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Taint Necessarily News
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USA
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Today leads with what it describes as President Clinton's refusal, on
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grounds of executive privilege, to provide Congress with documents it requested
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for its investigation of the FALN clemency. The New York Times
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and Washington Post each run this as their off-leads,
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choosing to lead instead with the continued course northward of Floyd, now
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downgraded to a tropical storm. The Los Angeles
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Times has its very own storm to lead with, a widening police scandal,
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called by the paper the city's worst in 60 years, featuring allegations of
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shooting unarmed suspects, planting weapons on suspects and of drug dealing and
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sending at least one person to prison on totally false court testimony. The
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FALN investigation does not make the LAT's front.
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USAT notes high up that Clinton's citation of executive privilege is
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the fourth such in his presidency. The WP sets the clemency dustup
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inside a broader context, noting that while Congress is investigating the FALN
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clemency, it is also probing the Clinton administration's role in Russian
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banking improprieties, as well as the possibility of a cover-up about its
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conduct in the Waco confrontation. The NYT gives a more nuanced account
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of the standoff than the others. Whereas USAT says Clinton refused to
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hand over documents, and the Post says it's saying no to witnesses too,
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the Times says the White House will release some clemency documents it
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feels are not covered by executive privilege and will allow three
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administration officials to appear at congressional hearings. But everybody
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agrees that there is now considerable friction between Congress and Clinton. On
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both sides of the aisle: USAT runs a critical quote about the clemency
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from a Democratic senator.
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The fronts feature the now-routine day-after shooter profiles of the man who
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killed seven churchgoers and then himself in Texas on Wednesday. The LAT
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headline is almost a template, calling him a "loner, full of rage." The
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NYT effort is typical in finding out that he was prone to mood swings,
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fantasized about murder, and was feared by several of his neighbors. Since this
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sort of information can evidently be put together in 24 hours, wouldn't it be
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better to require authorities to do so before a gun purchase could legally be
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made, rather waiting for reporters to do so after a shooting?
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The WP front reports that high tech companies appear to have
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prevailed in the long-simmering debate about whether or not national security
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concerns should prevent them from exporting software that encrypts electronic
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communications. (This story fronts the LAT business section and was
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reported yesterday by the online version of the NYT .) Yesterday, the
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Clinton administration said exporting encryption is okay, while it also gave
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law enforcement increased power to combat criminal uses of computers, although
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not as much as had been contemplated in several working drafts of the
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decision.
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The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a study
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yesterday estimating that tainted food sickens about 76 million Americans and kills
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5,000 of them each year. This is double the last authoritative estimate, made
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in 1994. What with all the attention paid to Floyd (toll: a dozen or so
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deaths), you'd think that a story about a phenomenon said to have claimed
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thousands of lives last year would get a lot of front space. Think again.
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Apparently, the papers don't deem this food for thought. It's not on anybody's
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front.
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What the NYT tipped yesterday, everybody has today about Bill Gates
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and his wife donating $1 billion towards financing for college and advanced
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studies for minority students in the sciences, engineering and education. The
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head of the United Negro College Fund is quoted by the Times saying the
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gift would increase by 15 to 40 percent the number of minorities who receive
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doctorates in the targeted fields. The coverage reports that the decision has
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drawn some fire from opponents complaining that it shuts out qualified white
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students.
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The Wall Street Journal "Washington Wire" reports that, soon
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after a top Army general was court martialed for having sex with subordinates'
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wives, another top Army general was just removed from his big Pentagon job
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while the Army sees if he did the same thing. Fortunately, at least one brass
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hat looks a lot better in the paper today. In a NYT op-ed, a retired
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admiral argues that since it's in the Pentagon's direct interest to have
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access to the improved manpower pool that would come out of better schools, the
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military should get behind a ten-year program to repair every public school,
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fully finance Head Start and reduce class size from kindergarten through third
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grade. How do you come up with the $230 billion this would cost? By canceling
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all the unnecessary planes, subs and nukes in the defense budget, says the
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former 3-star.
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Where, oh where, are the stories about the presidential and congressional
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pay raises passed yesterday? Not on anybody's front. The WP effort is
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typical: It puts the congressional $4,600 raise (to $141,300) on page 7 and
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doesn't say that the president's salary is being doubled (to $400,000). And the
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whole thing is buried deep in a story under a headline that doesn't even
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mention the raises.
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