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<text id=93TT1962>
<title>
June 28, 1993: News Digest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jun. 28, 1993 Fatherhood
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE WEEK, Page 17
NEWS DIGEST
</hdr>
<body>
<p>NATION
</p>
<p> President Bill Clinton's fortunes improved last week. A number
of his legislative initiatives made some progress through Congress,
and he finally named his candidate for the Supreme Court seat
being vacated by Byron White. A quick Senate confirmation was
expected for Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a judge on the federal appeals
court in Washington and a pioneering feminist lawyer. Ginsburg
was praised by both liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans,
though some women's groups were nervously reviewing her position
that the Roe v. Wade abortion-rights ruling was the right decision
but based on the wrong grounds. Only two days before the President
named Ginsburg, his aides told the press that he was almost
certain to nominate Appeals Court Judge Stephen Breyer. Clinton's
personal chemistry with the candidates--he was cool to Breyer
after they met but responded well to Ginsburg--seemed to weigh
heavily in his decision. Although Breyer told the Administration
about the problem weeks before, his fate was sealed by news
reports that he had neglected to pay Social Security taxes for
a domestic servant.
</p>
<p> The President's budget plan cleared another hurdle when Democrats
on the Senate Finance Committee struck a deal on new tax increases
and spending cuts. They eliminated Clinton's $72 billion tax
on all forms of energy, substituting a 4.3 cents-per-gal. motor-fuels
tax that will raise just $24 billion over the next five years
and tacked on a 2.8% increase in the capital-gains tax for the
affluent. With the First Lady's very discreet acquiescence,
the Senators also cut an extra $19 billion from Medicare beyond
the $49 billion already sought by Clinton. Now the bill moves
to likely passage in the full Senate.
</p>
<p> After Democrats and moderate Republicans joined forces to end
a Republican filibuster, the Senate voted 60 to 38 to pass White
House legislation to reform campaign spending in House and Senate
races. Though Democrats agreed to strip the bill of most provisions
for public financing of congressional races, the Senate version
would limit contributions by corporate and other political action
committees, bar lobbyists from making contributions to lawmakers
whom they lobby and establish voluntary ceilings on campaign
spending. The House considers a similar bill next month.
</p>
<p> Democrats and Republicans on committees in both houses gave
strong support to a less generous version of Clinton's national
service plan, under which students could do volunteer work in
law enforcement, social services and environmental protection
in return for help in repaying their college loans.
</p>
<p> Hoping to take advantage of his forward momentum last week,
the President held two news conferences. At the first, he pointed
to his success in getting a budget agreement through both houses
of Congress, denied that he had changed course in Bosnia and,
somewhat implausibly, took credit for the creation of 755,000
new jobs since he took office. "This is the most decisive presidency
you've had in a very long time on all the big issues that matter,"
he said. The question-and-answer sessions represented a wary
revival of Clinton's on-again, off-again truce with the media,
which had reached a new low early in the week after Clinton
introduced his Supreme Court nominee. When ABC correspondent
Brit Hume asked about "a certain zigzag quality" in White House
decision making, the President said peevishly, "How you could
ask a question like that after the statement she just made is
beyond me," then cut off further questions. Clinton mended fences
by joking with Hume and other reporters at his later news conferences.
</p>
<p> After a man in Tacoma, Washington, said he found a syringe in
a can of Diet Pepsi, more than 50 similar tampering incidents
were reported around the country. Noting that the reports involved
cans filled at different times in different plants, company
officials said it was "almost incomprehensible" that so many
could have been tampered with. By week's end 13 people had been
arrested on charges of making false claims, at least three others
had admitted that their stories were invented--and authorities
remained unconvinced that any of the reports were authentic.
</p>
<p> The Supreme Court tied another knot in its tangled doctrine
on church-state relations with a 5-to-4 ruling that permits
public school districts to provide sign-language interpreters
for deaf students in religious schools.
</p>
<p> WORLD
</p>
<p> It started with an assault on Pakistani U.N. peacekeepers in
Mogadishu and escalated into a bombing campaign against the
attack's instigator, Somali warlord Mohammed Farrah Aidid. Finally,
U.N. troops stormed Aidid's stronghold, forcing him to flee,
and to remain separated from most of his supporters. Five U.N.
troops and over 100 Somali militia were killed; 46 peacekeepers
and more than 100 Somalis were wounded.
</p>
<p> Serb, Croat and Muslim Bosnian leaders agreed to a cease-fire,
despite the failures of the three that have preceded it during
the past 15 months. At peace talks in Geneva, the Presidents
of adjoining Serbia and Croatia suggested splitting Bosnia into
three regions, each ethnically homogeneous. The idea was rejected
by Bosnian President and Muslim leader Alija Izetbegovic. Lord
Owen, the British mediator and co-author of an earlier, much
more complicated gerrymandering peace plan, said the new idea
might not be the fairest or the best but that "the Muslim government
would be well advised to look very closely at these proposals
and to negotiate."
</p>
<p> Russia and Ukraine have been arguing for more than a year over
what to do about the powerful 350-ship Black Sea fleet of the
former Soviet navy. Russian President Boris Yeltsin and Ukraine
President Leonid Kravchuk reached a solution: they will split
the fleet down the middle. The fleet's port in Sevastopol, Ukraine,
will be shared as well. Russia also agreed officially to guarantee
Ukraine's security, a condition Kravchuk has insisted on before
giving up his 1,900-warhead nuclear arsenal.
</p>
<p> Civil war was averted in Cambodia when seven provinces that
had tried to secede reversed course. The rebels' leader, Prince
Norodom Chakrapong, a Deputy Premier in the pro-Vietnamese government
and the son of Prince Norodom Sihanouk, the head of state, had
declared the provinces independent to protest the governing
party's loss in last month's elections to a party headed by
Chakrapong's brother. But Chakrapong decided to go along with
a plan for both parties to share power in an interim government.
</p>
<p> Japanese legislators have approved a motion of no confidence
in the government of Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa; they say
he has failed to attack political corruption as he promised
to do. It is only the second such resolution since the 1950s.
Miyazawa has dissolved the parliament, and must call new elections
within 40 days.
</p>
<p> Canada's ruling Progressive Conservative Party has chosen Kim
Campbell as its leader to replace Brian Mulroney, who is stepping
down. Campbell will be the first woman Prime Minister in Canadian
history. Turkey also got its first woman Prime Minister last
week when economist Tansu Ciller was named to that office.
</p>
<p> The U.N. is getting tough with Haiti. The Security Council gave
the Caribbean nation's military junta just one week to allow
democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to return
from exile to the office from which it ousted him in 1991. If
the army fails to reinstate Aristide, Haiti will face severe
international sanctions, including a freeze on its overseas
assets and an embargo of oil and weapons shipments. A proposal
for a naval blockade, however, failed.
</p>
<p> Nigeria's transformation to a democracy after 10 years of military
rule seemed too good to be true, and in the end it was. A government-appointed
commission has set aside the results of national elections in
the face of legal challenges over alleged voting irregularities.
The challenges come mostly from close allies of General Ibrahim
Babangida, the military despot who was supposed to yield power
later in the summer.
</p>
<p> Its never robust economy in free fall since the breakup of its
sponsor, the U.S.S.R., Cuba says it will cut its military forces
to save money.
</p>
<p> BUSINESS
</p>
<p> When Apple Computer co-founder Steven Jobs burned out 10 years
ago, the Silicon Valley company brought in marketing maven John
Sculley. Now it is Sculley who has apparently flamed out. He
has stepped down as CEO, but will stay on as chairman to focus
on new business opportunities. His decision came a week after
Apple warned Wall Street that a price war had seriously peeled
its profits. Sculley had grown aloof, spending considerable
time in Washington.
</p>
<p> According to Financial World magazine's annual list of the best-paid
figures on Wall Street, investor and fund manager George Soros
earned $650 million last year. That beat out Michael Milken's
record of $550 million, set in 1987.
</p>
<p> SCIENCE
</p>
<p> President Clinton has decided to go ahead with NASA's space
station, but in a "reduced-cost, scaled-down" version. The low-budget
station would hold four astronauts and go into operation shortly
after the turn of the century, at a total cost of $18 billion--$8 billion less than the previous design.
</p>
<p> The asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago--it threw megatons of dust into the air, blocking out the
sun and putting the planet in a temporary deep freeze--may
have had company. French scientists have found rocky debris
in the Pacific that's about the same age but probably came from
a different object than the one that landed off Mexico's Yucatan
coast. The implication is that an asteroid shower, rather than
just a single asteroid, struck the earth.
</p>
<p>-- By Richard Lacayo, Michael D. Lemonick, Christopher John
Farley, Michael Quinn, Erik Meers, Alexandra Lange
</p>
<p>WINNERS AND LOSERS
</p>
<p>WINNERS
</p>
<p> MICHAEL CRICHTON
</p>
<p> Film rights to Jurassic author's next go for $3.5 million
</p>
<p> DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN
</p>
<p> Senator passes big test guiding budget through Finance
</p>
<p> KIM CAMPBELL
</p>
<p> Survives challenge and becomes Canada's first female PM
</p>
<p> LOSERS
</p>
<p> KIICHI MIYAZAWA
</p>
<p> Japanese head loses no-confidence vote; government falls
</p>
<p> GEN. HAROLD CAMPBELL
</p>
<p> Mocking Clinton means a $7,000 fine, early retirement
</p>
<p> PEPSI HOAXERS
</p>
<p> Exposed, arrested--and what sorts of lives do they lead?
</p>
<p>Hands Have No Tears to Flow, but Presidents Do
</p>
<p>President Clinton began to cry last week after introducing his
Supreme Court nominee, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and hearing her
speak abouut her mother. It wasn't the first time.
</p>
<p> "Mrs. Davis burst into tears as she told the governor about
not having enough money for food after paying for her prescription
drugs. Mr. Clinton dropped to his knees, teary-eyed himself,
and hugged and consoled her."--DALLAS MORNING NEWS Nov. 5,
1992
</p>
<p> " `The people of America will learn...that they can trust
Mack McLarty to bring the real concerns of real people to the
table,' said Mr. Clinton, his eyes watery with tears as he introduced
his friend to the nation."--NEW YORK TIMES, December 13, 1992
</p>
<p> "((When Clinton announced Madeline Albright's nomination to
be ambassador to the U.N., her comments about her father, a
Czech diplomat who sought asylum in the U.S.)) "brought tears
to Mr. Clinton's eyes."--DALLAS MORNING NEWS, December 23,
1992
</p>
<p> "As the congregation ((at Little Rock's Immanuel Baptist Church))
sang the Battle Hymn of the Republic, Clinton repeatedly wiped
tears from his eyes."--LOS ANGELES TIMES Jan. 11, 1993
</p>
<p> "Last week, the president-elect described the last days in his
home state as an emotional roller coaster ride. At times, he
said, he was overcome with tears for no apparent reason..."--HOUSTON CHRONICLE, Jan. 17, 1993
</p>
<p> "Tears filled Mr. Clinton's eyes as he listened to hymns at
an interfaith service inside Washington's Metropolitan African
Methodist Episcopal Church."--INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE,
Jan. 21, 1993
</p>
<p> "[A woman told him] that she had voted for him even though
her pilot husband had been killed in Vietnam War. Clinton, with
tears in his eyes, she remembers, gave her a hug..." LOS ANGELES
TIMES, Jan. 29, 1993
</p>
<p> "((The father of a boy killed by robbers)) asked Clinton what
could be done to curb violence...Clinton's eyes welled almost
to tears." CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER, Feb. 12, 1993
</p>
<p> "When a young boy from Louisiana told Clinton that his 10-year-old
brother died because of a brain tumor that may have been caused
by pollution...Clinton's eyes seemed to redden with tears."--HOUSTON CHRONICLE, Feb. 21, 1993
</p>
<p> "Clinton spoke haltingly, seemingly moved to tears, when he
talked of secretly jogging...to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial..."--WASHINGTON TIMES, May 30, 1993
</p>
<p> "Shaken, somber, near tears - those were the words used to describe
Clinton as he met the press after the session with [Lani]
Guinier."--PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, June 5, 1993
</p>
<p>INFORMED SOURCES
</p>
<p>The F.O.B. Ambassador Track
</p>
<p> U.S. Presidents always know the perfect thing to give a pal--an ambassadorship. Secretary of State Warren Christopher
recently sent Bill Clinton a list of four career diplomats whom
he was recommending to become ambassadors. The President scribbled
a no next to each name on the list and wrote at the top, "Where
are all our friends?" One candidate has since been promised
an embassy, one is leaving government, two are still waiting.
</p>
<p> Pointing Fingers with Bloody Hands
</p>
<p> WASHINGTON--After 600 refugees were massacred in Liberia on
June 6, it seemed as if everybody in this country riven by civil
war wanted to blame somebody else for the slaughter. Eyewitnesses
said the forces of rebel leader Charles Taylor were responsible;
Taylor blamed the pro-government Armed Forces of Liberia. Now
investigators believe that both versions have a piece of the
even ghastlier truth. Taylor's rebels entered the camp, stole
rice from the refugees and then went on a killing orgy. A.F.L.
soldiers, who were supposed to be guarding the camp, did not
intervene or bother to phone nearby West African peacekeeping
troops, and later they looted the corpses.
</p>
<p> Who's Running China?
</p>
<p> HONG KONG--Deng Xiaoping, China's senior leader, may be too
senile to govern. According to a Western diplomatic source,
the 88-year-old head of state has lost all real decision-making
ability, and now Deng's family members--some of whom had taken
advantage of the authority vacuum--stand to lose power. Members
of the top leadership are distancing themselves from Deng's
children, and a corrupt Deng retainer was recently stripped
of his immunity from prosecution by the man who may someday
officially become Deng's successor, Jiang Zemin.
</p>
<p>DISPATCHES
</p>
<p>The Quayle Museum Is No Joke
</p>
<p>By GARY TRUDEAU, in Huntington, Indiana
</p>
<p> On the front steps of the Dan Quayle museum in Huntington,
Indiana, John Herrenden, a straw-haired 10-year-old in a Notre
Dame baseball cap, is practicing the free-market entrepreneurialism
once preached by the 44th Vice President of the United States:
he's selling cups of Kool-Aid at 10 cents a pop. The flavor?
"I think it's red," he says. "R-e-d," he adds, slowly and seriously.
</p>
<p> But the boy, who attends the elementary school where young Danny
Quayle learned to spell, was not the first person outside the
museum when it opened last week in Huntington, a tidy, cheerful
town of 18,000 located on a bend of the Wabash River. That honor
went to the NBC satellite truck that came here before 6 a.m.
for an interview with Marj Hiner, the local lady who was the
leading force behind the museum.
</p>
<p> "The interview was supposed to be on the Today show at 6:35,"
says Marj, a spunky woman who says she has known the Quayles
for "only" 23 years, "but the generator blew, and they had to
frantically call New York. Luckily, my husband Homer was waiting
on me, and he hot-wired the truck and we went on at 7:08." And
the interview? "Well, Katie [Couric] didn't ask any of the
questions they told me she would ask."
</p>
<p> The national press turned out in full, sardonic force for the
opening of the Quayle museum, a sweet, rinky-dink exhibit on
the ground floor of an 80-year-old neoclassical building on
Warren Street, catty-corner to Dan's old school. The networks,
the New York Times, the Washington Post, the New Yorker--the
very doyens of the cultural elite that Quayle infamously criticized--had come to give Danny one last kick. A local woman, who
had brought her four-year-old to see the exhibit, fled when
she was surrounded by reporters pushily quizzing a real, live
person on why she had come to the museum.
</p>
<p> But in fact the place is not so much a museum as a kind of genial
time capsule about a small-town boy who made good. A snapshot
of two-year-old Danny clutching a toy football, a small boy's
grimace of determination on his face. A letter he wrote to his
uncle when he was 12 explaining why he lost a nine-hole Jaycee
golf tournament ("A 14-year-old kid who shot a 49 he [sic]
beat me on the 17th"). A photo of an awestruck Dan as a college
student shaking hands with Ronald Reagan (not unlike the now
famous picture of earnest young Bill Clinton shaking hands with
J.F.K.).
</p>
<p> None of the images explain why a not-very-exceptional fellow
ascended to the second highest office in the nation. Thomas
Mehl, the museum's curator--who is actually a graduate student
at Eastern Illinois University ("I'll be getting six credits
for this," he says)--notes shyly that the museum is history.
"Sure, this isn't the Revolution or the Civil War. But it's
still history. He has a story to tell. Hell, I have a story
to tell. You have a story to tell." It's a modest ode to a common
man--a man lifted by circumstance from an ordinary stage to
an extraordinary one. No museum can explain luck.
</p>
<p>HEALTH REPORT
</p>
<p>THE GOOD NEWS
</p>
<p> American adults have an average of 4% less blood cholesterol
than they did 12 years ago, and only 20% of adults have very
high cholesterol, down from 26%. Death rates from heart disease
are down too.
</p>
<p> Cocaine seems to prevent brain cells from absorbing the neurotransmitter
dopamine; researchers have reduced the narcotic's high in addicted
rats--and thus the craving for it--by giving them a drug
that overrides the cocaine and helps cells absorb dopamine.
</p>
<p> The FDA will aid credulous consumers by requiring companies
that market vitamins and diet supplements to back up their therapeutic
claims with hard evidence. Only calcium supplements taken to
prevent osteoporosis now meet the proposed standards.
</p>
<p> THE BAD NEWS
</p>
<p> AIDS has become the leading cause of death, beating out cancer,
accidents and heart disease, among men between ages 25 and 44
in California, Florida, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York.
It also leads in 64 cities, including such unlikely places as
Salt Lake City, Utah.
</p>
<p> About 12 million American children suffer from chronic hunger.
The problem is worst in some Southern states, where more than
a fourth of all children regularly go hungry; the rate is more
than 18% in New York, South Dakota and California.
</p>
<p> Megadoses of vitamin E, commonly thought to slow the progress
of retinitis pigmentosa, a hereditary form of blindness, actually
make the disease worse, according to a controlled study of 600
sufferers. Only vitamin A seems to help.
</p>
<p> SOURCES: Journal of the American Medical Association; Science;
Archives of Ophthalmology; American Diabetes Association
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>