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Economist , Sept. 20
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(posted
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Saturday, Sept. 20)
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The cover editorial and a 48-page survey of the world economy
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reject the conventional wisdom that the era of big government is over. The
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share of government spending in the gross domestic product of industrial
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countries has risen steadily throughout the century, up to the current 46
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percent. Exceptions: Hong Kong and Singapore, which got rich with small
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bureaucracies. A story on Bill Weld's blocked nomination blames not Jesse Helms
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("now in his fifth rumbustious term") but the Senate itself. Archaic rules let
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one passionate senator win out over reasoned argument. Also, an article says
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China's new military cuts are in troop size, not spending. China, like most of
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East Asia, seeks high-tech weaponry.
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New
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Republic , Oct. 6
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(posted
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Friday, Sept. 19)
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One
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reason New Republic editor Michael Kelly was fired is that his "TRB"
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columns were too tough on Al Gore. But this week's TRB, headlined "Impeach
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Gore," is not as harsh as it seems. It argues that an independent counsel lets
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both sides hide behind legal technicalities. Impeachment hearings would never
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oust Gore, but they would reveal the truth. The cover story on John Sweeney
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advises the AFL-CIO president to be more militant. Sweeney is too often
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subservient to the White House and the Democratic National Committee. To remain
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relevant, labor must take risks and build its membership (current growth rate:
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less than 2 percent per year). Also, an article says right-wingers are becoming
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socially conscious, establishing conservative-minded mutual funds and
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boycotting products. Cheerios are out: General Mills gives to Planned
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Parenthood.
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New
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York Times Magazine , Sept. 21
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(posted
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Thursday, Sept. 18)
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The cover
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story on Harold Ickes compares the former Clinton aide to his FDR-aide father.
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Each Ickes kept absurdly copious notes, and was doggedly loyal to his boss.
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Despite the fact that he was dismissed and abandoned by Clinton, and despite
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the fact that he turned his notes over to the Thompson committee, the younger
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Ickes maintains "unshakable" faith in Clinton. An article on Oliver Stone says
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he has eschewed political diatribe in his forthcoming film U-Turn and
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his planned sequel to Mission: Impossible . Instead, Stone seeks
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mainstream clout. Also, a story refutes the notion that learning-disabled kids
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get too much attention. Schools that are looking for places to save money are
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tossing most LD-diagnosed kids into regular classes, where they are not
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assigned the rote drills they need if they are to learn how to read.
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Time and Newsweek , Sept. 22
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(posted
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Tuesday, Sept. 16)
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Newsweek devotes the cover package to Mother Teresa, asking when she
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will be sainted. (Canonization can take more than 100 years.) The pope may
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waive several necessary steps, but Mother Teresa must still be credited with a
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posthumously performed miracle. (She'd better get cracking.) Time 's
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cover story credits America Online CEO Steve Case with
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simplifying the Internet for consumers and notes that AOL's acquisition of
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CompuServe's subscribers tightens its domination of the online market. The Di
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news continues as both mags chronicle the life and final drunken hours of Di
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driver Henri Paul. (Time has more details, even listing his brand of liquor,
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Ricard pastis.) Newsweek looks at how children deal with death: "A child
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who has lost a parent feels helpless, even if he's a future King of England;
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abandoned, even in a palace with a million citizens wailing at the gates." And
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Time discounts the warnings of anti-nuke activists who claim
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that the 72 pounds of plutonium on NASA's soon-to-be-launched Saturn explorer
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poses a health hazard. The radioactive fuel is safely encased, and will not
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pollute the atmosphere if the spacecraft explodes. ( The Nation
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disagrees; see below.)
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U.S.
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News & World Report , Sept. 22
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(posted
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Tuesday, Sept. 16)
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The
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cover
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story credits Julia Child with "invent[ing] modern life." How? The
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celebrity chef launched the gourmet-food craze, made American cooking
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respectable, empowered housewives, and legitimized public television. And she's
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a lot of fun, too. A reporter visits Little Rock's Central High School 40 years after
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integration and finds a new kind of segregation: White students take honors
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classes, black students take regular classes. The reason: White parents press
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their kids onto the honors track, black parents don't. An article heralds the rise of the worm industry ("vermiculture"):
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Worms are a cheap, environmentally sound way of turning garbage into
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fertilizer.
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The
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New Yorker , Sept. 22
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(posted
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Tuesday, Sept. 16)
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Sex
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Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren chronicles his wild '70s life, focusing on Sid
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Vicious' 1978 arrest for his girlfriend's murder. Among many highlights:
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McLaren fences sound equipment stolen by the Sex Pistols from David Bowie's
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house; McLaren rejects William Kunstler as Vicious' defense attorney because he
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listens to "Bob Dylan or Joan Baez--possibly even Joni Mitchell"; McLaren tries
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to sanitize Vicious' image by finding him a "librarian" girlfriend. An article
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on the insanity defense recounts the miserable story of Edward Allen, the child
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of a wealthy New York family who's now on Oklahoma's death row for murdering
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his wife. Allen, who defended himself, tried to prove he was insane, but the
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jury didn't buy it. A piece describes--only half in jest--"Diana's Relics."
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Among them: "the pearl choker," "the Elvis dress," and "the cardigan with
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running reindeer." Unlike other saints' emblems, Diana's relics can be bought
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in stores. Also, The
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New Yorker breaks with tradition by
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publishing photographs of contributors.
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Vanity Fair , October 1997
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(posted
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Tuesday, Sept. 16)
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An
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article on the JonBenet Ramsey case presents evidence that strongly suggests
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her parents killed her. But the district attorney's office has botched the case
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by cooperating with the parents' attorneys, so it's unlikely that charges will
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ever be filed. The "New Establishment 1997" ranks "the 50 most powerful players
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of the Information Age." Bill Gates is first, Rupert Murdoch second. (Only two
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women are listed, at No. 47 and No. 48.) On the cover: Nicole Kidman. She's
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cagey about her new movie, Stanley Kubrick's mysterious Eyes Wide
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Shut .
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Weekly Standard , Sept. 22
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(posted
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Tuesday, Sept. 16)
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The cover
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editorial and article rip Al Gore. The editorial calls him a sleazeball based
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on the fund-raising evidence. The article says that while Gore doesn't seem
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rattled by the allegations, he should be. Even his allies are anxious. The
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Standard accuses the United Way of political correctness (a capital
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crime!): The charity has shifted funding from dull-but-worthy projects like CPR
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training to programs that are supposed to support "ethnic communities." Also,
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an article savages Diana for not doing her duty. She wanted money, popularity,
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pleasure, and leisure, but not the obligations that came with her title.
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The
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Nation , Sept. 29
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(posted
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Tuesday, Sept. 16)
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An
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article says Rudy Giuliani is not as good as he seems. Crime may be down, but
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public schools are as lousy as ever, and the unemployment rate is one of the
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highest in the nation. Two editorials oppose NASA's plutonium-laden mission to
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Saturn (see Time , above). An explosion of the spacecraft within the
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Earth's atmosphere would spread toxic particles, endangering millions. An essay
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by Mother Teresa basher Christopher Hitchens likens the nun to Princess Di:
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Both used the poor and sick as "accessories" in "the service and the pursuit of
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the rich and powerful."
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--Compiled by Seth Stevenson and the editors of Slate .
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