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Raising the Fed
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The Egyptian government's objection to the impending FBI takeover of the
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EgyptAir 990 investigation--plus the mounting evidence that a co-pilot
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deliberately crashed the plane--leads at the New York Times , the
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Washington
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Post , and the Los
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Angeles Times (the Wall Street Journal also fronts a long article). For the
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first time in many days, USA Today relegates EgyptAir to the off-lead, leading instead with the Fed's quarter-point hike in short-term
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interest rates, a story off-leaded by the NYT , the LAT , and the Post . Wall Street reacted favorably to the decision by
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the Fed, which cited tightening labor markets. Analysts do not expect another
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increase until March.
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All the papers report that the National Transportation Safety Board will not
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cede authority of the investigation to the FBI until it consults further with
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Egyptian officials, who think the investigation is culturally biased. (The
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NYT , however, leaves the NTSB's announcement until its
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seventh paragraph.) The NYT and LAT report the source of the bias charge: The religious
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phrase used by a co-pilot shortly before the plane dived is a common one, used
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both in emergencies and before meals, and thus not necessarily an indication of
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suicide. Only the Journal manages to quote actual Egyptian officials
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criticizing the investigation (the Post quotes an "Arab" official, but does not make
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clear what this means).
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Meanwhile, "officials close to the investigation" continue to leak details
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of the plane's last moments. After the captain briefly leaves the cockpit, the
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voice recorder reveals, the remaining co-pilot says, "Tawakilt ala
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Allah ," which means, roughly, "I put my faith in God." He shuts off the
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autopilot. The plane goes into a dive, at which point the captain returns and
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says, roughly, "What's going on?" As the plane continues to dive, two flaps on
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the tail point in opposite directions--one to dive, one to climb. The
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Journal notes that the flap in the "climb" position was controlled
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from the pilot's seat, the other, from the co-pilot's. The Journal
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also says that near the end of the dive the pilot orders, "Cut the
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engines!"--apparently to decrease the plane's dangerous speed (only the
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Journal has this detail). ( USAT says that the plane was weightless for 20 seconds and
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reached 94 percent of the speed of sound.) The NYT , by contrast,
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implies that the co-pilot cut the engines in order to doom the
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plane.
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The Post and the LAT reveal that the co-pilot had a sick
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daughter (the LAT attributes this news to an Egyptian newspaper); the
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Post says that she has been receiving outpatient treatment at UCLA Medical
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Center for about a year, although she has been improving lately. According to
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the LAT , Egypt's Al-Ahram newspaper reported that: a) before the flight the
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co-pilot asked a colleague to carry gifts and money back to his family in
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Cairo, even though he was scheduled to arrive there shortly, and b) the
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co-pilot had recently told his brother-in-law, "We see our deaths every day
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over the ocean." The Journal and the LAT report that the
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co-pilot requested to fly the plane shortly before he took the controls; the
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Journal says that he had been scheduled to take over much later in the
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flight.
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The LAT fronts, and the NYT reefers, an apparent breakthrough in the Northern Ireland peace
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talks. David Trimble, the Protestant leader, said he would consider forming a
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government with Sinn Fein before the Irish Republican Army gives up its
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weapons--provided that Sinn Fein (which represents the IRA) appoints a
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representative to an international disarmament commission. This concession came
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after 10 weeks of talks mediated by former U.S. Senator George Mitchell, who
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had brokered the April 1998 Good Friday accords. The power-sharing government
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evisioned by the 1988 agreement could become a reality if Sinn Fein responds in
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kind to Trimble's offer. The Post --which runs its story
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inside--notes that Trimble could lose his leadership of the Ulster
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Unionist Party if he loses a vote at a Nov. 27 meeting.
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The NYT fronts, and the Post reefers, the second-degree murder conviction of a Michigan
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boy who was 11 years old at the time of the killing. The boy, who is now 13,
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shot a man walking out of a convenience store with a 30-year-old rifle from
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over 200 feet away in the dark. Defense attorneys argued that the boy was
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shooting at trees and the bullet ricocheted. The NYT says that he is
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probably the youngest murderer convicted as an adult this century.
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In the Post 's "Reliable Source" column, some journalist named Michael
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Kinsley, who claims to work for Microsoft, reveals what Al Gore did behind
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closed doors Monday when he visited the company's headquarters in Redmond, Wa.:
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"He tore off his clothes and went running through the office shrieking, 'I
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can't stand these earth tones.' Then he said he would appoint Bill Neukom,
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Microsoft's general counsel, to the Supreme Court. Then he lit up a joint and
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started listing all the heads of state of Third World countries. The usual, in
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other words."
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Spellings of the name of the co-pilot suspected of crashing EgyptAir 990:
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Gamil al-Batouti ( NYT )
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Gamil Batouty ( LAT )
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Gameel Batouti ( Post )
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Gameel el-Batouty ( USAT )
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Gameel El Batouty ( Journal )
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