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Call Guys
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All three majors working the weekend agree on today's lead: the decision by
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Janet Reno to begin the investigative process that could result in appointing
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an independent counsel to investigate President Clinton's 1996 election
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fund-raising activities. This news comes on the heels of Reno's decision two
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weeks ago to take the same look at Al Gore.
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The Washington Post says the decision is based on new
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information developed by federal investigators that Clinton may have made
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campaign fund solicitation calls from the White House, and reports that the
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White House response is two-pronged: Clinton says he doesn't remember making
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such calls, and there is no clear legal precedent to show that they would be
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illegal anyway.
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The New York Times
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calls the Reno decision a "potential turning point" in that "until now, the
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investigation buffeting the administration had swirled around the Oval Office
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but had not touched Clinton personally...."
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The new evidence apparently includes solicitation call sheets that were
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prepared for Clinton, for calls to fat cats who indisputably gave money to the
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DNC. What's in dispute is whether Clinton actually made the calls. The NYT
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refers to a call sheet for beer baron August Busch IV. The WP opts
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instead for ones for a Maryland businessman and for Frank Zappa's widow Gail.
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The natural assumption that all the papers had access to the same call sheets
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leads to a homework assignment: Does the WP or Newsweek or any
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Post company television station carry Busch product ads?
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Only the Los Angeles Times makes the observation that puts this
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development in the proper context: Clinton has already been under the scrutiny
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of a special prosecutor for three years. (Remember Whitewater?)
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Clinton wasn't informed until Saturday--he was in California on his way to a
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$1 million fund-raiser (!)--which meant that the story was kept out of Friday
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headlines and newscasts. But what's the gain? It's dominating the Sunday
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papers, which in turn set the agenda for the Sunday political talk shows.
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There's just no escaping the news cycle anymore.
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The NYT runs a front-page explanatory piece on last week's Teamster
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guilty pleas. Worth doing, because the case could well lead to deeper trouble
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for the DNC. Unfortunately, the piece doesn't excel at explanation. True, it
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has the understandable problem of trying to be clear about describing schemes
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that were designed to be murky, but it doesn't help that the story doesn't even
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begin to explain until the 26th paragraph why the Teamster fund-raising deals
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in question were illegal, and even then none too clearly. Isn't the relevant
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law that the union can't donate money to either candidate, and hence can't
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create schemes that do that while appearing to be donations from somebody else?
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And shouldn't the Times just say so?
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The WP runs a piece about the decline in the accuracy of directory
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assistance information, saying that the trend arises from increased competition
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and hence decreased cooperation between local phone companies and AT&T.
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They used to freely share numbers, but now they charge each other through the
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nose. The result is that AT&T and many regional phone companies are now
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attempting to compile their own data bases from other sources, like credit card
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files, DMV records, etc.--with decidedly mixed results.
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The NYT 's "Editorial Notebook" item about Chelsea Clinton's arrival
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at Stanford makes a good point. If the Clintons are so concerned that the media
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respect Chelsea's privacy at school, then perhaps they should have let Chelsea
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arrive on her own "attended perhaps by a handful of Secret Service agents
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rather than arriving in a Presidential motorcade and trailed by hundreds of
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reporters and cameramen...."
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