Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
Rubles and Rubble
7
8
The death toll in Turkey rose past 4,000 by press time, with 17,000 reported
9
injured and thousands more still missing. Rescue and relief teams from all
10
over--the U.S., western Europe, Russia, and Israel--flocked to western Turkey
11
where domestic efforts were faltering or nonexistent. Only the Los Angeles Times leads
12
with post-quake events. The fire in Turkey's largest oil refinery continued to
13
blaze out of control, threatening to blow up a nearby fertilizer plant and
14
forcing tens of thousands of local residents to flee. The New York Times lead
15
reports that law enforcement investigators have discovered Russian mobsters may
16
have used accounts at the Bank of New York to launder some $10 billion. The
17
Washington
18
Post lead, dwarfed by the quake headline below it, carries yesterday's
19
warning by Maryland officials and environmentalists that a fractured response
20
to the drought by regional officials could impede effective conservation of
21
water. USA Today
22
goes with results of the annual National Household Survey on Drug Abuse.
23
24
Finger-pointing over western Turkey's ill preparedness for the quake began
25
in some places before rescue and relief efforts, the WP reports.
26
Survivors interviewed by the paper blamed the government for not conducting
27
adequate building inspections, failing to create food reserves, and failing to
28
equip them for emergencies. A NYT story cites residents' complaints in
29
Izmit that contractors slapped together many buildings with greater concern for
30
cutting costs than risk. Only the LAT mentions that Turkey's top-heavy
31
government leaves regional authorities without the resources to cultivate local
32
civil defense teams. Earthquake experts tell the LAT that strict
33
building codes make the city better prepared for a 7.4 (it's official) temblor
34
than Turkey, despite similarities in their fault systems.
35
36
The two-column NYT exclusive reports that investigators may have
37
cracked one of the largest money-laundering operations in U.S. history:
38
Investigators say that a notorious Russian mob figure, Semyon Yukovich
39
Mogilevich, may have filtered $10 billion through the Bank of New York since
40
early 1998. The bank suspended two women in its Eastern European division, both
41
of whom are married to Russian businessmen. Western investigators have been on
42
the lookout for suspicious Russian economic activity since the August 1998
43
ruble crash sent money flying out of the country even more furiously than
44
usual. Money sifted through the Bank of New York account may have gone to pay
45
contract killers and drug lords, the paper reports.
46
47
The federal survey reveals that teen use of cocaine, marijuana, and other
48
illegal drugs fell to 9.9 percent in 1998 from 11.4 percent the year before,
49
according to the USAT lead. The overall level of drug use stayed about
50
the same. Officials said they see the drop in use among 12-to-17-year-olds as
51
an indication that messages from parents, schools, and the government are
52
getting through. The WP, which also fronts the story, says that young
53
people aged 18-to-25 saw an increase in both drug use and smoking. A substance
54
abuse researcher told the NYT that results in the 12-to-17 group may be
55
flawed because parents must consent to their child's interview and tend to
56
stick relatively close.
57
58
The NYT runs a response from the Energy Department to charges that
59
Los Alamos researcher Wen Ho Lee has been a victim of unfair racial targetting.
60
Notra Trulock, a department intelligence officer, deflated the accusation,
61
saying that of 12 suspects initially brought to the FBI's attention, three were
62
Chinese-Americans and the rest Caucasians.
63
64
Kenneth Starr's decision to leave his post as independent counsel before his
65
final report is complete raises a thorny issue: Do the three judges who sit on
66
the panel that appointed him have the right to name a successor now that the
67
prosecutor statute has expired? A new appointee might face legal roadblocks
68
from any of a number of sources, the WP reports. An NYT editorial
69
on Starr's exit does not ask this question yet solves it anyway: Editors ask
70
that Starr stay on, dot his i's and cross his t's.
71
72
Long-awaited economic recovery in Asia and Europe may cause some strain in
73
the U.S., according to Wall
74
Street Journal and LAT front-pagers. Increased production abroad
75
may make resources more scarce and finally tug prices upward at home. With
76
other places in the world to invest, investors may pull money from U.S. stocks.
77
Economists expect that interest rates will head north to attract foreign
78
investors. The WSJ also sees a global recovery as a turning point that
79
would solve minor problems at home: "In order to save the world, U.S. consumers
80
pushed their own savings rate into negative territory."
81
82
83
84
Yes, the drug surveys were anonymous:
85
On the
86
Post op-ed page, Richard Cohen speaks with candor of his Time
87
magazine-inspired conversion to the belief that Gov. George W. Bush should
88
answer rumors that he has used illegal drugs: "I happen to think Bush is a
89
Fifth Amendment cokehead. If he had not used the stuff, he would certainly say
90
so. After all ... he has told us much about his past--his drinking, his
91
carousing, his lost youth, his meandering career path and how he gave up booze
92
and found God. This is a stirring tale, and I am moved every time I hear it."
93
94
95
96
97
98
99