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Cunanan the Barbarian
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This is the kind of news day when it's nice to be USA Today .
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Because that way, you don't have to lead with a proposed youth health insurance
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plan (today's New York
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Times ), with the European Union's acceptance of the Boeing/McDonnell
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Douglas merger (the Los Angeles Times ), or even with Newt Gingrich seeking calm
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among House Republicans (the Washington Post ). You can lead with Andrew Cunanan.
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Below the "important" stories, Cunanan does get front-page space at the
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LAT and WP and most of the "National Report" inside at the
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NYT . The story presented a challenge to all the east coast papers,
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breaking as it did just about at closing time. At about the time the cops were
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zipping up the body bag, the WP was describing Cunanan as "now a
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phantom"--but meaning he was still on the loose. Most of today's accounts have
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been substantially rewritten between editions and the final versions still
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feature a lot of sourcing to television broadcasts. Only the LAT could
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cut right to the (end of the) chase: "Serial Killing Suspect Cunanan Is Found
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Dead in Miami Beach."
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The WP reports that in a private caucus meeting with House
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Republicans, Gingrich has explained that there is a single line of authority in
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the House and that he is it. Gingrich called the intrigues of recent days
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"childish, silly and self-destructive." Despite Gingrich's attitude, there will
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apparently be at least one more meeting among House Republicans to discuss the
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events of the past week. Judiciary Committee chairman Henry J.Hyde tells the
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Post why he's looking forward to the session: "The entertainment
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value."
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The middle top of the Times front page is dominated by details from
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memos turned over to congressional investigators, apparently from the files of
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former White House chief of staff, Harold Ickes, which illustrate the extremely
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active role Bill Clinton and Al Gore had in their re-election campaign's
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fundraising. The story is topped by a large picture of portions of two of the
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memos.
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A tiny box on the NYT front informs readers that a Pentagon/CIA study
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concludes that 100,000 American soldiers may have been exposed to nerve gas
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during the Gulf War. The story itself is on page A12.
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The WP has a story today about a program that sends troubled kids
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from inner city Baltimore to a school in Kenya. The piece opens with "before"
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and dramatically improved "after" writing samples by a 13-year-old boy who just
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returned from a year there. He'll be going back. (Was there some good reason,
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by the way, why the Post couldn't bring itself to mention that the
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students in the program are black?)
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According to the Wall Street Journal , people who came to Atlanta last year
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to set up vending operatons are so disgruntled by the financial baths they
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took--they've filed more than 200 lawsuits in local courts--that after the FBI
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cleared Richard Jewell, it began wondering if the Olympic bombing could have
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been the work of an outraged vendor.
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The NYT op-ed page continues to turn the heat up on an issue nobody
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cares about--keeping foxhunting legal in Britain. For the second time in two
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weeks. And for the second time, by a novelist. Hmmm--plotting problems with
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their current projects?
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