Five female soldiers say Army investigators pressured them into falsely accusing their superiors of rape. Four of the five say they had sex with their instructors, but that it was consensual. The women claim they were promised helpful transfers if they told investigators what they wanted to hear and threatened with retaliation if they didn't. The announcement was organized by the NAACP, which suspects racism in the investigation because all the accused officers are black, and most of the accusers, white. (3/12) Update on the Democratic fund-raising scandal : 1) President Clinton said FBI agents denied him advance warning about Chinese influence-buying efforts (through political contributions) by telling his aides to keep the information secret. The FBI then issued a statement contradicting Clinton. Pundits oohed and aahed over the quarrel. The next day everyone insisted it was just a misunderstanding. 2) The FBI warned six members of Congress last year that China had targeted them for illegal campaign donations through foreign companies. 3) The New York Times reported that the administration endorsed a project in China that was financially important to the Riady family just after a Riady-controlled company put Webster Hubbell on its payroll. White House special counsel Lanny Davis said Clinton may have known three years ago that his friends were subsidizing Hubbell. (3/12) Political fallout from the scandal: 1) The Senate expanded its investigation to include "improper" as well as illegal conduct in the 1996 elections. This brings soft money and other much-criticized practices under scrutiny. It is seen as a rebuke to Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott and a victory for Democrats, Sen. Fred Thompson (who will chair the investigation), and campaign reform. 2) Clinton's job rating fell from 60 to 55 points in a Washington Post poll, apparently because pollees disapproved of his use of the White House for fund raising. (3/12) Republican fund-raising hypocrisy watch: 1) The Washington Post reported that a Republican House committee counsel hit up investment firms for $100,000 contributions to the GOP shortly after working on financial-deregulation legislation. 2) Democrats released documents indicating that Republicans sold big political donors meals with the party's leaders in federal buildings in 1995. 3) The Washington Post reported that for $5,000, the National Republican Senatorial Committee is offering donors a chance to give Trent Lott and other senators "advice" at a forum next month. (3/12) Jordan's King Hussein accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of trying to destroy the Middle East peace process. In a letter released to the press, Hussein warned Netanyahu that he was provoking the Palestinians to violence and had exhausted Hussein's good will. Since Hussein is regarded as Israel's best Arab friend, analysts consider the letter an important alarm and a major addition to Netanyahu's domestic political crisis. (3/12) The TWA Flight 800 missile theory is back. A group headed by former ABC newsman Pierre Salinger is about to publish a massive report in Paris Match claiming that a U.S. Navy missile blew up the plane. The key evidence, according to a co-author of the report: 1) A red residue on the plane's seats has "chemical elements consistent with solid missile fuel" and 2) a government radar tape supposedly shows a fast projectile on a collision course with the plane. Federal investigators 1) dismissed the report as "rumors and innuendo"; 2) said lab tests indicate the residue is from standard glue used in plane seats; and 3) seized the radar tape, ostensibly to check it out. Salinger said the seizure of the tape shows the government is covering up its crime. (3/12) Russian President Boris Yeltsin ordered a shake-up of his Cabinet. Yeltsin pledged to keep only two aides: Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin and Deputy Prime Minister Anatoly Chubais. The betting is that Chubais, a free-market advocate whom Yeltsin promoted just last week, can now put allies in key jobs and restart economic reforms. The Washington Post declared that Yeltsin is back in the saddle and is launching a much-needed second wave of economic reform. But the Chicago Tribune warned that Chubais will fail, because he is a lousy manager and everyone in Russia hates him. (3/12) Germany told the United States it would expel an American spy . Initial reports indicated the Germans were angry because the agent was conducting economic espionage against Germany. But U.S. officials now say that the agent was gathering intelligence on another country--most likely Iran--and that the Germans ordered the diplomat out because they're tired of the United States using their country as a spy nest and keeping them in the dark about it. American officials are asking Germany to let the agent stay. (3/12) Playboy says it has corroborated a report that Timothy McVeigh confessed to the Oklahoma City bombing. The magazine claims its article is based on documents "prepared under the direction" of McVeigh's lawyer but that these documents are different from those previously cited by the Dallas Morning News . According to the article, McVeigh said he alone drove the truck bomb to the site--but he flunked polygraph tests, and his lawyers were skeptical. (3/12) Gangsta rap artist Christopher Wallace, a k a Notorious B.I.G. , was assassinated in an apparent drive-by shooting. Police have no leads, but everyone suspects the shooting is a payback for last year's drive-by assassination of rival rapper Tupac Shakur. Wallace, who represented the East Coast rap community, had a long-running feud with Shakur, who represented the West Coast rap community. Police fear an escalating war between the two sides. (3/10) Fertility frontiers : 1) The Sunday Times of London reported that a Belgian scientist had cloned a human. The report created a stir but was soon debunked when the scientist explained that he had merely fertilized an egg in vitro and then caused it to split, producing twins. 2) An elderly Milwaukee couple are soliciting women to conceive and bear their grandchild, using frozen sperm from their dead son. 3) President Clinton banned federal funding of research on human cloning. 4) A bill was filed in the House to ban human cloning outright. (3/10) Underplayed : A California scientist announced that he has made chickens behave like quails by replacing their embryonic brain cells with quail brain cells. The media, consumed by the frenzy over cloning, have largely ignored the brain-transplant story. Scientists point out that transplanting animal tissue into human embryos is far more imminent than human cloning. Researchers in Boston are already implanting fetal pig cells in the brains of Parkinson's disease patients. The Associated Press raised the specter of "people with socially unacceptable behavior being forced to undergo brain surgery." (3/7) President Clinton ordered federal agencies to hire welfare recipients . The idea is to set an example for business leaders. The announcement appeased some critics who have accused Clinton of hypocrisy for failing (until now) to take this step. But skeptics pointed out that there are few openings for low-skilled workers (since the government is shrinking), and unions objected to giving welfare recipients preference in the competition for those openings. (3/10) Police announced that they have ruled out JonBenet Ramsey's half-brother and half-sister as suspects in her murder, evidently because both were out of town when the crime was committed. Locals are said to be increasingly suspicious of the refusal of the girl's parents to be interviewed separately by police. Material collected from under JonBenet's fingernails--possibly tissue scraped from the killer--is reportedly being examined by a lab. (3/7)