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Economist , Oct. 31
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(posted
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Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998)
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The
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cover editorial predicts that in next week's election
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"voters will most likely stick to old habits, returning a legislature much like
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the previous one." Defying all the summer punditry, Flytrap has been a
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nonfactor. ... A story scientifically explains Halloween legends.
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Vampirism may be traced to the disease porphyria, which causes sunlight-averse
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skin, retracted gums, and red urine--leading to the blood-drinking myth.
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Several witchcraft panics "occurred in places where rye was widely cultivated,
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and after weather that was propitious for the growth of Claviceps ."
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Claviceps is a parasite that, when eaten, causes hallucinations.
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Mother Jones , November/December 1998
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(posted
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Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998)
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The
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Mother Jones 400 lists the top individual political contributors of the past year. No. 1:
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Richard M. and Helen DeVos, founders of Amway, who gave more than $1 million to
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the GOP. They were rewarded with a special tax cut that saved Amway $19
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million. Donors' favorite special interests were telecommunications and oil. An
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accompanying story exposes how Outback Steakhouse coerced employees to
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contribute to Outback's PAC. Outback then used the PAC funds to lobby against
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national health care and an increase in the minimum wage.
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New
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York Times Magazine , Nov. 1
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(posted
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Thursday, Oct. 29, 1998)
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The cover
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story says Americans no longer want an ambitious, problem-solving government.
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Our only consensus is that "government should serve the ordinary, hard-working
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individual--providing safety, public goods like roads and parks and the tools
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necessary to seek opportunity, like education. It should protect people from
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unfair or excessive aspects of the marketplace." We lack pride in or loyalty to
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our government and have no "willingness to put aside personal concerns to serve
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a larger cause." ... The magazine interviews young Iranians who long for
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cultural freedom. Iran's revolution, now 20 years old, leaves young Iranians
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cold. They want to wear shorts, drink booze, and sing pop songs--all banned by
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the government. Young people hoped Iran's new president would liberalize the
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nation, but he hasn't so far.
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Atlantic Monthly , November 1998
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(posted
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Thursday, Oct. 29, 1998)
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The cover
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story excerpts, with commentary, a forthcoming collection of Jack Kerouac's
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unpublished letters and notebooks. Revealed are Kerouac's growing distaste for
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the other beats and the beat movement, his surprising religious fervor, and a
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sweet and earnest nature. A letter to his editor at Grove Press: "I cant
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possibly go on as a responsible prose artist and also as a believer in the
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impulses of my own heart and in the beauty of pure spontaneous language if I
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let editors take my sentences, which are my phrases that I separate by dashes
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when I 'draw a breath,' each of which pours out to the tune of the whole story
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its own rhythmic yawp of expostulation, & riddle them with commas, cut them
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in half, in threes, in fours, ruining the swing ... I know what I'm talking
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about tho I may get drunk and act childish socially ... I'm an artist,
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oldfashioned, devoted."
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Texas
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Monthly , November 1998
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(posted
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Thursday, Oct. 29, 1998)
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A
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35 th anniversary look at the Kennedy assassination includes interviews with several witnesses and photos galore. One piece
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carefully debunks all the conspiracy theories: the CIA, the Mob, Fidel Castro,
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LBJ, and the current vogue theory--that there were two Lee Harvey Oswalds, and
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the innocent one got caught. Conclusion: There was one Oswald, and he acted
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alone.
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Time and Newsweek , Nov. 2
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 27, 1998)
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Time 's cover story calls Tom Wolfe's new novel, A Man in Full ,
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better than Bonfire of the Vanities . (New York area Time readers
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will get a Yankees cover.) The germ of the novel came when Wolfe visited a
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Georgia plantation used by its rich owners for quail hunting. The result: a
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book about an Atlanta businessman caught in debt. Newsweek 's review
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agrees with Time 's rave. ... The Newsweek cover package predicts how life will be different for kids born
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in the next millennium. A child born in 2000 will have twice the life
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expectancy of one born in 1900. Also, she will be taller and less likely to
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marry, will live in a far more racially diverse United States, and will eat
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genetically engineered food.
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Time concludes that
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the 1998 Yankees are the best baseball team ever. Why? They were "as strong on
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the mound and in the field as they were at bat; endowed with a bunch of superb
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role players; blessed with a rare balance of speed and power; managed by a man
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of calming temperament."
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Newsweek explains how rap labels spread the word-of-mouth about a new
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album. "Street teams"--young people hired by the label--put up posters, give
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out illegal (but label-sanctioned) advance bootlegs, and request and dance
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enthusiastically to the album at clubs. (The Wall Street Journal put
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this story on Page 1 on June 25.)
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U.S.
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News & World Report , Nov. 2
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 27, 1998)
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The
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cover package says Flytrap is a nonissue so far in this fall's
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congressional elections: Voters aren't linking their ballots to Clinton's fate.
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But, says U.S. News , the election outcomes will directly determine
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whether impeachment proceeding are dropped and whether Clinton can set any
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agenda in his remaining two years in office. Accompanying pieces emphasize the
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closeness of races--voter turnout will be the key deciding factor.
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The
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Nation , Nov. 9
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 27, 1998)
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The
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cover story frets that
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we're overconcerned with terrorism. Yes, terrorism is serious, but it can be
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countered with a bit more vigilance from our intelligence groups. Instead,
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"America is now spending $7 billion a year defending itself against backpack
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nuclear bombs, canisters of nerve gas and petri dishes of germ weapons planted
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in crowded cities by an as-yet-unknown adversary." The
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Nation
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deems this a dubious money grab by defense agencies.
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Weekly Standard , Nov. 2
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 27, 1998)
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The cover
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story argues that California is no longer the progressive, trend-setting state
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it once was. Instead, the state is growing more conservative: Even its
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Democratic candidate for governor is pro-death penalty and anti-gay marriage.
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California elections this fall feature old issues and old campaign tactics, not
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the state's previous "genius for charting America's political future."
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--Seth
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Stevenson
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More Flytrap
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...
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