The New Republic

Search and Destroy

In 1986 the Japanese health department launched a campaign to screen infants for neuroblastoma, the second most common form of early-childhood cancer, after leukemia. The test was easy to administer: Parents simply pressed a piece of filter paper to their baby's wet diaper, allowed the paper to dry, and then mailed it to a laboratory. Doctors had known since the 1950s that neuroblastoma tumors cause the body to excrete an unmistakable chemical signature in the urine; in the 1980s analyzing… more

Under Control

Sometime during the summer of 1918, an influenza virus that had recently swept through the United States and Europe evolved into a far more virulent organism. World War I was still underway when the first case of the new flu was reported in America, at Camp Devens near Boston. Within days new victims had appeared in military bases up and down the Eastern seaboard. By the time the virus hit America's cities, public health officials knew they were dealing with… more

Shannon Brownlee | The New Republic | October 29, 2001

Arrested Development

The Maya Angelou Public Charter School in Washington, D.C., is the kind of institution conservatives love -- a place that offers opportunity but demands responsibility. Students are in school ten and a half hours per day, all year long, mostly studying core subjects like reading, writing, math, and history. When not in class, they work in student-run businesses, where they earn money and learn job skills. Those who achieve academically are held in high esteem not only by their teachers… more

James Forman Jr. | The New Republic | September 10, 2001

AT&T's First Amendment Problem, and Ours

When you think "First Amendment martyr," you don't exactly think AT&T. It's a safe bet that few executives at the telecom giant … more

Bugging Out

Every PC user is familiar with the notorious "blue screen of death," the azure void that appears when Windows crashes. And even amateur geeks recognize the ubiquitous "Fatal Error!" … more

Brendan I. Koerner | The New Republic | November 27, 2000

Poor Black Folks Need God

"I only left prison in January and look where I am now. God meant for me to be here. He expects results. I expect results."

Ricky, a formerly drug-addicted ex-con, was describing his participation in the Anacostia Men's Employment Network (AMEN), a Lutheran outreach for unemployed and underemployed men. He had earned an AMEN diploma, signifying his participation in a three-week course on how… more

Eleanor Brown | The New Republic | October 10, 2000

Black vs. Black

Brooklyn representative Major Owens hasn't just fought the good fight; he's rapped it. Known as "the rapping congressman," Owens has broken into spontaneous verse on the House floor to … more

Eleanor Brown | The New Republic | September 24, 2000

Federal Reserve

Stock traders selling short. Bored kids. Anti-capitalist terrorists. Any of these could be responsible for the recent hack attacks that hobbled Yahoo!, Buy.com, E*Trade, and other… more

John Simons | The New Republic | February 28, 2000

Homesick

Imagine for a minute that the anti-Castro militants in Miami get their way and, 40 years from now, Elian Gonzalez is still on our side of the Strait of Florida. Imagine … more

Margaret Talbot | The New Republic | January 31, 2000

Don't Worry, Cut Taxes

When George W. Bush's campaign leaked his economic plan to the press last week, the lucky recipients were forced to accept a special condition: any reporter who wanted to see it had to agree not to share the details with other campaigns or, more importantly, outside analysts. "This is between you, me, and your typewriter," a … more

Jonathan Chait | The New Republic | December 27, 1999