Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Economist , June 28
12
13
14
15
(posted
16
Saturday, June 28)
17
18
19
An
20
optimistic cover editorial says that Hong Kong may take over China,
21
rather than vice versa. Hong Kong has inspired capitalism in China--60 percent
22
of Chinese investment is routed through it--so perhaps it can inspire political
23
freedom there too. Hong Kong could serve as China's political "laboratory,"
24
proving that free elections and the rule of law are not destabilizing. A
25
related article speculates that Hong Kong is safe from
26
excessive Chinese meddling: China doesn't want to alienate Taiwan or the
27
international community, and Tung Chee-hwa is making sound, relatively liberal
28
decisions. A story on the world environmental summit says that developed
29
nations are breaking their promises to curtail emissions of greenhouse gases.
30
And they can't agree on how to do better. A piece on Bosnia says there is a
31
teensy, tiny bit of hope that new economic laws will help unify the three
32
feuding ethnic groups.
33
34
35
36
New
37
Republic , July 14 & 21
38
39
40
41
(posted
42
Friday, June 27)
43
44
45
46
47
TNR finds a new angle on Hong Kong. The cover article, "Hong Kong Is in
48
Worse Trouble Than You Think," warns that the colony's "triad" gangsters have
49
forged an alliance with Chinese officials. China will let the triads extort,
50
smuggle drugs and arms, pander, and counterfeit. The triads, in turn, will
51
maintain order in Hong Kong and may act as the de facto secret police. Several
52
tycoons with ties to the triads and Beijing are investigated. Also, philosopher
53
Amartya Sen argues that the idea of "Asian values"--collective identity,
54
absence of individual rights--is bunkum. Asia's authoritarians are wrong:
55
Freedom, tolerance, and respect for individual rights are integral to the
56
Confucian, Buddhist, and Hindu traditions.
57
58
59
60
61
New
62
York
63
Times
64
Magazine , June 29
65
66
67
68
(posted
69
Thursday, June 26)
70
71
72
The diary
73
of a breast-cancer patient takes the cover. The piece's main themes: the
74
writer's fear that she won't be able to have children, anxiety about the
75
appearance of her breast, and gratitude toward her husband and her cancer
76
support group. After a lumpectomy and radiation, she has an excellent
77
prognosis. A story sings the praises of the federal Legal Services Corp.,
78
describing how one of its lawyers has served a poor Appalachian town devotedly
79
for 25 years. The message: Conservatives in Congress should think twice before
80
defunding the program. A piece chronicles the struggles of Firefly, a tiny
81
Internet startup: Its "agent" software, an artificial-intelligence program that
82
helps consumers choose and buy online, may be the Net's next killer
83
application, but only if Microsoft or another software giant doesn't create a
84
knockoff first. Also, an elderly widow writes about rekindling a sexual affair
85
with her first lover, a man she slept with 50 years ago.
86
87
88
89
90
Newsweek and Time , June 30
91
92
93
94
(posted
95
Tuesday, June 24)
96
97
98
99
Newsweek runs its
100
seventh health cover story of the year. "How to Live to 100" advises exercise,
101
low-fat food, and perseverance. Centenarians, it notes, are the fastest growing
102
segment of the population. A "Longevity Test" lets you calculate your life
103
expectancy (e.g., add two years if you're a happily married man, and subtract
104
three if you don't exercise), while a sidebar explains the many benefits and
105
few risks of estrogen therapy.
106
107
108
Time puts the
109
cigarette deal on the cover. It describes the negotiations (extremely civil) and
110
the agreement. Anti-tobacco forces fear that the industry will find a way to
111
evade regulation. Industry folks fear they have given too much away. Cigarette
112
historian Richard Kluger praises the deal, saying that FDA regulation of nicotine
113
content is a huge defeat for the industry. Newsweek 's cigarette story
114
cautions that Congress may spike the agreement: Liberals think it's too soft on
115
the industry, while conservatives think it's too harsh.
116
117
118
Time 's 20-page special report on Hong Kong reaches the same
119
conclusions as all the other special reports on Hong Kong: The colony's
120
residents are optimistic; corruption and crime will seep in from China; no one
121
knows whether China will quash political freedom. Accompanying articles
122
describe three Chinese towns: One town is decrepit, polluted, and filled with
123
idle, state-owned factories; one is experimenting with private farming and
124
local democracy; one is bustling with capitalism. Also in Time , the
125
movie critic pans the summer blockbusters for their similarly idiotic
126
plots, brutality, and witlessness.
127
128
Also in
129
Newsweek , a package of articles cheers the capture of Pol Pot--"the last
130
monster of the 20 th century"--but notes that Cambodia is still
131
corrupt, lawless, and scarred by Pol Pot's genocide.
132
133
134
135
U.S.
136
News & World Report , June 30
137
138
139
140
(posted
141
Tuesday, June 24)
142
143
144
"Extreme"
145
sports are on the cover. Kayaking, sky diving, radical skiing, street lugeing, etc.,
146
are booming. The pop-psychology explanation: The elimination of risk in daily
147
life has made Americans hungry for danger and excitement. Dramatic photos of
148
ice climbers, BASE jumpers, and sky-surfers accompany the article. A piece describes the moronic things tourists do in national parks:
149
hike the Grand Canyon in high heels, run at midday in Death Valley, dip their
150
hands in 200 F geothermic pools. An article says that both the Republican and Clinton tax plans favor
151
the rich too much, but that the Republican plan is much worse.
152
153
154
155
156
Weekly Standard , June 30
157
158
159
160
(posted
161
Tuesday, June 24)
162
163
164
Another
165
cover package on the Republican crackup--the second this month. One of the
166
cover pieces predicts that Newt Gingrich will be ousted as speaker by the end
167
of next year: His lieutenants (Richard Armey, Tom Delay, John Boehner, Bill
168
Paxon) are abandoning him because he has betrayed them repeatedly. An article
169
contends that China's behavior toward Hong Kong proves the failure of Clinton's
170
"constructive engagement" policy, which holds that China will become more
171
democratic as it becomes more capitalistic: By gutting the Joint Declaration,
172
China proves that it will never allow democracy to flourish, even if it
173
lets capitalism flourish. Also, the Standard apologizes to Deepak Chopra
174
for a 1996 cover story that called him a "huckster." The magazine retracts a
175
charge of plagiarism and an allegation that Chopra hired a prostitute.
176
177
178
179
The
180
Nation , July 7
181
182
183
184
(posted
185
Tuesday, June 24)
186
187
188
An
189
ambivalent cover story cheers Richard Gephardt's new commitment to old-time
190
liberal populism, but frets that he's a political chameleon who has adopted
191
this cause for political reasons (i.e., the 2000 presidential campaign). It
192
also criticizes him for being a follower. An article warns that the growing
193
power of Orthodox Jews will weaken American Jews' staunch support of Israel.
194
Orthodox Israeli Jews are alienating American Jews by refusing to recognize
195
them as Jews.
196
197
198
199
200
201