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Belgrade Blues
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Events in Turkey again capture front page headlines, but only USA Today leads with it.
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The official body count nearly doubled in the last 24 hours to 7,000, and
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conditions for the living have begun to deteriorate rapidly--no electricity,
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little food and water. The Washington Post leads with Gov. George W. Bush's response
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to questions about his rumored drug use. Bush admitted to youthful mistakes but
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indicated that he has been drug-free for at least 25 years. The New York Times leads with
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a mass demonstration in Belgrade calling for Slobodan Milosevic's prompt
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resignation. The Los
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Angeles Times goes with a local story on a national issue: The state
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assembly approved a ban on "unsafe" handguns, making California the second
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state to do so (after Massachusetts). The guns are considered unsafe if they do
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not meet standards designed to prevent misfiring.
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Yugoslavia's fragmented opposition pulled together for an evening of
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anti-Milosevic fervor before, er, a lot of demonstrators--more than 50,000 in
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the NYT , 100,000 in the LAT and the Wall Street Journal , and 150,000 in the Post .
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Neither bomb threats nor the isolated explosion of a tear-gas grenade early on
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could scare them away. Speakers called for the president's swift exit but
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disagreed on how best to approach it. After swearing he wouldn't show up, Vik
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Draskovic, leader of the largest opposition party, matched the president's
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suggestion for elections in November and was booed by the crowd: The
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opposition's bickering and Milosevic's control of the media and police would
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benefit the latter in the elections. The WP fronts the story, the
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LAT reefers it with an above-the-fold picture.
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Gov. George W. Bush suggested that he would easily have passed strict
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government background checks into drug use at any time during Clinton's or his
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father's administrations. Checks under the Bush (Sr.) administration reached
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back 15 years, and that was ten years ago at the earliest. So, simple
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arithmetic yields that Bush has not used drugs in at least 25 years. The
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comments came after a journalist's inquiry into whether or not Bush could pass
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a background check that might be given to members of his administration. The
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LAT , which also fronts the story, writes that Bush's comments sparked
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curiosity into his activities as a young adult and debate over the press'
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interest in probing such issues.
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USAT leads with conditions in Turkey for the first time. The story
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cites a U.N. official in New York who said that up to 35,000 people may be
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buried in the rubble. The Post carries this figure as well but
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attributes it to an official government estimate made after flights over the
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region. Unburied bodies pose great risks to public health as a source of
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disease, the papers report. The fire at Turkey's largest oil refinery, which
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the LAT led with yesterday, was brought under control after fire
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fighting planes dumped 75 tons of chemicals on it. Insult to injury: The
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NYT reports that in Golcuk relief workers now outnumber residents. They
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brought with them more bread and water than locals could consume, but no
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portable toilets, tents, or generators. The Turkish government opened a
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criminal investigation into contractors who built the apartment complexes that
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crumbled so quickly and thoroughly on Tuesday, according to a LAT
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front-pager.
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The Evangelical Lutheran Church voted yesterday to unite with the Episcopal
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Church, two years after dismissing a similar measure. The two churches will
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recognize each other's membership rolls and sacraments, and work together on
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missionary and social programs. The pact will have great resonance abroad, as
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related churches in Europe and Africa also start to bridge gaps in practices
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and programs. The Episcopal Church is expected to approve the union at its
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convention in July. The Post says in its headline that both groups have
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been losing members, but the NYT emphasizes cost-cutting needs: The
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churches can now combine resources and clergy in cash-strapped areas. Together,
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they have a combined membership of about 8 million. The LAT, WP , and
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NYT all front the story.
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Three Japanese banks announced a possible merger that would create the
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world's largest financial institution, worth $1.26 trillion. (Deutsche Bank AG
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holds the current title, weighing in at $868 billion.) The WSJ carries
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predictions that smaller competitors will lock arms as well, thereby reducing
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the industry's dead weight.
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The NYT prints two corrections and a short news item to clear up a
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story and editorial from earlier in the week. On Tuesday, the paper's lead
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story suggested that $1 billion in foreign aid had been stolen in Bosnia. As it
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turns out, $20 million of that sum is foreign aid, the rest was taken from
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Bosnian public funds or resulted from failed tax collection. At a press
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conference on Wednesday, a State Department spokesman said the story was
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misleading.
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History textbook or today's front page?: "The revolt of the serfs
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has sparked a backlash by the landlords, who are moving to crush the rebellion
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before it gets out of hand." Both. The LAT "Column One" article reports
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that the drive for freedom is rattling the world's largest remaining holdout of
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feudal serfdom. Thousands of slave laborers in southern Pakistan are rising up
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against landlords who have shackled and sold them for hundreds of years.
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