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Lily White House?
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Everybody leads with the decision by Israel and Syria to resume peace
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talks--probably starting next week--after a lapse of nearly four years. The
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Washington Post , New York Times , and Los Angeles
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Times fronts feature a picture of President Clinton at his press
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conference yesterday, where he announced the development.
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The WP calls the talks a "major foreign policy victory for President
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Clinton." The coverage makes it clear that one major issue Israel and Syria
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have to sort out is what to do about the Golan Heights, which Israel occupied
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during the 1967 Six Day War and which has served as a key security buffer for
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it ever since. The WP is the clearest about another: what to do about
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the 35,000 troops Syria maintains in Lebanon and about its support for
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anti-Israeli operations there conducted by the militant Islamic group,
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Hezbollah.
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The coverage is largely upbeat, with only the LAT including the
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following: 1) Although Yasser Arafat publicly supports the talks, privately the
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Palestinians were stunned by them and fear that they will have an adverse
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affect on their own dealings with the Israelis; 2) the political opposition in
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Israel is not pleased, with one right-wing party viewing the talks as a
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complete surrender to Syria; and 3) there is much bitterness too from Golan
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Heights residents who fear losing their homes.
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Everybody runs stories about President Clinton's press conference yesterday
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and all of these mention a question near the end that seemed to have caught him
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somewhat flat-footed, a question about why most top White House jobs in his
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administration have gone to whites. But all of these stories run inside and
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none dwell at length on the issue the question raises. With the exception, that
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is, of USA
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Today , which serves up a 1,900 word pass
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at the topic on its front page. The story highlights the basic fact raised (and
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not denied by Clinton) at the press conference: While Clinton has presided over
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a historically diverse Cabinet, all 26 people who've held the top seven White
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House jobs under him have been white, and 21 of them have been men. The story
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garners two quotes from Clintonites that are sure to give the topic some media
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life: Current Press Secretary Joe Lockhart is quoted as saying that when it
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comes to crucial White House decisions, "women and minorities still have to
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fight for a seat at the table." And former Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers says,
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"The rule is still that when the big decisions get made, it's not as diverse a
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group as the overall administration. And I'm putting it nicely." The story
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tries to suggest important examples where this alleged ethnic skew hurt. The
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most convincing: The United States' slow response to the 1994 civil war and
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genocide in Rwanda.
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The NYT fronts an exclusive from the New York Senate campaign trenches: At a private
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fund-raiser organized by gay and lesbian supporters, Hillary Clinton said that
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the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy crafted by her husband to govern gays in the
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military was a failure, and that if elected she would work to overturn it. The
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Times points out that HRC's likely opponent, Rudy Giuliani, also opposes
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the policy. The paper further reports that at the event the first lady also
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supported full rights for "same-sex unions," even though, notes the NYT ,
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in 1996 she supported, along with her husband, a bill passed by Congress that
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effectively banned gay marriages. The Times runs the story next to
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pictures of the killer and the killed in the case of an Army private convicted
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yesterday of murdering a fellow soldier he'd harassed for being gay.
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An LAT front-pager reveals that one of the suspects in the 1997
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shooting of rap star Notorious B.I.G. is a former LAPD officer now in prison on
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unrelated bank robbery charges. A theory being pursued by investigators, says
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the paper, is that the officer conspired with Death Row Records founder Marion
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"Suge" Knight to arrange a contract killing of the rapper. On this theory, the
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actual shooter was a college friend of the then-cop.
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Everybody reports inside that a Memphis civil jury decided, in a lawsuit
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brought by the family of Martin Luther King, that a retired local cafe owner
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was part of a conspiracy involving "governmental agencies" in the 1968 King
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murder. This means, explains the coverage, that the jury does not believe the
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man convicted of the crime, James Earl Ray, was the real shooter.
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The NYT runs a story inside about an execution conducted last night
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with possible political ramifications. Monday morning, a man scheduled to be
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executed in Texas was found unconscious from a drug overdose. Nevertheless, the
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state decided not to issue a stay of execution for the man and instead put him
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to death on time. Although George W. Bush was out of the state during all this
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and so technically not in on the decision, the paper reports that a Bush
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spokeswoman confirms he agreed with it. Wackiest detail reported by the
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Times : "Because Long's doctor deemed such a move 'risky,' state
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officials used an airplane staffed by medical personnel to ensure that he
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arrived in good health after the 25-minute trip."
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Some quality control problems noted at the WP : 1) A story about
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trials of an experimental anti-autism drug is slugged by the paper "Treatment
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Counters Autism" even though the story goes on to explain that the drug worked
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no better in the studies than placebos given to the control group; 2) an AP
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story the paper runs about a credit card scam targeting senior military
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officers fails to mention that the Wall Street Journal broke the news yesterday; 3) over a
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heart-wrenching story about a 9-year-old boy who concealed the accidental death
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of his mother for a month, leaving her body in their home because he was afraid
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of being sent to an orphanage, the Post goes with the bad taste headline
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of the year, century, and millennium: "MOTHER DIED, BUT BOY, 9, KEPT MUM."
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