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A New Bill
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At the New York Times ,
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the lead story is the strongest indication yet from the Clinton administration
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that U.S. troops may remain in Bosnia past the originally stated pull-out date.
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At the Los
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Angeles Times , it's the announcement (made while Al Gore was in Moscow
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on a state visit) that Russia has promised to stop making weapons-grade
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plutonium. Both the Washington Post and USA Today
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lead with new prospects for a campaign finance reform bill.
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The bi-partisan McCain-Feingold campaign reform bill, which would ban
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unregulated "soft money" donations, and which has been languishing in the
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Senate for quite a while, got a new lease on life Tuesday when President
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Clinton threatened in a letter to Majority Leader Trent Lott to force Congress
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to stay in session to vote on the measure. The WP elaborates a bit on
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the presidential power to keep Congress in session, and points out that it
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hasn't been exercised since Harry Truman called back the "Do-Nothing" Congress
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in 1948. The paper also illustrates Trent Lott's aggravation at the gambit,
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quoting his warning: "The president has lots of conferences, legislation,
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appropriations and fast-track [trade authority] that he wants to get through.
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Threats don't serve him very well." USAT states that the Clinton letter
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was one of several moves "trying to deflect attention from the president's own
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fund-raising role in the 1996 election," and quotes bill opponent Sen. Mitch
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McConnell as saying, "President Clinton calling for campaign-finance reform is
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like Bonnie and Clyde calling for bank regulations.''
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The Times reports that national security advisor Sandy Berger said
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Tuesday the U.S. and its European allies must be prepared for an extended stay
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in Bosnia. The paper says the comments were designed to counter congressional
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Republicans who want to cut off spending for the mission, and to calm the fears
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of allies, who don't want to station their troops in Bosnia without ours.
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Uncompleted tasks Berger mentioned include supervision of the repatriation of
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refugees and the apprehension of war criminals.
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The Wall Street Journal 's lead feature reveals plans by Toyota
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and Honda to expand their U.S.-based assembly operations. The paper points out
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that such moves help insulate the companies from currency fluctuations, exempt
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them from tariffs, and help in U.S. domestic politics because they create
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American jobs.
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The WP reports that the U.S. and Japan have just agreed formally to
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expand their security alliance, resulting in Japan's highest military profile
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in Asia since World War II. The new defense guidelines, announced formally in
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New York by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Defense Secretary William S.
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Cohen and their Japanese counterparts, mean that Japan would, for the first
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time since the Pacific war, engage in military activities outside its borders
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in conflicts involving the U.S. The activities would, however, be primarily
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logistic rather than active fighting.
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The NYT reports that a surprising witness appeared before a NYC City
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Council hearing on police reform: former NYPD whistleblowing cop Frank Serpico,
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who called for an independent police monitoring board to investigate police
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wrongdoing and "create an atmosphere where the crooked cop fears the honest
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cop, and not the other way around."
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The WP media column points out that coverage of the Marv Albert trial
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seems to be filling journalism's OJ void. For everybody, except, the column
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reports, the National Enquirer . The tab's editor is quoted as saying,
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"We've left it to the networks to cover."
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