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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper critiques 6 New York Times articles about North Korea. All articles are from early 2003. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA310NYT.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
hodge podge of articles on the subject of this very controversial country at present, one will see varying degrees of interest and attitude. Some articles are informative. Some are suggestive.
In noting how the New York Times reports on North Korea, it is also interesting to see events unfold between the end of January and the beginning of March.
James Brooke (2003) wrote an article published in the New York times on January 26, 2003 regarding the talks between North and South Korea. The article notes that the talks
went on for three days, and from the tone of the article, it seems to have been a rather successful meeting. The reporter noted that the two nations "ended up
papering over differences" (2003, p.2). This is a positive step but of course North Korea has other problems to deal with. In any event, it was also reported that South
Korea acknowledged that the talks truly did not produce a progressive position on the nuclear issue (2003). That is somewhat disappointing. However, the author notes that President Kim
Dae Jung said that sometimes they do not appreciate what the other party does; however, they do need to talk with them and negotiate (2003). On February 2,
2003, an article was published in the Sunday Times entitled "The World; To China, North Korea Looks Radioactive." The article begins by saying that things were so different a few
weeks previously (Kahn, 2003). China and the U.S. were working to try to end the North Korean standoff and the Bush administration even urged China to use its
leverage--short of violence--in order to halt North Koreas nuclear desires (2003). Some had speculated that perhaps China would emulate Germany in 1989, and open its borders to refugees and force
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