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Kosovertures
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Nobody agrees on the lead today. The New York Times
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leads with Slobodan Milosevic's promise Tuesday to resume talks with Kosovo's
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Albanians. The Los Angeles Times leads with the Clinton administration's
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plan to send the Treasury Dept.'s international trade point man to Tokyo to
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prod the Japanese to stabilize the yen. The Washington Post goes with North Korea's belligerent
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admission for the first time Tuesday that it has and will continue to develop
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and test ballistic missiles as well as sell them to the likes of Iran, Iraq and
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Syria. This disclosure, bizarrely enough, is apparently designed to get the
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U.S. to lift its near-total economic embargo on North Korea. USA Today
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leads with the various natural calamities plaguing the country right now:
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wildfires in Florida, thunderstorms in Maryland, and floods in New England.
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The NYT reports that after meeting in Moscow with Boris Yeltsin,
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Milosevic, in an attempt to forestall NATO military action against his forces,
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pledged to provide relief groups and international monitors with access to
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Albanians in Kosovo province and to make arrangements for Albanian refugees to
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return there. However he did not, observes the paper, agree to withdraw his
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Serbian security forces from the area. Russian officials who, notes the
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Times , are also opposed to any NATO use of force in the situation,
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portrayed Milosevic's remarks as an important breakthrough. And while the
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NYT notes that it's not at all clear that Milosevic's pledges are
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genuine, it's beyond curious that nowhere does the story mention that he is
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believed by many to have authorized crimes against humanity in the Bosnian war
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and is not being hauled before an international tribunal to answer for them
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primarily because he is a head of state. This context is also missing from the
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LAT front-page story on the Kosovo developments. Ditto for the
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WP , which carries the story inside, along with one about the U.S.
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military's doubts about being able to operate effectively in and around
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Kosovo.
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The LAT says that what's prompting the U.S. push to Japan is the fear
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that if something isn't done soon, the Asian crisis could worsen. In
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particular, explains the paper, there's the fear that if the yen continues to
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drop, China will abandon its pledge not to devalue its currency, which could
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set off further devaluations across Asia, and this would only further hurt the
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region's banks and further suppress its imports. Which could hurt U.S. exports.
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Already, notes the story, the yen's problems have contributed to a 50 percent
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drop in Chrysler's Japan sales. For all this about what is going wrong and
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could go wronger, the LAT is awfully light on what the U.S. wants the
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Japanese government to actually do, not going much beyond its remarks in the
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seventh paragraph about the desire for Japan to "stimulate and deregulate" its
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economy and bail out its insolvent banks. There is the comment that Prime
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Minister Hashimoto's responses in this direction have only been "modest," but
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there is no detail on what they were or why they are considered
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insufficient.
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The USAT front section "cover story" reveals that one in four
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stalking victims is a man, 90 percent of them stalked by other men. The story
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keys on perhaps the most famous victim of male-on-male
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stalking, Steven Spielberg, but also notes the cases of a congressman and a
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senator (both from Nevada) who were preyed on recently by the same man.
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According to the story, men stalk men for the same reasons they stalk women:
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mental disorders, narcissism, and an anti-social streak.
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The NYT front reports that the Massachusetts Supreme Court has upheld
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the reduced sentence of 279 days for au pair Louise Woodward. The ruling means
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that Woodward, convicted last fall of killing a baby boy in her care, is free
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to return to her home in England. The parents of the dead child immediately
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filed a civil suit against Woodward (for wrongful death? The Times
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doesn't say) seeking damages and asking that she be prevented from making
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interview or book deals allowing her to profit from the death. The story also
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makes front-page "reefers" at the LAT and USAT .
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The WP runs an AP item about a JAMA study coming out today noting
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that the number of disciplinary actions taken against physicians for
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sex-related offenses increased from 42 in 1989 to 147 in 1996. About 40 percent
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of the doctors disciplined during this time span were allowed to return to
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practice. Doctors disciplined for sex-related offenses were more likely to be
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in the fields of psychiatry, obstetrics and gynecology, and family and general
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practice.
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The Wall Street Journal reports that in congressional
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testimony, Alan Greenspan questioned how antitrust laws are being applied in
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the current merger environment and indirectly criticized the government's case
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against Microsoft. Greenspan suggested that the government should exercise more
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"humility" in wielding antitrust action because, as in the case of U.S. Steel,
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IBM, and GM, monopolies tend to fade over time.
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In his survey of the recently released House and Senate financial disclosure
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forms, the WP 's Al Kamen notices that although Sen. Robert C. Smith is a
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big advocate of tort reform, his wife nevertheless collected a $175,000 jury
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verdict against the Sheraton Hotel for a slip and fall.
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