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Weld: Done
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The FDA recall of apparently dangerous diet drugs leads at USA Today ,
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the Washington Post , and the Los Angeles
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Times , and is the top item in the Wall Street Journal front-page "Business and Finance" news
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digest. William Weld's decision to abandon his quest for the ambassadorship to
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Mexico leads at the New York Times ,
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and is the number two story at USAT and the WP . (The LAT
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plays it on the front too, but below the fold.)
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At the FDA's request, Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories withdrew fenfluramine, half
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of the wildly popular "fen-phen," and also dexfenfluramine, which is marketed
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as "Redux." The request came because of new findings from doctors that
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indicated use of the substances was correlated with serious abnormalities in
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heart valves, a suspicion first revealed to the FDA and in the press last July.
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USAT says that 92 of the 291 patients in the group evaluated exhibited
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the valve problems. The agency also recommended that dieters stop using any of
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the drugs they have and contact their doctors. The paper reports that the drugs
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were prescribed more than 20 million times last year. The WP makes the
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extent of the drugs' use a little clearer, stating that about 300,000 people
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are taking each one. The Post quotes an obesity expert expressing the
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worry that these developments will hinder the general development and marketing
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of weight control drugs. USAT makes the same point, but by quoting fat
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people expressing it.
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The papers' consensus on the Weld pull-out is that he never had much of a
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chance, that President Clinton's support for him once the Jesse Helms problem
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presented itself was lukewarm at best, and that the source of Helms's enmity
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was never completely clear. The NYT views the whole quixotic episode as
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indicative of Weld's ulterior pursuit of some other greater political
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goal--either a senate or presidential bid down the road--a claim the paper
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makes both in its news story and in an editorial. The paper quotes Dick Morris
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as saying that he thought Weld had successfully used the attempt to become the
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leader of moderate Republicans.
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The Post floats the view that the dispute was on balance a plus for
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Clinton, saying that several White House advisors were delighted at the
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fissures inside Republican ranks it opened up.
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The WP has a front-page piece about an emerging national
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trend--close-in parking spaces at retail locations for expectant and new
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mothers, known as "stork parking." And it's not just a voluntary trend. The
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Post reports that Dade County, Florida, passed an ordinance last
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year--the first of its kind in the country--requiring businesses with more than
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100 parking spaces to provide at least two spots for "stroller parking."
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There's also an emerging national backlash. The paper notes that some reject
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the suggestion that pregnancy is a disability, while others wonder why parents
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with children should receive a special benefit the elderly do not. "How about
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special parking zones for golfers who need to lug heavy golf bags to the
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clubhouse?" is one irate response to the Dade measure the paper quotes. The
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WP also comments that doctors don't think pregnant women need special
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access, and in fact, some doctors advise them to park far away from stores, for
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the extra exercise.
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The WSJ 's "Work Week" reports that flag and touch football have
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become very big at many companies. Maybe a little too big. One company wrote an
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entire playbook and spent $2,000 on a practice field, and the NEC Corp. pulled
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its team out of the Tokyo league, citing too many injuries.
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