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Iran
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beat the United States 2-1 in World Cup soccer. This ends U.S. hopes of
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advancing in the tournament. Iranians rejoiced in the streets and thanked
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Allah. The U.S. players were humiliated and, in contrast to American
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post-major-victory tradition, did not attribute the outcome to Jesus Christ.
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The surly spin, from Iran's chief theocrat, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei: Iran's
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"arrogant opponents felt the bitter taste of defeat." The sunny spin, from
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ordinary Iranians: 1) There are no hard feelings. 2) The United States is just
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a paper tiger/Satan after all. 3) Let's be friends. The U.S. media noted the
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political rapprochement behind the game: Last week, the Clinton administration
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praised Iran's moderate president and proposed to upgrade relations. The
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Washington Post called the soccer match "a love fest." U.S. soccer
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pundits immediately launched into the all-American pastime of fixing blame and
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complaining about bad luck. The chief whipping boy, U.S. coach Steve Sampson,
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is accused of having panicked, fielded too many rookies, and benched or cut
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veteran players over petty personality conflicts. (6/22/98)
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Update
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on the Lewinsky scandal : 1) U.S. News & World Report
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described more contents of the Tripp-Lewinsky tapes. First highlight: Lewinsky
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sought President Clinton's help in getting a new job before she was subpoenaed
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in the Paula Jones case. Pundits' spin: This undermines Kenneth Starr's theory
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that Lewinsky sought Clinton's help in exchange for lying to protect him in the
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Jones case. Second highlight: On the tapes, Tripp apparently encourages
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Lewinsky to obsess about Clinton, to ask him for help getting a job, and to
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send him letters via a courier service owned by the family of Tripp's literary
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agent. Pundits' spin: This supports the moral argument that Clinton was set up,
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and it might support the legal argument that he was entrapped. 2) The
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Washington Post reported that Lewinsky's new lawyers have reached the
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same impasse with Starr that stalled her first lawyer: Starr demands that she
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plead guilty to at least one crime, whereas she insists on total immunity.
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Pundits figure any impasse is good news for Clinton. 3) The buzz over Steven
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Brill's critique of Starr and the press extended into its second week,
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highlighted by a Weekly Standard countercritique of Brill. Brill's new
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spin is that the anti-Starr spin on his article didn't come from him. (For
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evidence to the contrary, click .)
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(6/22/98)
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Two
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major health insurers, Kaiser Permanente and Aetna, decided not to cover
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Viagra except for members who pay a surcharge. Kaiser's spin: It's too
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expensive, and other people shouldn't have to pay for your intercourse. Aetna's
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spin: "Having sexual relations is not a medical necessity." The New York State
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Health Department's explanation for not covering Viagra under Medicaid: Some
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people will turn around and sell it on the black market. The pro-coverage spin,
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from the pill's manufacturer, Pfizer: Impotence is a "serious medical condition
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that can seriously diminish men's self-esteem and affect their relationships."
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Analysts speculate Kaiser's decision will accelerate a race by insurers to
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avoid becoming havens for impotent men. (6/22/98)
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An
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alleged copycat case of three white men dragging a black man from a car
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has been recanted. A black man in Louisiana, whose report of the alleged crime
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was picked up in the national press and was being investigated as a hate crime
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(after the recent murder in Texas), has admitted he fabricated the story. Two
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women say what really happened is that they ripped off the man in a crack deal,
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he tried to get into their car, and he was dragged in the ensuing altercation.
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(6/22/98)
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The
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Boston Globe forced metro columnist Patricia Smith to resign for
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fabricating quotes and characters. Nobody knows how long she has been doing it.
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Smith's defense, in her departing column: She only did it "to create the
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desired impact or slam home a salient point," and her career will survive "this
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indiscretion." Colleagues and media critics compared her with ex- New
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Republic fabricator Stephen Glass with varying takes: 1) Like Glass, she
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was "stretched too thin." 2) Kudos to the Globe for instituting the
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routine source double-checking system that caught Smith. If only the New
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Republic had done this. 3) Shame on the Globe for having hired Smith
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despite a previous incident in which she had reportedly reviewed a concert she
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didn't attend. At least the New Republic didn't know it was hiring a
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liar. 4) As with Glass, the quotes from Smith's sources were too good to check.
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5) Actually, the poetic quality of Smith's quotes is what aroused her editors'
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suspicions. 6) Her talent for poetry is what inspired her to fabricate in the
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first place. So it's poetic justice that she was caught for the same reason. 7)
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Glass showed superior cleverness by fabricating less perfect quotes. 8) Smith
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"championed the downtrodden and elevated the voices of people who would never
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have gotten in this paper." 9) Smith invented those voices instead of doing the
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work of talking to real downtrodden people. (Why do editors fall for the wiles
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of the likes of Glass and Smith? Check out "Glass Houses,"
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by Jack Shafer.) (6/19/98)
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The Senate killed the
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McCain tobacco bill . Editorialists were outraged. Democrats accused
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Republicans of killing the bill at the behest of Big Tobacco. Republicans said
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the bill had lost sight of its original goal--reducing teen smoking--and become
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a tax-and-spend monstrosity full of extraneous special-interest tax breaks and
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off-budget spending. Democrats pointed out that Republicans had demanded the
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extraneous tax breaks in the first place. The initial spin: Pushing to kill the
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bill was a big gamble for the tobacco companies, because they'll now have to
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face suits from states and individuals. The backspin: What gamble? The Senate
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had made the companies' decision easy by stripping the bill of the liability
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cap that would have mitigated the suits. (For an earlier look at the spin
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war over tobacco, click here.)
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(6/18/98)
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The
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Ennis Cosby murder trial opened. Even before jury selection, the
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prosecution dropped a bombshell, alleging that defendant Mikail Markhasev
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belongs to the "Mexican Mafia" prison gang and that the gang might threaten
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jurors. Similarities to the O.J. Simpson case: 1) It's a celebrity murder. 2)
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National media are flocking to cover it. 3) It's next door to the O.J. civil
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case courtroom. 4) The racial angle is back, but this time, the roles are
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reversed. The defendant is Ukrainian and is alleged to have told a companion,
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"I shot the nigger." (6/17/98)
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The Detroit Red
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Wings won the Stanley Cup, beating the Washington Capitals in four games.
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This is the second straight National Hockey League championship for the Red
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Wings and the fourth consecutive sweep in the NHL finals. The on-stage hero:
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Steve Yzerman, Red Wings captain, who won playoff MVP honors after having been
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labeled a choker earlier in his career. The offstage hero: former Red Wings
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star Vladimir Konstantinov, who, a year after suffering severe brain damage in
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a car crash, was rolled onto the ice in his wheelchair to celebrate this year's
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championship. (6/17/98)
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Congress and the White House are in a ruckus over homosexuality . First,
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Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott called it a sin and compared it to
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kleptomania and "sex addiction." Then gay activists denounced Lott's remarks.
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Then House Majority Leader Dick Armey said Lott is right and the Bible proves
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it. White House spokesman Mike McCurry said that 1) "it's not a disease, it is
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something that is part of defining one's sexuality"; 2) Lott's remarks show
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that Republican leaders in Congress are "backward"; and 3) the Christian right
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has pushed these leaders to "the extreme." The media had a field day, recalling
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Bob Dole's 1996 crisis over a donation from gay Republicans and Armey's 1995
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reference to Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., as "Barney Fag." (6/17/98)
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Massachusetts' highest
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court decided that British au pair Louise Woodward will not go back to
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jail. Woodward will soon be able to leave the United States. The court upheld a
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trial judge's decision to 1) reduce Woodward's conviction from murder to
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manslaughter in the death of an 8-month-old baby and 2) reduce her prison
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sentence from 15 years to the 279 days she had already served. The baby's
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father responded by filing a wrongful death suit. Woodward recently fired one
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of her lawyers for allegedly telling a state trooper she now thinks Woodward is
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guilty. (See the latest "International
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Papers" for the Woodward-British Airways ruckus.) (6/16/98)
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