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Here is a
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sampler from
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Slate
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's "The Fray," where the market of ideas has
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been deregulated. Subscribers engage one another in debate, discussing news and
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cultural happenings and even trading gardening tips. To wit, a selection of
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last week's hottest topics. And of course, you can always jump right into the
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action. Click here to
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join the Fray.
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Hot
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Threads
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What did Kenneth Starr know,
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and when did he know it? Inquiring minds in the "Clinton and the Media" thread
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focused this week on the question of key Whitewater witness David Hale's
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possibly tainted testimony. The possibility that outside forces (notably
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billionaire Clinton-hater Richard Mellon Scaife) might have tampered with
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Starr's star witness stoked the debate. Starr's conservative defenders,
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naturally, chafed at the notion that they might be sidetracked in their dogged
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pursuit of the president. His liberal critics, on the other hand, over Starr's
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no-win dilemma: He must investigate his own chief witness--a course that would
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invite all kinds of political fusillades--or turn the process over to Janet
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Reno's internal investigators. Oh, and that gal back in Arkansas--Paula Jones?
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Her planned appeal raised scarcely a blip.
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A by an
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unassuming fraygrant caused the venerable "Language" thread to erupt into its
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most intense debate ever. The topic: Does language influence culture? By week's
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end, the lines had been drawn, with two opposing camps staking out their turf
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and even coming up with labels for their positions. The Bi-Directionalists
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believe that language influences culture even as culture influences language;
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the other side avers it doesn't. The debate should segue nicely into next
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month's discussion of Steven Pinker's The Language Instinct in the
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"Reading" thread.
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New
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Threads
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"Black in America" erupted
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when an African-American fraygrant asked which white fraygrant would be the
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first to apologize to him for slavery. Affirmative action was debated, as was
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the question of privatizing schools: Would it collapse America's class
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divisions or just lead to even more problems? But the biggest firestorm erupted
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over test scores: How are they used? Are they obsolete? Do test-result
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disparities reflect just cultural-knowledge disparities?
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After a
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slow start, the "Higher Education" thread got a shot in the arm when one
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fraygrant posed a . A lengthy debate ensued on vocational education programs in
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high schools: Are high schools the best place for them? Should some programs be
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moved to the post-secondary level? Should the whole lot be moved? Another topic
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emerged: the issue of exit exams in higher education. Which states use them,
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and in what fields are students tested? The focus has now shifted to The
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Bell Curve and its discussion of the needs of gifted students.
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Fray
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Feud
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In the
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"Religion" thread, one irreverent poster asked, "Is Gandhi burning in hell?"
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Another on why Gandhi never became a Christian despite having been possibly the
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best Christian of the century. This question tapped an ongoing battle between
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staunch conservative Christians and liberal-minded believers on topics ranging
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from PBS's Frontline special "From Jesus to Christ" to the interplay of
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politics, Christians, and gays. Not much common ground here; the battle
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continues.
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A Feast
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for the Eyes
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The "Arts" thread was all
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about the legendary art critic Clement Greenberg. The debate was inspired by
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Adam Gopnik's recent New
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Yorker review of Florence Rubenfeld's
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new biography, Clement Greenberg: A Life , and the Charlie Finch review
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in ArtNet magazine. Did Greenberg really have a great eye, or was
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Jackson Pollock just a lucky loser foisted on a gullible public by a bull in a
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china shop?
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Slate
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's
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"Movies
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Today" dialogue between David Denby and Alex Ross has inspired some
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interesting posts in the "Movies and Television" thread. To illustrate their
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views, fraygrants posted lists of their favorite films in different genres,
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from the familiar to the obscure. This led to some on just what belongs on a
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list of favorite films. Other topics this week: What makes a sex symbol sexy,
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commentary on Neil Jordan's The Butcher Boy , Werner Herzog's Little
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Dieter Needs to Fly , and the (apparently) implicit homoeroticism in
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Grease .
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