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Real
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Quiet lost the Belmont Stakes to Victory Gallop by a nose. This is the
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second straight year that the winner of the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness
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fell just short in the final leg of the Triple Crown. (Last year's near-winner
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was Silver Charm.) The last Triple Crown winner was Affirmed, 20 years ago. The
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popular spin: How sad for Real Quiet's jockey, Kent Desormeaux, and for trainer
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Bob Baffert, who also trained Silver Charm. The backstage spins: 1) How sweet
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for jockey Gary Stevens, who rode Victory Gallop this year after having lost on
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board Silver Charm last year. 2) Desormeaux and Baffert are lucky they lost the
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race outright, because if they'd won, Real Quiet would have been disqualified
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for interfering with Victory Gallop's run--and they'd be remembered for
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scandal, not just defeat. (6/8/98)
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The
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National Rifle Association held its annual convention and showcased its new
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president, Charlton Heston. Click for a dissection of the NRA's spin on
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school shootings.
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(6/8/98)
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Terry Nichols was sentenced to life in prison for his part in the
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Oklahoma City bombing. The dramatic spin: The families of the victims testified
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about their grief and received justice. The intellectual spin: Judge Richard
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Matsch sent a message against terrorism and in support of the government.
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Matsch argued that the workers who were killed had been establishing justice,
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ensuring domestic tranquility, and promoting the general welfare. His sound
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bite: "This was not a murder case. ... It is a crime against the Constitution."
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(6/5/98)
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The
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House fell 61 votes short of the two-thirds majority needed to pass a
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constitutional amendment to allow organized prayer in schools , religious
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displays in federal buildings, and the spending of tax money for religiously
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affiliated groups. The vote was 224-203 in favor. Supporters argued that
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Congress should protect religious students from anti-religious school
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administrators. Opponents argued that religious-minority students and school
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administrators should be protected from Congress. The naive spin: Republicans
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lost. The sophisticated spin: Republicans won, by appeasing Christian
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conservatives who will reward them at the polls in November.
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(6/5/98)
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The
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Supreme Court rejected independent counsel Ken Starr's request to
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resolve whether Clinton aide Bruce Lindsey and Secret Service employees must
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answer questions in the Monica Lewinsky investigation. Instead, these questions
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will proceed to the U.S. Court of Appeals. For a look at how Starr is
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recovering ground in his PR battle with President Clinton, click .
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(6/4/98)
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Monica Lewinsky dumped William Ginsburg and hired Jacob Stein and Plato
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Cacheris as her new lawyers. Theories on why she did it: 1) Unlike Ginsburg,
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Stein and Cacheris know how to defend high-profile Washington clients. 2)
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Unlike Ginsburg, they know how to shut up--and proved it by saying nothing when
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Lewinsky presented them to the press. Ginsburg, meanwhile, went on CNN to deny
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he had been fired. 3) Unlike Ginsburg, they're willing to make nice with
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Kenneth Starr in order to avert an indictment of Lewinsky. Pundits hope the
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parties will cut a deal to get Lewinsky to testify against Clinton.
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(6/3/98)
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Several
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states held referendums and primary elections June 2. The headlines: 1)
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Californians approved a ballot measure to replace bilingual education with one
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year of training in English. Hispanic politicians opposed the measure, but
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voters supported it across ethnic lines. Pundits think other states will follow
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suit. 2) Californians rejected a measure that would have banned unions from
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spending dues on political contributions without their members' consent.
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Pundits think this will hurt similar initiatives in other states. 3) California
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Lt. Gov. Gray Davis beat Rep. Jane Harman and businessman Al Checchi, who spent
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millions of their personal wealth, for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination.
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Pundits hailed this as a triumph of political experience over wealth and
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negative ads. 4) Alabama Gov. Fob James Jr. fell just shy of the 50 percent
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needed to avoid a runoff in the Republican primary for governor. The national
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media clucked at James' embarrassment and blamed it on his putative religious
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extremism. (6/3/98)
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Russia's economy is in peril. Its stock market has lost more than half
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its value this year, including a 10 percent drop Monday before rallying
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Tuesday. Analysts fear the economic ills could spread to Europe and that
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Russians might resort to selling nuclear technology under the table. To stave
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off disastrous currency devaluation, the Russian government is tripling
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interest rates, spending reserves, and exhorting Russian tycoons to invest
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their money in Russian markets to restore foreign investors' confidence. The
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U.S. government faces two dilemmas: 1) It must make the situation look grim
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enough to jar Congress into supporting the International Monetary Fund but not
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so grim that investors pull all their money out of Russia. 2) It must bail out
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Russia soon enough to avert collapse but not before Russia delivers the
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politically painful tax, spending, and legal reforms necessary for its
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long-term health. (6/3/98)
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The National Gay and
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Lesbian Task Force released a report on public attitudes toward
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homosexuality . The New York Times agreed the findings show
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increasing public tolerance for gays despite persistent moral disapproval.
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For analysis of the report and its spin, click .
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(6/3/98)
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