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Address your e-mail to
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the editors to [email protected]. Please include your address and daytime phone
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number (for confirmation only).
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Last week
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in Slate, Jonathan Rauch documented former Secretary of Labor Robert B.
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Reich's fabrications in his much-touted memoir, Locked in the Cabinet .
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Reich to Rauch's accusations. And Rauch Reich's response.
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This week the
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controversy continues:
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Third
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Reich
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The
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Jonathan Rauch vs. Robert Reich controversy captures the meaning of
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communication in the new world of Webzines. I don't particularly care about
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either party, nor do I find the substance of the controversy particularly
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gripping: a reporter and an ex-politician going after each other like a couple
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of school kids in the playground--big deal. What did matter to me was being
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able to access the gestalt of the experience. Sounds like psychobabble, but it
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means I liked Rauch's original piece, felt and understood Reich's arguments in
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reply to Rauch, and was able to incorporate Rauch's counter-arguments, all in
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what seemed like a comprehensive whole occurring at one moment in time. Sort of
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like playing a good point in tennis--lots of interchange and then a precise
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conclusion, quick and satisfying. It doesn't happen the same way in print
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journalism.
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-- Gary
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Walters Toronto
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Rauch to
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Judgment
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Thank you for the
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Rauch/Reich/Rauch dialogue. I found the Rauch counter particularly compelling
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since it mirrored exactly my reaction to the Reich reply. What struck me most,
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however, was how this little folk tale of inaccurate reporting of events
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illustrates a dilemma of modern life.
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From my
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occasional role in affairs reported in the media I have drawn the general
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conclusion that very little reporting is 100 percent accurate. Whether the
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inaccuracies are intentional, mere failures to understand, or just
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oversimplifications in order to dumb down the message or meet space or time
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limitations matters not. My rule of thumb is that 80 percent "right" is way
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above average. How, therefore, am I ever to recognize the (minimum) 20 percent
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"wrong" in most articles? It is this question which, for me, limits media
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credibility more than any other.
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--Frank
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Ruswick
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Tales
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From the Trans-Crypt
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This from a former chief
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clerk for a U.S. Senate Committee:
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Both Reich and Rauch wrote
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wrong. Recording companies never challenge chairmen's changes. Obsequious staff
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often offer trimmed and tabulated transcripts, the better to butter their
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bosses.
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In contrast to a courthouse,
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I can tell you that the official record of any Senate or House proceeding is
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what the chairman says it is. Hired recording companies make typed transcripts
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of what their stenographer thinks the tape recorder, supplemented by written
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notes, captured. This "draft transcript" goes back to whomever the senator or
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congressman designates for corrections. Tradition mandates that changes are
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assumed to be technical corrections--to set the record straight, to translate
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garbled portions, or to sort who said what when more than one person speaks at
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once.
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Corrections can be complete rewrites, however. Sometimes the corrections are
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accurate, sometimes awful. Angry, sarcastic, or tongue-in-cheek responses are
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most likely to be struck from the record. Poor grammar, misspoken words, and
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confrontational moments between important men and women also regularly hit the
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cutting-room floor. Even the most ethical staff member gets to the typed
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transcript draft days or weeks after the event and is dependent upon his or her
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own memory to edit the record. The connection to the stenographer's wire has
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been known to fail suddenly at sensational senatorial clashes. Finally, members
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of the press have also erroneously visualized goings-on, especially when
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writing hours later.
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-- R.L.S. Kropf Tahoe
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City, Calif.
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Jonathan Rauch
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replies: Committee chairmen (and privileged witnesses) do sometimes modify
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hearing transcripts, but not in this case: I checked the hearing transcript
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against a videotape.
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The
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Village People
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A coffee bar full of
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Gotham's hippest logicians couldn't construct a better example of the
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begging-the-question fallacy than Anne Hollander's lead to "Black Was
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Beautiful." To wit: The East Village is no more the "center of bohemia"
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than Colonial Williamsburg is a 17 th century farming community.
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Whom did Hollander see
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decked out in pastels? Well, there's a large young professional demographic in
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the East Village (you'd be surprised how few genuine bohemians can come up with
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$1,000 a month for a 150-square-foot studio), there's a sizable Puerto Rican
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population, and I wouldn't be surprised if more than a few of Hollander's
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"bohemians" were toting cameras and wearing bulging nylon fanny packs.
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Still and all, there is
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plenty of black being worn in the East Village. Hollander simply picked an odd
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time for her fact-finding stroll. The throngs of black-clad teen-agers who
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flock to the East Village in the summertime to use drugs, panhandle, sleep in
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abandoned buildings, and drink malt liquor in Tompkins Square Park--it's sort
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of like camp--have yet to arrive. However, many of the East Villagers most
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likely to go about in black--the students at NYU, Parsons, and Pratt--are gone
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for the summer, squatting with their parents.
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It's too
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bad for Hollander that the summer people are late. She might have gotten a kick
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out of them without having to significantly revise her argument. They are
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almost all white. As a rule they stick to a punk-rock look: studded black
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leather jackets over plaid flannels and old Bad Brains T-shirts, black jeans
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(torn black tights or fishnets for the ladies), safety pins through the ears
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and nostrils, and heavy eyeliner. They lurk outside bars and restaurants
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begging change from passers-by, flashing curled lips and hangdog stares, as
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precious in their own way as any amateur anthropologist taking her first
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cautious steps east of First Avenue in breathless anticipation of a walk on the
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wild side.
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--Adam Mazmanian New
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York City
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Double
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Vision
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I
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thoroughly enjoyed Luc Sante's "Master of All He Surveys" review of Robert Hughes'
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American Visions program. I did want to point out, however, that
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Time 's site is not the only place on the Web where users can read
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Hughes' words on the subject. The PBS/WNET
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American Visions piece also includes a major exhibition of over 300 pieces
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of artwork, accompanied by Hughes' detailed commentary (drawn from the
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transcript of the program). We include links to other articles by Hughes, and
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will be posting the transcript of a live chat conducted June 3, 1997. All in
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all, a great stop for the Hughesophile and the devotee of American art and
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culture.
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--Ellen
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Mendlow associate producer, American Visions Web PieceNew York City
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Bullish
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on Pippen in the '90s
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Having just read "Boycott Nike and
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Reebok," Robert Wright's treatise on the evils of shoe companies and their
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athlete "pitchmen," it becomes clear that Wright has failed to do his homework,
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at least with regard to the Chicago Bulls' Scottie Pippen.
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Wright calls Pippen
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"reprehensible" for his failure to enter a playoff game in which the final shot
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was not designed for him. Firstly--not that this makes Pippen's decision any
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better--Pippen felt that he, ostensibly the Bulls' best player at the time,
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should be on the floor as an option for the last shot, not inbounding the ball.
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He would most likely draw a double team, freeing a teammate for the final shot,
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thereby giving his team a better chance to win. His behavior was indeed
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immature and boorish. Is it not enough, however, that he publicly apologized to
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his coach, his teammates, and the fans of Chicago?
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Unlike many self-centered
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and pampered athletes of the '90s, Scottie Pippen is recognized by his peers
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and in the league as one of the more giving players to disadvantaged youth.
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Unfortunately, Pippen does not call the media to follow him around with camera
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crews every time he finds an opportunity to give back to the community. Is
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Wright aware that on Christmas Eve a couple of years ago Pippen delivered over
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500 winter jackets to inner-city kids in Chicago's notorious Cabrini Greens, or
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that he was very upset when USA Today wrote a story about it? Is he
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aware that the Pippen Foundation supports reading programs for disadvantaged
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youth in Chicago? Does he know of all the "Pippen Parks" underwritten by Pippen
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in his home state of Arkansas to provide safe play environments for kids?
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On more than one occasion it
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has been suggested to Pippen that he issue press releases to help the Robert
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Wrights of the world understand who he really is and the values for which he
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stands. His response has always been that it does not matter what people think;
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that he knows, and the children know, and that's what matters.
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Scottie
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Pippen's problem is that he is a very private person--one who has learned and
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grown as a person. To suggest that he made a mistake by not entering a game
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several years ago is fair. To suggest that he is "reprehensible" is absurd.
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--Peter Flack
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Address
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your e-mail to the editors to [email protected]. Please include your address and daytime phone
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number (for confirmation only).
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