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Koppeling a Plea
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USA
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Today leads with President Clinton's announcement of a plan to combat
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global warming. The New York Times
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lead is a presidential advisory commission's recommendation of numerous new
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rights for patients. The Washington Post goes with the news that during the '96
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campaign, the Republican National Committee steered $1 million of donors' funds
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to sympathetic outside groups such as the National Right to Life Committee. And
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the Los
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Angeles Times leads with Boeing's announcement of the largest loss in
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company history.
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USAT says the Clinton greenhouse plan, to be submitted to an upcoming
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international conference on the problem, sets up a pollution credits market
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under which companies profit from getting below emissions standards, promises
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further incentives for companies cutting emissions before 2008, and also
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invests $5 billion over five years on energy-efficient technology. But, says
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the paper, the proposal is considered not stringent enough by many
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environmentalist groups, U.S. allies, and developing countries, yet too
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stringent by many American industries. The WP , in its front-page piece,
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points out that Clinton's proposal falls short of the goals he outlined in
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1993, when he called for voluntary cuts in greenhouse gas emissions back to
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1990 levels by the year 2000. It's the NYT , in its front-page story,
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that most clearly explains the relative smallness of the plan's $5 billion
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investment in global warming control: "enough to give every citizen an annual
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rebate covering one-fourth of the cost of a high-efficiency light bulb."
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Earlier this year, Republicans howled upon learning that DNC officials
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helped steer givers to congenial outside groups. Today's WP lead shows
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that the RNC did it too. The stratagem allows both donors and political parties
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to spend on their pet causes without being identified (unlike political
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parties, interest groups don't have to disclose their money sources).
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According to the Times , the presidential commission says that
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patients' rights should include the right to an external review of denials of
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care or coverage by insurers and HMOs, and the right to such information as how
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often and how successfully a doctor has performed a procedure. President
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Clinton is expected to endorse all this, although, the Times points out,
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nobody has explained how these new rights would be enforced.
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The LAT 's report on Boeing (which the paper describes as "the world's
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premier aircraft maker." Isn't that just a little boosterish for a front-page
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story?) says that the company shocked Wall St. yesterday with its surprise
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disclosure of a $1.6 billion loss. It seems that aircraft orders are rolling
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in, but the company can't keep up because of part shortages and the hiring of
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thousands of inexperienced workers.
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More detail comes to light today about the Justice Department's case against
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Microsoft. Both the Wall Street Journal and WP reveal that Justice says
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it was Compaq that was prevented by MS from offering its buyers easy keyboard
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access to Netscape software. And the Post reports that the government's
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petition also claims that Gateway 2000 and Micron Electronics were told by
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Microsoft that they could not remove Internet Explorer or its desktop icon from
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their machines. Also, the Post says the government's evidence includes
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some email from Bill Gates to his company's executive committee.
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The WP says that the White House is trying to neutralize the coffee
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videos by getting the release of a 1996 ABC News tape in which candidate Bob
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Dole admits that the RNC was financing ads that were helping his campaign. ABC
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has refused the request. On the tape, Dole explains to Ted Koppel that the ad
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is okay because "it never says, 'I'm running for president.'"
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