Top headlines in major S. Korean newspapers
SEOUL, May 18 (Yonhap) -- The following are the top headlines in major South Korean newspapers on May 18.
Korean-language dailies
-- Angry nurses say they will quit 'illegal' duty (Kyunghyang Shinmun)
-- 10,000 nurses move to stop doing work like 'drug prescriptions,' 'blood collection' (Kookmin Daily)
-- 'Father of ChatGPT' warns AI can manipulate U.S. presidential election (Donga Ilbo)
-- Ruling, opposition parties agree to conduct total inspection of crypto transactions among lawmakers (Seoul Shinmun)
-- Contact-free medical treatments to continue in some hospitals, clinics (Segye Times)
-- 'International cooperation is needed to end the war; S. Korea must play a central role': Yoon (Chosun Ilbo)
-- Progressives more likely to believe fake news than conservatives (JoongAng Ilbo)
-- Soldier's death, believed to be the trigger for mass shooting of innocents in Gwangju, turned out to be caused by martial law army (Hankyoreh)
-- 'May spirit' hurt by combative politics bound by the past (Hankook Ilbo)
-- S. Korea's economic growth will stop unless immigration rises fourfold (Maeil Business Newspaper)
-- 'Shallow recession is imminent; distressed-debt market will open' (Korea Economic Daily)
English-language dailies
-- Yoon, Trudeau agree to deepen partnership (Korea JoongAng Daily)
-- S. Korea, Canada vow stronger ties (Korea Herald)
-- Japan's info on Fukushima wastewater should not be taken at face value: expert (Korea Times)
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(Asiad) S. Korea blank China to reach men's football semifinals
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(LEAD) (Asiad) S. Korea takes 2 silvers in roller skating relays
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N. Korea slams IAEA's adoption of resolution on Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program
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(Asiad) No time to celebrate for S. Korean goal scorer after win over China in men's football quarters
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S. Korea says N. Korea will never be recognized as nuclear-weapon state
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(News Focus) Travis King's release an opportunity for rapprochement in U.S.-N. Korea ties?
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DP averts crisis following court's rejection of Lee's arrest; focus shifts to unity
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5 years after signing, future of inter-Korean military accord unclear
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In desperation, N. Korea, Russia turn to one another for mutual assistance rivaling U.S.-S. Korea cooperation
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Yoon seeks to carve out bigger role for S. Korea in Indo-Pacific, world