Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Economist , Nov. 22
12
13
14
15
(posted
16
Saturday, Nov. 22)
17
18
19
The cover
20
editorial worries that Russian economic reform is tenuous. The next two years,
21
which are critical to a stable capitalist future, will require unwavering
22
leadership from Boris Yeltsin. A study suggests a novel form of health care:
23
Let your kids get sick. Children who get illnesses like malaria, diabetes, and
24
asthma and aren't treated for them have more resistance to disease in later
25
life. Also, an article follows McDonald's attempts to enter the Indian market.
26
The "Maharaja Mac" is made from mutton, and customers can top it with sauces
27
like "McMasala" and "McImli." So far, sales are slow.
28
29
30
31
New
32
Republic , Dec. 8
33
34
35
36
(posted
37
Friday, Nov. 21)
38
39
40
The cover
41
story mocks movie star Alec Baldwin's quest for campaign-finance reform. (He
42
took a bus trip through the Northeast promoting the cause.) Problem: Baldwin
43
doesn't seem to know much about the subject, or to want to talk about it. He's
44
contemplating a Senate run. An article questions CBS News' use of former Sen.
45
Bill Bradley as a correspondent. Bradley's patriotic "essays" (on the disabled,
46
good sportsmanship, etc.) look suspiciously like campaign spots for the 2000
47
race. Other candidates protest his free air time. Also, wary praise for the
48
Department of Housing and Urban Development's new welfare-reform plan. The
49
agency installs computers in public-housing projects so that jobless residents
50
can do telemarketing from home.
51
52
53
54
New
55
York Times Magazine , Nov. 23
56
57
58
59
(posted
60
Thursday, Nov. 20)
61
62
63
Benjamin
64
Netanyahu's peace-through-strength coalition may dominate Israeli politics for
65
a long time. Israel's secular elite hates Netanyahu, but Russian immigrants;
66
ultra-orthodox Jews, to whom he panders; and Middle Eastern/North African Jews
67
unite behind Bibi's patriotism and distrust of Arabs. One politician says
68
Israelis "no longer share the values of America--religious freedom, the
69
civility of political discourse, democratic values ... [Netanyahu's election]
70
was the victory of Judaism over Israel." A profile of Webster Hubbell, the
71
former Clinton adviser jailed for tax evasion, finds a sad, humbled figure.
72
Hubbell, who still supports Clinton, is now a "consultant" making big bucks off
73
Clinton-referred clients. Independent Counsel Ken Starr suspects the cash is
74
hush money. Also, a story rejects the conventional wisdom that overpopulation
75
is imminent. It argues that birth rates are falling across the world, and
76
populations will soon begin to shrink.
77
78
79
80
81
Time and Newsweek , Nov. 24
82
83
84
85
(posted
86
Tuesday, Nov. 18)
87
88
89
Saddam on both covers.
90
Time 's superior package emphasizes U.S. hopes that Iraq's
91
military will strike first. (Quote from senior Pentagon official: "We're just
92
waiting for him to do something stupid so we can whack him.") Time also
93
runs a disturbing report from Baghdad, where Iraqi commando units proved their
94
battle-readiness by gutting a live dog on television while chanting, "Our God,
95
our nation, our leader!" A nifty two-page map in Newsweek describes
96
Iraq's military as seriously diminished since the Gulf War. Newsweek
97
also publishes a dispatch from a U.N. weapons inspector: "[W]hile they delayed
98
us from entering some sites, we have seen Iraqi officials burning documents and
99
throwing the embers into a river." Time 's explanation of the science of
100
toxic weapons trumps Newsweek 's.
101
102
103
Newsweek excerpts the
104
forthcoming memoir of former Air Force bomber pilot Kelly Flinn, who was
105
discharged for adultery. She claims the Air Force treated her unfairly and that
106
her commanding officers gave her no guidance. The Air Force says the case was
107
less about adultery and more about Flinn's subsequent lying and cover-up. Also
108
in Newsweek , an essay by Hillary Rodham Clinton argues that American
109
foreign aid and investment will improve human rights.
110
111
112
113
Time interviews Deborah Eappen, grieving mother in the Louise
114
Woodward au pair case. Eappen remains convinced of Woodward's guilt, and is
115
stunned at her negligible punishment. "Louise took away Matthew and the judge
116
took away justice." Also in Time , trend-spotting: the Kabbalah, a brand of Jewish mysticism
117
employing numerology and the code-breaking of sacred texts, is drawing
118
celebrity converts (Madonna, Roseanne, and Laura Dern, among others).
119
120
121
122
The
123
New Yorker , Nov. 24
124
125
126
127
(posted
128
Tuesday, Nov. 18)
129
130
131
A story
132
follows the gruesome trail of Michael Swango, a doctor suspected of poisoning
133
colleagues, patients, and friends. In the mid-'80s, surgical resident Swango
134
was investigated after patients died suspiciously. Later, he was convicted of
135
poisoning five paramedic colleagues with arsenic. Even so, he landed subsequent
136
jobs as a paramedic and a medical resident (hospitals didn't thoroughly
137
investigate his background). In every case, colleagues and patients
138
mysteriously fell ill or died. He's currently in jail for a minor fraud charge.
139
An essay examines Napoleon's mixed legacy: Alone of history's great leaders,
140
Napoleon inspires ambivalence (French adoration, British loathing). Conclusion:
141
He deserves credit for inventing the merit-based army and restoring glamour to
142
military service; criticism for destroying Europe with his self-aggrandizing,
143
idiotic wars.
144
145
146
147
148
Weekly Standard , Nov. 24
149
150
151
152
(posted
153
Tuesday, Nov. 18)
154
155
156
The cover
157
story blasts Secretary of Defense William Cohen for blocking the promotion of
158
Air Force General Terry Schwalier. Schwalier was in command of the Saudi
159
Arabian barracks where a terrorist bombing killed 19 U.S. airmen last June. The
160
article claims Schwalier did everything right, and that Cohen simply sought a
161
scapegoat. A story gushes over Oklahoma Rep. Steve Largent, a former NFL star.
162
Largent is devoutly religious, looks like a male model, and stood firm as a
163
supporter of the attempted Gingrich coup (even after it failed). An essay by
164
William J. Bennett condemns President Clinton's recent comparison of gay rights
165
to civil rights: "Homosexuality should not be socially validated, for reasons
166
rooted in custom and tradition, natural law and teleology, morality and
167
faith."
168
169
170
171
The
172
Nation , Dec. 1
173
174
175
176
(posted
177
Tuesday, Nov. 18)
178
179
180
The
181
cover story rails against the growing commercialization of public
182
television. PBS now licenses tie-in products to the "Learningsmith" retail
183
chain; signs pre-production deals with huge companies like AT&T, US West,
184
and Disney; and lets underwriters announce their sponsorship with
185
commercial-like spots. An editorial points out that Saddam Hussein's current
186
naughty actions (lying, subjugating his citizens, developing weapons of mass
187
destruction) earned him U.S. support in the '80s. Also, an editorial chides the
188
Smithsonian for running a rosy exhibit on the Alaskan pipeline--sponsored by,
189
among others, British Petroleum and Exxon. The pipeline's negative
190
environmental impact and the ravages of the Valdez spill are downplayed.
191
192
193
194
195
Vanity Fair , December 1997
196
197
198
199
(posted
200
Tuesday, Nov. 18)
201
202
203
A
204
posthumous profile of Dodi Fayed says he was childish, profligate, unreliable,
205
paranoid, and drug-using. His father totally controlled him, his much-touted
206
involvement in film production has been wildly exaggerated, and his affair with
207
Diana would have fallen apart, as his many other glam romances did. A story
208
marvels at New Yorkers' conspicuous consumption, which far outdoes the '80s.
209
Grotesque examples: $20,000 watches, $14,000 bags, $5,800 bottles of wine, and
210
$3,000 sweaters are popular items, and some thirtysomethings are purchasing
211
$10-million apartments-- with cash . Vanity Fair exhaustively
212
chronicles the events at Brooklyn's 70 th precinct, where the
213
"Plunger Cops" assaulted Abner Louima. Thomas Bruder, one of the four officers
214
accused, tells his story, blaming the others. Louima's lawyers are depicted as
215
shameless money- and publicity-seekers. A piece about Internet gossip Matt
216
Drudge depicts him as a charming, naive young man who made a terrible mistake
217
in reporting that White House aide Sidney Blumenthal beat his wife.
218
Blumenthal's lawsuit may well ruin Drudge and threaten Internet free
219
speech.
220
221
222
--Seth
223
Stevenson
224
225
226
227
228
229
230