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<SPAN class=630250921-01071999><EM>TNR</EM>'s Man of the Millennium</SPAN>
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New York Times
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Magazine , Dec. 19
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The
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cover profile admires Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak's steely determination
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to make peace. The unpretentious ex-general acts as "the national tough guy."
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He set an ambitious 15-month timetable for solving the centuries-old
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Arab-Israeli conflict and back-burnered domestic issues to keep on schedule.
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… A profile of auteur Paul Thomas Anderson, director of the
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new Magnolia , applauds his artistry and moxie. Boogie Nights
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showed that Anderson is master of camera movement and character development.
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Anderson shepherded his new film into theaters without letting it be dumbed
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down, proving that he can protect his work from rank Hollywood commercialism.
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… An article exposes Tulsa, Oklahoma's long-forgotten race
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riots. In 1921, as many as 300 African-Americans were killed when white
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authorities deputized a bloodthirsty lynch mob. A state commission is finally
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investigating the disturbance.
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New
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Republic , Jan. 3
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A
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millennium parody issue. … A faux-profile picks a man of the
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millennium: "With his cartwheeling intellect and generous heart; with his
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revolutionary brain and conservative gut ... this epoch has belonged to Richard
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Keith 'Dick' Armey." … A piece honors nachos as the emblematic
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invention of the last thousand years: "Producing penicillin may be beyond the
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mental faculties of the average Joe, but melting things isn't. … [N]achos are
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the glue that unites us." … The magazine also includes a
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helpful list of the "Top Ten Stain-Removing Tips of the Millennium."
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Economist , Dec. 18
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The
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cover story pegged to Russia's parliamentary elections
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says democracy is not in terrible shape. The crackdown on Chechnya has swelled
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the popularity of Boris Yeltsin's flailing administration, but the Russian
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system remains robustly pluralistic. The Communists will probably retain a
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plurality in the Duma, and "reformist views may be more strongly represented."
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… An article earnestly questions whether irony is eroding the
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national character of post-imperial England: "In the days of yore British
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superiority was proven by force of arms. Now the point is made with a joke, and
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a quiet, knowing smile." … A survey cheers the globalization of wine. The "best wines
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of the new world can match or even surpass the great wines of the old world."
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Vintners in Bordeaux now solicit the advice of Australian producers.
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Time ,
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Dec. 20
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The
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chilling cover photo, taken from a surveillance videotape, shows Columbine
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killers Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris in the cafeteria during the massacre. The
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cover story reveals the contents of the killers' homemade
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videotapes. Harris called his sawed-off shotgun "Arlene," after a character in
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the video game Doom, and boasted that his plan was better than those of
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previous school shooters: "Not like those f___s in Kentucky with camouflage and
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.22s." Klebold hoped to kill 250 people on what he called "Judgement Day."
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Klebold predicted: "Directors will be fighting over this story," and Harris
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hoped for Steven Spielberg or Quentin Tarantino. The sickest detail: When
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Harris found Cassie Bernall hiding under a desk, he leaned down, said
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"peek-a-boo," then shot her.
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Newsweek ,
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Dec. 20
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The
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cover story names ordinary Americans the "People of the Century."
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In the "Century of the Common Man" democracy "became the norm" and " 'elite'
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became a dirty word." A clunky six-pager summarizes the century in thick
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newsweekly-ese: "The overarching theme of the century's first half was the rise
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of state power. … The theme of the century's second half was liberation."
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(David Plotz's "" of a generic man of the year deflates the genre.)
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… A portfolio compiles the century's best cartoons and quotes.
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… An article explains how the stock market could have risen even
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though the majority of companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 has lost
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ground: Enormous gains in the technology sector boost the overall market.
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U.S. News
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& World Report , Dec. 20
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The
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cover story reveals that--brace yourselves--Americans work a lot.
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More than one-third of Americans work at least 50 hours per week. Meanwhile,
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the French are scaling back to a 35-hour workweek. Telecommuting has made long
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hours easier and may be contributing to productivity gains. …
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An article applauds a Navy decision to build "electric drive" ships.
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Electric destroyers will have smaller engine rooms with more room for weapons.
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The new ships will be quieter, stealthier, and more efficient.
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… A piece questions a new approach to cracking down on school
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absenteeism: In California, Florida, and Michigan, prosecutors are imprisoning
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the parents of chronic truants for up to 90 days.
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Weekly
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Standard , Dec. 20
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A
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cover profile pokes fun at Donald Trump. Trump's penchant
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for purple prose and self-promotion verges on self-parody. The candidate says
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of the United States trade representative: "Has she made billions of dollars?"
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He supports the United Nations so strongly that "I'm building a 90-story
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building right next to it." He regrets the death of Princess Diana because "I
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would have loved to have had a shot to date her." … An
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editorial applauds New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani for
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applying tough love to the homeless. Coddling hasn't worked. We should demand
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that able-bodied folks pay for shelter.
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The
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Nation , Dec. 27
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The
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cover story claims that food will become a focus of radical
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politics in the 21st century, galvanized by opposition to genetically modified
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crops. … An editorial claims that a tentative "red-green alliance" emerged
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from the Seattle havoc. The new coalition will make it difficult for the United
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States to normalize trade relations with China.
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The New
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Yorker , Dec. 20
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An
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item relays the rumor that Bill Clinton will join the Motion Picture
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Association of America. Retiring MPAA head Jack Valenti thinks the former
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president would make a worthy successor. Clinton would enjoy working with
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starlets. … As Hillary Clinton steps up her Senate campaign, a
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faux West Wing memo proposes first lady subs. The president's top picks are
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Shania Twain, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and "wrestling sensation" Sable. The East
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Wing prefers Janet Reno.
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