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Mississippi Learning
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USA
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Today leads with President Clinton's criticism Tuesday of health
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insurers for making it too difficult for people who switch or lose their jobs
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to get coverage. The Washington Post leads with oil prices hitting a ten-year
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low. The New York Times
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goes with the Senate Republicans' proposed budget and its rejection of
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Clinton's domestic spending priorities. The Los Angeles
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Times lead is that California thrift institution Home Savings is being
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bought by Seattle-based Washington Mutual, creating the nation's
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seventh-largest financial institution. But the paper's off-lead is probably the
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bigger story: The earthquake hazard facing Southern California may only be half
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as great as scientists had been saying, and it's very unlikely that the region
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will ever experience that staple of Los Angeles small talk, the 8.0 quake, aka
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The Big One.
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USAT reports that Clinton has asked HHS Secretary Donna Shalala to
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look into strengthening a 1996 law aimed at helping people between jobs keep
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their health coverage. The main problem, says the paper, is that the law
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doesn't control how much companies can charge for such gap coverage, so they
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are tending to make it prohibitive.
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Following up on the USAT lead from just over a week ago, the
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WP lead reports that oil prices have gone down into the $13 a barrel
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neighborhood, a true boon to the U.S. economy. Adjusted for inflation, this is
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the lowest price since the energy crisis in the 1970s. The reasons given are
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the same ones offered in the papers last week: a mild winter here and in
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Europe, a slowdown in Asian demand and the unwillingness by two of OPEC's
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biggest producers, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela, to cut production. A bit further
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below in the story is the reason for that: they are trying to gain market share
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via low prices.
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The Senate Budget Committee proposed a Republican fiscal blueprint that,
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says the NYT , rejects nearly all of President Clinton's calls for
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increased spending in such areas as education, child care and health care,
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choosing instead to put the proceeds of any tobacco settlement into Medicare.
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But on the other hand, the budget plan provides smaller tax cuts than were
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sought by many Republicans, and supports the Clinton administration's plan to
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use budget surpluses to first shore up Social Security. The Times says
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the proposal is likely to be adopted more or less intact.
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The Wall Street Journal runs a piece inside reporting that it
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turns out the Beardstown Ladies, the group of elderly investors who
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became media darlings a few years back, have been overstating the annualized
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rate of return they're achieving. Turns out that between 1983 and 1993 it was
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9.1 percent, not 23.4 percent, the figure on the cover of their best-selling
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investment guidebook. During the same period, the DJIA was up 12.1 percent.
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Oops, math error, say the Ladies. (The audit was prompted by earlier stories in
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Chicago magazine and the WSJ .) The oops is also on today's
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WP and LAT front pages.
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The NYT front reports on the court-ordered release yesterday of more
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than 124,000 pages of previously secret files from a Mississippi state agency that used spy
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tactics, intimidation, false imprisonment, jury tampering and other illegal
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methods to fight civil rights activities in the state. The files are believed
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to provide material for lawsuits against the state and also for the reopening
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of long-dormant cases of crimes against civil rights workers, along the lines
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of the long-delayed but finally successful prosecution of the man who murdered
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Medgar Evers. The Mississippi papers story is also carried inside the
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WP .
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This week's Bill-Bashing from Michael Kelly in his Post column
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includes the following table of organization for the Clinton White House:
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There's "Robert Bennett, the president's sexual misconduct mouthpiece, which is
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a distinguished position. It is distinguished from David Kendall, his
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personal-finance corruption mouthpiece; from Lanny Davis, his campaign-finance
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corruption mouthpiece; from James Kennedy, his White House general scandal
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mouthpiece; from James Carville, his 'independent' general scandal mouthpiece;
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and from Michael McCurry, his don't ask, don't tell mouthpiece."
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