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Russian to Judgment
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Boris Yeltsin's dismissal of his entire cabinet leads at USA Today and
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the New York Times .
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The Washington Post goes with the Supreme Court's
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decision to sidestep a "partial-birth abortion" case. (An FOTP coffee cup for
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the reader who submits, the best alternative phrase, in TP's judgment, for the
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procedure in question. How can someone be partially born? And doesn't
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"Partial-birth abortion" seems about as logical as "partial-life execution?")
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The Los
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Angeles Times leads with the main economic reaction to yesterday's big
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story about oil production cutbacks: a 13 percent rise in oil prices, the
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biggest one-day percentage gain since the Gulf War.
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Yeltsin explained his move by saying his nation needed a fresh and powerful
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team in place to pull it out of its social and economic crises. The biggest
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name casualty was long-time Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, widely viewed
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as Yeltsin's heir apparent. In firing him, Yeltsin advised him to concentrate
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on the next presidential elections, to be held in 2000. Odd or insincere
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advice, given that the NYT says few give Chernomyrdin much of a chance
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to win that election without the power of the PM's office or Yeltsin's
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support.
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The NYT says theories about why Yeltsin fired everybody "swirled
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through the capital like a cyclone." But give the Times credit for
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putting forward its own clear suggestion: With Yeltsin's health problems much
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in evidence of late, Russians were increasingly viewing Chernomyrdin as
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Yeltsin's imminent successor, and "nothing infuriates Yeltsin more than the
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suggestion that he has lost any of his political authority." The LAT ,
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which runs Yeltsin on its front, also settles on this as the most likely
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explanation.
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Although all the papers agree on the basic facts of the shake-up, their
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takes on the emotions involved vary. The NYT says Yeltsin made his
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stunning announcement in a "surprisingly folksy and conciliatory speech," while
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WP says the speech was made by a "stiff-looking" Yeltsin, and the
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LAT says he was "grim."
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The Post has some excellent detail on the mechanics of the firings.
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Yeltsin, says the paper, met with Chernomyrdin in person and gave him a
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farewell award for "Services to the Fatherland," while the other big names got
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it in the neck on the phone. The Post account makes it clear that there
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are Russian spin doctors too, by reporting that a Kremlin spokesman said
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Yeltsin's moves "had been planned for a long time."
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The WP lead brings word that the Supreme Court, confronted with its
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first chance to take up the issue of a particular vexed type of late-term
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abortion, decided to punt, prompting an angry dissent from conservative
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justices Thomas, Rehnquist and Scalia. On the other hand, abortion rights
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advocates were cheered by the inaction. The non-move is also the USAT
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off-lead, but doesn't make the front of the NYT or LAT . Both of
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those papers find another judicial story more pressing: The California Supreme
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Court's decision that the Boy Scouts can ban gays.
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The LAT , NYT , and WP fronts carry the news that the
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federal government has indeed, as it first hinted over a week ago, decided to
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try to block the Lockheed-Northrop merger.
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President Clinton's arrival in Ghana is front-page news at
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the NYT , LAT , and WP . Clinton opened his 12-day tour of
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Africa, says the NYT , by pledging more American interest and aid while
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calling for a deeper African commitment to democracy and free markets. The
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Times describes how the largest crowd Clinton ever spoke to--some half a
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million Ghanians--surged against the barricades, threatening to "overwhelm the
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president." The paper says Clinton, "his face contorted in anger, raged at the
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crowd to get back." The picture on the NYT and WP fronts captures
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the moment: It's the "Primary Colors" opening handshake gone mad. Clinton in
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Africa also makes the LAT front.
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The WP reports that in the Lewinsky matter, the White House is
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attempting to use its recently announced claim of executive privilege to cover
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discussions involving not just presidential advisors like Bruce Lindsey and
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Sidney Blumenthal, but also those involving Hillary Clinton. The paper points out that this indicates
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how actively involved she has been in the White House response to the scandal.
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Meanwhile, a NYT editorial calls the attempt to use executive privilege
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in the controversy "an alarming attempt to extend presidential power."
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The Wall Street Journal "Work Week" column reports that
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"Eighty-eight percent of CEOs surveyed anonymously report that they see a
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connection between a worker's age and productivity. In a poll of 773 chief
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executives in 23 countries, consultants Watson Wyatt Worldwide found that most
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think productivity peaks around age 43." "Today's Papers" is sorry that the
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Journal wasn't curious enough to find out the average age of those
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CEOs.
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