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Economist
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, March 6
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(posted Saturday,
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March 6, 1999)
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The cover story warns that cheap oil, though a boon to
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consumers, could bankrupt the poor and politically unstable nations that
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produce it. ... The magazine diagrams the current Chinese-American diplomatic
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impasse. The United States berates China for human rights abuses and illicit
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transfer of defense technology; Chinese officials see U.S. policy as
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inconsistent and hypocritical--President Clinton has sent mixed messages about
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Taiwan and most favored nation status. ... A piece describes the monuments Saddam Hussein has
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erected to himself. One is made from a fallen American missile melted down and
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remolded in the image of agonized Western leaders groveling at Saddam's
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feet.
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New
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Republic
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, March 22
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(posted Friday, March
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5, 1999)
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A profile accuses
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Christopher Edley--the president's premier policy adviser, operative, and
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ghostwriter on race--of being doctrinaire and intolerant of dissent. He
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single-handedly closed the discussion on class-based affirmative action and
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excluded conservatives from the president's race initiative. ...
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Prostate cancer screenings are now de rigueur for men, says a piece, but
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they may lead to premature and overaggressive surgery. The operations are often
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deadlier than the cancer itself. ... The cover story calls CIA Director
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George Tenet an energetic, clever, and appealingly iconoclastic leader but
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questions his--or anyone's--ability to reform the stumbling agency. ...
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A review savages Barbara Kingsolver and Anna Quindlen: Their writing is
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heartfelt, but their politics are naive and their use of emotion is cheap.
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New York Times
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Magazine , March 7
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(posted
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Thursday, March 4, 1999)
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The magazine's special
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shelter issue, titled "The Human Habitat," self-consciously departs from
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glossy, expensive interior-decorator culture. The opening essay rejects
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overdesigned sleekness for the "flowing, tangled" realism of everyday mess.
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Short pieces feature a family farm in India, repossessed houses in the Los
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Angeles suburbs, and the many uses of storage lockers. There's even a special
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section ("Making the Most of It") devoted to the poor, portraying
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struggling-but-content families, living in a $30-a-month Tennessee mountain
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shack and in the slums of Rio de Janeiro. A photo spread depicts how people
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have made various unlikely settings--including missile silos, water towers, and
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mausoleums--into cozy and functional homes.
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Time
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and
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Newsweek
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, March 8
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(posted Tuesday, March
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2, 1999)
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Time 's peculiar cover story announces and names the new "femaleist" movement:
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biological feminism based on new research showing that women's bodies are
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"tougher, stronger, and lustier" than stereotype dictates. According to
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femaleism, ancient women hunted along with their male mates, the clitoris is
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anatomically superior to the penis, and menstruation is an expression of
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"primal female power." The story is oddly competitive, keeping score between
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the genders on strength, agility, and aggression, and mischievously wondering
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"which sex should rule." Photographs of scantily dressed, genetically gifted
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women illustrate it. A sidebar traces political attitudes toward women's bodies,
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from Margaret Sanger to ... Cybill Shepherd. It's a big week for women's health
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at Newsweek , too. Its "Health for Life" supplement gives practical, soothingly written advice on a
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long list of women's health concerns, from familiars such as pregnancy and
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breast cancer to perimenopause (pre-menopausal hormonal irregularities) and
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hormone replacement therapy.
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Newsweek 's regular issue is devoted to
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Americans at war. The introductory essay argues that war has been the central
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influence and organizing principle of the 20 th century. The bulk of
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the magazine is given to firsthand narratives by veterans and others. A
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sampling: The founder of the Navy SEALs recalls his near-drowning at Guadalcanal, David Halberstam
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describes the military's spin apparatus in Vietnam, and Nancy
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Reagan reminisces about the first Reagan-Gorbachev
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summit.
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Time prints a
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quick and dirty guide for rebel groups who aspire to statehood. From Chechnya
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to Kurdistan to Quebec, independence is achieved through television, luck, and
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location, location, location--no way for far-flung East Timor, maybe for
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European Kurdistan.
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U.S. News
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& World Report
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, March 8
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(posted Tuesday, March
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2, 1999)
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The grim cover
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story explains why depression is so hard to treat effectively: Insurers
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won't pay for the trial-and-error process of finding the right medication, and
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the disease is still mistaken, even by its victims, for everyday doldrums. The
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cover promises new treatments, but the story inside says very little about
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them. ... A piece asks if Saddam Hussein is finally losing his
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marbles--or at least his judgment. Unsettled by sanctions, riots, and the
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West's steady bombing, the dictator has been firing military brass and
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assassinating clerics. ... An article describes how American personal-injury lawyers
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thronged to Nairobi after the U.S. Embassy bombing, convincing Kenyans to sue
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both the U.S. government and Osama bin Laden.
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The New
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Yorker
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, March 8
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(Posted Tuesday, March
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2, 1999)
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A profile of Goldman
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Sachs argues that the investment house is a mirror of capitalism itself. The
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firm's decision to go public was driven by unbridled individual greed and
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represents the demise of the long-term, group-oriented thinking that spurred
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the firm's original success. One telling detail about the firm's legendary
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emphasis on teamwork: Employees have constant access to a database where they
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can input evaluations of their co-workers' performance. ... Two
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men--brothers, English professors, and gambling addicts--unrepentantly describe
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how they blew their inheritance at Mississippi blackjack tables. ... A
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writer finds head-spinning confusion at the National Archives, where librarians
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are straining to keep up with the antiquatedness of old technologies and the
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information sprawl caused by new ones. For example, a 1989 court case requires
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all federal agencies to archive their computer files and e-mails, but it took
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the Archives over two years just to copy the records of the Reagan White House.
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And even those records "are gibberish as they currently stand," sighs one
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former Archives librarian.
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Weekly
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Standard
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, March 8
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(posted Tuesday, March
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2, 1999)
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The lead editorial
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pleads with the media to pursue the Juanita Broaddrick story. ... The
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cover
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story opines that Bill Bradley should be the Democratic nominee for
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president, because he's smart, principled, and destined to lose. Whereas
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Republicans would have to play hardball to beat Al Gore, Bradley is a "listless
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and uninspiring" candidate who could be vanquished quietly and nobly.
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... An article sings the virtues of "alternative country music," which
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is authentic and religious. Big-name country artists have forsaken the
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form--not only for filthy lucre, but also because mainstream success helps them
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"lose the sense of inferiority they've had since Appomattox."
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