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Next Year in an Expanded Jerusalem
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USA
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Today and the Los Angeles Times lead with Israel's controversial plan to
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expand Jerusalem's borders. The Washington Post leads with President Clinton's call for
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surveys to determine which cigarette brands underage smokers prefer. The
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New York Times , prone to leading with financial
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news, claims that while inflation remains down, prices for many products are
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zooming (to consumers' annoyance).
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Israel's Prime Minister Netanyahu wants to expand Jerusalem's borders,
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"strengthening" the 70% Jewish majority in the city, and increasing the city's
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tax base. The unilateral gerrymandering move goes sharply against U.S. and
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Palestinian wishes, and all the papers agree this further jeopardizes the peace
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process. USAT quotes a Palestinian official calling this a "declaration
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of war on the Palestinian presence" in Jerusalem. Many soon-to-be-annexed
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Jewish neighborhoods protested the higher taxes they'll pay once encompassed by
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the city's borders. (The NYT adds that some of these Jews had earlier
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fled Jerusalem to escape its heavily orthodox culture.) While the other papers
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all put the story out front and above the fold, the WP oddly buries it
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on page A22.
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The WP lead, in tune with the paper's heavier focus on domestic
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politics, covers Clinton's plan to keep annual stats on which tobacco brands
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are most popular with minors. The executive order directs the Department of
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Health and Human Services to survey smokers aged 12 through 17, salvaging a
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provision that was originally in the failed tobacco bill. The WP sees
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the move as 1) image bolstering for Clinton, and 2) "a useful way to put public
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pressure on the [tobacco] firms." USAT , the NYT , and the
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LAT all leave the story off their front pages.
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The NYT lead says both inflation and the Consumer Price Index are low
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and steady, but Americans are still griping about high prices. How can this be?
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The CPI averages costs for "thousands of goods and services," and most
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essentials (food, gas, cars) are fairly cheap. But prices in the service sector
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("the extras in life") are quickly rising. Among commonly complained-about
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overcharges: video rentals, legal fees, theme park admissions, and pay phone
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rates (up to 35 cents from a quarter).
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The Wall Street Journal's leader covers Disney's troubled foray
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into the cruise ship business. Disney's eagerly awaited first ship is far
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behind schedule and still not ready, largely because of the company's
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nitpicking specs. The boat's builders claim Disney requires ridiculously costly
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and unnecessary guidelines for the ship's structure, and on-board decoration
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involves hand-painted murals incurring hundreds of hours of work.
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All the papers run front-page stories on the Iranian soccer team's 2-1
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defeat of the U.S., marking both Iran's first-ever World Cup victory and the
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elimination of the U.S. from the tournament. Everyone agrees that the
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politically heated match was marked by excellent sportsmanship from fans and
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players on both sides. So sporting was the U.S. team, notes the LAT ,
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that it handed its opponents not only trinkets of goodwill, but also the match
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itself.
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