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Never Say Never?
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President Clinton's new forceful denial about Monica L. leads everywhere. At
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what might be called the tail-end of a White House event highlighting Clinton
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education and child-care proposals, with Hillary at his side, the president
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stated, "I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky. I
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never told anybody to lie. Not a single time. Never."
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All the dailies feature a picture of Bill Clinton alongside their stories
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about his denial. USA Today 's has him looking the angriest. The Washington Post says Clinton clenched his jaw and glared as
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he made his denial. USAT reports that although Clinton's statement
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itself and follow-up remarks by aides seem to make it utterly unambiguous,
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Monica Lewinsky's lawyer responded by suggesting that still, Lewinsky may say
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that she and the president engaged in an act other than intercourse. "What's
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the president's definition of sex?" he asked.
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Another development that engrosses the dailies is the news that Lewinsky's
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lawyer has given Kenneth Starr a formal statement about the testimony she could
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give in the matter in return for immunity. USAT suggests the proffer
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includes an admission of sex with Clinton, which, the paper says, an earlier
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draft did not.
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The WP says that one person who saw Clinton over the weekend quotes
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the president's response to the widely circulated story that Lewinsky received
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a dress as a gift from him: "There is no dress." But the New York Times
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front cites two sources saying that Lewinsky met privately with Clinton at the
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White House late last month. The visit is alleged to have come two weeks after
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Lewinsky was served with a subpoena in the Paula Jones case and one week before
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Lewinsky signed an affidavit swearing that she had not had a sexual
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relationship with Clinton.
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A sign of the scandal's impact: The news at the WP that a major point
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of tonight's State of the Union address will be Clinton's pitch to apply
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prospective budget surpluses to shore up Social Security couldn't make it above
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the fold. By the way, the paper reports that several White House aides will
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visit the Hill today to encourage lawmakers to applaud.
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The NYT notes that Clinton's poll numbers are still pretty good, but
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also says some of his longstanding allies were not reassured by Clinton's
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statement. The Los Angeles Times lead says it did buoy his supporters.
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Another LAT front-page piece reports that the "crisis cabinet" assembled
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to respond to the scandal includes the doubly qualified Dick
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Morris, both an experienced Clinton advisor and a sex scandalee in his own
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right.
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The Wall Street Journal front reports that Compaq has purchased
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Digital Equipment. The story points out how in just ten years Compaq has come
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from nowhere and that Digital has pretty much gone in the opposite direction.
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The deal, says the Journal , puts Compaq in position to compete directly
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with IBM and Hewlett-Packard. This story is also on the front at the WP ,
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NYT , and the LAT .
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The U.N.'s chief weapons inspector, Richard Butler, tells the NYT about the Iraqi cat-and-mouse
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games he's had to endure, such as being stalled for twenty minutes while Iraqi
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computer guys replaced hard drives containing records of the country's entire
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weapons program with ones running only computer games. Butler confirms earlier
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reports that his team had evidence that Saddam has loaded biological weapons
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onto missile warheads.
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Right now, no one is paying the least little attention to military
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procurement--which is the way the military likes it. So there won't be much
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newsplay for the piece inside today's Post about how the Navy has
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managed to keep its hot new airplane program rolling along despite a continuing
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serious aerodynamic problem.
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The NYT 's Thomas Friedman speaks for many when he writes of the
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particular betrayal he feels right now. "We overlooked Mr. Clinton's past
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indiscretions--he was hardly the first politician with testosterone
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overload--on the condition that he pursue his agenda and postpone his next
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dalliance until after he left the White House. But he broke the bargain. I knew
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he was a charming rogue with an appealing agenda, but I didn't think he was a
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reckless idiot with an appealing agenda."
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The WP points out that the scandal has been good media business, with
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USAT distributing an extra 500,000 copies of its weekend edition, the
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WP printing about 15,000 copies of its daily run, Time adding
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100,000 copies to its usual newsstand run of 250,000, CNN's viewership up about
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40 percent, and ABC's "Nightline" and "This Week" experiencing pronounced
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ratings increases. But, notes the Post , neither the Globe nor the
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National Enquirer is seeing much of a bump. (But when those Monica
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topless shots show up, don't look for them in Congressional
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Quarterly .)
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