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Phone Bill
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The Washington Post leads with news the Russian mob is going
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international in a big way. USA Today goes with the formation of a new coalition
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of teacher and parent groups dedicated to saving the public schools. And the
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New York Times
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lead is: "Mideast Leaders Taking First Step to Reviving Talks" (that's key F4
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on Times keyboards, right next to F5: "Teamster Officials
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Indicted").
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According to the WP , U.S., European and Latin American law
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enforcement officials say that Russian organized crime groups, operating out of
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Miami, New York and Puerto Rico and flush with cash, are forming alliances with
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Colombian drug traffickers in the Caribbean. These alliances, say some experts
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quoted in the piece, are the most dangerous trend in drug smuggling in the
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hemisphere. The Russian mobs offer the drug cartels access to sophisticated
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weapons siphoned from the Soviet inventory. Recent undercover operations have
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detected, says the paper, attempts by Russian groups to sell Colombian drug
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lords a helicopter, surface-to-air missiles and a submarine. The Russians are
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especially dangerous, one DEA Russian expert tells the WP , because "We
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are talking [about] people with PhDs, former senior KGB agents with access to
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sophisticated weapons, people who have [already] laundered billions of
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dollars."
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USAT heralds the formation today of the Learning First Alliance of
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teachers, principals, parents, school boards, experts and community leaders,
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which is dedicated to improving public school education. The Alliance includes
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such educational policy power players as the NEA and the AFT and its principal
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goals include establishing tougher course work and making schools safer. The
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group will be holding a summit in Washington in January to address improving
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reading and math achievement.
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The Wall Street Journal 's Alan Murray observes in a front-page
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"The Outlook" column that now with the diminution of the tobacco lobby, in
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Washington the most influential lobby is broadcasting. For proof, Murray points
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to the fate of the concept of free television time for political ads. Once a
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staple of campaign reform legislation, it is now MIA, because "broadcasters
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complained" and "members of Congress cowered."
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The NYT reports that cancer rates for children are on the rise:
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nowadays a newborn child has a 1 in 600 chance of contracting the disease by
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age 10. Experts tend to implicate increased environmental exposure to
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carcinogens.
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After virtually ignoring the IRS hearings story last week when the other
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majors had it splashed all over their front pages, today the WP goes
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front page with the news that, as a direct result of testimony revealing agency
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abuses given at those hearings, the IRS has suspended a number of mid-level
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managers. The paper also reports that the hearings have given the flat tax a
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new life on the Hill.
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The NYT reports on its front page that the Clinton and Gore
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fund-raising calls now causing such a political furor produced far smaller
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contribution totals than they were supposed to. The principal problem was, it
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seems, that neither the president nor the VP was comfortably in bluntly asking
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for the sums the professional fundraisers specified. And the fund-raisers were
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convinced their goals could have been met if Clinton would have made more calls
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himself. So they came up with the concept of a "touch-up call" in which Clinton
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would call potential donors and talk about everything but money. That
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was handled by fund-raisers asking for large contributions in orchestrated
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follow-up calls. "The answer," says the Times , "was almost always
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yes."
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It was easy to get Clinton to make touch-up calls, a Democratic fund-raiser
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told the paper: "The president loves to schmooze on the phone."
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