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<text id=94TT0461>
<title>
Apr. 25, 1994: Chronicles:The Week
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CHRONICLES, Page 23
THE WEEK:APRIL 10-16
</hdr>
<body>
<p> NATION
</p>
<p> Mitchell Turns Down the Court
</p>
<p> In a surprise move that clearly baffled and dismayed his Senate
colleagues, retiring Senate majority leader George Mitchell
turned down the President's offer to be nominated to the U.S.
Supreme Court to succeed Justice Harry Blackmun. Mitchell said
he wanted to devote his full efforts to passing the President's
health-care plan. Speculation immediately shifted to minority
contenders, including Connecticut federal Judge Jose Cabranes,
Solicitor General Drew Days and New York federal Judge Amalya
Kearse.
</p>
<p> Cigarette Chiefs Get Blasted
</p>
<p> For more than six hours, the top executives of the nation's
seven largest tobacco companies underwent a hostile televised
grilling before California Congressman Henry Waxman's House
health subcommittee. The executives denied that cigarettes are
addictive or that their companies manipulate nicotine content
to keep smokers hooked. Cigarettes are no more addictive than
coffee, tea or Twinkies, allowed one executive. "The difference
between cigarettes and Twinkies," responded Waxman sharply,
"is death."
</p>
<p> Hillary's Profits Revised--Up
</p>
<p> The White House disclosed that a second commodities-trading
account maintained by Hillary Rodham Clinton during 1979 and
1980 produced a $6,500 profit--not a $1,000 loss as the couple
had previously maintained. The cost to the Clintons: $14,615
in back taxes and interest they agreed to pay voluntarily. President
Clinton complained tartly to newspaper editors that it was impossible
to recall precisely family finances of 15 years ago: "You think
I should have shut the whole Federal Government down and done
nothing but study these things for the last two months?"
</p>
<p> House Backs Ultimate Penalty
</p>
<p> The House demonstrated its get-tough mood by voting the death
penalty for more than 60 crimes, from carjacking murders to
treason, as the new crime bill made its way through Congress.
</p>
<p> Kelso's Stars
</p>
<p> At the urging of top Pentagon officials, the Senate Armed Services
Committee recommended 20 to 2 that Admiral Frank Kelso be permitted
to retire with his four stars--and accompanying pension--intact. This despite his role in the Tailhook scandal, which
remains in dispute. The full Senate is expected to agree.
</p>
<p> Trust-Fund Warnings
</p>
<p> The government issued revised estimates on the solvency of Social
Security and Medicare. Both remain in trouble: the Social Security
old age and disability trust funds are expected to run out of
money in 2029, the Medicare hospital trust fund in 2001. Congress
faces the task of finding a solution.
</p>
<p> Honk If You Like to Drive!
</p>
<p> To the praise of an assemblage of politicians vying for credit,
including Democratic Vice President Al Gore and Republican Governor
Pete Wilson, the quake-damaged pivotal Santa Monica Freeway
reopened to Los Angeles' car-addicted commuters, who wasted
no time forsaking public transportation.
</p>
<p> Flood Season Again
</p>
<p> The country's midsection got an unpleasant reminder of the great
flood of '93 when heavy spring rains swelled rivers to overflowing
in several states, once again sending residents scurrying to
higher ground and bringing out legions of sandbag volunteers.
At least six deaths were reported.
</p>
<p> WORLD
</p>
<p> Gorazde Threatened
</p>
<p> The embattled Bosnian city of Gorazde, once designated a "safe
area" by the U.N., was close to collapse after heavy attack
from Bosnian Serb forces when U.N. officials announced that
a cease-fire was likely that would leave the Serbs with most
of the land seized in their recent offensive. On Saturday a
British Sea Harrier jet, flying under nato command, was shot
down as it searched for a Serb target. Earlier in the week,
U.S. aircraft bombed Serb positions and imposed a momentary
quiet on the area. By the weekend, however, Serb forces were
reportedly two miles from Gorazde's center.
</p>
<p> Ethnic Strife Continues
</p>
<p> The Rwandan capital of Kigali was ravaged by continued ethnic
violence between the Hutu and Tutsi tribes as bands of marauders
armed with guns and machetes roamed the streets in search of
victims. The numbers of dead were estimated to reach into the
tens of thousands by week's end, with Belgian troops scrambling
to evacuate the last foreigners from the city. Despite tentative
talks with government forces that began Friday, rebel troops
warned that any non-nationals remaining in the city after 24
hours would be considered hostile.
</p>
<p> Caught in "Friendly Fire"
</p>
<p> Twenty-one United Nations personnel, including 15 Americans,
and five of the Kurds they were trying to help died Thursday
after two helicopters were mistakenly shot down by U.S. fighter
planes over the "no-fly" zone in northern Iraq. Defense Department
officials said Friday that the jets signaled the helicopters
electronically, but did not receive a response identifying them
as "friendly."
</p>
<p> Another Bombing in Israel
</p>
<p> New fear gripped Israel after another suicide bombing--the
second in a week--claimed five Israeli lives and left 28 injured.
On Wednesday, a Palestinian with explosives strapped to his
body blew himself up after boarding a crowded bus in Hadera.
</p>
<p> Heir Apparent?
</p>
<p> The spotlight was on Japanese Foreign Minister Tsutomu Hata
amid speculation that he would inherit the post vacated by former
Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa, who resigned two weeks ago.
Like Hosokawa, Hata has been an outspoken critic of Japan's
scandal-plagued political system; he also faces the challenge
of holding together the fragile seven-party coalition that brought
Hosokawa to power. Parliament is expected to vote on a new Prime
Minister this week.
</p>
<p> No Deal
</p>
<p> Efforts by former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to
mediate the South African political crisis fell apart after
Zulu leaders repeated their demand that the nation's all-race
elections be postponed. Kissinger's mediation team had hoped
to resolve the conflict between African National Congress members
and Zulu nationalists, who are demanding a sovereign state and
boycotting the April 26-28 election.
</p>
<p> Face to Face
</p>
<p> Also on Thursday, A.N.C. leader Nelson Mandela and President
F.W. de Klerk sparred in their first and only televised debate,
attacking each other over economic policy and who was to blame
for the country's political violence. The debate ended on a
conciliatory note as the two leaders agreed to "go forward together."
</p>
<p> BUSINESS
</p>
<p> P&G Takes a Hit
</p>
<p> Procter & Gamble announced that it was taking a $102 million
after-tax charge on its third-quarter earnings because it was
"badly burned" by two derivatives contracts. Derivatives, the
subject of a congressional hearing last week, are complex financial
instruments whose value is derived from the overall direction
of a financial market like stocks or interest rates.
</p>
<p> Sanctions Against Taiwan
</p>
<p> President Clinton announced that the U.S. will impose limited
trade sanctions against Taiwan for its continued trade in products
made from endangered species, including tigers and rhinos.
</p>
<p> SCIENCE
</p>
<p> Cancer Culprit
</p>
<p> Researchers looking for mutant strands of DNA in skin-cancer
cells have discovered a gene that may be at the root of many--if not most--cancers, including such major types as lung,
breast, brain, bone, bladder, kidney, ovary and lymphocyte.
In healthy tissue, the gene acts as a brake on runaway cell
division. Scientists hope that by replacing damaged genes with
healthy ones, they may someday be able to prevent many types
of cancer.
</p>
<p> Cancer-Research Apology
</p>
<p> Under harsh questioning at a congressional hearing, the heads
of the National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer
Institute apologized for their failure to properly monitor a
falsified breast-cancer study. The officials reiterated their
belief in the validity of the study results, despite the flaws.
</p>
<p> THE ARTS & MEDIA
</p>
<p> Journalism's Finest
</p>
<p> Among this year's Pulitzer prizewinners: Eileen Welsome of the
Albuquerque Tribune for her reporting on human radioactivity
experiments; William Raspberry for his commentary in the Washington
Post; and freelance photographer Kevin Carter for his haunting
shot of a tiny Sudanese girl stalked by a vulture. E. Annie
Proulx' The Shipping News won the fiction prize and Edward Albee's
Three Tall Women won for drama.
</p>
<p>By Melissa August, Philip Elmer-DeWitt, Margaret Emery, Christopher
John Farley, Lina Lofaro, Michael Quinn, Jeffery Rubin and Alain
L. Sanders
</p>
<p>HEALTH REPORT
</p>
<p>THE GOOD NEWS
</p>
<p>-- George Bush's mom was right--at least about broccoli. Scientists
have shown that a substance found in crucifers (broccoli, cauliflower,
Brussels sprouts, cabbage and other crunchy vegetables) actively
blocks formation of cancerous tumors in rats.
</p>
<p>-- Experts say new vaccines and treatments for a common type
of influenza called Hib can prevent up to one-third of the cases
of hearing loss in young children.
</p>
<p>-- People who have AIDS are living about a year longer than
they were at the start of the epidemic, largely because of improved
treatments for Pneumocystis carinii, an AIDS-related pneumonia.
</p>
<p> THE BAD NEWS
</p>
<p>-- Two leading antioxidants, beta carotene and vitamin E, gave
no protection against lung cancer in a controlled test of 29,000
Finnish smokers, and may have done some harm.
</p>
<p>-- Researchers investigating the high incidence of breast cancer
on New York's Long Island found that women who lived near chemical
plants in the late 1960s have a 60% greater chance of developing
breast cancer after menopause.
</p>
<p>-- Many blacks lack an enzyme that breaks down a key carcinogen
in tobacco smoke, which may help explain why black men who smoke
are 48% more likely to develop lung cancer than white men who
smoke.
</p>
<p> Sources--GOOD: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Ear and Hearing, Journal of the American Medical Association.
</p>
<p> BAD: The New England Journal of Medicine, New York State Department
of Health, American Health Foundation.
</p>
<p>NAME THAT MUSICAL CLICHE
</p>
<p>Trailers for Serial Mom feature the song Bad to the Bone--a musical workhorse (by George Thorogood and the Destroyers)
whose use in movies and TV is rivaled only by James Brown's
I Got You (I Feel Good). So who's raking in bigger royalties?
</p>
<p> Bad to the Bone
</p>
<p> MOVIES:
</p>
<p> Christine
Flesh and Bone
Problem Child
Problem Child 2
Slayground
Talk Radio
Terminator 2
Vice Versa
</p>
<p> MOVIE TRAILERS:
</p>
<p> The Sandlot
Serial Mom
</p>
<p> TV SHOWS (partial list)
</p>
<p> Coach
Married...with Children (3 shows)
Melrose Place
Miami Vice
Tequila and Bonetti
Who's the Boss?
</p>
<p> VIDEO GAMES
</p>
<p> Super Nintendo "Rock 'n Roll Racing"
</p>
<p> Total: 39
</p>
<p> I Got You (I Feel Good)
</p>
<p> MOVIES:
</p>
<p> Good Morning, Vietnam
K-9
Mr. Baseball
Mr. Destiny
Mr. Jones
The Mommy Market
Moving Violations
No Man's Land
White Men Can't Jump
Who's Harry Crumb?
</p>
<p> MOVIE TRAILERS:
</p>
<p> Frankie and Johnny
</p>
<p> TV COMMERCIALS (partial list):
</p>
<p> AlliedSignal Automotive
Constitution Healthcare
Senokot Laxative
Swanson Le Menu Lightstyle
</p>
<p> Total: 32
</p>
<p>THEY ALL LAUGHED--NOT
</p>
<p>Jackie Mason: Politically Incorrect, a new Broadway show featuring
the rabbi turned comedian, received decidedly mixed reviews
when it opened two weeks ago. But you wouldn't know from the
newspaper ads... WHAT MASON'S AD SAYS WHAT THE ACTUAL REVIEW SAID
</p>
<p> "Meat-Cleaver Comedy!"
</p>
<p>-- Associated Press
</p>
<p> WHAT THE ACTUAL REVIEW SAID
</p>
<p> "It's meat-cleaver comedy performed by a harsher, less funny
Mason."
</p>
<p> WHAT MASON'S AD SAYS WHAT THE ACTUAL REVIEW SAID
</p>
<p> "People all around me were falling out of their seats with applause,
cheers, and laughter."
</p>
<p>-- Newark Star-Ledger
</p>
<p> WHAT THE ACTUAL REVIEW SAID
</p>
<p> "People all around me were usually falling out of their seats
with laughter the other evening, so I guess my sense of humor
simply doesn't tune into Jackie Mason's comic wavelength."
</p>
<p> WHAT MASON'S AD SAYS WHAT THE ACTUAL REVIEW SAID
</p>
<p> "We laugh and marvel."
</p>
<p>-- New York Newsday
</p>
<p> WHAT THE ACTUAL REVIEW SAID
</p>
<p> "There's a chip on his shoulder these days that, when he digs
deeper than Bobbitt-Harding-Menendez for material, puts an unpleasant
defensive spin on the observations. We laugh, sure, and marvel..."
</p>
<p>INSIDE WASHINGTON
</p>
<p>Is Rehnquist Getting Itchy?
</p>
<p> Retiring Senate majority leader George Mitchell, who last week
turned down a nomination to the Supreme Court, may get a second
chance to join the court--as Chief Justice. Current Chief
Justice William Rehnquist, a widower, recently started dating
a woman who lives on the West Coast. Sources say he appears
to be developing a greater interest in his private life at the
same time that he's tiring of the court's legal grind. If Rehnquist
decides to resign during Clinton's presidency, Mitchell would
probably be the leading candidate for the post.
</p>
<p>WINNERS & LOSERS
</p>
<p>WINNERS
</p>
<p> EDWARD ALBEE
</p>
<p> Virginia Woolf playwright wins a remarkable third Pulitzer
</p>
<p> BROCCOLI GROWERS
</p>
<p> Farmers anticipate big sales for cancer-fighting vegetable
</p>
<p> THE INTERNAL REV. SERVICE
</p>
<p> Tax-week surprise: a $14,615 bonus from Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
</p>
<p> LOSERS
</p>
<p> STEVE CARLTON
</p>
<p> Hall of Fame pitcher's alleged anti-Semitic remarks cause furor
</p>
<p> TOBACCO EXECUTIVES
</p>
<p> Congressional sub-committee rejects Twinkie Defense 2
</p>
<p> NAT. MEDICAL ENTERPRISES
</p>
<p> Shrink chain paying record $300 mil. plus to settle fraud charges
</p>
<p>ART FOR AL'S SAKE
</p>
<p>One of the perks of being President or Vice President is that
you get to decorate your home with paintings from the National
Museum of American Art. The Clintons made news when they borrowed
an abstract by Willem de Kooning--a White House first. The
Gores' selections are more traditional. They may also be reflective
of the vice-presidential mindset:
</p>
<p>-- Marjorie and Little Edmund (1928), Charles Tarbell. A metaphor
for powerlessness? A glum child (a Gore-ish blond!) is dandled
on the knee of a large adult.
</p>
<p>-- Peacock in the Woods (1907), Thayer & Meryman. The brilliant
peacock clearly deserves to be front and center but is obscured
by bothersome, less deserving foliage.
</p>
<p>-- Street Scene, Tangier (Man Leading Calf) (circa 1910), Henry
Ossawa Tanner. Another image of subservience: the calf must
go wherever its master leads it--no matter how well-implemented
the calf's ideas for reinventing government.
</p>
<p>-- Idle Hours (1895), Harry Siddons Mowbray. The title says
it all.
</p>
<p>INFORMED SOURCES
</p>
<p>Who's Eating the Borscht in Baikonur?
</p>
<p> Moscow--Baikonur, Moscow'S PRIME SPACE LAUNCH FACILITY, has
been in chaos for the past two and a half years, with persistent
theft of gold-plated electronic parts from space rockets and
satellites. Now, say recent U.S. visitors to Baikonur, there
are pilferers in the pantry. Cosmonauts complain that thieves
have raided the supply of specialty foods prepared for their
comrades on the orbiting Mir space station. Canned meats, bread,
oranges and borscht have mysteriously--but, in this land of
privation, not surprisingly--vanished from the rocket manifests.
</p>
<p> More Criticism for Commerce Boss
</p>
<p> Washington--WILLIAM CLINGER, the ranking Republican on the
House Committee on Government Operations, is demanding details
on Commerce Secretary RON BROWN'S personal investments in telecommunications
firms. Clinger wants the information because Brown, as head
of Commerce, influences the industry. Brown, citing an internal
review that cleared him of possible conflicts of interest, is
refusing to hand over further documentation.
</p>
<p>NO MAN ABOVE THE LAW--OR SOMETHING
</p>
<p>"I ALSO BELIEVE THAT THE LAW SHOULD APPLY TO ALL CITIZENS, ONE
STANDARD FOR NATIVES AND OTHERS NOT DIFFERENTLY."
</p>
<p>-- FORMER PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH TO THE SINGAPORE BROADCAST CORP.
ON THE CANING PENALTY PRESCRIBED FOR AN AMERICAN TEENAGER CHARGED
WITH VANDALISM
</p>
<p>ZHIRINOVSKY BEAT
</p>
<p> Russia's top ultranationalist, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, enjoyed
a springtime visit to France...Tuesday: Attended a Council of Europe parliamentary meeting
in Strasbourg, where he complained about the limited visa he'd
been given. He told fellow parliament members, "You are not
democrats, you are agents of the CIA." He hurled clumps of tulips
at student protesters and boasted that his singular political
style is "in key" with the Russian people: "It's like in sexual
relations," he explained. "You have to be in harmony." Wednesday:
Was said by a Russian newspaper to have filed suit against local
political opponents who, he claimed, had insulted his dignity
and honor. Thursday: Accused European Council members of stealing
his hat--a fisherman's cap--from a guarded cloakroom. Friday:
Revealed that "World War III started on April 11, when NATO
bombed Bosnian Serbs. This date must be remembered for future
historic references." The bombing actually began on April 10.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>