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Broken Glass Pieces
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The New York Times
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leads with NATO's decision to stage mock air strikes soon over Serbian targets
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near Kosovo province, a story that also runs on the Washington Post and Los Angeles
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Times fronts, but USA Today --which instead reserves prime front space
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for new safety rules for golf carts--doesn't get around to it until p. 8. The
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WP leads with President Clinton's defense of his decision to seek closer
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relations with China. The LAT leads with Mitsubishi's decision to end a
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two-year fight against federal sex harassment charges in a case concerning its
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treatment of 350 female employees at an Illinois plant by agreeing to the
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largest harassment settlement ever--$34 million. USAT goes with the
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outbreak of a sympathy strike at a second Flint, Michigan GM plant. A 17-day
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1996 strike, the paper says, ended up costing the company $900 million, adding
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that continuing strikes at GM could have effects throughout the economy.
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The point of NATO's simulated bombing and strafing raids, to be conducted next
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week, is, says the Times , to "give Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic
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a taste of the power that could be turned on him if he persists in attacks on
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the province." It is not known, the NYT writes, if the "aerial
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sabre-rattling" will actually employ live ammo or real bombs.
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Clinton says, "choosing isolation over engagement would not make the world
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safer; it would make it more dangerous." Gary Bauer of the conservative Family
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Research Council offers the Post this response: "He's setting up a false
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dichotomy. He's claiming that the debate is between a policy of engagement and
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a policy of isolationism, when in fact the debate is about what kind of
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engagement we're going to have." The LAT runs this on the front, while
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the NYT and USAT put it inside.
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With the Asian economic crisis nearly a year old, the NYT surveys the
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GDPs in the region and concludes that the situation is now the most serious
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region-wide recession since World War II. And although thus far, the impact on
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the U.S. economy has been negligible, the paper sees warning signs:
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Asia-focused U.S. companies with anemic earnings, and an overall decline in
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U.S. exports. The stock market sees this too--Asian worries are widely credited
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for yesterday's big Dow drop, say the Times and USAT .
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The WP reports that House GOP leaders, anxious to bolster their case
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for a large tax cut this year, are pressuring Congress' budget forecasting arm,
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the CBO, to produce rosier estimates of future surpluses. The House
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honchos are exercised over CBO's longstanding overstatement of the budget
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deficit and its recent understatement of the budget surplus. The story reports
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that the GOP leadership would like to see a change in the CBO's forecasting
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models and probably some new faces over there too.
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The NYT front reports that financial
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settlements have been reached in a case in which without permission or
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legal sanction, America Online identified to a Navy investigator an active-duty
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sailor whose on-line profile suggested he was gay. The Navy, which on the basis
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of the disclosure had originally tried to expel the sailor, has agreed to allow
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him to retire with full benefits and will pay his legal fees. And AOL, which
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with the disclosure violated the terms of its own service agreement, has
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apologized to him and agreed to pay him damages. The sailor has declined to
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discuss his sexual orientation, and so the coverage of the story has dwelt on
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the electronic privacy issue, but this episode is also relevant to the Navy's
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"Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy. The whole thing started when a third party saw
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that the man's email profile mentioned his hobby of "collecting pictures of
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other young studs" and that his screen-name was "Boysrch." So here's the
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unpursued question: Does such information count as "telling"? If not, then
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telling has nothing to do with what common sense could easily and
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non-investigatively arrive at concerning another person's sexual orientation,
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and hence has nothing to do with protecting unit cohesion, which could easily
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be upset by such readily-arrived-at information. But on the other hand, if so,
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then the current superficially more tolerant policy immediately reduces to the
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old intrusive one, because investigations would become so easy to set into
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motion.
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Both the WP and NYT report on The New Republic 's
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post-Stephen Glass post-mortem, which concluded that all or part of 27 of the 41 pieces Glass did for TNR were
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fabricated. And the Times segues into doubt about the effectiveness
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of fact-checking departments. But a quick look at today's letters to the editor
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in the Times suggest that here at least is one department of the paper
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that could use a little more fact-checking. A Mr. Donald N. S. Unger, in
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criticizing a recent William Safire pitch for anti-missile missiles, refers to
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how the Aegis missile system shot down an Iranian Airbus during the Gulf war,
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mistaking it for a Mig fighter plane. Actually, the shoot-down took place three
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years before the Gulf War and occurred because the Airbus was mistaken for an
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Iranian F-14. So the question arises: Do letters just go straight into the
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paper without being checked? And if so, isn't this just as bad as a similar
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laxity with regard to articles?
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