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Jiang and the Restless
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After a string of party-line days, news diversity breaks out. The Washington Post leads with Jiang Zemin's testy meeting with
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some members of Congress. The New York Times
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leads with U.S. emergency aid to Indonesia designed to help bring financial
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stability back to Asia. The Los Angeles Times goes with a California Supreme
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Court decision that children may sue their mothers' employers for injuries they
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received in the womb from unsafe working conditions experienced by their moms.
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And the USA
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Today lead is the 2nd degree murder conviction returned against British
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au pair Louise Woodward in the death of an eight-month-old boy in her care. The
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paper reports that when the verdict was returned, Woodward, 19, wept
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hysterically and shouted, "I didn't do anything!"
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According to the WP , Jiang's closed-door congressional meeting had
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the same rather tempestuous atmosphere as did his press conference with Bill
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Clinton earlier in the week. Jiang gave no quarter as he was asked by members
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about forced abortions, harvesting of human organs from executed prisoners,
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religious repression, foreign weapons sales, jamming U.S. broadcasts and his
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country's takeover of Tibet. Several members presented Jiang with lists of
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political and religious prisoners to be released. Sources tell the Post
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that there was no discussion about allegations of Chinese illegal campaign
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contributions during the last election cycle.
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Jiang invited Newt Gingrich to Tibet and the WP says he replied by
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saying he would hope Jiang would greet him there alongside the Dalai Lama. The
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LAT front-page account of all this depicts Gingrich in a somewhat more
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ironic light, quoting the Speaker as saying that in his discussions with Jiang,
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he saw "no defense of dictatorship" of the sort the Soviets used to make. Yet
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after the meeting, reports the Post , Jiang gave a defiant speech in
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which he made no concessions about human rights in his country or Tibet.
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Today's NYT Indonesian aid package lead fits the mold that so often
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applies when the Times decides to lead with an international finance
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story--not only is the story not anybody else's lead, but it doesn't even make
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any other major's front page.
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The top of the LAT front page features a large photo-and-graphic box
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addressing the stepped-up rate of deportations by the INS of illegal
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immigrants--last year about 111,000, an increase of about 60 percent over the
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year before. Of those removed, says the paper, 45% had criminal records.
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The Wall Street Journal "Washington Wire" reports that today,
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in the Halloween spirit, Republican leaders will unveil a "horror stories of
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the IRS" web site.
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A piece inside the WP about the use of songs by law enforcement
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authorities in hostage situations notes that the music used at Waco against
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David Koresh "was selected ad hoc from the personal cassettes of FBI agents."
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There wasn't, according to the Post , exactly deep reasoning behind the
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selections. "Nancy Sinatra's 'These Boots Were Made for Walking,' for instance,
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was intended to get Koresh and others to walk out of the compound."
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Back to that California Supreme Court decision about fetal injuries: if the
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Court is consistent, shouldn't we also expect to see decisions allowing kids to
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sue their moms for prenatal smoking, drinking, and drugging?
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