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Fundseekers
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The Albright mission to the Middle East leads at the Los Angeles
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Times and the national edition of the New York Times
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(the metro edition of the NYT leads with the coming NYC Democratic
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mayoral run-off). At the Washington Post , it's tobacco politics that leads and at
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USA
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Today , it's military reform.
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The LAT and the NYT differ from each other about Albright. The
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NYT paints a picture in which the Secretary of State's statements upon
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arrival emphasizing security drew criticism from Palestinians, but praise from
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Israelis. (This is also the tenor of the USAT front-page Albright
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piece.) In fact, the NYT even says that Prime Minister Netanyahu praised
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Albright. But the LAT emphasizes instead Netanyahu's resistance, saying
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that he "rebuffed" Albright's "appeal to cease economic restrictions to
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encourage the Palestinian Authority to crack down on terrorism."
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There is no mention of mideast diplomacy on the WP front, where the
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lead is the Senate's repeal yesterday of a $50 billion tax credit for tobacco
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companies that had been inserted with little fanfare into the budget bill under
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the prodding of Newt Gingrich and Trent Lott. The vote was 95 for, only three
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tobacco state senators against, and no senator spoke in favor of the
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credit.
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The USAT lead is the news that in the first major changes since
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Vietnam, the Army will announce today that it's expanding basic training from
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eight to nine weeks, with the extra time being used for lessons on values and
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mutual respect, especially for women, who now make up 20 percent of recruits.
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Tougher screening of drill sergeants will also be implemented.
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The heat on Al Gore gets turned up another notch as the WP ,
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LAT , and NYT each run above-the-fold front-page pieces detailing
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how at the Thompson hearings yesterday, an internal memo was produced,
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apparently signed off on by Gore, that explains that the DNC was routinely
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dividing all solicited funds into hard (targeted to specific campaigns, highly
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regulated) and soft (not for specific campaigns, not highly regulated) money
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accounts regardless of the nature of the actual solicitation. These papers all
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point out that the memo strongly suggests that Gore knew that the fund-raising
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calls he made from the White House were at least in part to raise hard money,
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which he had initially denied--as well he might, since the amounts he
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apparently raised in those calls exceeded legal limits for hard money.
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Incidentally, that memo also has Bill Clinton's tell-tale left-handed
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backwards check-mark on it too, which is noted in the Wall Street Journal 's "Politics and Policy" column, which
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makes the case that Janet Reno's investigation into whether or not Gore's
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fund-raising activities merit an independent counsel's scrutiny will almost
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inevitably push her into also investigating Clinton's role.
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A further sign of fallout from the fundraising morass comes with the
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WP 's front-page revelation that several Asian-Americans with approved
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White House clearances were initially prevented from entering the grounds
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because security officials assumed their Asian surnames meant they were
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foreigners. And double oops--one of the stymied guests was a member of the U.S.
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Civil Rights Commission.
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Earlier this week, a freshman at Yale, a religious Jew, wrote an NYT
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op-ed complaining that the casual sex atmosphere of the coed dorms Yale is
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requiring him to live in meant Yale was forcing him to violate his religious
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principles. Today's NYT contains a letter from the Yale Dean, who
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doesn't address the op-ed's charges that in Yale co-ed dorms, students are
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frequently forced into "sexile" while their roommates are having sex, and that
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the halls are full of people of the opposite gender in various stages of
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undress. But the Dean does write, "Yale has a long history of working with
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students to accommodate their personal values, and we would happily explore
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accommodation in this case." "Accommodation" of modesty and abstinence--could
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you ask for a clearer example of backwards campus values than that?
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