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Brave Newt World
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After Today's Papers: International Papers provides the low-down on overseas
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coverage of the war crimes tribunal, Mandela's birthday, and Queen Elizabeth's
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rising stature in Fiji. The New York Times ,
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Washington Post , and Los Angeles
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Times lead with a story that's already made the rounds once this
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summer--the Nigerian military leader's promise that his country will return to
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democratic civilian rule. What's new is that on Monday he said this would
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happen by May 29, 1999. USA Today also goes with a moldy oldy: It's hot. The only
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really new heat news, on the LAT front and inside at the WP , is
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that the Border Patrol is carrying out search-and-rescue missions to save
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illegal immigrants who court heat death while trying to sneak into the U.S.
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from Mexico. In New Orleans, according to the Post , President Clinton
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said the summer swelter proved global warming.
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The NYT reports that Nigeria's Gen. Abubakar apparently bowed to
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military hawks in not agreeing to hand over power by October 1 to civilian
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authority. (The NYT doesn't explain the significance of the date, but
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the LAT does--it's Nigerian Independence Day.) But in a televised
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speech, he said he would release all political prisoners jailed by the previous
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military regime, allow the formation of political parties, reform the prison
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system and put an end to "lapses" in the management of public funds. The
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speech, says the Times , was intended to reassure Western governments.
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And Abubakar is clearly making the transition to Western political values--he
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summed up his predecessor's reign of corruption and false imprisonment thus:
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"mistakes have been made."
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The Wall Street Journal runs a front-page feature on an
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emerging force in Asian journalism, China's weekly Southern Weekend . The
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paper started out entertainment-oriented but under the leadership of its
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Western-oriented and literate editor, it has grown in circulation and
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profitability as it moved from celebrity news and salacious scandals to real
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investigative reporting. Recent stories: thefts of antiquities during a
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high-profile government dam project, and false murder convictions. And, reports
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the Journal , the paper is changing the shape of Chinese media. In fact,
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last month a government paper launched its own copycat.
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Additional perspective on the press comes in a NYT
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op-ed written by a Peruvian journalist, Gustavo Gorriti, who notes that in
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Latin America, journalists are often the only check on government abuse of
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power and, as a result, are generally viewed very positively. One reason for
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this, the author says, is that the American principles of thoroughness, fact
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checking and the separation between editors and publishers have profoundly
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influenced Latin journalists. Which leads Gorriti to wonder: What happened to
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these values in American newsrooms? His answer: Conglomerates swallowing up
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media properties, the rush to do "impact news" of the Lewinsky sort, and
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"relentless greed for prizes."
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Arianna Huffington's LAT column connects the two most consuming
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scandal stories of the 90s. If the "perjury epidemic" is to be checked, then,
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she says, the perjury cases involving President Clinton (who denied under oath
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having had sex with Monica) and O.J. Simpson (who denied under oath having
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beaten Nicole) must be pursued to their respective ends.
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The most disturbing thing "Today's Papers" has read on the job yet was in
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Sunday's LAT , which published an interview with a teenaged boy, David
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Cash, who apparently learned right after the fact that his friend had murdered
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a seven-year-old girl in a Las Vegas casino bathroom and yet did nothing.
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LAT : "Were you appalled that a friend said he killed a little girl?"
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Cash: "I'm not going to get upset over somebody else's life. I just worry about
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myself first. I'm not going to lose sleep over somebody else's problems."
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Following up its story yesterday about Big Tobacco's propensity for flying
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Republican members of Congress around, today's WP passes along the
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results of a Center for Responsive Politics study of the free travel
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accepted by members (it's still legal as long as it relates to
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congressional business). The chief finding: Corporations, trade groups and the
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like spent $6.4 million last year on trips for members, their spouses, and
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their staffs. The member accepting the most free travel--over $44,000
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worth--was Newt Gingrich. Gingrich also had the single most expensive free
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trip--a four-day jaunt to London that cost Atlantic Richfield $33,000. Asked
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about Gingrich's $12,000 hotel bill at London's posh Claridge's, an aide offers
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the Post this explanation: "Arco selected the hotel."
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