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Bombing the Ban
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Everybody leads with the Senate's rejection yesterday of the comprehensive
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nuclear test ban treaty, which needed 67 votes but only got 48--a nearly
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straight Democrats-for/Republicans-against party vote. All the papers view the
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vote as more about partisanship than nuclear policy, and all see it as
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politically devastating for President Clinton.
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The papers also see the vote as quite historical. The New York Times
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headline says it evokes the Senate's rejection of the Versailles Treaty, which
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meant that the League of Nations went forward without U.S. participation.
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USA
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Today says the vote was the first time in history that the Senate has
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voted down an arms control treaty. But USAT is wrong about this, because
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as the Washington Post points out, the Versailles pact was an arms
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control accord. The Los Angeles Times and Wall Street Journal also make the Versailles reference. But
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nobody quite connects the dots on what the comparison could mean for the
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planet: The Versailles vote is now considered to be one of the principal causes
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of World War II. But this general level of gravity is apparent in the
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WSJ 's quote from an arms control advocate describing the "nuclear domino effect" that could have just been unleashed: "If
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we don't ratify, Pakistan and India won't either. And if they begin a
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substantial testing program, that would push China to do the same. ... From
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there, it is easy to foresee Russia following suit. Even Japan might think it
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necessary to jump into the nuclear arena." The lead editorials at the
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WP , NYT , and LAT deplore the vote-down.
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The LAT has the toughest reaction quote from President Clinton:
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"Never before has a serious treaty involving nuclear weapons been handled in
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such a reckless and ultimately partisan way." And both the NYT and
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USAT go high up with his determination: "I assure you the fight is far
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from over." But the WP points out that the treaty can only be brought up
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again during this Congress if Trent Lott decides to do so.
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The NYT says, "The failure of the treaty to clear Washington raised
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serious questions about its survival." But the WP and LAT say
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that to be implemented, the treaty must be ratified by all 44 nuke-capable
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countries, which implies that it is as of right now completely dead
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internationally.
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The LAT says that Republicans wanted in return for deferring a treaty
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vote an ironclad promise from the Democrats not to bring the treaty up during
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the election, but "Clinton feared making such a pledge would tie his hands in
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the event of a diplomatic emergency." Without further explanation, this leans a
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bit too pro-Democratic for a news story--after all, although Clinton might well
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have that fear, he also surely wanted to have the treaty as an election
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issue.
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In the JonBenet Ramsey case, no news is news. USAT , the WP ,
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and the LAT front the announcement that the Boulder County grand jury
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that has been examining the case for 13 months has been dismissed without
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handing down any indictments in the case. The NYT runs the story
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inside.
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The LAT fronts the Associated Press' follow-up to the story it broke
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two weeks ago about possible U.S. atrocities against civilians during the
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Korean War. The new news: There were at least two bridges ordered blown up by
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U.S. officers including an Army general even though Korean refugees were
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streaming across them at the time. USAT runs the AP's story inside.
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The WP and WSJ report that today's New England Journal of
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Medicine features a study revealing that a big reason lung cancer is
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deadlier for blacks than for whites is that the former are less
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likely to have the cancer surgically removed while doing so would do them any
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good. The usual socio-economic disparities between blacks and whites don't seem
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to explain this difference, because in the study racial comparisons were made
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between patients with similar access to health care.
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The NYT has an inspiring obituary: that of the 86-year-old number one
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lox slicer at Zabar's, the Manhattan deli. The man, Sam Cohen, worked at the
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store for 46 years, after barely escaping the Holocaust, which claimed most of
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his family. Despite arriving in the U.S. in 1952 with $3 in his pocket, he
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eventually, reports the Times , put his daughter through dental school
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and his son through medical school.
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A letter to the NYT from a woman reader rejects the use of the term
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"chairman" by women as part of their job titles, advocating instead
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"chairperson." Today's Papers says go all the way: "furnitureperson."
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Both the NYT and WP report a major social change in France.
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Reporters, just getting back to work after recovering from the grueling chef
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riots there, today inform that France has given legal status to unmarried
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couples, including homosexual couples, making it, says the Post the
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largest country in Europe and the first Roman Catholic country to do so. The
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headline over the NYT 's online version doesn't mention the homosexual
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angle, while the WP 's headline--"FRANCE LEGALIZES GAY UNIONS"--doesn't
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mention the heterosexual angle. What's more, the latter reads more like it
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slugs a story about the Amalgamated Interior Decorators and Salon Stylists.
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