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The Full Vermonty
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Both USA
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Today and the Los Angeles Times lead with the mounting death toll--up to
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20,000, both papers declare--in the Venezuela mudslides, now recognized to be
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that nation's worst natural disaster ever. The New York Times puts Venezuela inside
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(although it fronts a picture of troops maintaining order there in the
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aftermath) and goes instead with the New York state court ruling that the
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Giuliani administration's aggressive strategy for restricting the number of
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X-rated bookstores and movie theaters in the Big Apple was based on an overly
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broad definition of an adult-oriented business. The Washington Post leads with the likely unveiling today by
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President Clinton of tough new environmental rules (to take effect in 2004)
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requiring all oil companies to produce cleaner gasoline (via lowering sulfur
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content) while also requiring that SUVs meet the same pollution standards as
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cars (starting in 2009). The story, which nobody else fronts, quotes supporters
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of the new rules as saying their impact on air quality will be the same as
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taking 54 million cars off the road.
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The papers report that hardest hit in Venezuela is the coastal state of
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Vargas, which has been transformed, says the LAT , into "a landscape of
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destruction filled with the stench of death." One U.S. official working on the
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international aid response is quoted by the paper saying, "You have areas where
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the mud is more than one story deep and the bodies will never be recovered. The
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areas may just be declared cemeteries." USAT quotes Venezuela's
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President Hugo Chavez as saying, "There are bodies in the sea, there are bodies
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under mud, there are bodies everywhere," while the LAT attributes this
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same quote to the country's foreign minister.
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The NYT lead explains that at issue is not the strict
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zoning confinement of adult businesses championed by the Giuliani
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administration--that has been upheld in court--but rather its attempt to say
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that a business was adult-oriented if 40 percent or more of its floor space or
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stock was adults-only. This reg was a clever attempt to define a vague, moral
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concept--pornography--by a specific, non-moral one--square footage. But as the
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paper explains, the store owners were clever back, often lining their shelves
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with videos of cartoons, wrestling, and karate movies that were hardly ever
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sold. Although the city called such practices, "sham compliance," the court has
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ruled, says the Times , that they comply with the city's guidelines,
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which say nothing about the profitability or turnover of stock.
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The WP and LAT off-lead, and the NYT goes above the
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fold with yesterday's decision by the Vermont Supreme Court that gay and lesbian couples are entitled to
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the same legal benefits and protections enjoyed by heterosexual married
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couples. USAT stuffs the ruling. The WP calls this the first real
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breakthrough for advocates of gay marriage. The court left it up to the
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legislature to decide whether this equal entitlement can best be achieved via
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legalizing gay marriage or, alternatively, by codifying the rights and benefits
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of domestic partners. The papers rough out how this decision could be not the
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end but merely the beginning of a legal morass: If the legislature does proceed
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to recognize gay marriage, then couples might come to Vermont to get married
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and then return to their home states citing the privileges of marriage
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there.
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A front-page USAT story reports that for the first time in the past
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few years (it would have been nice if the story specified exactly how many),
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the average diversified mutual fund is beating the S&P 500 stock index. The
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edge isn't huge--only about 2.7 percent. But, the story explains, the margin
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would have been better still if it weren't for the average 1.4 percent of
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return the average mutual fund charges.
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The Wall Street Journal reports that George W. Bush is
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launching an advertising push on the Internet that could demonstrate the
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feasibility of the medium for political pitching. It goes like this: GWB banner
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ads pop up when a Web surfer arrives at one of a number of sites chosen for
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their likelihood to be visited by Republican or independent New Hampshire or
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Iowa voters. The banners ask, "How much will the BUSH TAX CUT save YOU?" and
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then provide an interactive tax calculator to let the surfer answer the
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question.
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All the papers check in with their assessment of yesterday's David Shaw
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assessment in the LAT of the LAT 's Staple Center mess. (Today's
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Papers can barely wait for the Brill's Content analysis of these
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analyses of that analysis.) Thanks to all these term papers, TP has finally
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found an instance of towering journalistic integrity in the whole episode: At
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one point an LAT ad exec objected to the magazine's special issue's use
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of the locution "the Staples Center," because the facility's owners do not use
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the definite article. But LAT editor Michael Parks refused to drop it.
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(To read Chatterbox's take on the Staples Center incident--with links to
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background articles--click here.)
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