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Hong Kong Handover
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No doubt about it--today's top story is Hong Kong. The Los Angeles Times
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puts it across all six columns of the top of its front page and puts two more
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related page one stories below. USA TODAY leads with it and has a news section "cover
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story" on it as well. The Wall Street Journal dedicates its "World Wide News" front page
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space to the topic and does a column one take on Hong Kong tycoons. The
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Washington Post gives four columns at its top over to two
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stories about the event. The New York Times runs a
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banner headline across its top front and just underneath that, two big
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pictures: on the left, exiting British Governor Chris Patten, head bowed,
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holding his country's folded flag, and on the right, newly arrived Chinese
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soldiers raising theirs.
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In general, the Hong Kong reporting focuses on two themes: the pageantry of
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the handover ceremonies and the open political questions that remain. There's
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some pretty efficient limning of the historical context, but some linguistic
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and reporting overkill too. The LAT for instance, tells its readers
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that, "awash in fireworks and fired-up patriotism, China celebrates the end of
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156 years of 'national disgrace,' regaining a tiny patch of land ceded after a
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humiliating war and eyed enviously for a century," while the NYT can't
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keep to itself about the police band members at the ceremonies in their "snow
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white tunics" and the attendance there "of representatives of each of the
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territory's services, from the Correctional Services Department to the
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Auxiliary Medical Service." The paper also tells us that Patten's favorite song
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is "Highland Cathedral" and that the last ceremonial meal under a British flag
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was "Scottish salmon, stuffed chicken breast and a red fruit pudding with
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raspberry sauce."
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There are certain staple Hong Kong turnover details every paper tells us:
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that Jiang Zemin is the first sitting Chinese leader to visit the colony, that
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Madeleine Albright snubbed the Chinese, that the Chinese snubbed the British,
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and that the Chinese are saying they will preserve Hong Kong's free economy and
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open political system for fifty years. But none of today's accounts really
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explains where this number comes from.
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Among the big papers, the Post is alone in keeping the Mike Tyson
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story on page one, detailing there how on Monday, Tyson apologized to Evander
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Holyfield for biting him on both ears. Here too, there seems to be more
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reporting than the story needs. The Post tells us that Tyson's prepared
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statement lasted "4 minutes 16 seconds," and includes the detail that
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"President Clinton, an admitted boxing fan, expressed revulsion at Tyson's
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actions in the ring." The paper then goes on to relieve whatever anxieties are
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currently being suffered by libertarian fight fans: "The president, however,
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stopped short of suggesting federal intervention in boxing."
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