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Prose and Cons
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Befitting a mid-summer news drought, the papers go their separate ways. The
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New York Times
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leads with internal dissension at the DOJ about whether or not Bill Clinton's
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1996 campaign fund-raising activities warranted an independent counsel--Louis
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Freeh says yes and Janet Reno says no. The Washington Post leads with the World Bank's hiring of
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outside auditors to investigate spending from a $25 billion annual development
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project fund after an internal check seemed to suggest kickbacks and
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embezzlement. USA Today leads with the upcoming Senate battle over
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competing Democratic and Republican bills regulating HMOs. President Clinton,
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the paper reports, is making a rare congressional working visit to plump for
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his party's bill, which unlike the GOP alternative, would strike down a
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25-year-old ban against patients suing their health plans. The Los Angeles
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Times front-page story with the most national impact is a federal
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judge's refusal to block California's recent vote to eliminate long-term
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bilingual education.
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The Reno vs. Free disagreement was discussed during Reno's appearance
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yesterday at Senate hearings, but as the Times reminds the reader four
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paragraphs in, it was already aired last winter. But the Times gets
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excited enough by this virtual news to also offer a lead editorial and a
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William Safire column backing Freeh. The WP is much calmer--calling the
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Senate hearing "a familiar scene," and putting it on p. 7.
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The World Bank investigation apparently encompasses, says the
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WP , kickbacks possibly received by a WB official supervising a water
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project in Algeria, possible misuse of a fund set up by the Japanese government
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to subsidize WB staff expenses, and Bank-funded efforts in Russia and
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Indonesia. Three WB officials have been notified that they are under
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investigation. The Post quotes a senior Bank official as saying, "So the
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question is 'Are we clean?' and it's not clear.."
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The WP 's off-lead is that a federal judge will not
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prevent the head of President Clinton's Secret Service detail from being forced
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to testify about Monica Lewinsky. Indeed, the paper reports that the judge
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"harshly chastised" the Secret Service for continuing to fight Kenneth Starr on
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this point. So Special Agent Larry Cockell might be at the federal courthouse
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this morning to answer Starr's questions, although the Post says Cockell
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may be advised not to show up. Apparently Starr is interested in asking Cockell
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about what he heard of Clinton's discussion with his private attorney Robert S.
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Bennett in the limo on the way back from the deposition he gave on Jan. 17 for
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the Paula Jones suit. Of course, the Post notes, this means that
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Cockell's testimony turns on, not just "protective privilege" but also on
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attorney-client privilege, and hence it seems that there will be much more
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court wrangling before the Cockell issue is resolved.
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The LAT "Column One" reports on an interesting conflict between
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medicine and the law. One of the most common causes of death in this country is
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heart attack and in most attacks there is only a window of ten minutes to save
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the victim's life. So it would seem obvious that the advent of the portable
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defibrillator--an electrical shock device that does just the trick in an
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overwhelming percentage of cases--would be a universally accepted godsend.
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Given, for instance, that 80 percent of heart attacks occur at home, wouldn't
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it be great if defibrillators were as common as portable fire extinguishers?
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Well, as the LAT tells it, the trial lawyers don't think so, because
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they don't like exempting bystanders who use the devices from possible
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lawsuits. The cops aren't crazy about them, because they fear this will lead to
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a distraction from their primary law enforcement role, and besides they don't
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want to get sued. And there's the fear that improper use of the machines can
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*cause* heart attacks--a dozen states still prohibit lay people from using the
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machines.
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USAT runs a completely positive account of the productive and
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powerful partnership that has developed between Hillary Clinton and Madeleine
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Albright, especially regarding international women's issues such as the
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handling of rape charges at the Rwanda War Crimes Tribunal, and clamping down
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on the international prostitution trade. So what does it say about the First
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Lady that for this article she not only declined to be interviewed but even
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declined to answer written questions?
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The Wall Street Journal reports that publishing houses receive
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a steady stream of requests for free books from prisoners, which they
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frequently honor. The article reports that self-help titles are among the most
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requested, but doesn't explain the point of mailing out "The Seven Habits of
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Highly Effective People" to guys on death row.
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