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Hear Them Roar
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The Washington Post leads with the black women's march in
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Philadelphia. The New York Times
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leads with a House committee's condemnation of the Pentagon's handling of Gulf
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War veterans' medical problems. The Los Angeles
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Times 's lead is a report that the U.S. strategy of isolating Iran and
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Iraq from the world community is failing as our allies' desire to make business
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deals weakens their support.
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The WP summarizes the rally's agenda: investigation of the CIA's role
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in "allowing black communities to be flooded with crack cocaine," programs to
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help women prisoners make the transition back to society, the establishment of
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black independent schools, and the release of political prisoners. In
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discussing crowd size, the Post uses as a reference the size of the
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Million Man March, but, curiously, doesn't refer to the Promise Keepers rally
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of a few weeks back--even though the paper gave PK massive front-page
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coverage.
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The rally coverage signifies an odd new journalism trend. In their extensive
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front-page coverage, the Post , the NYT , and the LAT
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dutifully report the size of the rally as "hundreds of thousands," yet they
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each persist in referring to the event as the "Million Woman March," apparently
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because that's what the organizers called it. So look for the Pentagon to call
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its next use of force "Operation Only Objected to by Draft-Dodging Reporters,"
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and don't be surprised when next summer's would-be blockbuster is called "The
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Best Movie You'll Ever See." (Question for William Safire: Why isn't it
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"Million Wom e n March" anyway?)
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The NYT lead is written off a copy it has obtained of a House
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committee's report to be released this coming week that says the Defense
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Department and the Department of Veterans Affairs should be stripped of their
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authority over Gulf soldiers' sickness because of their mishandling of the
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issue. The report states that Congress should either create or designate an
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agency to take over. The paper also reveals that a separate forthcoming study
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by a White House panel will be nearly as critical of the DOD.
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Last week, the WP ran a front-page story about the problems under
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welfare reform faced by a woman fresh off the rolls whose 15-year-old daughter
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has had two babies in rapid succession. The story was accompanied by a
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front-page picture of the daughter sucking her thumb and staring blankly at
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television while holding one of her kids. That picture has drawn a firestorm of
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protest from readers, many of them black women. Now, the Post
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distinguishes itself by being the only paper covered here that has an ombudsman
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who writes a regular column, and today she takes up the issue and concludes
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that "deciding not to put that picture where we did would have better served
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the truth." Avoiding the truth is more like it--the Post didn't turn on
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the TV or tell the girl to suck her thumb.
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In the run-up to Jiang Zemin's visit, there is a lot of China action today.
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The WP , in a story about American-based Chinese political exiles, runs
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the following precis of China's recent human rights record: "After the
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Tiananmen Square crackdown, a decade of public political debate in China came
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to an end. Hundreds if not thousands of demonstrators died. Hundreds were
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jailed, and scores of dissidents fled abroad....Most [had been] beaten or
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tortured. All have seen family members harassed, even persecuted to death."
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Today at least, the NYT seems fixed on looking the other way. It runs an
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op-ed piece about China that asserts "while individuals and special-interest
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groups are free to give human rights absolute and unqualified priority,
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governments are not," and which reports that "the number of political prisoners
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in China currently is 3,000--which is 0.00023 percent of the total population."
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Meanwhile, a Times front-page piece details how Jiang loves to break
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into song and play the piano and recite poetry, all of which, says the paper,
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"points to an unpredictable, wacky side." (Homework assignment: find a single
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front-page piece in the entire history of the NYT emphasizing Hitler's
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fondness for animals and children.) "Oh, Jiang," says one student protester to
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another, "stop with the wacky stunts, with the piano, with the poetry. You're
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killing us here."
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