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Guystock
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The New York Times
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leads with the news that some insurance companies are skirting the new law
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that's supposed to guarantee available health coverage to millions of Americans
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who change jobs or who have pre-existing conditions. At the Los Angeles
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Times , it's Promise Keepers and at the Washington Post , it's Promise Keepers big-time.
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The NYT insurance story is dramatic proof of a gaping hole in last
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year's Kennedy-Kassebaum bill, which was viewed at the time as taking the first
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important step towards universal coverage: namely, the bill says insurance
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companies have to extend coverage to those they had tended to cut off, but it
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doesn't say the companies can't gouge them for it. (This is a feature Congress
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could have easily added. The Times points out New York state has had
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such a law since 1992.) For example, Design Benefit Plans charges 35 percent
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extra to individuals purchasing policies under the new law, and the paper
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quotes Rep. Pete Stark as saying that insurers in many states are charging
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$6,000 to people with pre-existing conditions.
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The WP coverage of the Promise Keepers rally is all-out--three pieces
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on the front page and another six inside. The lead story credits name twenty
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Post staffers. The paper describes the event as one of the largest
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gatherings ever in the nation's capital and one of the biggest religious
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gatherings in the nation's history, and says the crowd numbered "perhaps a
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half-million people." Although the official program was multi-racial and
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multi-ethnic, the WP says the attendees were "overwhelmingly white,
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reflecting the composition of the organization." One woman comments to the
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paper that she was "surprised by how clean-cut and how educated" the Promise
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Keepers were. "I guess," she adds, "that makes it even more scary."
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The LAT says the crowd appeared to number "well over half a million
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people" and that it "contained large numbers of blacks and other minorities, as
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well as wives and other women."
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The Post reports that when four women belonging to the Lesbian
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Avengers, which has protested PK rallies across the country, took off their
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shirts and marched bare-breasted into the crowd, a Park Police cop said, "Bare
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breasts are okay in the District."
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Lots of presidential sidebar stories today. The Post runs an AP
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dispatch revealing that a new biography of George Bush states that within days
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of naming Dan Quayle as his running mate in 1988, Bush wrote in his diary: "It
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was my decision, and I blew it, but I'm not about to say I blew it." Gerald
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Ford and Jimmy Carter co-author a Post op-ed calling for the end of soft
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money. The NYT takes a long look at Ronald Reagan's Alzheimers disease.
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According to the piece, "the man behind the firm handshake and barely gray hair
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is steadily, surely ebbing away" and "appears to recognize few people other
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than his wife." There's also the detail that one of Reagan's former White House
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physicians first suspected trouble when he had an odd conversation with Reagan
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in September, 1992--more than two years before his condition was publicly
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acknowledged.
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And the WP reports that yesterday while attending a Secret Service
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demonstration at the agency's training headquarters, President Clinton took the
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wheel of a Camaro and executed an evasive 180 degree turn. Evasive? 180? Bet he
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was good at it.
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