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Clinton's New Organ Policy
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USA
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Today leads with a Clinton administration proposal for new rules
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governing transplant organ availability. The New York Times
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goes with the decision by Switzerland's three biggest banks to negotiate a
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global settlement with Holocaust victims by setting up a compensation fund. The
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plan does not include the Swiss government, whose central bank received the
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vast majority of wealth stolen by Nazis from Jews and other persecuted groups.
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The Los
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Angeles Times leads with depressing news about California's second-tier
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state college system: an overwhelming number of its incoming students lack the
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basic math and English skills they should have acquired in high school. The
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Washington Post lead headline is a hardy perennial,
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relating to one of the worst public education systems in the country: "D.C.
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Schools Chief Resigns."
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The new transplant rules, explains the USAT lead (and front-page
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pieces in the WP , and the NYT ), aim at providing organs to the
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sickest candidates first regardless of where they live, as opposed to the
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current ones, which were conceived when organs couldn't be maintained outside
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the body for nearly as long as they can now, and hence emphasize getting them
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to the closest candidates. The private network that coordinates most organ
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distribution opposes the shift, because of a fear that this change will atrophy
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local transplant centers by diverting organs to a handful of large regional
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ones, and also deny organs to people who can't travel. The papers all point out
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that under the status quo, more than 4,000 Americans die annually while waiting
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for needed organs.
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The LAT front reports that just two days before the NCAA Final Four
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tournament game, a federal grand jury in Chicago has indicted two former Northwestern University players on charges of
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attempting to fix the outcome of games for the benefit of bettors during the
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1994-1995 college season. This is a "stinging blow" to the sport, says the
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paper, because Northwestern has the reputation of placing academics above
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athletics. The NYT runs the indictments story inside, adding that a
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nationwide survey of Division I basketball and football players showed that 4
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percent said they had gambled on a game they had played in.
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The papers note that Bill Clinton appeared in South Africa yesterday
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alongside Nelson Mandela, but none could be bothered to put their stories about
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the appearance--simply unthinkable as recently as four or five years ago--on
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the front page. All the visit gets is front-page pictures with "reefer"
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captions pointing to stories inside. This judgment is especially hard to
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understand given yesterday's GOP charges that some spots in Clinton's traveling
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delegation were in effect sold to mega donors to Democratic Party coffers,
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making the trip a sort of flying Lincoln bedroom. By the way, over a
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non-descript editorial, the WP serves up the perfect headline for
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Clinton's apology-strewn safari: "Guilt Trip."
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Front-page pieces in the NYT and USAT report that one of the
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Jonesboro shooting suspects is asking for his pastor and the other is crying
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for his mother. And an inside NYT piece addresses the question raised
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yesterday by TP about what the rules are nowadays governing identifying juveniles in the
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paper. Almost every editor questioned says the crucial fact pushing
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disclosure was that the names were already out there, in the local paper and on
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the Internet. This is another example, like the tabloidization of the
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mainstream press, where the dwarfs have ended up controlling the giants.
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The Wall Street Journal reports that Senate Judiciary Committee
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Chairman Orrin Hatch is demanding that Microsoft allow its licensees and
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partners to speak with Senate investigators despite nondisclosure rules in MS
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contracts. Backing the demand is the committee's ranking Democrat, Sen. Patrick
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Leahy, up to now a MS supporter.
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The national conversation on sexual harassment gets curiouser and curiouser.
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Now comes Abe Rosenthal, who responds to Gloria Steinem's Times op-ed
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from earlier in the week with one of his own. Steinem had argued that if an
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uninvited sexual gesture by a man is met with noncompliance by a woman and then
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is not followed up by him, no sexual harassment has occurred. Rosenthal
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counters with a family secret. Many years ago, his older sister was walking in
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the park when a man exposed himself to her. She screamed and ran home, where
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she came down with a cold and then pneumonia and then a few days later, died.
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Rosenthal's counter to Steinem is that mere uninvited sexual gestures can
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be...fatal. This is a sad, sad story, but legally and morally irrelevant. To
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think otherwise is to opt for making coming up behind someone and saying "Boo"
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a crime, because yes, it just might possibly scare him to death.
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