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Internal Affairs
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The Washington Post leads with Independent Counsel
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Kenneth Starr's investigation into allegations that President Clinton suborned
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perjury by a former White House intern. A three-judge panel, reported both the
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Post and Los Angeles Times , has authorized Starr to explore charges
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that Clinton and his close friend Vernon Jordan persuaded the intern, Monica
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Lewinsky, to deny that she had had a year-and-a-half-long affair with the
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president after she had detailed the relationship in 10 conversations with
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Linda Tripp. Tripp, a colleague at the Pentagon where Lewinsky later worked,
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recorded the conversations surreptitiously and reportedly turned the tapes over
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to Starr. Both Clinton and Lewinsky denied the affair in sworn depositions in
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the Paula Jones case. Clinton lawyer, Robert Bennett called the story
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"ridiculous" and told the Post he "smelled a rat." Neither Bennett nor
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White House officials would comment on whether Clinton had discussed her
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testimony with her.
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The Clinton/Netanyahu talks lead at the New York Times . USA
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Today goes with the finding that Theodore Kacszynski is legally competent
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to stand trial, which is also the top national story at the LAT .
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The WP reports that President Clinton, who will meet with Yassir
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Arafat on Thursday, is getting into an unusual amount of detail in the latest
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Mideast talks.
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The WP reports that before the two leaders broached substantive
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matters, they made an attempt to clear the air about their own troubled
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relationship. Netanyahu complained about being snubbed by Clinton on a prior
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visit to the U.S., and Clinton chided him for meeting with Jerry Falwell the
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other day, noting that Falwell has distributed videos suggesting that Clinton
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may have been complicit in a murder. The NYT , in its lead, says that
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administration officials were "furious" about the Falwell rendezvous. The Post
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reports that Netanyahu presented Clinton with a stack of gross images of Jews
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and Israelis from Arab newspapers.
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The LAT reports that the two leaders met again last night but also
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states that the long talks have thus far failed to restart the deadlocked
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Middle East peace process.
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Besides the court-appointed psychiatrist's finding that Kacszynski can stand
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trial, the papers also pass along indications that she found him to be mentally
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ill. USAT quotes an AP story saying that in her eyes he's a paranoid
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schizophrenic, and the NYT says that she concluded he "actually does
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resort to violence against those individuals and organizations that he believes
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are hurting him." Most of the dailies hint at the possibility of renewed plea
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bargaining now, with USAT stating flatly that this is underway. Prompted
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by the recent murder of a NYC plainclothes officer during a drug bust, the
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NYT has an informative take-out on undercover work, which points out
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that about twice a month a NYC undercover officer is shot during a buy, and
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five or six times a month, one is forced at gunpoint by dealers to use coke or
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heroin. The story adds that about 70 percent of the city's undercover cops are
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black or Hispanic. Both the LAT and NYT report in front-page
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stories that Cuba is reaping a financial windfall from the Pope's visit. The
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LAT estimates that tourists and media types will pump an extra $25
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million into the local economy. And the NYT reports that hotel prices
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have recently doubled and that the government has come up with such extras as a
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$1,000 licensing fee for each satellite phone brought in by the networks.
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Additionally, Cuban state television is charging each visiting TV outfit a
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$100,000 fee for the live video feed of the Pope's activities.
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The WSJ reports that State Farm is suing Ford and one of its
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suppliers, alleging that the car company concealed ignition switch defects that
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led to car fires and millions in insurance claims. (This story is also on the
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NYT front.)
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The on-off-on again decision of the National Holocaust Museum to invite
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Arafat for a look-see while he's in D.C. generates an uncommon amount of
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opinion at the WP . Sure, invite him, says columnist Jim Hoagland.
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Absolutely not, counters columnist Charles Krauthammer. The paper's editorial
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on the matter says it all, though: "Very few people tour [the museum] and come
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away unmoved and unchanged. Perhaps Mr. Arafat would be one of those rare
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exceptions. But what would be lost by taking that chance?"
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The NYT editorial page is likewise on the mark in its discussion of
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whether in light of the Guatemalan student rapes, American college excursions
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should be curtailed, pointing out that such enriching experiences are probably
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not as rape-risky as fraternity parties.
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