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Hugh Profits?
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As is not uncommon for a Monday, no two of the big papers have the same
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lead. The Los Angeles Times leads with the White House reaction to
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the weekend revelation that Kenneth Starr served as a source to reporters
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working the Monica Lewinsky story. USA Today
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leads with NATO's preparations for warning flights today near Kosovo. The
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New York Times
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goes with today's start of a U.N. conference considering the establishment of a
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permanent international court for prosecuting crimes against humanity. And the
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top national story at the Washington Post is the national trend of grieving parents of murdered children working to create
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laws designed to protect other children from the fates met by their own.
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The most famous examples--Megan's Law (federal: requires notifying a
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neighborhood of the presence of a convicted sex offender), the Jimmy Ryce Act
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(Florida) and Stephanie's Law (Kansas: both provide for the commitment to a
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mental hospital of dangerous repeat sex offenders after the expiration of their
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prison terms)-- are but the tip of a legislative iceberg that, the Post
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reports, currently consists of at least 50 such laws added to the books in the
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past 18 months. The paper observes that the anxiety over child safety among
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current parents, the largest generation of American parents ever, has
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considerably broadened the constituency for victims' rights.
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The LAT lead reports that in response to Starr's
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admission in a Content magazine interview that he spoke privately to
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reporters about potential witnesses in Clinton-related inquiries, the White
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House took to the Sunday airwaves to charge that such actions were illegal and
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that fair inquiry into Clinton will be completely in question until they are
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investigated. In short, we have hit the meta-motherlode: a claim that the
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independent counsel's investigation needs...an independent counsel's
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investigation. Lewis Carroll, call your office.
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And things get curiouser and curiouser as the LAT tries to report on
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the possible wrongdoing here while at the same time exculpating its own prior
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interactions with Starr. The paper says that it (along with other papers) has
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openly reported that some of its information has "come from Starr's office,"
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but Starr's public admission "broke an unwritten taboo leaving him vulnerable
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to criticism." Why Starr's admission should do so when the corresponding one by
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the LAT does not, the LAT doesn't say. It almost seems as if the
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paper's position is it's okay to talk to an "office," but not to any actual
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person who works there. But then again, papers love to fuzz up the origins of
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their information if for no other reason than that it makes them look more
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original than they really are. This very LAT piece is a good example:
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although the whole story is generated by the Content article, the paper
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manages to stave off using the C-word until the last--the
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twenty-third--paragraph.
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The LAT front points out a little-noticed feature of the version of
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the tobacco bill now working its way through the Senate. Although the bill had
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originally contained $11.5 billion for helping smokers quit, to keep others
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from starting, and to keep children from buying cigarettes, it now contains
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nothing for any of that.
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The Times ' William Safire wonders in his column how many millions
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Hillary Clinton's brother, lawyer Hugh Rodham, will be getting for his work on
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the tobacco settlement. Safire says he doesn't know because Rodham hasn't been
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returning his phone calls.
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The Wall Street Journal reports that according to a benchmark
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annual customer survey, Apple Computer has fallen from its longtime position as
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the personal computer industry's leader in customer loyalty. The company is now
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third in the allegiance sweepstakes, behind the new leader, Gateway, and
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Hewlett-Packard. The Journal says analysts attribute this to Apple's
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failure to provide a price-competitive entry in the booming market of computers
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selling for under $1,000.
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A WP op-ed by two former government nuclear power
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specialists details an important fact about India's nuclear weapons program
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that has drawn little notice: the plutonium India dipped into for its recent
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bomb tests was provided nearly forty years ago as part of an "Atoms for Peace"
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reactor built by Canada and fueled by the U.S. In return, India had promised
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both countries in writing that the reactor would be reserved for "peaceful
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purposes." The U.S. and Canada therefore now should, write the authors, as a
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condition of lifting U.S. economic sanctions, make India withhold that
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plutonium from its weapons program.
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All of the big fives's fronts feature the Bulls' dramatic win for the title.
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Today's Papers' biggest worry about the possibility that Michael Jordan will
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now retire: he'll get his own talk show.
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