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Tough Sit
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The New York Times
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and Los Angeles
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Times lead with the agreement that New Jersey struck Wednesday with the
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Dept. of Justice that's designed to ensure that the state's highway police stop
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using race as a factor in making traffic stops. The Washington Post leads with testimony from last week's court
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hearing for Wen Ho Lee in which an FBI agent said that Lee went to unusual
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lengths to mislead his colleagues at Los Alamos about what he was doing when
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during nighttime and weekend sessions, he downloaded onto portable tapes the
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highly classified nuclear secrets to which he had access. USA Today
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leads with a new poll (undertaken with CNN and Gallup) indicating that, because
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of the latest terrorism concerns, 50 percent of respondents are less likely to
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attend public gatherings on New Year's Eve or New Year's Day. The poll also
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found that nearly two-thirds of those asked thought it was at least somewhat
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likely that an act of terrorism would occur somewhere in the U.S. on one of
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those two days. The story also reports that on Wednesday a federal grand jury
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indicted the Algerian arrested in Washington state for trying to smuggle
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bombmaking components into the country, a development that is fronted at the
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WP and reefered at the NYT . Neither the Post nor
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USAT front the racial profiling story.
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Both Times leads state that under the New Jersey profiling deal, the
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state police will report to a federal monitor who will have broad powers to
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investigate virtually any police function and who will track the cops' patterns
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of arrests and traffic stops to make sure that minorities are not being singled
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out. Neither story really gets at the nuances involved in really doing this.
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The NYT mentions for instance that under the agreement with Justice,
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troopers are still allowed to make a race-based stop when they are pursuing a
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specific criminal suspect, but neither story says whether an all points
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bulletin saying to be on the look out for say, a fleeing black or Latino is
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specific enough. And neither addresses whether or not race-driven stops that
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result in an arrest or conviction will/should be counted as racial
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profiling.
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The NYT 's story does not include any negative reactions from cops,
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but the LAT 's does, including a harsh one from L.A.'s black police
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chief: "It's not the fault of the police when they stop minority males or put
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them in jail. It's the fault of the minority males for committing the
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crime."
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The LAT front reports that the U.S. Army is on the verge of adopting
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its first new rifle in thirty years. The weapon would use the precision
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guidance technology already common in planes and tanks to deliver rounds that
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explode in the air above enemy soldiers, thereby lessening their ability to
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survive battlefield small arms fire by taking cover. There are question marks
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however: the weapon is more than twice as heavy as the M-16 it would replace,
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and it's not clear if its complex works are really combat-hardy. The LAT
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waits until pretty deep into the story to raise another very realistic worry:
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these weapons would wreak havoc in the hands of guerrillas. And hey, given the
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track record of the M-16 and its ilk--what about in the hands of street
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criminals?
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A NYT front-pager describes an Oregon experiment that intensifies the issues
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surrounding the possibility of adding genes to human embryos. And the headline
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makes the whole thing sound like science gone mad: "SCIENTISTS PLACE JELLYFISH
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GENES INTO MONKEYS."
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The WP reports that Louis Farrakhan, recovering from prostate cancer,
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yesterday made his first public appearance in nearly a year. Appearing
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alongside a Catholic priest and a rabbi, Farrakhan called on all peoples of the
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world to "end the cycle of violence and the cycle of hatred."
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The NYT front identifies at least one area of the economy that's
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booming as a result of Y2K: the babysitting sector. In big cities, New Year's
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Eve rates of upwards of $100 an hour are common. Also pulling down premium
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prices for the big night: pet sitters and security guards.
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The Wall Street Journal front returns to the arena of one of
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its more widely read pieces of 1999--an airline nightmare story--to tell the
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tale of U.S Airways' MetroJet Flight 2762, an evening flight from Atlanta to
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Dulles that has the distinction of being this year's most delayed flight. The
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scheduled 70-minute hop, says the Journal , averages an hour behind
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schedule. It is late 80 percent of the time. The piece quotes the pilot of one
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night's flight after an 80-minute runway stint followed by controller-ordered
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zigzag patterns over the ocean: "We hate it too."
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