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Economist , Dec. 6
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(posted
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Saturday, Dec. 6)
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The cover
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editorial argues that "road pricing" will solve the world's traffic problems by
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making drivers pay for their privilege. Charging varying amounts for driving at
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peak and off-peak times will cut down on congestion and pollution. Revenues
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could fund public transportation. A profile salutes pathological downsizer
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"Chainsaw" Al Dunlap for having the guts to fire workers in order to turn
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companies around. The profile also asserts that Dunlap's slash-and-burn
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technique would be ineffective for all but the sickest firms. (For
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Slate
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's take on Dunlap, see "The Chainsaw
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Capitalist.") A few weeks ago there was a media flurry about a computer
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that composed classical music. In this week's Economist , a computer that
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can improvise jazz. Its programmer enters parameters of style and tempo. The
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computer's getting better: Many experts can no longer distinguish it from a
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live musician.
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New
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Republic , Dec. 22
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(posted
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Friday, Dec. 5)
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Following
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Newsweek 's lead, TNR puts Amistad , Steven Spielberg's new
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film about a slave revolt, on the cover. Among four related stories: a rave
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review for the film and an appreciation of John Quincy Adams, a major
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Amistad character and "one of the only genuine intellectuals ever to
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occupy the White House." An article says the Russian military is too weak to
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invade other countries (good news), but also too weak to prevent its soldiers
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from selling arms to terrorists (bad news). Also, a report from the Rev. Moon's
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mass-marriage ceremony: Most of the newlyweds will go back to their own
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hometowns after the wedding. They may or may not see their spouses in the
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future.
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New
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York Times Magazine , Dec. 7
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(posted
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Thursday, Dec. 4)
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Yet
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another "special issue"--the fourth in three months. The subject of the 20-odd
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stories: American religion. A story follows a Muslim teen-ager living in
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suburban Virginia. Her classmates ridiculed her head scarf, so she took it off.
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Her mom doesn't like her punk nose ring, but she leaves it in. An article
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describes a new medical study about prayer: When devout "healers" prayed for
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the health of arthritic patients--without the patients' knowledge--the
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patients' health improved. Doctors are dubious. A Unitarian recounts her
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epiphany: A voice in the woods told her to become a minister. Also, kudos for
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the Alabama Freethought Association, a league of atheists in the heart of the
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Bible Belt. They meet on Sundays and lampoon Christians: "Right about now,"
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says one, "the folks in town are sitting in church, waving a book that makes no
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sense and that most of them haven't even read."
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Time and Newsweek , Dec. 8
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(posted
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Tuesday, Dec. 2)
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The mags discover the same
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trend: the exodus to exurbia. Time 's cover story on small towns follows several couples who
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gave up fast-track lives to settle down in villages. Why the migration?
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Telecommuting and the great job market make mobility easier than ever. A
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shorter Newsweek story labels these dropouts "Young Unhappy
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Professionals" (unhappy, that is, till they drop out).
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Newsweek 's cover
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package, pegged to the release of Steven Spielberg's film Amistad ,
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assesses the legacy of slavery. Among the conclusions: A national apology for
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slavery would be hollow and facile, but America should erect a slavery memorial
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on the Mall. Newsweek interviews John Hope Franklin, chairman of the
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presidential advisory board on race. (He's against an apology, and for
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affirmative action. See "The Sound of One Hand Talking" for
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Slate
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's take on
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Franklin and the panel.) An accompanying review raves about Amistad
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(though the magazine inexplicably calls it "controversial").
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Time breaks the news that Bill Ford Jr. will become chairman of
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Ford in 1999. Ford, who has been running the family-owned Detroit Lions for the
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past two years, will be the first Ford to head the automaker in a decade.
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Time also reports on the making of Titanic . The film cost
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$200 million, and its producers are terrified. Director James Cameron
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contributes a short defense of his movie, but an accompanying review pans it:
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great special effects, hackneyed story.
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U.S.
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News & World Report , Dec. 8
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(posted
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Tuesday, Dec. 2)
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U.S.
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News kicks off the Christmas shopping season with a cover
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story on junk mail. Lots of insider info about how junk mailers reel you
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in: real stamps, pseudo-official envelopes, and "P.S." messages. Some high-end
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retailers make more money by selling their mailing lists than by selling their
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products. (Requisite statistic: On average, each American receives 553 pieces
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of junk mail a year.) A story praises the Trinity Foundation, a Christian community in
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Texas that investigates fraud by televangelists and publishes a Christian
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satire magazine called the Door . The annual
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guide to personal finance advises investors to stop worrying about
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inflation: It's gone.
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The
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New Yorker , Dec. 8
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(posted
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Tuesday, Dec. 2)
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An
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article chronicles Rupert Murdoch's quest to buy the Los Angeles Dodgers.
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Murdoch, who has decided that sports will be his international TV anchor, is
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trying to monopolize broadcast rights for California sports teams. But Atlanta
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Braves owner and Murdoch rival Ted Turner may try to block approval of
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Murdoch's $311-million Dodgers bid. A profile of the vice president takes the
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usual Gore psychoanalysis a step further. It agrees that Gore's outer
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robotic-ness masks a warm jocularity, but argues that the warm jocularity
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itself masks Gore's fundamental emotional coolness. Gore admits that his "no
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controlling legal authority" press conference was a mistake. A "Comment" by
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Robert Reich argues that Republicans and Democrats have switched places.
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Republicans used to be the party of "noble aspirations" and Democrats used to
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be the party of "just causes." Now Democrats tout bland aspirations (like
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racial healing) while Republicans fervently champion causes like tax reform and
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school vouchers.
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Weekly Standard , Dec. 8
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(posted
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Tuesday, Dec. 2)
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A cover
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story makes the case for national education reform. Decentralization, the usual
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conservative solution, isn't helping schools. National policies could increase
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the number of charter schools, cripple local education bureaucracies, and limit
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the power of evil teachers unions. A piece calls Clinton's race commission the
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"Disgrace Commission." It's a group of affirmative-action supporters appointed
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to rubber-stamp Clinton policies, the article says. The most interesting
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section of the magazine is the letters page, where gay-rights advocates
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exchange fire with William Bennett over Bennett's recent piece attacking
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them.
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--Seth
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Stevenson
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