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Whitewatershed?
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USA
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Today leads with the death of James McDougal. The Washington Post goes with the upcoming return grand jury
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appearance of Betty Currie. The Los Angeles
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Times leads with Madeleine Albright seeking a tough stance on Serbian
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violence in Yugoslavia. And the New York Times
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goes with drawing the basic Capitol Hill battle lines regarding the upcoming
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surplus budget. The Times says a rift has opened between House
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Republicans, who continue to aggressively opt for tax cuts, and Senate
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Republicans, who are more apt to go along with the basic thrust of the Clinton
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budget plan.
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The death of McDougal on Sunday, of a heart attack in the prison where he
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was serving his Whitewater sentence, is widely viewed as trouble for Ken Starr.
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USAT says it means the end for Starr of a steady stream of information
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on the Clintons' business and political activities. The LAT front-page
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McDougal piece says his death could be a "setback." USAT calls McDougal
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a "dashing eccentric." The WP calls him a "wily Arkansas banking
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rogue."
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Everybody quotes President Clinton's statement of condolence: "I have good
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memories of the years we worked together in Arkansas, and I extend my
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condolences to his family." The USAT and the WP (in its "Style"
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section profile) mention that the White House statement notably lacked any
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expression of sympathy from Hillary Clinton. The Post says there is a
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McDougal book on the way titled "Arkansas Mischief."
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Last Friday's NYT lead set out the meaning of the WP 's Clinton
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deposition scoop from the day before: that the president's secretary, Betty
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Currie, had become the central character in his accounts of all his dealings
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with Monica Lewinsky. It apparently took several days for that to sink in at
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the Post , where today's lead makes essentially the same point. The paper's
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quotes this gender- and religion-confused defense of Currie offered by Jesse
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Jackson: "Betty Currie isn't a lone gunman shooting from the hips....She is a
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government servant and a Christian woman....It isn't like Betty to be making
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independent decisions of her own volition."
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The LAT lead states that on the eve of a six nation conference in
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London, Albright is pushing European allies to act decisively to end the recent
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outbreak of violence in the Serbian province of Kosovo. The paper notes that
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France may balk at punitive measures directed against Serbia. The NYT 's
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veteran war correspondent Chris Hedges provides detailed reporting on the ground from Prekaz in Kosovo province.
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Hedges says there were clear indications the town saw heavy combat, indicating
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that the Albanian side was not unarmed. Hedges' dispatch includes the harrowing
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tale of an Albanian woman who fled Prekaz with her five children after her
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husband was killed.
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USAT has a brief front-page blurb and the WP has a more
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detailed piece based on the report in this week's Time that the FBI and
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State Department are investigating the theft, during the height of the Iraq
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crisis, by a man in a brown tweed jacket, of top secret documents from a secure
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State Dept. office just down the hall from Albright's. So far, the papers
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report that authorities suspect an inside job.
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The Wall Street Journal 's main "Politics and Policy" piece
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states that based on recent White House performances, "the Clinton legal team
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clearly is calling the shots in the Lewinsky flap, and its strategy is simple:
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the less said, the better." In the piece, Dee Dee Myers joins fellow Clinton
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alum George S. in dumping on the White House: "Throughout the Clinton
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presidency, even times when I was there, the White House has created the
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appearance of wrongdoing by being slow to come forward with the facts."
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Journalists have been uniformly weak-willed in their inability to resist the
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Monica Lewinsky saga. William
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Safire demonstrates an inability to resist Monica Lewinsky. Today, his
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column is quite firm. Seems ol' Bill had a chance hook-up with her in D.C.'s
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posh Cosmos Club: "The dark-eyed young woman looked attractive in a simple
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short black dress and black stockings....She was too carefully coiffured, but
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had a sort of natural, youthful, exuberant smile that anybody, even a
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President, would enjoy seeing around the office."
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