Close
Close
  • SIGN IN to access the Harper’s archive
  • Need help?

SIGN IN to access the Harper’s archive

Close   X

ALERT: Usernames and passwords from the old Harpers.org will no longer work. To create a new password and add or verify your email address, please sign in to customer care and select Email/Password Information. (To learn about the change, please read our FAQ.)

Not a subscriber? Subscribe today!
Create a login here. Forgot password? Forgot email? More help here.

  • Subscribe
  • Current Issue
  • Blog
  • Archive
  • About
    • History
    • Contact
    • Masthead
    • Submissions
    • Internships
    • Advertising
    • Find a Newsstand
    • Media
    • FAQ
May 23, 2013: [Woolwich][Limiting drones][Syria embargo][Boy Scouts vote]
= Subscribers only. Sign in here. Subscribe here.

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

Pennsylvania

Advance Search

Photography — From the February 2012 issue

Ward 63, Precinct 16, Philadelphia, PA (2008)

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Michael Mergen (Photographer)

Photography — From the February 2012 issue

Ward 64, Precinct 11, Philadelphia, PA (2008)

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Michael Mergen (Photographer)

Weekly Review — January 31, 2012, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Genevieve Smith

A Christian martyr. Republican presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich released their most recent tax returns. Romney’s showed that he made $21.6 million in 2010, paid taxes at a rate of 14 percent, and gave $4 million to the Mormon church over two years. Gingrich’s return showed that he earned $3.1 million last year and may have cheated on his taxes. Washington PostChristian Science MonitorForbesLos Angeles TimesPresident Barack Obama made increasing the tax rate on the super-rich a theme of his State of the Union address, saying, “Right now, Warren Buffett pays a lower tax rate than his secretary,” …

Weekly Review — January 24, 2012, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Sara Breselor

An American cattleman. Francesco Schettino, captain of the Costa Concordia cruise liner whose capsizing off the Italian island of Giglio killed at least 15 people, was revealed to have deviated from the shipâ??s authorized route in order to salute a former captain who lived on the island. The Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera released an audio recording in which Schettino, speaking to the Coast Guard from a lifeboat, defied commands to return to the ship and direct the evacuation of passengers. “Listen Schettino, you saved yourself from the sea,” says the Coast Guard captain, “but I am going to… I …

Weekly Review — January 3, 2012, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By J Gabriel Boylan

People around the world celebrated the passing of another year as 2012 began. The first to ring in the new year were the South Pacific nations of Samoa and Tokelau, which officially switched to the Western side of the international date line by jumping ahead to Saturday on Thursday at midnight. New York City celebrated by dropping the Times Square Ball; objects dropped in other American cities included a giant peach, in Atlanta, a giant sardine, in Eastport, Maine, and a giant conch, a pirate wench, and a giant glittering red high-heeled shoe bearing a drag queen named Sushi, in …

Weekly Review — September 20, 2011, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Justin Stone

A kinkajou, 1886. A Second World Warâ??era military plane crashed into a group of spectators at the Reno National Championship Air Races in Nevada, killing 10 people, including Jimmy Leeward, 74, who became the twentieth pilot to die at the event since it began 47 years ago. “It looked like just someone sprinkled Legos in every direction,” said one witness. National Transportation Safety Board investigators refused to speculate on what brought down the plane, which was built in 1944 and had previously crashed in 1970. “Our job is to identify what caused this accident,” said NTSB member Mark Rosekind, “so …

Weekly Review — September 13, 2011, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By J Gabriel Boylan

The United States observed the tenth anniversary of the terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people on September 11, 2001. Thousands of mourners gathered at the World Trade Center site in Lower Manhattan, at the Pentagon, and in a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Relatives and loved ones read out the names of the victims, bagpipers played, and six moments of silence were observed, one for each airliner and one for each of the twin towers. President Barack Obama visited all three sites in the course of the day. In New York City, he read from Psalm 46, and former president …

Weekly Review — June 21, 2011, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Anthony Lydgate

Workers at Japanâ??s crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, where 110,000 tons of radioactive water have collected since an earthquake and tsunami in March, were forced to suspend a new filtration scheme after a cesium absorber that was expected to last a month wore out in five hours. Addressing fears that Japanâ??s seasonal rains could cause some of the contaminated water to spill into the Pacific, a spokesman for Tokyo Electric Power Company said the utility would “probably be able to solve the problem” before the holding facility was overwhelmed. Kyodo via Japan TimesBBCIn China, where the worst floods in half a …

Weekly Review — June 7, 2011, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Christopher R. Beha

Former senator John Edwards was indicted for soliciting contributions to his 2008 presidential campaign that were intended for covering up his affair with Rielle Hunter and Hunter’s subsequent pregnancy. Edwards reportedly turned down a plea bargain that included up to six months of prison time. “We will not permit candidates for high office … to circumvent our election laws,” said Lanny A. Breuer, assistant attorney general for the Justice Departmentâ??s Criminal Division. “Itâ??s not illegal to be a pig,” said campaign-finance expert Brett Kappel. Washington PostAn Australian politician apologized for “meowing” at a female cabinet member during a senate debate; …

Weekly Review — May 23, 2011, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By J Gabriel Boylan

Talks with Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, grew tense after Barack Obama called for the country’s pre-1967 borders to be the starting point for peace negotiations with Palestinians. Netanyahu rejected the proposal, saying, “Remember that before 1967, Israel was all of nine miles wide; it’s half the width of the Washington Beltway. These were not the boundaries of peace. They were the boundaries of repeated wars.” President Obama resolved to continue pressuring the Israelis, but stated, “Obviously there are some differences between us in the precise formulations and language, and that’s going to happen between friends.”CNNThe world failed to end, …

Readings — From the May 2011 issue

Hard time

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Alexander Berkman

Weekly Review — January 4, 2011, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Rafe Bartholomew

Rival Afghan and Pakistani militant groups stopped fighting each other to unite against U.S.-led NATO forces in the region. “They have been forced to cooperate due to the effect our collective efforts have had on them,” explained coalition spokesman Lt. Col. Patrick Seiber. U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan killed 21 suspected insurgents, and the Air Force announced plans to deploy a new model of surveillance drone in Afghanistan called the Gorgon Stare. Developed using methods borrowed from ESPN and reality-television shows, the aircraft uses multiple cameras to produce live video of entire towns and cities. “There will be no way …

Readings — From the December 2010 issue

Furry logic

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Ronald Folino

Weekly Review — August 10, 2010, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Genevieve Smith

A Christian martyr. Federal judge Vaughn Walker ruled that California’s Proposition 8, which sought to ban gay marriage, violates the equal protection clause of the Constitution. “Moral disapproval alone is an improper basis on which to deny rights to gay men and lesbians,” the judge said in his opinion. “The evidence shows that, by every available metric, opposite-sex couples are not better than their same-sex counterparts.” Conservative groups opposed to the ruling claimed Walkerâ??s own sexual orientation influenced his decision. “Here we have an openly gay federal judge,” explained chairwoman of The National Organization for Marriage, Maggie Gallagher, “substituting his …

Weekly Review — June 1, 2010, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Margaret Cordi

The wire master and his puppets, 1875. Forty days after its rig started gushing oil into the Gulf of Mexico, BP announced that the “top kill” effort, in which mud was used to try to plug the leak, had failed. CEO Tony Hayward said, “I’m sorry,” and, “There aren’t any plumes,” insisting that the leaked oil is all on the water’s surface despite scientists’ sightings of several underwater plumes, including one 22 miles long, six miles wide and more than a thousand feet deep. BP planned to contain the leak by placing a cap over the well, but expected that …

Weekly Review — May 25, 2010, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Claire Gutierrez

An American cattleman. A van filled with 1,650 pounds of explosives rammed into a NATO convoy in Kabul, killing 18 people, including five Americans, and bringing the total number of American dead in Afghanistan to more than 1,000. “What do you want me to do with this?” an Afghan soldier carrying a bloody bag of brains asked an ambulance driver who had already carried off six bodies. “Do you want me to bury it, or do you want to take it?”New York TimesNew York Daily NewsCommentators declared that a wave of “outsiders” was toppling incumbents in the Senate, as Democratic …

Weekly Review — February 23, 2010, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Margaret Cordi

The wire master and his puppets, 1875. The top military commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, apologized for a NATO airstrike that killed 27 civilians and wounded 14 near Kandahar; the victims’ convoy was mistaken for Taliban vehicles. “I have made it clear to our forces,” said McChrystal, “that… inadvertently killing or injuring civilians undermines their trust and confidence in our mission.”CNNMullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, who was second in command to the Taliban’s spiritual leader, Mullar Muhammad Omar, was captured in a joint U.S.-Pakistani raid in Karachi.BBCAfter posting to the web a 3,000-word manifesto about the federal tax code, Catholicism, …

Weekly Review — November 24, 2009, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

A kinkajou, 1886. The U.S. Senate voted 60?39 to bring the $848 billion health-care plan, with a diminished public option, to the floor for debate, but only after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid agreed to concessions for centrist Democrats, such as providing as much as $300 million in extra Medicare funding to Senator Mary Landrieu’s state of Louisiana. No Republicans voted for the measure. A poll found that only 38 percent of Americans support the plan, an all-time low; another poll found that 52 percent of Republicans believe community organization umbrella group ACORN stole the 2008 election for President Barack …

Weekly Review — October 27, 2009, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

A kinkajou, 1886. Twin car bomb attacks just outside the Green Zone in Baghdad destroyed three government buildings, killed 155 people, and injured 520. The attack was the country’s worst since 2007 and killed an unspecified number of children at the Justice Ministry day-care center. “There were children killed in the swings,” said a rescuer, “others who died right where they sat on the see-saws.” More violence is expected as elections near; three beheaded bodies were found in the province of Babel.BBCThe New York TimesFourteen Americans were killed in two helicopter crashes in Afghanistan, and the Department of Defense announced …

Readings — From the October 2009 issue

Let’s get physical

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By George Sodini

Ajax Loader
More results

Get access to 163 years of
Harper’s for only $19.97

United States Canada

THE CURRENT ISSUE

Harper’s Magazine (June 2013)

June 2013

Long Division

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Vanessa Gregory

The Separating Sickness

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Rebecca Solnit

How to Make Your Own AR-15

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Dan Baum

view Table Content

Subscribe and get access to 163 years of Harper’s for $19.97

Subscribe Todays

12 issues delivered to your iPad, Kindle Fire, or Android tablet

Digital Subscription

FEATURED ON HARPERS.ORG

[Editor's Note]
Introducing the June Issue of Harper’s Magazine
Why the AR-15 rifle is here to stay,
the conspiracy theories of Room 237,
and more
By Ellen Rosenbush
[Perspective]
On Gun Control and Collective Rights
The firearm as emblem of personal sovereignty
By Dan Baum
“Let’s review our recent national paroxysm about guns, shall we?”
Illustration by Jeremy Traum
[Report]
How to Make Your Own AR-15

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Dan Baum
“Even if federal gun-control advocates got everything they wanted, they couldn’t prevent America’s most popular rifle from being made, sold, and used. Understanding why this is true requires an examination of how the firearm is made.”
Illustration by Jeremy Traum
[Harper's Finest]
Gary Greenberg’s “Manufacturing Depression” (2007)

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

Wherein the author enrolls in a clinical drug trial
By Harper’s Magazine
“This is the heart of the magic factory, the place where medicine is infused with the miracles of science.”
Illustration by Ernst Kreidolf
[Report]
Broken Heartland

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Wil S. Hylton
“During the early 1990s, farmers throughout the Great Plains began to notice a decline in their wells. Irrigation systems from the Dakotas to Texas dipped, and, in some places, have been abandoned entirely.”
Illustration (detail) by Jeffery Smith

Amount British Nuclear Fuels paid the British Scouts last year to add its logo to their scientist badge:

$49,776

AUGUST 1998 > SEARCH >

British Nuclear Fuels (Warrington, U.K.)

Roughly 80 percent of U.S. cocaine was thought to be contaminated with a drug that causes skin tissues to rot.

AUGUST 2010 > SEARCH >

Ohio was judged to be the most profane state.

SIGN UP > SOURCE > MORE >

Close  X

Subscribe to the Weekly Review newsletter. Don’t worry, we won’t sell your email address!

HARPER’S FINEST

Article — From the May 2007 issue

Manufacturing Depression

By Gary Greenberg

“This is the heart of the magic factory, the place where medicine is infused with the miracles of science, and I’ve come to see how it’s done.”

Subscribe Today
  • Subscribe
  • Current Issue
  • Blog
  • Archive
  • About
  • History,  Contact,   Masthead,   Submissions,   Internships
  • |
  • Advertising,  Classifieds,  Where to Buy,  Media,  FAQ
  • |
  • Customer Care
  • |
  • Store

© 2012 Harper’s Magazine. Logo photograph (detail) by Nadia Shira Cohen.