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1949 / April | View All Issues |

April 1949

[Coming in Harper's]

4 PDF

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Personal and otherwise

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[various]

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Letters

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Article

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The cold peace

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Outline for an unwritten book

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How to read the Chicago Tribune

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Poetry

35 PDF

The seal

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Article

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Why medicine is not a science

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Fiction

40-51 PDF

The kiss, the tree, and the bullet

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The easy chair

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The easy chair

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Article

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Selling out

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Article

65-75 PDF

The Durban deep

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Poetry

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Still-life

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Article

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What the war cost

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Poetry

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The weeds

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Article

80-86 PDF

Death and the baroque

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Fiction

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Down at the dinghy

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Article

92-98 PDF

What’s good about the UN

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Fiction

99-102 PDF

We don’t know

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Article

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Don’t lock the laboratory door

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After hours

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After hours

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Stinkers

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New books

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Past masters and new blood

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Elizabeth Bowen, Arthur Bryant

Books in brief

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[Editor's Note]
A global-warming get-rich-quick scheme, a magic-mushroom murder,
and more
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Glaciers for Sale

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“Water is the medium of climate change — the ice that melts, the seas that rise. It is also an early indicator of how humanity may respond to climate change: by financializing it.”
Photograph (detail) by Aaron Huey
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“How a rising of the ocean waters may flood most of our port cities within the foreseeable future . . .”
“The Glacier of Sermitsialik” (1872)
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From the March 1933 issue
“I submit that he who cannot do these things is not completely educated.”
Illustration by Elizabeth Shippen Green (1902)
[Folio]
Blood Spore

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“The strange timing of Pollock’s murder begot paranoia of all shades and textures . . .”
Photograph by Paul Stamets

Ratio of the number of cicada eggs per square mile of southern New Jersey to the number of stars in the Milky Way:

4:5

A Singaporean company unveiled Kissenger, a pair of plastic lips mounted on a large plastic egg, which transmits real-time interactive kisses to a distant lover. “I am not interested in the sexual uses for it,” said the device’s inventor. “We’ve taken several steps to minimize the creepiness.”

The practice of sexualized eyeball licking was causing conjunctivitis in Japanese sixth graders.

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