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Time and Newsweek , Oct. 12
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1998)
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Newsweek 's cover story predicts a recession. The failure of so many foreign
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economies will soon hurt America, crushing both the stock market and consumer
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confidence. Higher unemployment may follow. Remedies: The Federal Reserve Board
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must drastically cut interest rates, the International Monetary Fund must
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continue to aid foreign countries, and Japan must reform its banking system.
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...
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Time 's cover package: a week in the life of a hospital. Following
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doctors, nurses, and administrators around the Duke Medical Center, Time
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offers vignettes of modern hospital life. General theme: It's hard to balance
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belt tightening and effective health care.
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Newsweek says tabloids such as the National Enquirer and Globe
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are losing readers. Why? "Mainstream" media have taken over their turf by
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covering Princess Di's death, Flytrap, and other tablike stories. Tabloids are
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now more prudish than network television, refusing to discuss the specifics of
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the Flytrap sex acts. (To read
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Slate
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's tabloid roundup, click
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here.)
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U.S.
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News & World Report , Oct. 12
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1998)
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The
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cover story says humans have been in the New World for much
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longer than previously assumed. "Clovis-first" theories (named for an
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archaeological site in New Mexico), which hold that humans appeared here about
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12,000 years ago, have been supplanted by evidence of seaside communities in
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Chile and the Pacific Northwest 30,000 or more years ago. ... A story exposes a wave of kidnappings in China. Small-town Chinese
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women who migrate to bigger cities for work are often shanghaied at the train
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station. Sold to "husbands" for a few hundred dollars, the women spend years as
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captive breeders. The Chinese government is only now cracking down on the
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trade.
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The
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New Yorker , Oct. 12
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1998)
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More
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celebrity writers praise President Clinton and bash Kenneth Starr. E.L.
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Doctorow compares Starr to Joseph McCarthy: "Starr has shown us how a
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conscienceless, ideologically vindictive use of the investigative privilege can
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undercut the legitimacy of any duly elected American government." Bobbie Ann
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Mason claims, "[W]e eviscerated the American government because a middle-aged
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man dallied with a young, willing woman and then tried to hush it up." William
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Styron argues that "a complicity between the public and the media has generated
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an ignoble voyeurism so pervasive that we have never permitted a candidate like
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Bill Clinton to proclaim with fury that his sex life, past and present, is
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nobody's business but his own." ... A story describes the breakthrough
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period of Muhammad Ali. Ali (then Cassius Clay) created his persona knowingly
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and from nothing, and his defeat of Sonny Liston marked a turnaround in our
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culture. Older sports fans hated the brash, loudmouthed Clay; younger ones knew
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he was a revolutionary.
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The
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Nation , Oct. 19
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1998)
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The
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Nation 's cover story proposes a "bank holiday," à la FDR, to pre-empt
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further catastrophe in the global economy. Among proposals: close banks for one
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day to allow them to reorganize; institute emergency tax cuts; sack the IMF's
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failed leadership; and place emergency controls on capital flows. A related
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article says that all nations can't emulate the United States, so
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it was a given that capitalism as a single global paradigm would fail. Thus,
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the United States should reverse its "imperial laissez-faire" policies and take
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an active hand in the global economy.
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Weekly Standard , Oct. 12
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1998)
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An
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article tears apart Human Rights Watch's recent report on U.S. police brutality
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as exaggerated and anecdotal. Most troublesome to the Standard : HRW's
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recommendation to increase state, federal, and even global supervision of U.S.
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police.
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--Seth
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Stevenson
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More Flytrap
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...
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