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Federal Head Case
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Everybody has their own idea about the lead. USA Today
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goes with May's single-month record level of sales of new single-family homes.
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The New York Times
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leads with a major new Serbian military assault on Albanian rebels in Kosovo, a
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story not on anybody else's early edition front. The Times off-lead is
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President Clinton's arrival in Shanghai and his anticipated contact with
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ordinary citizens there. The Los Angeles Times leads with the California
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legislature's passage of a bill protecting employees over age 40 from being
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replaced by younger and hence lower-paid workers purely on grounds of age. The
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Washington Post goes with the decision by
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Washington, D.C. and Baltimore to make a joint bid for hosting the 2012
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Olympics. But both papers give prime above-the-fold space to President Clinton
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in China.
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If the pace of new home sales persists, says USAT , 1998's totals will
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be a 35-year high. Low mortgage rates, dipping below 7 percent for 30-year
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fixed-rates, are cited as a key factor. The Times Bosnia dispatch, by
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blue-chip foreign correspondent Chris Hedges, describes an increasingly serious
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situation: Thousands of Serbian police and troops backed by artillery and tanks
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pressing into the Albanian forces surrounding a Serbian pocket. The area is
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described, says Hedges, by U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke as "the most dangerous
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place in Europe." Angry heavily armed Serbian civilians, many of whom say they
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had been pushed out of their homes recently by the Albanian rebels, appear to
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be gathering to reenter their town on the heels of the military assault. One
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elderly woman clutching a small bag of her belongings gives this situation
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report: "We have become Bosnia."
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The you-are-there feel of the story is upset only slightly by the
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disorienting avalanche of Seussian place-names in such passages as: "The police
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closed the main road from Pristina to Pec soon after dawn. Policemen on the
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road to Belacevac near Obilic, northwest of Pristina, were..." The solution is
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to move the map that the Times runs inside to before the jump, where the first
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geographical descriptions are encountered.
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The WP describes Clinton's trip to China, continuing today with a
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community leaders' roundtable in Shanghai and an appearance on a radio call-in
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show(wonder how long the delay is), as an "experiment in diplomacy as personal
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performance," referring to the familiar campaign stump style Clinton used in
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two talks on Chinese national television. The Post story refers to Clinton's
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appeals in these appearances for the expansion of individual liberties and his
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polite but unambiguous condemnation of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, but
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then says he's spent far more time flattering Chinese audiences than
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challenging them. The paper also points out that his many last minute speech
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rewrites meant that translators couldn't adequately prepare, with the upshot
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that Clinton's television audiences "missed large sections of his remarks." The
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LAT 's lefty columnist Robert Scheer embraces Clinton's talks, calling
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them "a diplomatic feat of extraordinary proportions" of which "Nixon would
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have been proud." But the Post 's Richard Cohen takes exception to
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Clinton's repeated references to the Chinese-American friendship, because
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"China and the United States are not friends."
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The NYT , USAT , and LAT fronts run reports of Monday's
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arguments in federal court between Kenneth Starr and White House lawyer Neil
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Eggleston over whether or not Clinton's discussions with government lawyers
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should be shielded from Starr's grand jury. One of the reasons Eggleston cited
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was that Clinton's discussions were part of a defense against possible
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impeachment proceedings. Meanwhile, as these stories and the WP mention,
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Linda Tripp will testify before the grand jury today. Tripp tells the Post that
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she is eager to dispel claims that she manipulated an unwitting Monica
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Lewinsky, or that she made the tapes to get a book deal. "I did not cultivate
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Monica," she tells the paper, "she cultivated me." Maybe that's why in
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preparation for her grand jury appearance, says the WP 's "The Reliable
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Source" column, Tripp had her hair cut and colored by a stylist who used to do
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Monica's do.
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The Wall Street Journal "Work Week" column tells how federal
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worker unions continue to battle for pay matching the private sector, and cites
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a current gap between the two calculated to be 23 percent. Surely there must be
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something wrong in the figuring here: How many private sector employees do you
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know who can still make $88,000 a year when they suddenly don't leave the house
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for months, like Linda Tripp can?
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