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Conoco Games
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With the Di saga receding ever so slightly, news diversity makes a small
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comeback. So we have USA Today leading with the failure of an airline rate hike
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attempt, while the New York Times
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goes with Clinton vs. Gingrich on national educational testing, the Washington Post with a startling development in the Paula
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Jones lawsuit, and the Los Angeles Times leads with a local political
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story.
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With airlines flying at 77 percent capacity in August and the Dow Jones
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Transportation Index at record levels, it seemed like a good time for a 5
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percent fare increase, which, says USAT , most of the major domestic
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airlines put into place last week. But by last night, only two airlines still
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had it in all markets. USAT says that a computer system glitch
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mistakenly rolled back United Airline's increase in all markets and when
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American, Delta, and TWA saw that, they, fearing the loss of business from
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being underpriced, rolled their fares back too.
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The NYT reports that President Clinton has decided to make national
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educational standards testing a centerpiece of his second-term agenda. Clinton
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says his call for fourth grade reading tests and eighth grade math tests should
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be beyond partisanship. Yet, says the Times , Newt Gingrich and many
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other Republicans in the House and Senate see it as a federal intrusion into
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the schools. "The president is focused on the wrong end," Gingrich is quoted as
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saying. "He's focused on Washington bureaucracy, Washington regulations,
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Washington red tape." To avoid this sort of opposition, Clinton has emphasized
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that the tests would be voluntary and ultimately under the control of local
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school authorities. He has also said the tests could be designed by a
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bipartisan board. Some critics have said the problem is that the tests divert
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money away from actual educational improvements. They are estimated to cost $22
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million to develop. (To me, that's the only part that's hard to swallow. Why
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should an elementary school test cost millions?)
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The Post reports that the two attorneys who have handled Paula
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Jones's lawsuit against the president thus far--including one successful trip
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to the Supreme Court--backed out of the case yesterday. Close sources say that
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the problem is that Jones rejected a $700,000 settlement offer because it
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didn't include a full apology from the president. The paper cites as a factor
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in Jones's intransigence the influence of her new friend and public relations
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consultant, Susan Carpenter-McMillan. The piece also points out a strong reason
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the lawyers had for urging Jones to take the deal--they had recently switched
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to a percentage contingency fee arrangement with her. (Does Jones's demurral
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show that she's about more than money or does it show that she's about more
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money?)
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The range of Di-related front-page stories indicates a level of interest
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that just won't wait for real news. USAT has a story about how the royal
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family offered to restore the title of Her Royal Highness posthumously (and was
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turned down by the Spencer family). The WP runs "Press Pledges
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Restraint" regarding Princes William and Harry, and "Diana Helped Choose Ring."
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The NYT front is graced by "Millions of Dollars Pouring in to Diana's
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Favorite Charities."
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Correction : This column made a mistake last night in saying that AOL
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was taking control of Prodigy. The column meant, of course, Compuserve. The
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column is sorry.
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The Wall Street Journal "Work Week" column reports, "In a
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survey of 1,000 adults, 46% said they would move next door to their in-laws for
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a 50% pay raise."
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Both the NYT and LAT run front-page pieces reporting that on
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Monday, the Clinton administration decided to allow Conoco to conduct oil
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drilling on a federal property in Utah where last year, during the election,
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Clinton established a national monument to protect the wilderness from
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development. This will be the first time that oil and gas drilling will be
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allowed at any national monument. Note to Fred Thompson: You might want to see
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if Conoco was a soft money contributor to the Democrats in 1996. Just a
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thought.
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