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<SPAN class=630250921-01071999>Dead Man Talking</SPAN>
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New York Times
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Magazine , Jan. 2
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The
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annual "Lives They Lived" issue memorializes 1999's dead. Sammy (the Bull)
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Gravano argues that Mario Puzo made Mafia life honorable with The
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Godfather . Gravano says that he himself borrowed Puzo's lines for his own
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mob work. ("I'm gonna make you an offer you can't refuse.") …
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A piece celebrates Fred Trump, the Donald's no-nonsense father, who built a
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real-estate empire in the outer boroughs with hard work and no flash. He lacked
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his son's imagination and grandiosity. … A week before his
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execution, a death-row inmate remembers his miserable life: "Been unhappy from
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the time I was born." … Others honored include Frank DeVol,
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the composer of the Brady Bunch theme; stripper Lili St. Cyr; Gorilla
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Monsoon, the first pro wrestling villain; and Frederick Hart, the
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traditionalist sculptor the art world stupidly ignored.
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Time ,
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Dec. 31
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The
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exhaustive fin-de-siècle issue elects Albert Einstein "Person of the
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Century," because he is "a symbol for all scientists" in a century defined by
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scientific advance. The cover profile hails the German-born "genius among
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geniuses" for helping to resettle scores of refugees and alerting FDR to the
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need for atomic weapons research. … Stephen Hawking explains that Einstein's theory of special
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relativity--the speed of light is constant while time and motion are
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relative--turned centuries of Newtonian physics on its head. … President
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Bill Clinton honors runner-up Franklin Delano Roosevelt for "two decisive victories:
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first over economic depression and then over fascism." Mohandas Gandhi is also
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a runner-up. … A "Most Important People of the Millennium" section
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exalts the greatest historical figures of each century, including:
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13 th -century Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan, 15 th -century
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printing press innovator Johann Gutenberg, 16 th -century Queen
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Elizabeth I of England, and Thomas Edison.
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U.S. News
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& World Report , Jan. 10
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A
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"Outlook 2000" issue anticipates 21 st -century innovations. An
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article focuses on the race to map the human genome: The
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National Institutes of Health hopes to finish a genetic sequence by 2003,
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before a private group of scientists can. Whoever wins will hold the keys to
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creating personalized medicines and cures for killer diseases such as cancer.
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… A profile of zoologist Betsy Dresser applauds her
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efforts to create a "21 st -century Noah's ark" of endangered species'
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DNA. Dresser hopes to clone a near-extinct animal. She has already produced the
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world's first test-tube gorilla.
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The
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Nation , Jan. 10 and 17
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The
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Nation goes glossy for its "alternative" retrospective of the
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20 th century. Highlights of a century's correspondence include a
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1925 letter to the editor from Adolf Hitler complaining that the magazine
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wrongly said he served a six-month prison sentence when he actually served 13
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months. ... The cover
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story delivers excerpts from The Nation 's archives, focused
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around two central themes: continuing class struggles and the rise of
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Americanized capitalism. … Among the excerpts from the 1920s is a prediction that Marcus Garvey's Africa for
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Africans movement would enduringly raise the racial consciousness of black
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Americans. … In a 1960s excerpt James Baldwin argues that "The law is meant to
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be my servant and not my master, still less my torturer." … A
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1980s editorial predicts: "Things will come flying through
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the windows of glasnost that Mikhail Gorbachev and the architects of
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radical reform in the Soviet Union neither foresee nor completely control."
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Weekly
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Standard , Jan. 10
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The
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cover story crowns Winston Churchill the "Man of the
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Century." (Note the defiant "man.") "No leader was so clear-eyed about the
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century's villains." While Franklin Roosevelt was "tragically unwary of the new
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global menace from the left," Churchill spearheaded the opposition to the "twin
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scourges" of the century--Nazism and communism. The man who gave the Iron
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Curtain its name is the true "democratic hero of our age." … An
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article accuses the press of overlooking John McCain's
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domestic-policy gaffes. McCain's media "cheering section" neglects its favorite
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candidate's lack of coherence on tax and health-care policy. The mainstream
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media do not cut George W. any slack. If McCain emerges as the nominee,
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Democrats will exploit his domestic weaknesses.
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Economist , Dec. 31
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This is the "millennium of
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the West," concludes the special year-end issue, which is by far the best of
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the millennial mags. The greatest events and achievements of the past 1,000
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years are reviewed, including the miraculous growth of prosperity since 1750,
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the persistence of the city, the emancipation of women, the rise of the law,
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and the invention of limited liability (the key to the rise of equity
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corporations). … The top 10 inventions include electrification,
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contraceptives, gunpowder, and calculus. … The issue is packed with
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remarkable historical tidbits: One article traces the rise of total war to
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Napoleon's conquest of Zaragoza. … A piece considers what would have
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happened if the Confederacy had won the Civil War (the ascendance of Mexico).
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… The obituary is for God.
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