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Economist , Aug. 16
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(posted
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Saturday, Aug. 16)
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India's
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50 th birthday is celebrated, ambivalently, as the cover package praises the country's democracy and condemns
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its history of socialism. Recent economic liberalization has started to improve
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living standards, but the editors urge the government to privatize and
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deregulate faster. A piece commends Madeleine Albright for her "splendid
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bluntness" and her belief that the United States must act as the world's moral
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(and actual) policeman. But even she may not be able to force peace on the
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Middle East. Also, an Economist obsession: The magazine advises Britain
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to legalize drugs, at least marijuana and ecstasy (MDMA). A related article
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describes, lovingly, the many medical benefits of pot smoking.
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New
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Republic , Sept. 1
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(posted
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Friday, Aug. 15)
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The cover
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story marvels at Lanny Davis, the White House lawyer who does spin control for
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the Senate campaign-finance investigation. The administration's "minister for
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scandal," Davis brilliantly defused the Thompson hearings by convincing
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reporters that the witnesses' testimony was old news. "Heil Harvard" describes
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how Austria's far-right leader, the repellent Jorg Haider, is polishing his
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reputation by attending Harvard conferences and schmoozing American
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politicians. Haider, the author reminds us, praised the SS and has proposed
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expelling all immigrants and foreigners from Austria. A biography of efficiency
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expert Frederick Winslow Taylor is reviewed. The conclusion: Taylor was a
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terrible man, and he should be blamed for the dehumanization of the American
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workplace.
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New
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York Times Magazin e , Aug. 17
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(posted
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Friday, Aug. 15)
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An
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article calls Japanese primary schools the best in the world. Why? Kids
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cooperate on everything, are encouraged to think creatively, and learn
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responsibility from chores. (They clean the school building because there are
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no janitors.) The bad news: Japan's high-pressure, exam-oriented secondary
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schools undo the primary schools' good work. The magazine interviews Boeing CEO
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Philip Condit, who defends the company's safety record, its acquisition of
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McDonnell Douglas, and its pro-China policy. Most astonishing moment: Condit
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likens the Rodney King beating to the Tiananmen Square massacre. The cover
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story profiles celebrity chef David Bouley, who's trying to launch a nationwide
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gourmet-food empire, complete with overnight delivery of flash-frozen,
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vacuum-packed, four-star meals.
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Time and Newsweek , Aug. 18
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 12)
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The Apple-Microsoft deal
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takes both covers. The shared conclusion is that the agreement is a win-win:
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Apple buys some needed time, Microsoft locks up the Macintosh applications
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market and wards off antitrust investigators. Time 's behind-the-scenes package follows Steve Jobs through the
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week leading up to the fateful speech. Funniest moment: When Gates asks Jobs
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what he should wear during the announcement, Jobs answers, a white shirt.
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Newsweek publishes a short interview with Jobs, who says that Apple will
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concentrate on the education and "creative content" markets. Newsweek
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also argues that Apple will fail to hire a strong CEO because nobody wants to
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work in Jobs' shadow.
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Both newsweeklies celebrate
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cities. Newsweek congratulates New York for its remarkable comeback,
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applauding its falling crime rate, cleanliness, swinging nightlife, and
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entrepreneurial immigrants. Time 's "City Boosters" pays tribute to big-city mayors who've
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privatized services, challenged employee unions, and supported school vouchers.
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Singled out for praise: Stephen Goldsmith of Indianapolis, John Norquist of
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Milwaukee, Ed Rendell of Philadelphia, Michael White of Cleveland.
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A pair of
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Newsweek articles commemorates the 20 th anniversary of Elvis'
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death. One recalls the earliest days of his career, when he toured the South in
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a Cadillac. The other remembers his twilight in Las Vegas, where female fans
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mobbed the auditorium every night. Time predicts the biggest El Niño of the century. A warm Pacific Ocean
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will wreak havoc in South America, cause drought in Australia, and bring a
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nice, mild winter to the United States.
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U.S.
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News & World Report , Aug. 18 & 25
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 12)
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A double
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issue probes 18 unsolved mysteries of science. Among them: How old is the
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universe? How do ice
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ages occur? Why do we sleep? Why does anesthesia work? (Best guesses: 12 billion years; absorption of
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carbon dioxide by grasses lowers temperatures; to process memories; not the
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foggiest idea.) A sidebar examines a handful of less pressing scientific puzzles,
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such as why dogs bark. An article chronicles a bizarre Egyptian espionage trial: An Israeli
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mechanic is charged with giving lingerie dipped in invisible ink to an
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Egyptian. The trial has exposed Egyptian paranoia about Israeli sex spies and
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inflamed already tense relations between the two countries.
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The
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New Yorker , Aug. 18
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 12)
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A long
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story describes Defense Secretary William Cohen's attempts to impose civilian
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authority on Pentagon leaders who don't trust him. Top brass loathe the Clinton
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administration for trying to gut their "warrior" culture. Cohen has faced down
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two generals who bucked his authority, but hasn't won (and will never win, the
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article predicts) the full confidence of high-ranking officers. The magazine
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prints the final entries in William S. Burroughs' journal. Best line: "That
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vile salamander Gingrich, squeaker of the House, is slobbering about a
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drug-free America by the year 2001. What a dreary prospect!" A piece chronicles
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the National Football League's effort to regain the fans it has lost to the
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National Basketball Association. The NFL's bright idea: Hire an MTV executive
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to craft a snazzy marketing campaign.
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The
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Nation , Aug. 25 & Sept. 1
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 12)
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The third
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installment in its "National Entertainment State" series dissects the American
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music industry. As in the Hollywood and publishing issues, the centerpiece of
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the music edition is a chart of corporate conglomeration: Six companies
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(Time-Warner, Sony, EMI, etc.) dominate the music industry. Articles criticize
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music journalists for ignoring black artists, praise the embryonic feminism of
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the Spice Girls, rejoice in the failure of U2's latest tour, and commend the
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few musicians (notably Ani DiFranco) who have rejected major-label control.
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Weekly Standard , Aug. 18
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 12)
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Summer
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camps have gone soft, concludes the cover story. Back in the good old days,
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roughhousing, risk-taking, fighting, noogies, and wedgies were encouraged, and
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helped make kids courageous. Regrettably, '90s campers are protected from all
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risk. A piece mocks the military's diversity training program for its squishy,
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idiotic, white-male-bashing uselessness. The editorial cheers Jesse Helms'
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attack on William Weld's nomination, then urges Senate Majority Leader Trent
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Lott to "squash [Weld] like a bug."
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National Review , Sept. 1
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 12)
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The cover
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story claims that an obscure Canadian businessman named Maurice Strong is the
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ringleader of a "creeping U.N. power grab." Strong currently serves as an
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adviser to the U.N. secretary-general, an adviser to the World Bank president,
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and presided over the 1992 Earth Summit as its secretary-general. He's also
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supervising U.N. reforms and environmental regulations that will cripple U.S.
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sovereignty, warns the article. Also, Rupert Murdoch writes an essay decrying
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the triumph of "neosocialism." Regulators, bureaucrats, and a "New Class" of
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mandarins are using their authority to erode individual liberty. Evidence
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cited: "Why can't I get my Fox TV news service onto more American cable systems
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and compete?"
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Vanity Fair , September 1997
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(posted
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Friday, Aug. 8)
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VF
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traces Andrew Cunanan's bloody trail from San Diego to Minneapolis to Chicago
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to Miami. He favored hard-core S&M, belonged to a fraternity of rich,
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mostly closeted gay men called Gamma Mu, dealt drugs to support his lavish
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lifestyle, and lied to everyone about everything. A Harold Ickes profile says
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the ex-Clinton staffer is cruel, bullying, and smart. Clinton may have tossed
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him aside, but Ickes is retaliating by cooperating with campaign-finance
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investigators. Also, a pair of articles on celebrity marriage. One piece mocks
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Larry King for marrying too often, depicting him as needy, lonely, and
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desperate for attention. The other claims that the marriage of Rudy Giuliani
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and actress/TV journalist Donna Hanover is a façade: The New York mayor has
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been conducting an affair with his communications director for the past three
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years, and Hanover will separate from him after this fall's election. The story
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chastises New York media for ignoring the story, saying they fear alienating
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the vindictive Giuliani.
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