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Russian Rubble
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The Los
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Angeles Times leads with yet another terrorist bombing of a Moscow
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apartment building, a story also fronted at the New York Times , which leads instead
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with preparations being undertaken in connection with the East Timor
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peacekeeping force, both bureaucratic at the U.N. Security Council and
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logistical in the militaries of the U.S., Australia, and elsewhere. The
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Washington Post bottom-fronts some refugee accounts
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of last week's Timor rampage, but stuffs the Moscow terrorism, all in favor of
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its lead about the latest fiscal gimmick gaining currency among Senate
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Republicans as a way to continue spending while technically not violating
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Congress' previously agreed-upon spending caps: declare the coming fiscal year
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to be made up of 13 months ("instead of the usual 12," explains the Post
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ever so helpfully). USA Today leads with the decision in both the House and
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Senate to proceed with (separate) investigations into the Russian aid money
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scandal.
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The apartment bombing, the fourth in Russia and the third in Moscow in the
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past two weeks (the cumulative death total: at least 266, says the LAT )
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is, report the papers, like its predecessors, widely viewed by the Russian
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authorities as the work of Islamic terrorists working with or sympathetic to
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the Chechen and Dagestan insurgencies. Boris Yeltsin responded with a
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nationally televised address in which he stated that "Terrorism has declared
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war on the Russian people." A major security effort is underway, including a
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search of every apartment basement in Moscow and intensified paperwork for
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non-Muscovites. The LAT reports that the explosions have prompted a
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lengthy discussion in the Russian parliament about whether or not Russia should
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drop an atomic bomb on Chechnya. The NYT quotes one former government
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minister likening the situation to that in Northern Ireland--in which terrorism
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will go on for years.
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According to the NYT lead, some things suspected in yesterday's Timor
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coverage are now confirmed: The U.S. is preparing to fulfill a primarily
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logistical role, particularly by providing air transport to the ground troops,
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who will be supplied by other nations; the force will probably be led by
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Australian troops (and an Australian commanding general); and the Indonesians
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are expressing a preference for, but not insisting on, a predominantly Asian
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force. The Times ends its lead with a helpful explanation: Setting up a
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security council force rather than a "full-dress" peacekeeping operation is
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essential to the Clinton strategy because of congressional restraints on
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American participation and funding in operations of the latter sort. But the
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NYT could have been more helpful still if it had explained what
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constitutes "full-dress" peacekeeping.
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Both the NYT and LAT front a Waco revelation made yesterday by
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a California congressman: Information showing that the FBI used combustible
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tear gas canisters at Waco has been in the DOJ's possession "for years" and was
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even sent to Congress no later than 1995. Another piece of Waco news is more
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troublesome for the feds: The Texas Rangers released a report to Congress
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stating in part that the Rangers, in their Waco post-mortem, found spent
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cartridges from two different types of sniper rifles used by FBI agents--which
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conflicts with the bureau's assertion that their agents never fired a shot. The
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paper points out, though, that the casings could have been from ATF weapons
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admittedly fired during the initial gunfight at the compound.
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The WP adds to the buzz around that new book by the KGB guy who defected to the Brits. Yes,
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there is the usual trench-coat ineptitude--like trying to discredit Carter's
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national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski by spreading the word that he was
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having an affair with Candice Bergen (note to Kremlin: to discredit, try Bea
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Arthur)--but there's also the news that Russian spies managed to intercept fax
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communications of top U.S. defense contractors concerning some of this
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country's most sensitive military projects. And that the Soviet Embassy in
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Washington, D.C., was the locus of a successful effort to intercept messages
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between Andrews Air Force Base and government aircraft used by the president,
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the secretary of state, and other senior officials. One former KGBer is quoted
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saying that the then-head of the KGB loved listening to intercepted
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conversations between Henry Kissinger and his then-fiancee Nancy Maginnes.
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Inside stories at the WP and NYT report that the State
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Department, in an attempt to convince other countries to maintain tough
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sanctions against Saddam Hussein, yesterday released new evidence suggesting
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that under the sanctions Hussein has enough money to feed his people and
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provide them with medicine but has chosen to spend it on other things. The
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evidence includes aerial photos of a lakeside village resort complete with
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Ferris wheel he recently completed, a facility for the exclusive use of his
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political cronies.
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The Wall Street Journal "Work Week" column reports that in a
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survey of restaurant workers at 11 national chains, respondents admitted
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stealing an average of $218 in food and property, compared with $96 the
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previous year. Those with a drug or alcohol problem stole five times more than
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nonusers.
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USAT runs a top-front "talker" about the decision of the folks
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running the Miss America contest to relax its rules about contestant marriage
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and childbirth. The old requirement: A contestant must sign a document stating
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that she has not been married and is not cohabitating, is not now nor has
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previously been pregnant, and has never had a child. The new requirement:
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Signing an affidavit affirming not being currently married and not being
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currently pregnant. The AP says the change was motivated by the pageant's fear
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of discrimination lawsuits. In a related development, it's now OK if Miss
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Congeniality used to be a pain in the ass.
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