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heat wave across the United States has killed more than 100 people,
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mostly in Texas. Dallas is beginning its third straight week of temperatures
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exceeding 100 degrees. Death Valley has reached 124. Illegal immigrants,
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homeless people, and old folks who are stuck indoors without air conditioning
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are in the greatest danger. Oklahomans have prayed for divine intervention to
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no avail. The secular explanation meteorologists have offered for the heat
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wave--"a persistent anomaly"--is no more satisfying. The bad news: There's no
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relief in sight for the South. The worse news: The heat is spreading over the
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Northeast. The good news: We're doing a lot better than Papua New Guinea, where
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a 23 foot tsunami killed an estimated 3,000 people July 17 and left their
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corpses to be devoured by crocodiles. (7/20/98)
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Military officials have proposed to relax their policies against
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adultery . The proposed changes, prompted by embarrassment over the Kelly
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Flinn affair and other recent adultery scandals, would reduce the number of
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prosecutions (by prosecuting only those cases in which the adultery has
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demonstrably damaged troop morale) and the severity of the discharge imposed on
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violators. Analysts have identified four schools of thought, in ascending order
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of laxity: 1) The Marine Corps, which is resisting the loosening of standards
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because, in the words of a spokesman, "If you can't trust the Marine next to
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you to remain faithful, how can you trust him on the battlefield?" 2) The Army,
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which, unlike the other services, thinks officers should be allowed to
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fraternize with enlisted personnel who are not in their chain of command. 3)
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Military law critics who prefer the civilian standard, under which adultery is
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rarely prosecuted. 4) President Clinton. (7/20/98)
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The
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Food and Drug Administration approved thalidomide as a treatment for
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leprosy complications. Everyone assumes doctors will prescribe it more often
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for AIDS complications. The real news isn't the approval, which was decided
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upon months ago, but the elaborate new regime of warnings and restrictions,
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which are designed to prevent a recurrence of the birth defects thalidomide
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caused in the 1960s. Analysts credit the new rules to collaboration between the
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drug's manufacturer (Celgene) and thalidomide victims. Optimists call it a
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model of cooperation and prudent regulation. The media are taking the
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opportunity to write once again about stumps and flippers. (7/17/98)
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Lockheed Martin dropped its takeover of Northrop Grumman rather than
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continue to fight a federal antitrust suit. The Justice and Defense departments
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had argued the merger would imperil national defense by reducing competition.
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The charitable economic spin: DOD has reversed its policy of encouraging
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defense industry mergers. The cynical economic spin: Thanks to DOD's
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encouragement, every company small enough to merge legally has done so, leaving
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a few behemoths. The charitable political spin, from the Washington
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Post : It's "a huge victory for the government's re-energized antitrust
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efforts." The cynical political spin, from Lockheed's CEO: Lockheed backed down
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from the fight not because it respects the government's authority but because
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the government is "our biggest customer." (7/17/98)
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Madison Square Garden hired Marv Albert as a radio and TV sportscaster.
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Last year, he pleaded guilty to assault for biting an ex-lover, whom he also
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allegedly forced to commit sodomy. Albert had worked for MSG for two decades
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before going to NBC. The spins, in order of ascending cynicism: 1) MSG is being
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loyal to Albert because Albert was loyal to MSG. 2) Albert has paid his debt
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and acknowledged that "what I did was wrong." 3) As the Washington Post
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puts it, "The road to redemption is getting shorter and shorter." 4)
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Redemption? MSG president Dave Checketts suggested Albert's notoriety would
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boost the ratings. (7/17/98)
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A jury
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ruled that the Rev. Al Sharpton and two other "advisers" defamed former
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Prosecutor Steven Pagones by accusing him of raping Tawana Brawley in 1987.
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This confirms a 1988 grand jury report that exonerated Pagones and suggested
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the Brawley "rape" was a hoax. Brawley and the advisers are black; Pagones is
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white. The advisers called the defamation case an attempt to silence those who
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challenge the white establishment and "to punish three men who have clearly
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given their lives and their careers to help people who could not help
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themselves." Editorialists called the verdict an affirmation that the truth
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matters more than 1) ideological fantasy and 2) self-promotion camouflaged by
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ideological fantasy. The softhearted spin: Sharpton will suffer the worst
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damage because, ironically, he is the only one of the advisers to have sought
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to moderate his public image. The hardhearted spin: Sharpton continues to
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rationalize rather than recant or repent. (7/15/98)
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The
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International Monetary Fund and other lenders agreed to add $17 billion to
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the Russian bailout . In exchange, Russia agreed to clean up its budget
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practices and reform its financial system to attract private investment. News
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of the deal boosted Russian markets. The spins, in order of ascending cynicism:
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1) Russia has failed to deliver the reforms it promised in exchange for
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previous loans. 2) If we don't lend the extra money, there will be financial
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meltdown, chaos, and maybe a coup. 3) That nightmare scenario is just what
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Yeltsin wants us to envision. 4) Russia's Parliament is too irresponsible to
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approve the necessary reforms. 5) The U.S. Congress is too irresponsible to
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extend further credit to the IMF to support the bailout. (7/15/98)
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Linda Tripp resumed her
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testimony before the Lewinsky grand jury, two days after Tripp's lawyers
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appeared on several weekend TV shows to portray their client as a good citizen
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who was forced to tell prosecutors about President Clinton's philandering and
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Lewinsky's efforts to cover it up. (For a dissection of the Tripp camp's
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spin, click .)
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(7/14/98)
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