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NYU Starin'?
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USA
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Today leads with President Clinton's announcement of new federal
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enforcement policies governing nursing homes. The story is also on page one at
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the New York Times ,
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but absent from the other fronts, an odd elision for a slow news day in a
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country getting grayer by the minute. The top national story at the NYT
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and Los
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Angeles Times is the House vote, despite much previous conservative
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consternation, to maintain current levels of financial support for the National
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Endowment for the Arts. The Washington Post 's top national story details the five-month
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manhunt for suspected abortion clinic bomber Eric Rudolph.
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The administration's nursing home plan, says USAT , will require more
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random inspections at night and on weekends and impose immediate civil monetary
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penalties on serious or chronic violators. The NYT sums up the situation
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to which this is a response: Two-thirds of nursing homes are not in full
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compliance with federal standards. And USAT explains the political
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timing of Clinton's announcement: A General Accounting Office report to be
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released Monday will make "explosive" charges of lax federal enforcement.
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The LAT sees the House NEA turnabout as a new comfort level created
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by recently imposed limits on the agency's grant-giving in general and a fresh
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Supreme Court decision allowing limits on the funding of indecent art in
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particular. The NYT instead sees the influence of the fall elections,
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going so far as to call the aforementioned new grant limits "political cover"
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for long-time NEA critics who voted yes. The vote, the paper continues, also
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reflected anti-New York sentiment because under the new endowing rules New
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York, long the NEA's largest beneficiary, can receive no more than 15 percent
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of all direct grant monies.
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The Post reports that the 200 law enforcement trackers braving rough
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terrain, boiling temperatures and snakes in the North Carolina woods in search
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of Rudolph have not garnered any new clues since a neighbor had a run-in with
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him near his hometown on July 14, when Rudolph made off with an ex-neighbor's
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pick-up truck and some food. The FBI, says the story, expresses grudging
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admiration for Rudolph's outdoor skills. The piece also notes that the last
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movie Rudolph rented at the local video store before going underground was the
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psychological thriller "The Game." (Oh, he's the one.)
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The LAT front reports that a consortium of software companies
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including Microsoft is close to settling its dispute with the Los Angeles
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public school system over illegal copies of programs made by school employees.
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An outright payment to the companies as well as administrative and replacement
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costs will mean that the schools will be out $4.8 million originally earmarked
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for educational purposes. In other Microsoft news, the papers report that Bill
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Gates will focus on products and delegate most day-to-day business operations
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to his No. 2, Steve Ballmer. In the testosterone-addled world of big deal biz,
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there's no higher compliment than the description of Ballmer given to the
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Wall Street Journal by one stock analyst: "He's a
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trained killer."
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The NYT reports that New York University, contending that its name is
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being tarnished, has filed a federal lawsuit against the operators of a sexually
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explicit Web site that features a secret camera purportedly spying on
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scantily- but NYU-logoed-clad women students romping in their dormitory. The
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paper says university officials said they first learned of the Web site from a
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Daily News reporter. (Yeah, right.) The university's housing director,
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says the Times , was then called in and--through a grueling review of the
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Web site, no doubt--ascertained that the rooms depicted are not on campus.
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Another clue: the women aren't discussing feminism.
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