Oct. 10, 1994: Chronicles-The Week: Sept. 25-Oct. 1 TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994 Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
Time Magazine CHRONICLES, Page 19 The Week: September 25 - October 1

NATION

Health Care: Dead

Retiring majority leader George Mitchell reluctantly abandoned his Herculean efforts to craft a compromise health-care reform bill and pulled the plug on any such legislation for this year. "The insurance industry on the outside and a majority of Republicans on the inside proved to be too much to overcome," said Mitchell. Senate minority leader Bob Dole countered that "democracy in action" defeated what he claimed was a bad, costly and overly bureaucratic set of proposals. President Clinton vowed to revive the fight next year.

Woolsey's Woes

"One could almost conclude not only that no one was watching, but that no one cared." Such was the frank admission of CIA Director R. James Woolsey regarding the most damaging security lapse in the agency's history: the breach that let Aldrich Ames compromise dozens of cia operations and fatally unmask key U.S. agents behind the Iron Curtain. Nonetheless, Woolsey announced that no one would be dismissed or demoted as a result of the spectacular fiasco; 11 current and retired officials will get only reprimands. The wrist slap triggered an outburst of congressional anger, including one suggestion that the CIA chief step down. It also added momentum to a congressional move to subject the CIA to a sweeping reassessment.

A Routine Summit

Time was when a Moscow-Washington summit would have put the world on hold, and any disagreement would have sent cold war chills around the globe. Not so when Russian President Boris Yeltsin met President Clinton at the White House for a two-day display of warmth, cooperation and goodwill to emphasize how relations between the two countries have changed. The leaders agreed to speed up nuclear disarmament and push for smoother economic relations. They politely agreed to disagree over Bosnia and Russian arms sales to Iran.

Going Home Is Hard to Do

With members itching to hit the campaign trail, Congress slogged through a raft of last-minute legislative business, including a pile of spending bills, in order to adjourn as quickly as possible. The House approved and sent to the Senate for its expected approval a stringent ban on gifts from lobbyists. The Senate, unable to overcome bitter partisan differences, walked away from campaign-reform legislation but agreed to go back for a post-election lame-duck session in order to vote on global-trade legislation.

G.O.P. Puts Out a Contract

House Republican lawmakers and candidates paraded in front of TV cameras on Capitol Hill to sign a "Contract with America," a midterm platform that, pace Reagan, promises tax cuts and increased military spending, as well as a balanced budget. President Clinton was quick to ridicule the plan as "the same old trickle-down economics."

A Lottery for Cubans

Administration officials said they tentatively planned to conduct a lottery that would select about a quarter of the 20,000 Cuban immigrants that Washington told Havana it would accept yearly. In theory the lottery is supposed to create opportunities for currently ineligible emigres, as well as eliminate huge waiting lines at the U.S. diplomatic post in Havana.

A Plethora of Jurors

To the surprise of the judge, the first phase of jury selection in the Simpson murder case--the screening out of persons unable or unwilling to face the hardship of a possible six-month trial--rolled smoothly to a speedy conclusion with the selection of 304 prospective panelists. The candidates are to return in mid-October to undergo personal questioning for fairness and objectivity.

Teen Trauma

Kimberly Mays made another startling about-face. Last year the switched-at-birth teenager won the right in court to sever ties with her biological parents, only to turn to them months later in order to escape Robert Mays, the man who reared her and with whom she had fought to stay. On Monday Florida authorities revealed that after accusing Robert Mays of sexually abusing her, Kimberly had recanted the accusation. She could now face charges of filing a false police report.

Starr Panel Targeted

Two months after the fact, the selection of Whitewater independent counsel Kenneth Starr continued to draw fire, as five past presidents of the American Bar Association criticized the objectivity of the judicial panel that picked Starr to replace Robert Fiske. Though the A.B.A. presidents were worried that political considerations may have influenced the panel's decision to make the switch, they were careful to stress their "utmost confidence" in Starr's integrity.

Disney Loses One

Yielding to the furious opposition of historians, environmentalists and even some members of Congress, the Walt Disney Co. abandoned its plans to build a sprawling American history theme park near hallowed Civil War battlefields in northern Virginia. The company said it would look for another site, also in Virginia.

WORLD

Haiti: Occupational Hazards

Even with 20,000-plus U.S. troops deployed around Haiti and more on the way, officials at the Pentagon expressed concern that the country was slipping into chaos as violence between pro-Aristide forces and opponents continued. On Thursday an explosion near the seaport killed six bystanders and wounded at least 43, and on Friday, with U.S. troops standing by just blocks away, pro-junta gunmen fired on a rally of Aristide supporters; at least six died in the ensuing clashes. Meanwhile, in New York City, the U.N. Security Council voted to lift sanctions against Haiti, but the resolution will not take effect until President Jean-Bertrand Aristide returns.

Tragedy at Sea

It was one of the century's worst maritime disasters. Heading across the frigid Baltic Sea from Estonia to Sweden, the passenger ferry Estonia capsized and sank just before dawn on Wednesday. Of the roughly 1,000 people aboard, more than 900 were confirmed drowned. The tragedy, believed to have been caused by water leaking in through the retractable front-loading door, provoked the London-based International Maritime Organization to question the stability of all "roll on, roll off" ferries.

India: The Plague Advances

After two weeks, the deadly pneumonic plague has spread from the port city of Surat to New Delhi and five other states, including West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. But officials claimed they had the epidemic under control. At week's end the death toll topped 50.

Arms Embargo to Remain

As President Clinton prepared once again to fend off congressional demands for the lifting of the arms embargo against Bosnia, he got some welcome help from Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic, who announced he would agree to a six-month postponement of the embargo debate. Meanwhile, nato Defense Ministers approved a plan of intensified retaliation against Bosnian Serb violations of cease-fire and safe-haven agreements, a move that some fear may only widen the war.

North Korea Stonewalls

Talks in Geneva between the U.S. and North Korea reached an impasse. North Korean negotiators took a hard line, backing off previous commitments to halt reactor construction and permit full inspections of nuclear facilities in return for modern new reactors and other financial concessions from the West. The U.S., in turn, called its chief negotiators back to Washington, but they will return to Geneva for more talks this week.

Saudis Ease Up on Israel

Saudi Arabia and five smaller oil-rich Arab states announced a partial lifting of their economic boycott of Israel. The move is intended to support Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in his peace negotiations with Syria.

BUSINESS

GM Strike Resolved

General Motors agreed to hire more workers, settling a dispute with 11,500 striking employees at its Buick City complex just as the walkout threatened to shut down many GM plants around the country. At issue: workers' complaints that the company's refusal to hire more permanent employees was causing illness and fatigue.

Japan Opens Markets--a Bit

Racing against a U.S.-imposed deadline, Japanese negotiators and U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor produced the first major market-opening agreement between the two countries since talks began in July 1993. The deal will lower Japanese trade barriers against a number of foreign products--but it does not include autos.

SCIENCE

Embryo Research Allowed

Arguing that fertilized embryos up to 14 days old do not have the same moral status as infants and children, a National Institutes of Health advisory panel urged the nih to end a 15-year ban on funding of human-embryo research. Opponents have always contended that life begins at conception and that such research is therefore immoral, but the panel concluded that the possible benefits--including studies of fertility, cancer and birth defects--outweigh these arguments.

THE ARTS & MEDIA

Elvis: It Really Was His Ticker

Once again it's official: the king of rock 'n' roll died of heart disease. The Tennessee health department confirmed the 1977 coroner's report and announced it had found no evidence of falsity on the singer's death certificate. But the finding probably will not put an end to the theorizing that Presley's death at age 42 was hastened by his fondness for prescription drugs--or, of course, that the putative father-in-law of Michael Jackson might not be dead at all.

SPORT

First Baseball Now Hockey?

The N.H.L. season was put on hold for at least two weeks while the league debated a no-strike proposal from the players. The plan called for sweetened contract terms and an undertaking from the league to drop its lockout threat. "We have invited the players' association back to the bargaining table," said N.H.L. commissioner Gary Bettman. "I am hoping they want to negotiate in good faith and help make a deal."

By Kathleen Adams, Robertson Barrett, Michael D. Lemonick, Michael Quinn, Alain L. Sanders and Sidney Urquhart

HEALTH REPORT

The Good News

-- A new study confirms earlier evidence that moderate alcohol intake can protect against heart attacks. It seems that alcohol stimulates the production of an enzyme that breaks up clots, a prime factor in heart attacks.

-- A team of scientists has concluded that carotid endarterectomy, a controversial and expensive surgical procedure that removes fatty deposits from the main arteries to the brain, can cut the risk of stroke in men by more than half.

-- Four decades after polio vaccines were first developed, the disease has been vanquished in the western hemisphere. The last case was in Peru in 1991.

The Bad News

-- African-American women are about twice as likely to die from breast cancer as are white women, says a new study. Much--though not all--of the difference can be attributed to socio-economics: black women have poorer access to health care, on average, and so their disease tends to be diagnosed at a more advanced stage, when it is harder to treat.

-- Practice may make perfect, but sometimes it feels better to have the experienced team at your side. A study of pediatric intensive-care units at 16 hospitals across the U.S. has shown that the chances of a patient's dying are 79% greater if the unit is part of a teaching hospital.

SOURCES--GOOD: Journal of the American Medical Association; The National Institutes of Health; Pan-American Health Association. BAD: Journal of the American Medical Association; Journal of the American Medical Association.

CORPORATE CASUALTY OF THE WEEK

Under fire for its plans to build an theme park near Civil War battlefields, the Walt Disney Co. surrendered to opponents.

INSIDE WASHINGTON

If It's One for the Road, Make It Ovaltine

When it comes to drinking on--or off--the job, FBI Director Louis Freeh will be merciless. While the CIA's James Woolsey was getting hammered for his agency's leniency toward superspy Aldrich Ames' flagrant drunkenness, Freeh issued a blistering Alcohol Policy memo warning agents that even off-duty misconduct caused by drinking will have "harsh consequences," up to dismissal. Even when drinking moderately at a social function, G-men and -women must arrange for a designated driver. Freeh, says one, is "J. Edgar Hoover with kids."

WINNERS & LOSERS

Winners

"SAMMY BULL" GRAVANO--Singing mobster gets five years for 19 murders: 3.16 months a hit.

W.S. MERWIN--Nature-loving poet cops the first Tanning Prize: $100,000.

PAMELA HARRIMAN--Ambassador's angry ex-in-laws fail to freeze her assets.

Losers

GEORGE MITCHELL--Despite his efforts, health care is officially dead. On to baseball?

JAMES WOOLSEY--Senate spanks CIA chief for his handling of Ames case fallout.

WOODY ALLEN--Loses custody appeal: apparently the judges don't read Esquire.

NETWATCH--News, Culture, Controversy on the Internet

Tomorrow's TV Today

Besides the prospect of a job for Barry Diller, one of the great benefits of the information superhighway is supposed to be interactive television. Now programmers at Cornell University have taken a step toward making two-way TV a reality. Thanks to software dubbed "CU-SeeMe," Internet users can tap into live sound-and-image transmissions with their computers. Better yet, users with video cameras can actually exchange TV images with fellow networkers. (Hi, Mom!)

As befits what is still an infant medium, CU-SeeMe's performance is a little sluggish on most Net links--the black-and-white images are akin to something you might see in a nickelodeon--but capabilities are improving quickly. Viewing choices are limited by the fact that right now there are only a few dozen Net sites, most of them academic, with CU-SeeMe capability. Browsers might end up staring at an empty physics lab in Norway or a blank chalkboard in Israel. But already CU-SeeMe promises low-cost video conferencing for students, journalists and the dateless. Using the new system, Chicago scientists recently made history's first video link to the South Pole, where a local trudged through a mile and a half of -60C tundra to talk face to face on the region's only Macintosh.

Use may snowball by year's end, when prices on some videocams drop to $100. Predicts David Farber, one of the Net's founding fathers: "Every kid with a Mac and an Internet connection is going to buy ((a camera)) and plug it into his serial port." With results as yet undreamed of.

E-mail Netwatch at timestaff1@aol.com

VOX POP

Do you think quiz shows are rigged?

Yes36% No42% Not Sure22%

From a telephone poll of 1,000 adult Americans taken for TIME/CNN on Sept. 21-22 by Yankelovich Partners Inc. Sampling error is plus or minus 3.5%.

UNDUE HARDSHIP

"Have you ever been to Nicole Simpson's condo at Bundy Ave.? Have you ever visited O.J.'s house on Rockingham? If so, will you promise not to visit those sites again for the duration of the trial?"

-- Questions from the 80-page questionaire given to prospective jurors in the O.J. Simpson case.

NAME THAT OPERATION

Can you match the code names of these U.S. military incursions with the countries being incurred upon? 1. Urgent FuryA. Grenada 2. Restore HopeB. Panama 3. Uphold DemocracyC. Somalia 4. Just CauseD. Haiti

Answers: 1-A, 2-C, 3-D, 4-B.

BESUBORU LIKE IT OUGHTA BE

In these last (and very rainy) days of Japanese major league baseball, all eyes were on the Central League's embattled first-place Yomiuri Giants:

Sunday: After a dismal 3-1 loss to the Yokohama Bay Stars, the Giants are just one game ahead of the Chunichi Dragons. Angry fans boo manager Shigeo Nagashima, littering the field with discarded megaphones ($6 each). Analysts link the team's slump to the lackluster performance of the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

Tuesday: Outfielder Dan Gladden, formerly of the Detroit Tigers, dons a kamikaze bandanna for courage. But the crucial game against the Dragons is rained out.

Wednesday: Tied with Dragons after disastrous 0-1 defeat.

Thursday: Rematch scratched as tropical typhoon Orchid hits.