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GOP Ames for White House
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The Washington
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Post and the Los
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Angeles Times lead with Gov. George W. Bush's victory in the Iowa
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Straw Poll. Nearly 25,000 voting Iowans descended on Ames for a day of food,
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entertainment, and politics that, according to the LAT , confirmed most
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expectations about the Republican presidential race. The New York Times , which
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also fronts Iowa, leads instead with a report that patients slighted by HMOs
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are having greater success bringing their grievances to court. The WP
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fronts President Clinton's announcement that the Environmental Protection
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Agency will demand that states intensify efforts to combat water pollution. The
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LAT runs two follow-up stories to last week's Jewish community center
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shooting. The first sets the diversity of the medical team that saved Benjamin
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Kadish against the alleged gunman's racism; a sidebar reports heated debate
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over whether or not the federal government should confront extremists more
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aggressively.
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Bush took 31 percent of the mock votes cast at the Iowa State University
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basketball arena, followed by Steve Forbes with 21 percent, and Elizabeth Dole
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with 14 percent. Places four through nine went respectively to Gary Bauer, Pat
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Buchanan, Lamar Alexander, Dan Quayle, Alan Keyes, and Sen. Orrin Hatch.
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Bush's less than overwhelming margin of victory in the mock election does not
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reflect current opinion polls elsewhere: The NYT reports that Bush led a
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New Hampshire poll 40 percent to Sen. John McCain's 10 percent. Forbes outspent
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everyone ($2 million), hoping to emerge from Ames as Bush's sole competitor,
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according to the WP . All three papers note that Dole's solid finish
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beat back fears that her candidacy might not survive a poorer showing. The
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WP article mentions twice that Bush delivered a recycled speech. Sen.
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John McCain, who dismissed the event as a "sham," will concentrate instead on
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California and New Hampshire in coming weeks, the NYT reports in its
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"Political Briefing" column.
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The NYT lead suggests that members of HMOs are beginning to have
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greater success suing for medical malpractice. Over the last 20 months, judges
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have started to let patients sue, but not for punitive damages--only for the
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value of the denied benefits. Attorneys have found ways to sidestep a 1974 law
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that shields the organizations from liability for their decisions. A recent
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Senate bill granting protections to some HMO members awaits a presidential
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veto.
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Clinton announced yesterday that the EPA will force states to clean up
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20,000 rivers, lakes, and bays currently too dirty to swim or fish in, the
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Post and the NYT report. State regulators will determine the
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level to which pollution must be reduced in a body of water and then assign
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quotas to individual polluters. The latter would then have to cut back
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emissions or buy discharge rights from someone polluting below allowed
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level.
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The LAT continues its detailed coverage of atrocities in Kosovo with
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a report that some Kosovars may be waging an organized ethnic cleansing
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campaign. Citing local and Western sources, the paper says that patterns have
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emerged in vandalism, threats made to Serbs, and execution-style killings. The
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NYT reports that NATO peacekeepers in Kosovo are stepping up their
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campaign to disarm and perhaps dismantle the Kosovo Liberation Army.
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The NYT and the WP front obituaries of Lane Kirkland, former
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president of the AFL-CIO, who died of lung cancer at the age of 77. Kirkland
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expanded the labor federation's influence abroad (for example, by sending money
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and equipment to Poland's Solidarity movement), but is said to have neglected
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domestic issues, the NYT reports.
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The NYT Magazine runs its second Russian-related cover story of the
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summer. John Lloyd explores political fallout in Washington (and on the
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presidential campaign trail) from botched Western policy initiatives undertaken
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in post-Soviet Russia. Bush's top foreign-policy specialist faults the
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Clinton-Gore administration with clinging to Russian reformers' empty rhetoric.
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The Bush camp will propose that the U.S. step away from Russian internal
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affairs. Robert Kaiser also plays the blame game in the WP : He asks if
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U.S. dependence on Yeltsin jeopardized the nation's relationship to Russia.
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The NYT and the WP run front-page accounts of grotesque
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mistreatment of children abroad. The former paper says that in Japan, reported
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cases of child abuse are rising against a backdrop of record unemployment and
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increasing divorce and remarriage rates. Legislators may scale back laws that
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give families significant autonomy and power. A WP front-pager peeks
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inside Russian orphanages for the mentally disabled--or "Gulags for the
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Children." The piece details the nightmarish conditions under which children in
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these borderline institutions live.
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D'oh!: If owners get their way, the grounds of the defunct Trojan
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nuclear plant in Rainier, Ore., may become a new state park, according to an AP
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story in the Post . The plant is thought by many locals to be the
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inspiration for Homer Simpson's workplace because of its proximity to Matt
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Groening's hometown. (The show denies a link.) Despite hundreds of acres of
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woods and rich wildlife, skeptics wonder who would feel safe enough to camp
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there. Link or no link, maybe the skeptics will find comfort in that the
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Simpsons have lived near an unsafe plant for so long without any adverse
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effects on their health.
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