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Canister of Worms
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The top non-local story at the Los Angeles
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Times is a major development in the Waco controversy: the discovery by
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the DOJ that all this time, the FBI has harbored audiotapes suggesting that
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pyrotechnic gas grenades were indeed fired at a bunker within the Branch
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Davidian compound. This is also the top non-local story at the New York Times . The Washington Post doesn't have this--its front Waco effort is
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Janet Reno's decision to have somebody from outside the FBI and the DOJ head up
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a Waco investigation (the NYT folds this into its Waco piece), and the
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Post's top non-local story, which makes everybody's front, is the
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creation of significantly smarter mice through a minor genetic alteration.
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USA
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Today's front is mum on Waco and its lead is an EPA audit revealing
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that the nation's public water systems are stricken by tens of thousands of
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cases of previously undocumented unsafe drinking water. The story refers to an
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EPA Web site that lets consumers check up on their local water systems, but
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there's a slip between cup and lip--the paper doesn't tell the reader the
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URL.
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According to the LAT , the FBI says it came across the audiotapes "in
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recent days." The NYT and Wall Street Journal say they were discovered last Saturday
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at the Quantico, Va., offices of the Bureau's Hostage Rescue Team, the unit
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that spearheaded the Waco assault. All the stories say the FBI then brought the
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tapes back to its Washington, D.C., headquarters. Then comes the most
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surprising step: Yesterday, Janet Reno sent U.S. marshals over to seize the
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tape. The NYT says she intended the move as a harsh rebuke of the
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FBI.
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The NYT has the most on the tape's contents, said by the paper to be a soundtrack of an
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infrared video made from an aircraft when the tear gas canisters were launched
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at the bunker. This suggests an orchestrated use of the gas, although the
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LAT quotes a law enforcement source saying that its deployment was "spur
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of the moment." One issue relevant here, which the press hasn't gotten to yet:
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Does the FBI/DOJ have written-down rules of engagement governing the use of
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incendiary devices? The NYT cites law enforcement officials saying that
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the tape supports their account that the canisters bounced harmlessly off the
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bunker's roof and hence could not have started the subsequent lethal fire, and
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also points out that nobody in law enforcement, including Reno, has suggested
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that the tear-gas devices contributed to the fire. But the papers lay out the
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meta-issues now put in play by the tape: Did the FBI contravene a Reno ban on
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pyrotechnics? And did it wage a six-year coverup against her and Congress?
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The smarter mouse stories are occasioned by a write-up of the
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research coming out in Nature today. In the experiment, extra copies of
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a gene associated with recognizing something or remembering where something is
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were inserted into mouse embryos. The result: The enhanced mice grew up better
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than control mice at remembering say, that a tone was associated with a shock
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or where a resting platform was in a tank of opaque water. The Post
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quotes the research's lead scientist as saying that the experiment raises
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issues of equal access to perfecting technology and that it's an example of
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biology outpacing the culture's capacity to deal with ethics.
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A story running inside the WP reports on a study of 15,000 civil
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cases that went to trial in the country's 75 largest counties. The chief
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conclusions: Judges are more likely than juries to rule for the plaintiff, but
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juries generally award larger damage amounts.
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Today's Papers urges readers to always note the credit line accompanying an
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Op-Ed. Today's NYT effort titled "China's Subtle Spying" is a case in
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point. The piece claims that China has successfully devised a new espionage
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strategy that can "consistently defeat our ability to investigate or prosecute
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spying offenses." The key elements are, says the author, that China doesn't
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normally pay an agent for information, request the provision of classified
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documents, use intelligence officers to elicit information, or engage in
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clandestine activity in the United States. All this, he says, usually means no
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smoking guns of the sorts found in other espionage cases. Interesting, but the
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snap bio tells us that the author, Paul D. Moore, was, during the whole time of
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the Los Alamos troubles, the FBI's man in charge of defeating Chinese spying.
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In other words, the reader needs to wonder, would Moore be making these
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arguments if he didn't desperately need them to try to save face?
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The NYT and WP , following up on a brief item in yesterday's
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LAT , report that Monica Lewinsky's father recently received a form
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letter from President Clinton's legal defense fund asking for a contribution.
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Lewinsky wrote "Return to Sender" on the envelope, adding, "You must be morons
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to send me this letter!"
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The WSJ reports that Cliffs Notes will soon come out with shorter
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versions of the guidebooks in the "...For Dummies" series. Today's Papers
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deplores society's vapid need for ever-briefer substitutes for actually reading
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something.
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