Word: newsdays
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...much for crime. How about punishment? "Perhaps the evidence in the end will warrant some lesser sanction than impeachment," wrote the Wall Street Journal. "But to shrink now from truth and judgment in the name of 'healing' is to make us all complicit with Mr. Clinton's behavior." Newsday opined: "The national jury is still out on whether he can be trusted to lead the country...
Sources: Agence France Presse, Wall Street Journal, Newsday, Encyclopedia Americana, Scripps Howard News Service...
Then the New York Post reported that Folkman would share in a $1 million book deal with Random House. Flat wrong, says Random House. It is true that the publisher has tapped science writer Robert Cooke of Newsday to produce a book about Folkman's life and cancer research and that Folkman has agreed to cooperate with the project. But the scientist won't get any money from the deal...
Some commentators have also seen Giuliani-style government as a sign that the age of identity politics is over. Jim Sleeper, for instance, writes in Newsday, that "Giuliani's victory is part of a national political realignment based on an emerging consensus: Liberal Democrats' `Rainbow' racial and sexual identity politics and their obsession with `root cause' explanations for social decay made them thunderously wrong about how to fight crime, stimulate employment, provide welfare, and improve public education...
...stains have been found on a dress that belongs to Lewinsky." The network did not give a source. TIME has confirmed with its own FBI sources that no semen stains or DNA evidence was found on any of the clothing seized from Lewinsky. The next day New York Newsday ran a story quoting forensic scientists saying tests for seminal stains can be rendered useless if clothing is laundered or dry-cleaned...