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Hillary's Base Motives
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The Washington Post and Los Angeles
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Times lead with the decision by Republican congressional leaders to
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meet today with President Clinton at the White House in an attempt to resolve
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the partisan budget differences which have left the government operating under
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a temporary spending bill, which expires this week. USA Today
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leads with the government's announcement of new regulations for transplant
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organ allocation, to take effect in 30 days. The goal of the revision is to
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eliminate, as much as possible, the current disparities in recipient waiting
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time from state to state and to maximize the chance for the sickest (but
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salvageable) patients to receive organs first. The lead at the New York Times is the Clinton
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administration's legislative proposal, sent to Congress yesterday, which would
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steer Medicare beneficiaries towards preferred doctors and hospitals that have
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agreed to offer discounted charge rates to the government and to reduce patient
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fees correspondingly. The White House claim, says the paper, is that the
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participating hospitals would not be financially hurt by the scheme because of
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increased patient volume. But, according to the Times , many Republicans
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and doctors object, fearing that such a plan will favor low cost over high
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quality.
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The LAT and WP leads report that the main reservation the
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Republicans have about jawboning with Clinton on spending is that in the past
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whenever they have, they've gotten their heads handed to them. The big budget
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issue, the two papers agree, is whether or not to tap into the current surplus
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generated by Social Security taxes. The Post quotes experts who think
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that any subsequent budget agreement will tap in, but via "enough budget
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gimmicks to obscure the picture."
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The LAT fronts, while the WP and NYT run inside, a
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report released today by the Rand Corp., at the behest of the government, which
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says an experimental anti-nerve gas medication given to up to 300,000 U.S.
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troops during the Gulf War may be the cause of the host of mysterious chronic
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illnesses afflicting tens of thousands of Gulf veterans. The LAT and
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NYT say the report contradicts prior government findings on the
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hypothesis, while the WP says, "Compared to reviews done previously, it
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gives somewhat more credence" to it.
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The LAT fronts and the Wall Street Journal front-page news box features a mammoth
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reorganization announced by Nissan (by the COO sent over from Renault, which
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owns more than one-third of the company): five plant closings, a 14 percent
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reduction in payroll (21,000 jobs), and $9.48 billion in cost cuts over the
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next three years. The good news: the Z car is coming back. The NYT and
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WP carry the story inside.
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Everybody carries word that Ken Starr stepped down yesterday, replaced by
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career prosecutor Robert Ray, whose big job will be producing the OIC's final
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report. Ray obviously has a great sense of humor, thanking Starr Monday for his
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"extraordinary service to the country at great personal sacrifice over the past
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five years."
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The WP reports that while in Washington for a benefit for a writers'
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organization, Calvin Trillin and Edward Albee declined a proffered invitation
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to meet with Clarence Thomas. Trillin gave his reason: He didn't like being
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told that he could speak to Justice Thomas only under certain conditions. The
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Post 's fall-down here: the story doesn't tell the reader what those
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conditions were.
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The NYT runs a front-pager reporting that a presidential panel has
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recommended that the U.S. military be allowed to resume live firing exercises
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on Navy property in Puerto Rico--for the next five years. This in the face of
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much Puerto Rican sentiment against the continued operation of the base, which
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has been particularly strong since April, when one Puerto Rican guard was
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killed by a stray bomb from a Marine jet. The Times story notes in its
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seventh paragraph that Hillary Clinton registered disappointment in the
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decision. The Post inside effort on the bombing range puts Hillary in
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the first sentence. Both papers make the connection between HRC's likely New
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York Senate run and her sudden interest in naval aerial training
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facilities.
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A letter to the WP makes an interesting claim about church donations:
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A surprising percentage of donated monies end up supporting national
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administrative bureaucracies. The writer states that his own church, the United
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Methodists, in 1997 paid $1.94 million in salaries and benefits to lobbyists,
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and another $1.6 million on their conferences, travel, and office expenses.
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This sum, he says, would enable the Salvation Army to provide two meals a day
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for one year, plus lodging, for about 2,800 people.
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