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Fashioning Paula
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USA
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Today leads with Texas' settlement of its product-liability lawsuit
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against the leading tobacco companies. The top nonlocal story at the Washington Post is the latest development in the Indonesian
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economic crisis--a rare and boosterish Suharto press conference in contrast to
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a further plunging stock market and food riots in outlying towns. The New York Times
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leads with a comprehensive poll about American attitudes concerning
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abortion.
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In the Texas case, reports USAT , the defendant companies have agreed
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to pay about $15 billion over 25 years to reimburse the state for expenses it
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incurred in the treatment of smoking-related illnesses. That makes Texas the
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third state to settle such a case, joining Florida and Mississippi. There are,
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says the paper, a total of 40 such suits on file, with Minnesota's turn coming
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next week.
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The Wall Street Journal states that the plaintiffs' lawyers
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hired by Texas to try the case will receive as part of the deal almost $2.2
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billion in fees.
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The NYT abortion survey, the first conducted by the paper since 1989, was
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based on telephone interviews of 1,101 people and detects "a notable shift from
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general acceptance" of having the procedure: from 40 percent to 32 percent. And
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the pollsters also detected an increasingly acute sensitivity to abortion
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timing: Sixty-one percent of those polled thought abortions should be permitted
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during the first trimester, but only 15 percent in the second and just 7
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percent in the third. (The piece notes that this last stat helps explain why a
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focus on partial-birth abortions has proven politically advantageous for
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abortion foes.) Nearly 45 percent of those asked to state the present law on
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abortion could not give the correct answer.
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The WSJ notes that the just-concluded football/TV deal will probably
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mean even steeper cable bills in the near future. Some local cable
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companies, the paper says, expect the fees they'll pay ESPN to go up more than
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20 percent. And they're in the habit of passing expenses along to Joe Remote.
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Even nonsports fans will be affected, notes the Journal , because ESPN is
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usually part of basic cable service. (Which raises the question: Hasn't
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technology progressed to a point that would allow cafeteria-style programming
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choices by subscribers?)
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A scan of the headlines found cheek-by-jowl on the WP 's Page A6
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provides an interesting snapshot of the life of the modern Cabinet officer:
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"[Ex-HUD Secretary] Cisneros's Ex-Mistress Pleads Guilty," "[Labor Secretary]
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Herman Denies Allegations of Influence-Selling Scheme," and "Two Tyson Foods
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Executive Indicted Over Gifts to [Ex-Agriculture Secretary] Espy."
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The WSJ reports that, according to an MIT survey, Americans are twice
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as likely to back a tax increase going toward the search for extraterrestrials
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than one for gene-cloning research.
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The NYT reports that today's issue of the journal Science will
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describe an experiment in which people's biological clocks were reset three
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hours by shining a bright light on the back of their knees. The finding, if it
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holds up, says the Times , may lead to a simple way for airline travelers
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to fight jet lag.
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Yesterday's Los Angeles Times ran a story under the headline "Paula
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Jones Works on Her Court Appearance," which, illustrated by pictures of Jones,
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was all about the various looks she's had since stepping on the public stage.
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The piece concluded that she's finally graduated to an image that's
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"sophisticated yet soft." Today's WP "Style" section (that's the
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opposite of substance, remember) picks up that ball and runs with it, with a
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lengthy discourse on the new PJ. "It is," hyperventilates
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the Post , one of the most jaw-dropping public make-overs ever." Jones
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apparently has "smoothed the frizzy mane of curls that once reached to such
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dazzling heights. Her makeup is now subtle and based on natural, not neon,
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hues. Her clothing is inspired by the boardroom instead of the secretarial
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pool. She has embraced the markers of dignity, refinement and power." In true
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newspaper overkill fashion, the piece backs this up by consulting Cynde Watson,
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national makeup artist for Bobbi Brown Essentials, and Steven Zdatny, a
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historian at West Virginia University specializing in the aesthetics and
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politics of hair.
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The placement of these two pieces is a PR triumph, but one carrying the
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seeds of its own destruction: If people know all this work is going into making
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Paula Jones seem a certain someone, doesn't that just make it obvious that
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she's really somebody else?
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