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<text id=94TT0200>
<title>
Feb. 21, 1994: Chronicles:The Week
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Feb. 21, 1994 The Star-Crossed Olympics
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CHRONICLES, Page 15
THE WEEK:FEBRUARY 6-12
</hdr>
<body>
<p>NATION
</p>
<p> U.S.-Japan Trade Talks Fail
</p>
<p> President Clinton and Japanese Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa,
meeting in Washington, failed to reach an agreement on trade.
The Administration had sought "objective standards" by which
the opening of the Japanese market to U.S. companies could be
measured. But Hosokawa said Clinton's request would lead to
"managed trade." Clinton conceded, "I have no idea what will
happen from here on in. This is a serious problem."
</p>
<p> Clinton Releases Tight Budget
</p>
<p> President Clinton sent a proposed $1.5 trillion budget to Congress
that forecasts a deficit of $176 billion. Severely restricted
by congressionally mandated limits, the budget increases just
2.3%, and only 36% of the total is discretionary spending. That
brings government spending, as a percentage of the national
economy, to its lowest level since 1979. Prominently absent:
the cost of Clinton's health-care plan.
</p>
<p> U.S. and Aristide Bicker
</p>
<p> After four Haitian refugees were found drowned off the coast
of Florida, ousted Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
denounced the U.S. policy of forcing Haitian boat people to
return to their country, calling the policy a "floating Berlin
Wall."
</p>
<p> Tailhook: It's Over
</p>
<p> A Navy judge dismissed the final three cases arising out of
the Tailhook scandal, claiming that they had been tainted by
the actions of Admiral Frank B. Kelso II, Chief of Naval Operations;
a fourth case was dismissed because of insufficient evidence.
Kelso, the judge said, witnessed debauched behavior at the 1991
Tailhook convention and then tried to cover up his knowledge
of the affair. Kelso denies being aware of any improprieties.
</p>
<p> Hutchison Cleared
</p>
<p> Texas Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison was cleared of ethics charges
after the judge refused to rule before the trial on the admissibility
of evidence seized in a raid of the state treasury offices.
Faced with the judge's decision, the prosecutors declined to
go ahead with their case.
</p>
<p> Tonya Scores
</p>
<p> The U.S. Olympic Committee struck a deal that allows Tonya Harding
to compete in the Winter Games. In exchange, she will drop a
$25 million lawsuit. However, Harding could still be disciplined
after the Games in connection with the attack on Nancy Kerrigan.
</p>
<p> Smoking Ban Wins Support
</p>
<p> The Clinton Administration announced its support for legislation
that would ban smoking in all buildings open to the public--including bars, stores and offices. Residences are excluded.
</p>
<p> Talbott Grilled by Senate
</p>
<p> President Clinton's nominee for Deputy Secretary of State, Strobe
Talbott, underwent semitough questioning by the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee about several articles critical of Israel
that he wrote during his 22-year career at Time magazine. Explaining
that he had changed his views on "many" subjects, Talbott said,
"I have always believed that a strong Israel is in America's
interest."
</p>
<p> The Plague Goes On
</p>
<p> On top of the fires and earthquake, the beleaguered citizens
of Malibu had to endure mudslides caused by two days of heavy
rains in Southern California.
</p>
<p> Winter Asserts Its Power
</p>
<p> Snow and freezing rain disrupted lives in large areas of the
eastern U.S. In Washington much of the Federal Government was
closed on Friday, and in New York City, which got more than
a foot of snow, the stock exchange closed early.
</p>
<p> Term-Limit Law Struck Down
</p>
<p> A federal judge in Seattle ruled unconstitutional a Washington
state law limiting the number of times that congressional members
can have their names on a ballot (a de facto term-limit law).
The case will probably be appealed to the Supreme Court; 14
other states have term-limit laws.
</p>
<p> Courtroom Roundup
</p>
<p> In New York City the prosecution rested its case in the conspiracy
trial of four defendants charged with bombing the World Trade
Center; the defense team is expected to complete its presentation
within days. Meanwhile, in Santa Barbara, California, the grand
jury in the child-molestation investigation of Michael Jackson
heard testimony from its first witnesses, including actor Marlon
Brando's son Miko, who has worked as a Jackson bodyguard.
</p>
<p> New Rules Proposed for Pilots
</p>
<p> Prompted by a crash that killed 18 people in Minnesota last
December, the Federal Aviation Administration proposed that
pilots of commuter planes with 10 or more seats be required
to undergo the same safety training as pilots for airliners.
The rules would take effect in about 18 months.
</p>
<p> WORLD
</p>
<p> This Time, We Mean Business
</p>
<p> Withdraw your guns or face our bombs. That was the essence of
NATO's message to Bosnian Serbs, issued after a tense 14-hour
meeting at NATO headquarters in Brussels. The ultimatum gave
Serbian forces 10 days to pull back the mortars and heavy guns
they have used to encircle Sarajevo for the past 22 months.
The deadline: next Monday. By week's end a tentative cease-fire
appeared to be holding.
</p>
<p> Trouble in South Africa
</p>
<p> During a week in which Nelson Mandela registered his African
National Congress to participate in South Africa's first-ever
all-race elections, several parties decided to boycott the vote.
The Freedom Alliance, an umbrella group of black and conservative
white organizations, all of whom are demanding autonomous regions
of their own in the new South Africa, failed to register in
time to participate in the April balloting. At least 14 parties
will compete in the election.
</p>
<p> Waiting Game
</p>
<p> When Israel and the P.L.O. first signed their in-principle peace
agreement in September, the details of its first stage, self-rule
in the Gaza Strip and Jericho, were supposed to take just one
month to negotiate. Last week Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres and P.L.O. Chairman Yasser Arafat signed a partial deal
in Cairo that resolved several disagreements but left unresolved
such important issues as economic relations and the exact size
of the Jericho enclave.
</p>
<p> Agony in Sudan
</p>
<p> After more than 10 years of civil war, hundreds of thousands
of Sudanese are now facing severe drought and renewed fighting
as mainly Christian rebels from the southern portion of the
country battle offensives from the Islamic fundamentalist government
in the North. Last week a report submitted to the U.N. cataloged
cases in which both government and rebel forces have massacred
civilians, tortured prisoners and kidnapped children for use
as slaves or soldiers.
</p>
<p> Anger in Warsaw
</p>
<p> To express their fury at declining living standards, some 30,000
Polish workers from around the country converged on Warsaw and
marched through sleet and snow in one of the largest demonstrations
the country has seen since the fall of communism.
</p>
<p> U.S. Recognizes Macedonia
</p>
<p> Despite Greek objections, the U.S. recognized the former Yugoslav
republic of Macedonia as an independent state. Greece fears
that the new republic may lay claim to part of the contiguous
Greek province of Macedonia.
</p>
<p> Finnish Line
</p>
<p> In Finland's first direct presidential elections since the country
gained independence from Russia in 1917, a former U.N. mediator
has won the presidency. Martti Ahtisaari, 56, owes his ballotbox
victory primarily to promises to battle recession. Now in its
third year, Finland's present economic slump is its worst in
60 years.
</p>
<p> BUSINESS
</p>
<p> Sculley Sues, and Gets Sued
</p>
<p> John Sculley, former chairman of Apple Computer, abruptly left
his new job as head of Spectrum Information Technologies, charging
Spectrum's chairman Peter Caserta with fraud. Sculley's $10
million lawsuit claims Caserta failed to mention anything to
him about an ongoing sec investigation. In turn, Spectra has
brought a $300 million countersuit against Sculley for breach
of contract.
</p>
<p> Two Software Giants Merge
</p>
<p> Electronic Arts, a leading producer of games for personal computers
and video-game machines, announced it will acquire Broderbund
Software in a $400 million stock swap. Broderbund, specializing
in educational software, made its name with the phenomenally
popular Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?
</p>
<p> Airwave Auction
</p>
<p> The Clinton Administration will permit commercial users to take
over a large chunk of the radio band that is now controlled
by the Pentagon and other federal agencies. The auctioning of
200 megahertz worth of airspace will take 10 years to complete
and could raise as much as $7 billion in revenue for the government.
</p>
<p> THE ARTS & MEDIA
</p>
<p> The Boot
</p>
<p> Kathleen Battle, the famously temperamental soprano, was summarily
fired by New York's Metropolitan Opera. Reason: "unprofessional
actions" during rehearsals for Donizetti's La Fille du Regiment.
Battle said she was "saddened" by the decision.
</p>
<p> Found and Lost
</p>
<p> Undercover police posing as art buyers recovered the 16th century
painting by the Italian Renaissance master Raphael known both
as The Madonna with Child and Lamb and The Madonna of the Hay.
The canvas, never publicly exhibited, disappeared in the early
1880s. After agreeing to pay $24 million for it, the police
reportedly detained five businessmen and art dealers. But just
as the art world got one masterpiece back, it lost another.
Edvard Munch's painting The Scream was stolen from the National
Art Museum in Oslo. It had been on display as part of a Munch
exhibition in conjunction with the Lillehammer Olympics.
</p>
<p> Oscars for Oskar (Schindler)?
</p>
<p> Steven Spielberg, Hollywood's perennial also-ran on Academy
Award night, may finally win the big prize: his movie, the acclaimed
Schindler's List, got 12 nominations, including Best Picture
and Best Director. Other contenders for Best Picture: The Fugitive,
In the Name of the Father, The Piano and The Remains of the
Day. Two actresses were double-listed: Emma Thompson (as Best
Actress for Remains of the Day and Supporting Actress for In
the Name of the Father) and Holly Hunter (Best Actress for The
Piano, Supporting Actress for The Firm).
</p>
<p> By Christopher John Farley, Wendy King, Jeffery C. Rubin, Alain
L. Sanders, Anastasia Toufexis, Sidney Urquhart
</p>
<p>ZHIRINOVSKY BEAT
</p>
<p>Russia's top ultranationalist was up to his neck last week in
forceful pronouncements and manly winter sports:
</p>
<p> Wednesday: In an interview with a Czech newspaper, Zhirinovsky
warned that Czechs "will be forced to...clean the shoes of
German officers"...Thursday: Visiting St. Petersburg, he claimed
to have rejected a $1 billion bribe from an Asian country to
help it "get some islands." He also vowed that "barbarian peoples"
in southern Russia would have their villages destroyed by napalm...Sunday: He planned to take part in a vigorous 40-km (25-mile)
cross-country skiing competition in Moscow.
</p>
<p>DISPATCHES
</p>
<p>THE ULTIMATE HEALTH-CARE STORY
</p>
<p>By MARC HEQUET, in Rochester, Minnesota
</p>
<p> DeWayne Murphy, also known as Prisoner 06764-045, won't step
outside during winter: the frigid Minnesota air leaves him gasping.
His sleep is plagued by night sweats and cramps. "They sent
me here to be rehabilitated," he says of the Rochester Federal
Medical Facility, where he is incarcerated. "But how can you
be rehabilitated if you die?"
</p>
<p> He's got a point. Though Murphy is just a first-time felon serving
a mandatory four-year sentence for drug possession, the ailing
33-year-old inmate finds himself on a kind of de facto death
row; his weakened heart has one-sixth its normal pumping power.
He needs a transplant.
</p>
<p> New hearts are difficult for anyone to come by; for inmates,
it's even harder. The U.S. Bureau of Prisons doesn't pay for
transplants. Medicare will pay--if Murphy is released. The
bureau will release Murphy--if a doctor accepts him for the
necessary pre-transplant work-up. But no doctor will take him--unless he's released.
</p>
<p> It may sound like a somewhat heavy-handed lampoon of the American
health-care system--bad Joseph Heller, say. It gets worse.
If Murphy is furloughed for the prolonged pre-transplant regimen,
afterward he would return to prison. Would he be furloughed
promptly again if a heart became available unexpectedly, as
donor hearts are wont to do? The Bureau of Prisons says he would
be. Murphy has his doubts. Doctors see a logistical snarl that
could hopelessly compromise the success of the transplant. The
authorities shrug. "The Bureau of Prisons doesn't have a hang-up,"
explains Robert McFadden, executive assistant to the warden
at Rochester. "When we're presented with the information we
request, we can go forward."
</p>
<p> Murphy's troubles started in 1990, when he was fired from his
job as a warehouse foreman in Kansas City, Missouri, for being
sick too much. Suffering from what he thought was pneumonia,
he got a chest X ray, which showed that his heart was greatly
enlarged. He was told he would need a transplant and placed
in intensive care.
</p>
<p> Murphy improved just enough to be released. Divorced, broke
and sick, he was arrested with a bag of methamphetamine in his
home in 1991. He says he was merely keeping it for a friend,
though in anticipation of being paid for doing so.
</p>
<p> Pudgy, stringy-haired, constantly out of breath, Murphy has
deteriorated since he was incarcerated in March 1993. A local
attorney has filed suit against the Bureau of Prisons seeking
his release, but Murphy doesn't really have time for a protracted
legal battle. When he arrived at Rochester, he says, he could
walk a lap or two on the prison track. Now he's winded after
climbing down a flight of stairs. He must sleep virtually sitting
up, and gets oxygen all night. He fears that a heart attack
or stroke could leave him on life support rather than kill him
outright. "Serving a four-year sentence on life support," Murphy
shudders. "That's scary." Ironically, his life seeps away just
minutes from the Mayo Clinic, home to a world-famous heart-transplant
program. "It drives me crazy," he says. He stops to breathe.
"I'm sitting here dying, and there's nothin' I can do about
it."
</p>
<p>HEALTH REPORT
</p>
<p>THE GOOD NEWS
</p>
<p>-- Peptic ulcers can be cured, not just treated, with antibiotics,
reports the National Institutes of Health. A special panel has
concluded that the bacterium Helicobacter pylori causes ulcers
and can be wiped out by a combination of drugs such as tetracycline,
metronidazole and amoxicillin.
</p>
<p>-- Many elderly women fail to perform breast self-exams because
of arthritis, failing eyesight or loss of feeling in the fingers.
Now a researcher has developed an alternative self-exam: the
woman lies down and uses the palm of her hand to sweep over
the breast, a more comfortable technique than the usual one
of standing in front of a mirror and using the fingertips on
the breast. In addition, women with poor eyesight can use a
hand-held magnifying mirror to look for lumps.
</p>
<p> THE BAD NEWS
</p>
<p>-- Baby boomers have a much greater chance of getting cancer
than their grandparents did at the same age, says a new federal
study. Researchers don't think the higher risk is due to smoking
or better diagnostic methods but believe it is probably the
result of still unrecognized cancer-causing chemicals in the
environment.
</p>
<p>-- Smoking cigarettes not only raises the risk of lung cancer
and heart disease but also causes damaging bone loss in women.
A new study, based on 41 pairs of female twins, has found that
women who smoke a pack a day through adulthood reach menopause
with bones that are up to 10% less dense than those of nonsmokers--and more vulnerable to fractures. Researchers speculate that
smoking interferes with the body's estrogen production.
</p>
<p>PUTTING OUT FIRES WITH GASOLINE
</p>
<p>"I owned an El Camino pickup in the '70s. It was a real sort
of Southern deal. I had Astroturf in the back. You don't want
to know why, but I did."--PRESIDENT CLINTON, WHILE TOURING
A PICKUP-TRUCK FACTORY
</p>
<p>MAKE BIG BUCKS THE NATURAL-DI$ASTER WAY
</p>
<p>Heroic rescues, food-stamp fraud, heartwarming acts of charity,
price gouging a major natural disaster like last month's Los
Angeles earthquake can bring out the best as well as the worst
in victims. A compendium of bad postcalamity behavior:
</p>
<p> LOS ANGELES EARTHQUAKE
</p>
<p> Over 50,000 survivors have applied for food stamps, and rampant
cheating is suspected. Relief workers have imposed a 72-hour
waiting period to cross-check names and addresses. Complaints
are also rising about landlords who refuse to refund rents and
security deposits on condemned apartments.
</p>
<p> SUMMER '93 MIDWEST FLOODS
</p>
<p> Out of 7,349 Kansas City, Missouri, households receiving food
stamps, one-third were found to be not entitled. Aid workers
were forced to close down the program and later announced an
amnesty to persuade impostors to turn in their ill-gotten stamps.
Other abuses: a 600% price hike for towing mobile homes to higher
ground; flood-damaged, though perfunctorily spruced-up autos
pouring into used-car lots.
</p>
<p> HURRICANE ANDREW
</p>
<p> South Florida saw widespread price gouging in the form of $4
candy bars and $6 cans of baby formula. One store would not
sell batteries without the purchase of a TV or radio. A woman
filed for an $11,500 loss of household goods, but the address
she gave investigators turned out to be in Biscayne Bay. A farmer
submitted a photo of someone else's destroyed mobile home and
a claim of $19,440; investigators later found his actual, undamaged
trailer in Tampa, clear across the state.
</p>
<p>INSIDE JERUSALEM
</p>
<p>ISRAEL: SYRIANS FIRST, PALESTINIANS LATER
</p>
<p> Israeli Prime Minister yitzhak rabin is in no hurry to finalize
negotiations with the Palestinians. That's because he wants
a Syrian deal first, says one of Rabin's Cabinet ministers.
Rabin has told his inner Cabinet that the U.S. is working to
create a loose alliance of countries in the Middle East to counterbalance
Iran and Iraq. Thus, normalized relations between Israel and
Syria are of primary importance. Says the source: "Rabin will
give the entire Golan Heights back to the Syrians. As difficult
as it is, he's made up his mind to do it."
</p>
<p>WINNERS
</p>
<p> JIM CARREY
</p>
<p> His very, very zany Ace Ventura is an unlikely box-office No.1
</p>
<p> SENATOR KAY HUTCHISON
</p>
<p> Legal wrangling over evidence leads to ethics-charge acquittal
</p>
<p> DANIEL N. HELLER
</p>
<p> Miami lawyer wins $500,000 IRS harassment "apology"
</p>
<p>LOSERS
</p>
<p> JOHN SCULLEY
</p>
<p> Blue-chip executive quits new job, alleging he was suckered
</p>
<p> KATHLEEN BATTLE
</p>
<p> The Met fires the temperamental soprano for being diva-like
</p>
<p> THE U.S. AND JAPAN
</p>
<p> Clinton and Hosokawa spar publicly as summit trade talks crash
</p>
<p>NEWS FLASH! POLITICIANS COVER THEIR REARS!
</p>
<p>Some legislators are hedging their bets on the health-care debate
by co-sponsoring more than one of the three most prominent proposals:
the Clinton bill; its chief rival, the Cooper bill (similar
to the President's but without universal coverage); and the
McDermott bill (nationalized health care).
</p>
<p> Rep. Sam Gejdenson (D., Conn.)
</p>
<p> Co-sponsor: Clinton, McDermott
</p>
<p> Rationalization: "My basic call is that there are a number of
approaches to solve this problem."
</p>
<p> Rep. David Minge (D., Minn.)
</p>
<p> Co-sponsor: Clinton, Cooper
</p>
<p> Rationalization: "I wanted to support more than one to show
my commitment to [health-care reform]."
</p>
<p> Rep. Patsy Mink (D., Hawaii)
</p>
<p> Co-sponsor: Clinton, McDermott
</p>
<p> Rationalization: "I want to make sure that we have a bill."
</p>
<p> Rep. Martin Olav Sabo (D., Minn.)
</p>
<p> Co-sponsor: all three
</p>
<p> Rationalization: "I am a strong supporter of universality, and
I also have a deep respect for the work Jim Cooper did over
the years on health care."
</p>
<p> Rep. Mike Synar (D., Okla.)
</p>
<p> Co-sponsor: all three
</p>
<p> Rationalization: "All three...are major steps in the right
direction. I'm trying to be a conduit between the three different
ideas so we can have a good idea that can accomplish the goals
that the President set."
</p>
<p>IT'S A WONK THING--YOU WOULDN'T UNDERSTAND
</p>
<p>"You can laugh, my fellow Republicans, but I'll point out that
the Congressional Budget Office was normally more conservative
in what was going to happen and closer to right than previous
Presidents have been."
</p>
<p> Bill Clinton before a joint session of Congress, Feb. 17, 1993
</p>
<p> "Oh, we'll fix that. That's not a problem. That's a Washington
policy wonk deal."
</p>
<p> Clinton on Feb. 8, 1994, after the CBO said his health-care
plan would increase, not decrease, the deficit
</p>
<p>INFORMED SOURCES
</p>
<p>JUSTICE DEPARTMENT MAY BE CAUGHT IN WEBB
</p>
<p> Washington--Associate Attorney General Webster Hubbell is
snarling communications between the Justice Department and the
White House, claim sources at the department. Hubbell is Hillary
Clinton's former law partner and Bill Clinton's golfing buddy
and functions as Attorney General Janet Reno's link with the
White House. But the big-picture Hubbell tends to focus on issues
that interest him and lets crucial details fall through the
cracks. Justice aides say that's one reason the White House
is sniping about being blindsided by Reno.
</p>
<p> WHAT IS NORTH KOREA DOING WITH ITS PLUTONIUM?
</p>
<p> Washington--The international Atomic Energy agency will circulate
a report this week detailing the agency's unsuccessful negotiations
with North Korea over nuclear safeguards. Barring an eleventh-hour
breakthrough, the report will say that those safeguards have
broken down and that the IAEA is no longer sure what North Korea
is doing with its plutonium stockpile. The iaea is likely to
force the issue and refer the matter to the U.N. Security Council,
which will then have to decide whether to impose sanctions on
North Korea. Pyongyang has threatened to treat sanctions as
an act of war.
</p>
<p> CHINA'S GRUMPY OLD MEN
</p>
<p> Hong Kong--Aged Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping, who finally
made an official appearance in Shanghai last week after being
out of the public eye for almost a year, is the focus of much
silly gossip over what seems to be a battle between him and
rival Communist Party elder Chen Yun to see who can maintain
his faculties longer. A source close to Deng's inner circle
tells this story: the 89-year-old Deng can no longer write but
can walk 50 steps; the 88-year-old Chen can write but can walk
only 30 steps. Says the source: "Deng is so feeble, taking him
out in public has become an enormous production."
</p>
<p>AND YOU THOUGHT THOSE ROYALS WERE NAUGHTY...
</p>
<p> "Time to get back to basics," said Britain's Prime Minister
John Major four months ago at the Conservative Party annual
conference. But some of his fellow Tories weren't listening
to Major's pitch for family values. Only last week, Conservative
M.P. Stephen Milligan was found dead in his apartment. He was
wearing women's stockings and a garter belt and had a plastic
bag over his head and an orange in his mouth. (Scotland Yard
believes Milligan's death may have been due to self-strangulation
while indulging in a solitary sexual practice.) Some other recent
Tory peccadilloes:
</p>
<p> The Earl of Caithness, Transport Minister, resigns his post
just before his in-laws reveal the reason for his wife's recent
suicide: his affair with former secretary to Princess Anne,
Jan Fitzalan-Howard.
</p>
<p> The wife of Conservative M.P. David Ashby announces that he
has left her for another man. Ashby admits to "sharing beds
with dozens of men" but not for the purposes of having homosexual
relationships. Rather, he places the impetus on the accommodations
in "bloody French hotels."
</p>
<p> Environment Minister Tim Yeo resigns after admitting to being
the father of a five-month-old "love child" (Fleet Street's
formulation, not his own) born to his mistress, a north London
Conservative Party worker.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>