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"Going Nasdaq" on Taiwan
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USA Today and
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the Washington
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Post lead with the designation of West Virginia and parts of Kentucky,
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Ohio, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia as federal disaster areas, a story
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fronted by the New York
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Times . Farmers in these regions--who are suffering the worst drought
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since the 1930s--are now eligible for low-interest federal loans, which would,
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says USAT , cover up to 80 percent of their losses. The NYT
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leads with the EPA's prohibition of two fruit-and-vegetable pesticides, a story
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fronted by the Los Angeles
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Times . The pesticides kill insects by interfering with their nervous
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system; some fear the agent may affect the nervous systems of children,
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although there are no hard data. The LAT's top non-local story is a
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massive head-on train collision involving 2,500 people in India, a story at the
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top of the Wall Street
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Journal's front-page "Worldwide" box and reefered by USAT .
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The Post and NYT put the death toll at over 200 (many of whom
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were burned alive or dismembered) but the LAT , with a later deadline,
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says the number approaches 400. A signal failure was the likely cause.
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All the papers except USAT front China's unusual announcement of a
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long-range missile test within its territory. Almost every paper has a
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different angle: the Journal notes that the announcement will
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frustrate efforts to prevent North Korea from testing its own missiles; the
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NYT says the announcement was done in tandem with a harsh public
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critique of the United States for selling military technology to Taiwan; the
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Post puts the missile test in the ninth paragraph of a larger story on
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increased sorties over the Taiwan Strait by Chinese and Taiwanese military
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jets. In separate stories, the NYT and Post report that a
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Chinese court meted out harsh prison sentences to two political dissidents. The
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Post notes that since NATO's accidental May 7 bombing of the Chinese
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Embassy in Belgrade, China has sentenced nine dissidents to prison terms of up
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to 10 years.
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The Post and NYT front a decision by a federal district
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judge to throw out most of a 3-year-old Federal Election Commission lawsuit
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against the beleaguered Christian Coalition. The judge ruled that, in all but
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two cases, the Christian Coalition's distribution of voting guides did not
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constitute specific endorsement of candidates--which would have amounted to an
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illegal campaign contribution. The decision is expected to allow more citizen
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groups to distribute election literature in 2000 without the burden of FEC
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regulation.
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The Post and Journal both run articles on the risks and
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rewards of day trading, which apparently contributed to the recent massacre in
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Atlanta. The Post says it's not surprising that the rise of
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non-professional, home-based Internet trading can encourage the occasional
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bankrupted player to "go Nasdaq"--as Mark Barton's murders have been termed.
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Most traders sit at home alone, get unreliable tips through chat rooms, and
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lose their own money rather than that of a client. The Journal
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acknowledges these risks but argues that day trading makes financial markets
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more efficient and provides greater odds than (other) legalized forms of
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gambling, such as lotto and blackjack.
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On the NYT op-ed page, former Clinton economic advisor Laura
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D'Andrea Tyson tries to convince the financial markets that last week's report
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of unexpectedly high labor costs in the second quarter does not necessarily
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mean the economy is overheating. As if in divine confirmation of her argument,
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the Journal notes that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages have climbed over
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8 percent for the first time in two years, signaling an end to the housing
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boom. And the Post reports that economic growth and price increases in
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the manufacturing sector were less than predicted in July, "easing Wall Street
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fears of an overheating economy."
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Writing on the LAT opinion page, contributing editor Robert Scheer
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makes the provocative argument that the quickest way to halt China's
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belligerence is to simply hand over all our nuclear warhead and ballistics
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secrets. China's current saber rattling, Scheer reasons, stems from an
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inferiority complex about its relatively primitive nuclear arsenal. Once China
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has a deterrent equal to that of the United States, Scheer says, it won't feel
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the need to taunt its neighbors after every tiny technological advance.
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