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Sleeping wnn me enemy newspaper The underdog Las Vegas Sun is being inserted into the rival Review-Journal. By Ja m e s R a i n e y T im es S ta ff W riter LAS VEGAS — This city’s two daily newspapers have been battering each other for more than half a century — chasing the same stories, fighting over the best journalists and slinging ° published insults in the particularly plain-spoken manner that Las Vegans seem to love. So it represented a unique break with tradition last October when an accord launched the joint delivery of the two papers —* the hard news, Libertarian-leaning, advertising-fat Las Vegas Review-Journal wrapped each morning around the feature-oriented, politically liberal, financially struggling Las Vegas Sun. Economic necessity forced the two papers into a single bundle of newsprint. But if the first five months of joint delivery are any indication, hard feelings and rival views of this booming city will live on. And j ournalistic quality, often suspect, just might get a boost. “I just wish it weren’t in our newspaper,” Review-Journal columnist John L. Smith said of the Sun. “If you get beat by them, it’s right there, in your face. And if you beat them on a story, so what? You just beat the insert.” Jon Ralston, a television and newsletter commentator who writes a column for the Sun, retorts that the long-dominant R-J has done little to improve cover- [See Vegas, Page E16]