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Weird story mixing in VOA #22

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ahalterman opened this issue Feb 18, 2014 · 0 comments
Open

Weird story mixing in VOA #22

ahalterman opened this issue Feb 18, 2014 · 0 comments
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@ahalterman
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Goose seems to be getting lots of junk mixed in with the story text proper. I have no idea how to fix this.

Many, many stories across various VOA regions only display the CAR story below.

{ "_id" : ObjectId("52fe59478a1c060ee23aa647"), "title" : "US Intel Chief Calls Syria Conflict 'Apocalyptic Disaster'", "url" : "http://www.voanews.com/content/clapper-syria-an-apocalyptic-disaster/1849482.html", "stanford" : 0, "content" : "The United Nations and international human rights groups say militias in the Central African Republic, known as the anti-Balaka, are carrying out an "ethnic cleansing" of the country's Muslim minority. Muslims are being targeted as payback for abuses committed by the recently ousted Seleka rebel coalition. VOA's Anne Look was in the western town of Boali, where Muslim residents have been living in a church for protection for the past month.\n\nThe United Nations and international human rights groups say militias in the Central African Republic, known as the anti-Balaka, are carrying out an "ethnic cleansing" of the country's Muslim minority. Muslims are being targeted as payback for abuses committed by the recently ousted Seleka rebel coalition. VOA's Anne Look was in the western town of Boali, where Muslim residents have been living in a church for protection for the past month.\n\nLandmines are one of the more controversial weapons of war. Hidden from sight, they maim and kill and remain long after conflicts end. According to the United Nations, 110 million active landmines are scattered over 70 countries. For five decades, Colombia has been plagued by insurgencies and countless, planted landmines. But, as Arash Arabasadi reports, one company there may have found a way to defeat the explosives our eyes can’t see.\n\nLooking Back: Beatles Take US by Storm This week marks the 50th anniversary of the Beatles’ first appearances in the United States, and the beginning of the U.S. version of “Beatlemania.” When the Beatles touched down in New York on February 7, 1964 few knew that American music and culture would change forever. The Beatles arrived in a country still mourning the loss of President John F. Kennedy, assassinated just months before. Americans were ready for something that would lighten the somber mood. The Beatles delivered some levity and joy. The Beatles had come to America to perform on the Ed Sullivan TV show, and more than 70 million people tuned in. It was then the largest TV audience ever for an entertainment show. Laurel Bowman takes a look back.\n\nMost car shows feature the latest in automotive technology, the cars of the future. But at the 39th Parisian Retromobile Exhibition this month, cars of the past were under the spotlight. VOA's George Putic reports.\n\nIn many countries throughout the Middle East and North Africa, walls and buildings became the canvas for street art during the Arab Spring uprisings that began in 2011 and gave protestors a platform. VOA’s Kane Farabaugh reports.\n\nAmerican dollars are a popular currency both in the United States and around the world. So it's critical to ensure that they're distinctive and trustworthy. That's the job of a government agency that's been printing American bank notes for more than 150 years. VOA's Julie Taboh visited its Washington headquarters to see first-hand how American money is made.", "source" : "voa_me", "date" : "Tue, 11 Feb 2014 18:41:04 -0500", "date_added" : ISODate("2014-02-14T17:58:31.603Z") }

{ "_id" : ObjectId("5303cc548a1c06197977a78e"), "title" : "Syrian Artist Shows Trauma of War in Charcoal Sketches", "url" : "http://www.voanews.com/content/reu-syrian-artist-shows-trauma-of-war-in-charcoal-sketches/1854024.html", "stanford" : 0, "content" : "The Israeli government has announced it will allocate $100 million to counter a growing international boycott against Israeli organizations operating in the Palestinian territories. The issue was highlighted recently by a debate over the maker of a popular soft-drink machine operating in the disputed territories. VOA's Scott Bobb reports from the West Bank town of al-Azariya.\n\nThe Israeli government has announced it will allocate $100 million to counter a growing international boycott against Israeli organizations operating in the Palestinian territories. The issue was highlighted recently by a debate over the maker of a popular soft-drink machine operating in the disputed territories. VOA's Scott Bobb reports from the West Bank town of al-Azariya.\n\nA United Nations commission says North Korean officials - and possibly even North Korean leader Kim Jong Un - should be tried for crimes against humanity. A report released Monday by the U.N.’s Commission of Inquiry on North Korea compared many of the abuses to crimes committed by the Nazis during World War II. VOA’s Jeff Seldin reports.\n\nThe Central African Republic remains gripped in tit-for-tat inter-communal violence that has forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes since December. VOA's Anne Look reports from the northern town of Kaga Bandoro, where tensions have been growing.\n\nSochi isn't the best-connected Olympic host city. Most visitors have to travel through hubs like Moscow or Frankfurt to get there. And in a country as huge as Russia, some of those sports fans are undertaking journeys of several days and thousands of kilometers - by air, road, rail and sea. Henry Ridgwell reports for VOA from Sochi on the epic journeys travellers are taking to see the Games.\n\nIt has been six years since Khalid Sheik Mohammed and four other detainees at the detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, were first charged with murder for the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. Why is it taking so long to bring them to trial? VOA correspondent Meredith Buel has some answers.\n\nThe first anniversary of the shooting death of South African model Reeva Steenkamp at the hands of her boyfriend, Paralympic sprinter Oscar Pistorius, has sparked calls for tougher justice in cases of violence against women. VOA's Mark Snowiss reports.\n\nThree years ago Monday, opponents of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi declared a “Day of Rage” against his rule. Gadhafi was killed in the civil war that followed, but the nation has found little calm in the years since. VOA's Elizabeth Arrott has more from our Middle East bureau in Cairo.\n\n"Hot. Cool. Yours” is the slogan of the Winter Olympics in Sochi. Some think it may now be too hot. James Brooke reports from the mountains above Sochi.\n\nAsiana Airlines is changing its training for pilots to encourage crews to talk more and change cockpit culture. A U.S. investigation found the corporate culture may have been an issue in last year’s deadly Asiana crash in California. VOA’s Carolyn Presutti continues her reporting on the crash, bringing us up-to-date on what this means for aviation.", "source" : "voa_me", "date" : "Tue, 18 Feb 2014 13:00:22 -0500", "date_added" : ISODate("2014-02-18T21:10:44.075Z") }

@johnb30 johnb30 added the bug label Mar 6, 2014
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