91. Chernomyrdin told reporters in Russia that NATO would halt its bombing of Yugoslavia within two or three days of Milosevic complying with the demands. 92. Catherine Landis, a former newspaper reporter in North Carolina, lives in Knoxville. 93. Clarke told reporters in Tokyo that the U.K. economy is showing strong growth with low inflation. 94. Coast guard officials briefed reporters in Tokyo on Sunday on the incident. 95. Cheney told reporters in Springfield, Ohio, that Gore supported extending a moratorium on royalties paid by U.S. firms drilling for natural gas in the Gulf of Mexico. 96. Clouds of smoke were seen from the direction of the airport and in a district to the north, an AP reporter in Kabul said. 97. Coded paper signs flashed by reporters in a room equipped with an audio feed announced the verdicts to the world. 98. Col. Alghamdi, who still lives in Riyadh, told a reporter in a telephone interview that he has never been contacted by anyone from the U.S. government. 99. Compaq Computer Corp. chief executive Eckhard Pfeiffer told reporters back in Houston that his company was quickly boosting production of its own version, the PC Companion. 100. Clinton and Yeltsin yukked it up for reporters in a display of good will meant to reassure both American and Russian voters that their countries are in good hands. |