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Kissing Outlawed in the British Army
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With
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the outcome of the U.S.-China trade negotiations still unknown, a Northern
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Ireland political settlement still in the balance, and President Bill Clinton's
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planned meeting with Russian President Boris Yeltsin on Chechnya still
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unconsummated, Monday's papers focused on domestic issues and the latest
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Turkish earthquake. The Daily Telegraph of London led its front page with a new
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sex code for members of the British armed forces. To get around a ruling by the
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European Court of Human Rights against a ban on homosexuals in the military, a
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ban the country's military leaders hope to maintain, the British government is
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reported to be planning to impose new rules proscribing all sexual displays,
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whether homosexual or heterosexual.
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They
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will restrict "sex, not sexuality" by forbidding touching and other displays of
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affection across all ranks. The Daily Telegraph reported fears by senior
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officers that the new code of conduct would damage recruitment and lead to a
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flood of courts-martial, with service personnel being punished for what in
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civilian life is perfectly acceptable behavior. In an editorial, the paper
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toyed with the idea of putting homosexuals into separate units "like the Sacred
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Band of Thebes," but said that "a company comprised wholly of homosexuals could
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easily become a target for the rest of the Army." "Perhaps, on reflection, the
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simplest solution is for homosexual soldiers to keep their mouths shut and get
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on with their jobs."
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The
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Times of
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London's lead story said Northern Ireland Unionist leader David Trimble, a
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Nobel Peace Prize laureate, may have taken "the biggest gamble of his career"
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by considering entering in government with the Republican Sinn Fein Party--the
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political wing of the Irish Republican Army--before a single IRA weapon has
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been handed over. Until now Unionists have insisted that there could be no
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Catholic-Protestant powersharing in the province until some of the IRA's
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illegal weapons were decommissioned. A new critical round of talks resumed
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Monday in Belfast under the chairmanship of former U.S. Sen. George
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Mitchell.
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In an
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editorial, the Times described the re-election of Jacques Diouf as
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Director-General of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome as "a
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victory for machine politics and cronysim over much-needed reform in one of the
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oldest world organisations set up to ensure better food supplies for the
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millions of people around the world who go hungry." The paper said today there
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are many better international bodies looking at food supplies and that "Britain
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should give the FAO six months to review its use of voluntary contributions. If
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this does not improve, Britain should switch its donations to other bodies and
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give notice of withdrawal."
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Le Figaro of Paris
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fronted an interview with the new king of Jordan, Abdullah II, on the day he
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was beginning a state visit to France originally planned for his late father,
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King Hussein. In his own words, his main points included: "To invest in Jordan
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is to invest in peace in the Middle East"; "I belong to a generation that has
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been educated in the West, which has chosen what is best in both cultures and
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understands the western world"; "I have never organised any meeting between
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Israel and Syria. I have limited myself to passing on verbal messages from
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President Hassad to the US or Ehud Barak"; "Water is a fundamental problem in
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the Middle East. There should be an international conference to regulate it";
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"Most of the 1,200,000 Palestinian refugees in our country will probably want
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to remain in Jordan."
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With
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Hillary and Chelsea Clinton already in Istanbul, and Bill Clinton due there
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from Ankara later this week for a summit of the Organization for Security and
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Co-operation in Europe, the Guardian of London fronted Monday the claim that the
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disastrous earthquakes in northwestern Turkey were "a prelude to a cataclysmic
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strike in Istanbul." From Duzce, Turkey, the paper reported, "Seismologists at
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the country's Kandilli observatory warned that a major fault system had been
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activated, and that it was only a question of when, not if, the metropolis
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would be leveled." In an editorial Monday, the Turkish Daily News said
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Turks are "thrilled to see the American president as their guest, especially at
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a time when we are going through some very hard days, having to cope with the
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national trauma of two successive major killer earthquakes and the never-ending
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hardships suffered by our masses because of economic crises."
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The
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paper also noted that Clinton's five-day visit was "a record for an American
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head of state and source of satisfaction and pride for all of us." It urged the
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United States to encourage greater democracy in Turkey as part of its efforts
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to promote stability in the country. "In the past we have had bad experiences
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of how US administrations have pretended to condemn coups in Turkey while they
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have actively supported them and the juntas," the paper said. "We are aware
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that the world has changed and we feel the Clinton administration should give
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guarantees to the democrats of Turkey that this will never be the case
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again."
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In
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Japan, Asahi Shimbun ran an editorial Monday about the Microsoft
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case, warning about the dangers of official intervention to stop aggressive
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business practices in high-tech industries. Such intervention could stop the
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growth of that sector, it said: "In other words, even well-meaning regulations
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designed to protect consumers could prove counterproductive." The paper
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described Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson's findings of fact as "of great
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significance because they point to the shape of antitrust policy in the age of
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fast-paced, high-tech industries that are moving and shaking the world economy,
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particularly the US economy." It added that the high-tech industries have
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created millions of new jobs in the United States. "No doubt much of the credit
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for this goes to Microsoft. However, the ruling underscores the need of
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facilitating market access for newcomers and of respecting consumer
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interests."
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The problem, the editorial
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said, is where to draw the line: "The antitrust policy of the past--when
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national borders blocked free movement of goods and services and when
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traditional smokestack industries provided the main thrust of industrial
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growth--no longer holds water. Today moves toward international mergers and
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acquisitions are picking up momentum in a broad spectrum of industries, such as
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financial services, communications, automobiles and petroleum. Of course, the
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situation in these industries is different from that in the developing computer
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software industry. But they all face a common question: how to balance the
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demands of oligopoly and the interests of the consumer."
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