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Supreme Court Gridlock
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Three big Supreme Court decisions yesterday. Which to lead with? The New
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York Times , the Washington Post , USA Today and the Los
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Angeles Times all choose the ruling that states may ban assisted suicide.
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("No Help For Dying," is the NYT plaintive subhed. A sidebar analysis is
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headlined, somewhat tastelessly, "An Issue that Won't Die.") The unanimous
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ruling that the Communications Decency Act (banning smut on the Internet) is
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unconstitutional makes page one of the two Times es and the Post .
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But the third decision--rejecting a challenge to the line-item veto--didn't
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even rate a front-page teaser in the NYT .
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USA Today brings a characteristic "human touch" to all the dry legal
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news, noting that moments after the Court announced the Internet ruling, "a
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staffer for groups opposing the law popped a disk containing the opinion into
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his laptop computer outside the court and transmitted it by cellular modem to
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an Internet site."
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The NYT and LAT allot the top of column one (journalism's
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traditional spot for the day's No. 2 story) to the tax cut bill that passed the
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House yesterday.
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Two local-interest stories with national implications. The LAT
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reports that because of the University of California's recent abandonment of
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affirmative action in admissions, its incoming law school class is likely to
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include only one black student. And the NYT page-ones a story that
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publishing giant HarperCollins is reacting to the slump in book sales by
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canceling completed books, including some already advertised in its catalogs.
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Among the casualties mentioned are a Jell-O cookbook and a book about celebrity
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pets.
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