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Unreasonable Dowd
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USA
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Today and the Washington Post lead with Linda Tripp's grand jury
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appearance, a story that also makes the others' fronts. The New York Times
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goes with new data indicating that the birth rate for unmarried black women is
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the lowest it's been in 40 years. The Los Angeles
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Times 's top non-local story is the decision by 19 countries to form an
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alliance aimed at resisting the immersion of their indigenous cultures in a
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rising worldwide tide of U.S.-made movies, television and music.
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For all the drama of Tripp's appearance at the federal courthouse, since for
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a change there were no leaks of testimony, the story has one shortcoming that
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should have thumbnailed it inside next to the corset ads: it produced no news.
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In a nice bit of subversion, the Tripp reporters off-load a good deal of the
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ink unaccountably granted to them on copious descriptions of non-events. The
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Times ' James Bennet describes a British tv reporter
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taping a Fox News tv reporter taping his spot. And the WP 's Bill Miller and Susan Schmidt report that the
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AP reported that Tripp was carrying a Chanel handbag, then add that others in
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the media thought the stitching wasn't up to Chanel standards. Hope their
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editors got the point.
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The NYT reports that new numbers from the National Center for Health
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Statistics show a 1996 birth rate among unmarried black women of 74.4 births per
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1,000, down significantly from the 90.7 per 1,000 recorded in 1989. This is an
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important story and the Times is to be saluted for stepping over Tripp
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wires to run it where it belongs, but one still has the feeling the piece
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somewhat mishandles the information. Several times high up, the drop is
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credited to increased sex education and condom use among blacks. All this in a
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newspaper that in recent days has reported that although blacks make up but 13
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percent of the population, they account for 57 percent of all new HIV cases.
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And the piece waits until its fifteenth paragraph to mention welfare reform,
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which removed a financial incentive for having children out of wedlock--and
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then, claiming that the drop has been steady long before welfare reform was
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passed, says that "according to some people who monitor fertility rates" it was
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not a significant factor. If this is indeed true, then the piece should have
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made that point high up and supported it with more year-by-year birthrate
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stats.
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Overplaying stories like Tripp means underplaying stories like yesterday's
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U.S. aircraft missile launch against an Iraqi anti-aircraft battery that was
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radar-illuminating a British aircraft--just above the fold at the LAT ,
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bottom of the front at the WP and only in a reefer box on the
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USAT front. Or like the U.N.'s conclusion yesterday that Congolese
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soldiers and their Rwandan allies massacred unarmed Hutu refugees in 1996-1997
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and that the current Congolese government of Laurent Kabila blocked the U.N.'s
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investigation. No death total is given but the stories mention that according
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to the U.N., 180,000 Hutus are still missing. The NYT runs this story
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on page 8 of its early national edition. It's all too easy to
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discount the lives of people in other cultures, because they are people we
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don't know, but it's wrongheaded to play to that bias. Instead, journalism
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should strive to make us know them. On its front page today, the WP
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effectively acquaints us with four middle-class Americans who died in a head-on
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collision, but it runs its version of the Congo massacre on page 27.
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The Wall Street Journal reports that the Learning Channel was
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all set to run a thirty-minute show about beer, paid for by Anheuser-Busch,
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until the paper began making inquiries. The Journal implies a Joe
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Camelesque angle, noting that the show was scheduled to appear during the early
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afternoon of Saturday July 11 and Sunday July 12, when kids were likely to be
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channel surfing.
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Yesterday's papers brought the news that U.S. News & World Report
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owner Mort Zuckerman had fired his editor-in-chief James Fallows. "Today's
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Papers" thought this a bit too parochial for inclusion, but the Times '
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Maureen Dowd thinks otherwise: she devotes today's column to an
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anti-Fallows jeremiad, which ends up saying much more about her than him.
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Dowd describes Fallows' excellent book on the wrongheaded culture of political
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journalism, Breaking the News as a "pompous screed" and says he has "a
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problem recognizing a news story." But who has bad news judgment? Dowd says she
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would rather read a piece by Bianca Jagger than one about health care and
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scoffs at Fallows for not wanting to chase old news about Gianni Versace and
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Princess Di. And who's pompous? Dowd laughs at the idea that Hugh Downs might
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have something to say about Proust and as usual wields her high school
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French--the column is called "Le Tout Swivet."
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