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Next to the fact that 23 different Bears have scored touchdowns this year, the most outlandish statistic is that ten of them were playing defense. Considering that no team had ever marched unscored upon through the playoffs before, it takes some nerve for the Bears to insist that they were even better defensively last year. Besides nerve, they also have evidence. The Pro Bowl safety Todd Bell and the splendid linebacker Al Harris held out for more money this season and have missed the entire festival. Richard Dent, a particularly wanton defensive end, chose to work while he grumbled. Dent...
...laws of physics insist that work must move things: A pushes against B, and B moves. What, besides paper, does the columnist move? He wonders that himself. Swiveling in his chair, he catches hummingbirds, bats, butterflies in flutter, pins them to the wall and whispers, "Gotcha." But he doesn't. Today Gaddafi, tomorrow the Chicago Bears. Call this history? Come Thursday, no one will remember how right he was on Tuesday, and the facts may have altered to prove that he was wrong on Tuesday after all, but who will remember that either? Twenty years after his death, maybe...
Like the figures on jury verdicts, the insurers' profit-and-loss statistics are in sharp dispute. Consumer advocates insist that if adjustments are made for some quirks in insurance accounting (primarily involving the treatment of taxes, dividends and the rising paper value of investments), the industry made a net profit every year. The Insurance Information Institute, indeed, has acknowledged an industry profit after taxes of $1.7 billion last year, which it contends still amounts to a poor return...
...regulation," but promised to take a careful look at the Danforth bill. Plaintiffs' attorneys, needless to say, oppose all tort-reform plans. They commonly accuse insurers of creating a sense of crisis to enact laws that would deny just compensation to victims of malpractice or injury. More troubling, they insist that all the tort-reform ideas would undermine a fundamental principle of democracy: the idea that any citizen should have unrestricted access to the courts for redress of any grievances he might suffer. Robert Habush, president of the Association of Trial Lawyers, says of the tort-reform movement...
...abuse at a handful of centers have spooked insurers into indiscriminately canceling liability policies or demanding giant premiums. Mission Insurance Group, the chief provider of coverage for day-care centers, abruptly pulled out of the business last year. The handful of insurers that will still write day-care policies insist either on specifically excluding claims for damages arising from sexual abuse or setting up rules for strict supervision, such as unannounced visits by special investigators. Says Suzanne Grace, associate director of the Georgia Day Care Association: "The insurers are telling us, 'We don't care what your record is.' This...