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Wilted
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Everybody leads with the bloodless military overthrow of Pakistan's
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democratically elected government. The majors all cite the same immediate
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background: While army commander Gen. Pervez Musharraf was out of the country
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(in Sri Lanka), the civilian prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, fired him.
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Thereafter army units quickly took to the streets and overran key government
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facilities. ( USA Today and the New York Times front the same
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picture of troops going over the fence at the government TV station, mooning
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the world in the process.) Then Musharraf returned, and after placing Sharif
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and several other top officials under house arrest, announced that he was in
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charge.
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The papers also agree on the main background factors: The army had been
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upset that this past summer Sharif, bowing to U.S. pressure, had called for the
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withdrawal of Pakistani-supported guerrillas from Kashmir, where they had been
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in a shooting war with Indian forces. The Washington Post has the most fine-grained causal list,
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adding as factors Sharif's failure to authorize a military response to India's
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July shoot-down of a Pakistani navy training flight, his promise to consider
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signing the comprehensive test ban treaty, and his plans to divert money from
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the military to housing for the poor. The Post also mentions the army's
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distaste for Sharif's attempts to cut ties to Afghanistan's Taliban militia.
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Only the Los Angeles Times includes anything negative about Sharif,
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noting that he has jailed dissidents.
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The papers report that India went on high alert upon hearing of the coup.
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Both the WP and LAT report that the Clinton administration had
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warned in recent weeks against any extra-constitutional ouster of the
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government. But the LAT says that there is no immediate concern in the
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U.S. government regarding Pakistan's nuclear weapons, because, explains
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USAT , they have been presumed to be in the military's hands all along.
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The NYT says that if the U.S. government confirms the coup, it will no
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longer conduct business as usual with Pakistan. The LAT adds: If that
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happens, U.S. law requires cutting foreign assistance. (It would have been nice
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if the paper had said what law. How long has it been in existence?) The
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LAT , in case you had doubts, passes along word that Gen. Musharraf "has
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a reputation as a tough, no-nonsense soldier." Just once Today's Papers wants
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to read about a soft, all-laughs soldier!
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Perhaps it comes as no surprise what the sports-addled press views as the
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day's other big story: the death, at age 63, from an apparent heart attack, of
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Wilt Chamberlain. Every paper fronts this, with USAT
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and the LAT putting it top-front. USAT 's piece puts Chamberlain's
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claim to have slept with 20,000 women in the seventh paragraph of its
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eight-paragraph story. The WP puts it in the fifth paragraph out of 25;
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the LAT in the fifth paragraph of 59. The NYT front-page effort
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never mentions the alleged feat. The LAT runs a story inside by one-time
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biographer David Shaw that provides a bit of evidence for the claim: Shaw
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writes of a time that he was out at a restaurant with Chamberlain and
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Chamberlain's date when the player excused himself to get the phone number of a
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woman at another table. And another time, Shaw says, Chamberlain ushered him
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out of his hotel room in order to entertain three women simultaneously. (Shaw
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doesn't say if he put these stories in his book.)
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Both the NYT and WP report inside that the U.N. civilian
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worker killed in Kosovo two days ago was probably assaulted by Albanians after
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he responded to a question they posed to him in Serbian with an answer in
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Serbian. Both papers also report that in Burundi yesterday, several civilian
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U.N. officials were murdered by Hutu rebels.
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The Wall Street Journal front-page news box dutifully reports
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that yesterday the Dow dropped 231 points--a reduction in value of 2.2
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percent--on, it says, inflation worries. What's particularly noteworthy, and a
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sign that the papers are maturing when it comes to market swings, is that, on a
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relatively slow news day, no other paper fronts the story.
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The USAT front-page "Snapshot" gives an economic picture, based on
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Census Bureau stats, of the estimated 44 million Americans without health
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insurance. More than a quarter of whom, says the chart, earn more than
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$50,000.
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The WP runs an AP report inside about the first documented actual Y2K glitch. It seems that the
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Maine state government has issued, according to a computer's instructions,
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titles for model year 2000 cars and trucks identifying the vehicles as
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"horseless carriages," a designation meant to be reserved for vintage vehicles
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produced before 1916. The state has spent, says the AP, millions in an effort
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to make its computers Y2K-compliant.
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