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Bull Speed Ahead
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The Washington Post leads with news that a Canadian woman and
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her Algerian companion, arrested last Sunday at a border crossing in Vermont,
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may be connected to a militant Islamic organization (the New York Times and the Los Angeles
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Times front the story). The car she was driving and phone she was
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carrying were linked to a "primary member" of a group that sponsors terrorism
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in Europe and Algeria. The NYT's top non-local story is the dismal
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result of talks in Moscow. The deputy secretary of state expressed displeasure
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over Russia's offensive in Chechnya and Moscow's refusal to budge on
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modifications to the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. The LAT leads
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with the Dow's record high, its first since August. Why the boom? The Y2K panic
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sell-off many analysts predicted has failed to materialize. The NYT
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leads with the Board of Education's decision not to renew New York City's
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schools chancellor's contract, citing his increasingly erratic behavior and
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unwillingness to address recent allegations of widespread attendance fraud. An
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accompanying article paints Mayor Guiliani, a former ally of the chancellor, as
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the man behind his dismissal.
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All the papers say that there is no link yet between the Vermont arrests and
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the earlier arrest in Washington state of a man with a carload of bomb
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ingredients. The Algerian Islamic League, the suspected terrorist group, is
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described as a now-defunct cultural organization by its founder, an Algerian
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arms dealer living in Switzerland. The WP also notes that the woman
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listed her only asset as $8 in a checking account, and claims her living
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expenses, including significant international travel, are met by her wealthy
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mother.
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The LAT fronts the story of Freddie Meeks, who received a
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presidential pardon yesterday. Meeks was one of 50 black seamen accused of
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mutiny in 1944 when they refused to resume loading ammunition onto ships after
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a deadly explosion at Port Chicago. White officers were given a month's leave
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in the wake of the explosion; a 1994 Navy investigation concluded that Meeks
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and the other "mutineers" were victims of racial prejudice but did not overturn
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the ruling. Meeks was one of 37 people pardoned by President Clinton
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yesterday.
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P.T. Barnum, eat your heart out: High-flight tech stocks
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continue to soar, but aging rock stars, another perennially overvalued
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commodity, have hit the skids. The LAT reports that fewer than half
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of the seats for a Jimmy Buffett New Year's concert--priced at around $1,000
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apiece--have sold. Another gala affair, featuring Sting and Tom Jones, was
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canceled when partiers balked at the $2,500 tickets. Many promoters blame
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general Y2K dread for the sluggish sales. Filled with the spirit of the season,
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Today's Papers offers a more charitable explanation: Maybe folks just aren't as
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dumb as rock promoters think they are.
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