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Affirmative Negation
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The Supreme Court's decision Monday to let California's anti-affirmative
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action Proposition 209 stand leads at USA Today ,
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the Washington Post and the Los Angeles
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Times . The New York Times
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leads with the emerging Republican congressional campaign against Clinton
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administration small-scale health care reform--and sticks the 209 victory deep
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inside, on p.13 of the national edition.
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The LAT says the 209 decision "marks a major victory for the
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champions of a new colorblind standard for government." The three papers
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leading with 209 all make it clear that the decision will probably spur
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209-style laws in many states. And the LAT mentions that the House
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Judiciary Committee will consider a federal version later this week. The three
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also point out that although this Court decision was probably the watershed,
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there might well be other eventual appeals based on cases where plaintiffs
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allege actual harm as a result of the law. The WP mentions another
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factor that could lead to further legal challenge: 209 bans "preferential
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treatment" but does not define it. So look for cases that, for example, claim
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that 209 doesn't prohibit preference-based recruiting for programs with
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color-blind internal standards.
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The NYT health care lead states that the same business and insurance
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lobbyists who teamed up to help kill health care reform in 1994 are mobilizing
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to block the more modest, piecemeal federal quality-of-care proposals--like
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mandated-length hospital stays for certain procedures and government standards
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for health plans--that the Clinton administration has subsequently endorsed.
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The paper reports that Senate Republican leaders recently organized
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anti-Clinton strategy briefings. The Times also notes an interesting
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split within the Republican constituency concerning this issue: Many doctors,
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convinced that managed care companies have cut into their autonomy and their
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incomes, are in favor of many of the Clinton provisions reigning them in.
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The Wall Street Journal runs a front-page feature about a group
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of Allendale, South Carolina women with children who are striving to hold down
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the jobs that have gotten them off welfare. The piece makes the point that
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getting off welfare by working is even harder for the rural poor, who often
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have no access to public transportation, or, surprisingly, phones.
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USAT 's off-lead is an update on the Iraq/weapons inspector situation.
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The latest is that Iraq continues to block the operations of a U.N. weapons
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inspection team, and to threaten to shoot down U.S. surveillance planes. The
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White House, the paper reports, has warned Saddam Hussein that time is running
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out for him to avoid "firm action." The Iraq story is also carried on the
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NYT front, and in the "world-wide news" box on the front of the
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WSJ , but doesn't make the front of the LAT . Or of the WP ,
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which runs it on p. 14.
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The WP runs a piece inside on the first-ever World Bank study of
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AIDS, released yesterday. The piece opens with the report's observation that,
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"About 2.3 billion people, roughly half the population of the developing world,
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live in places where the AIDS epidemic has barely begun, and even mildly
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successful prevention programs could have enormous benefits." By contrast, the
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NYT inside piece on the study emphasizes not the possibilities of
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prevention, but the scope of the disease's surge, saving for its 13th paragraph
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the material that the Post leads with, about the relative scarcity of
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the disease for about half the world. As if to back up its more alarmist take,
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the NYT runs a front-page piece about how AIDS is suddenly ravishing
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Kaliningrad, a city of 400,000 that connects Russia with Europe.
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Back to the 209 decision: It seems that the majors have picked up the
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Hollywood habit of overlooking the writer. Like stars on Oscar night, the
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papers' coverage of the 209 victory mentions such proponents as Pete Wilson and
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Ward Connerly, but there is no front-page mention of Tom Wood or Glynn
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Clustred, who wrote and conceived 209 in the first place.
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