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<text id=93TT0316>
<title>
Oct. 04, 1993: The Week:News Digest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE WEEK, Page 17
NEWS DIGEST:SEPTEMBER 19-27
</hdr>
<body>
<p>NATION
</p>
<p> Health Care: Taking It Public
</p>
<p> President Clinton made a passionate appeal to a joint session
of Congress last week as he laid the groundwork for rebuilding
the nation's health-care system and guaranteeing coverage for
every American. The President finessed the financing details
but did say his plan would be funded in part by increased cigarette
taxes and a surtax paid by self-insuring companies. Days earlier,
Senator Daniel Moynihan, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee,
had labeled the Administration's hope of financing the plan
mainly by means of Medicare and Medicaid cuts "a fantasy."
</p>
<p> Death on the Rails
</p>
<p> Amtrak's coast-to-coast Sunset Limited derailed last week while
crossing a damaged bridge near Mobile, Alabama. The accident
sent the engine and several cars hurtling into the Bayou Canot,
trapping passengers in the water and an ensuing fire. Forty-seven
died--nearly equaling all the other deaths in Amtrak's 23-year
history. The apparent cause: a barge struck the bridge minutes
before the train came across.
</p>
<p> Gephardt on NAFTA: No Go
</p>
<p> Though he agreed to keep quiet two weeks ago when a trio of
former Presidents declared their support for the North American
Free Trade Agreement, House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt
was loud and clear last week when he announced his intention
to vote against the pact. But NAFTA got a boost when a federal
appeals court in Washington ruled that the White House could
submit the pact to Congress without an environmental-impact
statement, which might have taken a year to prepare.
</p>
<p> Shali on Bosnia: Go
</p>
<p> At his Senate confirmation hearings last week, General John
Shalikashvili, nominee for Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
gave strong support for sending 50,000 American troops to help
enforce a hypothetical Bosnian peace agreement--a mission
he estimated would cost $4 billion in the first year. The next
day, Senate Armed Services chairman and chronic Clinton second-guesser
Sam Nunn was skeptical, saying the Administration needed to
establish specifically "what our goals are" in Bosnia and "how
we get out if the parties begin fighting again."
</p>
<p> A Military in Contempt?
</p>
<p> U.S. District Judge Terry Hatter Jr., sitting in Los Angeles,
wants to know why the Navy's ban on homosexuals is still in
place eight months after he declared it unconstitutional. He
has instructed Defense Secretary Les Aspin, along with the Secretary
of the Navy and the commanding officer of a Bay Area naval air
station, to explain themselves in a court hearing this week
or be held in contempt.
</p>
<p> Another Tailhook Pilot Flies
</p>
<p> In heterocentric litigation, meanwhile, the Navy withdrew all
charges against a pilot in one of the 120 sexual-harassment
cases stemming from the infamous Tailhook Association convention
two years ago. Prosecutors abandoned the case against Lieut.
Cole Cowden after determining there wasn't sufficient evidence
to go to court. The Navy has now dropped half of the Tailhook
cases.
</p>
<p> More Mister Moms
</p>
<p> According to a report by the Population Reference Bureau, 1
in 5 preschoolers now has a father as primary care giver, up
from the 15% figure that was constant from 1965 until the late
1980s. One reason is that more fathers are working part time.
</p>
<p> The Return of John Demjanjuk
</p>
<p> Freed by Israel's highest court, retired Ohio autoworker John
Demjanjuk flew back to the U.S. seven years after his deportation.
Angry groups, many including Holocaust survivors who still believe
he is the death-camp guard "Ivan the Terrible," protested outside
the Demjanjuk home in Cleveland. "He's not going to have a day
of inner peace within himself," vowed demonstration leader Rabbi
Avi Weiss.
</p>
<p>WORLD
</p>
<p> Whose Russia Is It, Anyway?
</p>
<p> After 18 months of stalemate with his parliamentary opposition
over economic reform and political power, Russian President
Boris Yeltsin threw the game board into the air last week, dissolving
parliament and calling for June presidential elections--and
December elections for a new parliament. An anti-Yeltsin majority
refused to disband and named as acting President Vice President
Alexander Rutskoi, a onetime Yeltsin supporter who is now an
implacable antagonist. When the army, the Interior Ministry
and the Clinton Administration pledged support for Yeltsin,
at least 100 lawmakers barricaded themselves in the White House,
Russia's parliament building--the same place where Yeltsin
stood firm two years ago in the face of an attempted coup by
hard-liners. With hundreds of riot police ringing the building,
Yeltsin confidently predicted that the holdouts were "on their
last gasp."
</p>
<p> Georgia Civil War
</p>
<p> Rebels in the former Soviet Georgia have begun firing on civilian
airliners as they enter and leave Sukhumi, capital of the breakaway
Abkhazia region on the Black Sea. Two were shot out of the sky.
A third was destroyed on an airport runway as refugees tried
to board. Total deaths: 126 civilians. At week's end, the rebels
had reached the city's center as civilians fled by sea.
</p>
<p> Plus Ca Change in Poland
</p>
<p> In the old days they were known as Communists, but the party
that won Poland's parliamentary elections with more than 20%
of the vote now goes by the more politically correct label "Democratic
Left Alliance." The voters, fed up with the hardships of economic
reform, gave second place to the formerly pro-Communist Polish
Peasant Party, with 15%. The Alliance says it will continue
the free-market reforms, but with "a human face."
</p>
<p> South Africa's Walls Fall
</p>
<p> In a move that gave blacks their first say in the nation's government,
the South African Parliament approved the creation of a transitional
executive council, to be composed of representatives from nearly
all black and white parties, which will oversee the government
until the first ever universal vote next April. That prompted
African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, speaking at
the U.N. one day later, to call for the lifting of all remaining
economic sanctions against his country.
</p>
<p> Copter Downed in Somalia
</p>
<p> Three American soldiers died and two were injured when gunmen
shot down a U.S. Black Hawk helicopter patrolling Mogadishu.
It was the first successful attempt to bring down a helicopter
since the multinational mission in Somalia began 10 months ago.
</p>
<p> Knesset Okays Peace Pact
</p>
<p> After three days of debate that was emotional even by the standards
of Israeli politics, the parliament approved the Israel-P.L.O.
peace accord by the comfortable spread of 61 to 50. That was
made possible by eight abstentions--including three opposition
members who openly defied their own hard-line Likud Party, which
is against the agreement.
</p>
<p>BUSINESS
</p>
<p> Passionate for Paramount
</p>
<p> First came Viacom, owner of MTV and Nickelodeon, with an $8
billion offer for Paramount Communications. Then Hollywood executive
turned home-shopping mogul Barry Diller offered Paramount stockholders
$2 billion more. At week's end, Viacom was seeking a federal
court order to block Diller and his partner, ubiquitous cable-TV
mogul John Malone, from going forward with their deal.
</p>
<p> Taking Over Travelers
</p>
<p> In last week's other merger in the making, the financial-services
company Primerica agreed to acquire a venerable insurance firm,
the Travelers Corp., for $4.2 billion. The new giant, to be
called the Travelers, will offer stock brokerage and consumer
loans as well as insurance.
</p>
<p> Slow Growth Gets Slower
</p>
<p> With the U.S. economy wobbling, and Japan and Germany both in
recession, the International Monetary Fund estimated that 1993
world economic growth will be just 1.1%--way down from its
May estimate of 1.7%.
</p>
<p>SCIENCE
</p>
<p> Making Food Safer
</p>
<p> The government would have broader powers to remove dangerous
pesticides from the marketplace under a law proposed by the
EPA, the FDA and the Agriculture Department. In place of the
current cost-benefit decision making, which emphasizes economic
harm to food producers, the focus would shift to toxins' health
perils for consumers.
</p>
<p> Cosmic Mystery Solved?
</p>
<p> Astronomers have found the first direct evidence of machos,
or massive compact halo objects. A macho is a large planet or
a small dim star, one of trillions that may be orbiting at the
fringes of the Milky Way. What the astronomers actually noticed
was the temporary brightening of a star in a nearby galaxy,
apparently caused by a macho passing in front of it.
</p>
<p>MEDIA & THE ARTS
</p>
<p> N.E.A. Gets a B'way Trouper
</p>
<p> It took just one hour for a star-struck Senate committee to
approve the nomination of actress Jane Alexander as the new
head of the National Endowment for the Arts. The Tony Award
winner promised to listen to "the voices of those who are disturbed
by art and the voices of the creative community."
</p>
<p> A Treasure Repatriated
</p>
<p> After more than two decades of diplomatic and legal wrangling
over the acquisition of the 2,500-year-old antiquities, New
York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art revealed that it would
return to the Turkish government the "Lydian Hoard," a fabulous
collection of gold and silver objects that probably belonged
to King Croesus, the metaphor-inspiring richest man of his time.
Many had been stolen from tombs in Turkey shortly before the
museum acquired them in the 1960s.
</p>
<p> Prize on the Run
</p>
<p> Author Salman Rushdie, under an Iranian Islamic death threat
since 1989 for his "blasphemous" novel The Satanic Verses, received
Britain's grandest literary award. Rushdie's 1981 novel, Midnight's
Children, took the 25th anniversary "Booker of Booker" prize
as the best of all previous winners.
</p>
<p>-- By Christopher John Farley, Michael D. Lemonick, Erik Meers,
Michael Quinn, Alain Sanders, Sophfronia Scott Gregory, Sidney
Urquhart
DISPATCHES
</p>
<p>BEATING SWORDS INTO BILLY CLUBS
</p>
<p>By LARA MARLOWE, in Amman
</p>
<p> On the chest pocket of his navy-blue uniform, Captain Amer Mohamed
Abdel-Kader still wears the paratrooper's wings he earned by
skydiving out of Jordanian army planes as a member of the Badr
Brigade of the Palestine Liberation Army, the military wing
of the P.L.O. Under the terms of the peace agreement signed
by Israel and the P.L.O., Captain Abdel-Kader is one of hundreds
of Palestinian soldiers training in Jordan and Egypt for police
duty in soon-to-be-autonomous Jericho and the Gaza Strip. Lectures
on courtroom law and fingerprinting may seem banal for men who
until last month dreamed of military victory against Israel,
but Abdel-Kader is ebullient. ``Going to Palestine," he says,
"is more exciting than jumping out of a plane for the first
time."
</p>
<p> Though the policemen still wear shoulder patches embroidered
PALESTINE LIBERATION ARMY, their days of furtive desert bivouacs
are over. The grounds of Amman's Royal Police Academy, where
the men are training, are landscaped with hollyhocks and palm
trees. And there is no target practice. "We don't know what
weapons we'll have in Jericho," says Lieut. Colonel Mohamed
Youssef Al Sadi, commander of a 20-man unit drawn from the Badr
Brigade, which is expected to patrol Jericho. "We have forgotten
our Kalashnikovs." They have been trained, however, to handle
American M-16s. Whether the Israelis will allow the men of the
P.L.O. to carry them is still undecided.
</p>
<p> As part of the police- application process, hotheaded ideologues
are screened out. By design, the trainees in this unit are longtime
residents of Jordan who have wives and children but are in their
late 20s and early 30s, too young to have fought in the Arab-Israeli
wars. ("It is impossible that they are on any Israeli blacklist,"
says an instructor.) "We're going to Jericho as policemen, not
as soldiers," Al Sadi reminds his men. "Being a policeman is
much harder. The policeman has to help everyone--no matter
what his nationality--and forget about his own identity and
feelings."
</p>
<p> With Israeli and Palestinian extremists opposing the autonomy
agreement, the police cadets' riot-control training may prove
more useful than courses in directing traffic. And so far, recruits
have not been instructed on dealings with Israeli settlers and
security forces. Al Sadi brushes aside the possibility of politically
charged, violent confrontation. "We can solve things through
dialogue," he insists. "Our job is to protect people and prevent
crime."
</p>
<p> Most of all, the members of the Badr Brigade--they have kept
their unit's name--are eager to project a new image of Palestinians.
Not hijackers. Not dust-caked guerrillas staging night raids
across the Israeli border. Just ordinary cops with polished
boots and well-pressed uniforms, assisting in the splendidly
routine business of maintaining law and order among their own
people.
HEALTH REPORT
</p>
<p>THE GOOD NEWS
</p>
<p>-- Injections of vitamin K are the routine treatment for newborns
who suffer from a disease that can lead to potentially fatal
episodes of spontaneous internal bleeding. Although some research
suggested that the treatment could increase the risk of childhood
cancer, parents can now relax: a definitive new study says there's
no such risk.
</p>
<p>-- An experimental treatment for rheumatoid arthritis--oral
doses of collagen extracted from chicken cartilage--can reduce
and even eliminate swelling and joint pain, with no major side
effects. Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease in which
the immune system attacks the body's own tissues_in this case,
collagen-rich cartilage. Doctors theorize that the collagen
treatments desensitize immune cells and stop the attacks.
</p>
<p>THE BAD NEWS
</p>
<p>-- Women who smoke appear to be twice as likely to get lung
cancer as their male counterparts, according to a new report.
The reason is a mystery.
</p>
<p>-- More than 99.5% of heart-attack victims who don't respond
to aggressive treatment on the scene won't respond after being
rushed to the hospital either. The U.S. spends about $1 billion
a year on such doomed patients.
</p>
<p>-- The laparoscope--a flexible tube that lets doctors examine
internal organs and even perform surgery through small, quick-healing
incisions--has driven down the cost of gallbladder surgery.
But total spending on the operation is up because many more
are now performed - too many, according to public health experts,
who say doctors should prescribe the procedure more prudently.
WHO SAYS GAYS CAN'T SWITCH?
</p>
<p> Author Anne Rice has been troubled by rumors--which Warner
Bros. denies--that the forthcoming film of her Interview with
the Vampire will fudge the protagonist's bisexuality. The Color
Purple and Fried Green Tomatoes are just two films in which
homosexual relationships in the novel were straightened out
for the screen. Other cases in point:
</p>
<p> SERENADE (1956). James M. Cain's baroque novel featured an opera
singer consumed by an obsessive relationship with a gay impresario.
In the movie Mario Lanza is consumed by...Joan Fontaine.
</p>
<p> SOME KIND OF HERO (1982). Richard Pryor as a returned Vietnam
POW. But MIA from the movie: a sexual encounter between Pryor's
character and a fellow prisoner.
</p>
<p> THE MAN WITHOUT A FACE (1993). In the book a deformed man is
befriended by--and has sex with--a troubled boy. In Mel
Gibson's movie? No way.
COLLABORATOR? MOI?
</p>
<p>"The movie industry in the United States is like a war machine."--FRENCH ACTOR GERARD DEPARDIEU ON THE NEED TO PROTECT HIS
NATION'S FILM AND TV INDUSTRIES FROM AMERICAN DOMINATION
</p>
<p>THE 10 MOST GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED SENATORIAL RECIPIENTS OF HEALTH
INDUSTRY PAC MONEY SINCE 1983
</p>
<p> 1 DANIEL COATS (R-IN) $452,868
</p>
<p> 2 TOM DASCHLE (D-SD) $428,425
</p>
<p> 3 ROBERT DOLE (R-KS) $427,440
</p>
<p> 4 D. DURENBERGER (R-MN) $410,635
</p>
<p> 5 BOB PACKWOOD (R-OR) $395,352
</p>
<p> 6 KIT BOND (R-MO) $374,913
</p>
<p> 7 CHUCK GRASSLEY (R-IA) $373,388
</p>
<p> 8 MAX BAUCUS (D-MT) $367,915
</p>
<p> 9 BYRON DORGAN (D-ND) $364,546
</p>
<p> 10 ARLEN SPECTER (R-PA) $363,629
</p>
<p> Source: Common Cause
</p>
<p>Supreme Courtship
</p>
<p>The U.S. Supreme Court begins its new term facing questions
of women's rights and gender discrimination--the very realm
in which new Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg made her mark. Cases
to watch:
</p>
<p> ABORTION (NOW v. Scheidler) The Question: May abortion clinics
use federal racketeering laws to stop harassment and blockades
by pro-life activists? Prediction: The court, and Ginsburg,
will say yes.
</p>
<p> SEXUAL HARASSMENT (Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc.) The Question:
Must a complainant prove that vulgar and sexually suggestive
conduct by a boss is "psychologically damaging" or merely "offensive
to a reasonable person"? Prediction: The court, and Ginsburg,
will opt for the latter, more liberal, standard. Watch: Clarence
Thomas' vote.
</p>
<p> GENDER DISCRIMINATION (J.E.B. v. T.B.) The Question: Should
state attorneys be permitted to use peremptory challenges to
eliminate either all the men or all the women from a jury? Prediction:
The court, and Ginsburg, will say no.
Winners & Losers
</p>
<p>WINNERS
</p>
<p> STEVEN BOCHCO
</p>
<p> Vindicated TV auteur's NYPD Blue fared well--where it aired
</p>
<p> BORIS YELTSIN
</p>
<p> Russian President still in control after the political dust
settles
</p>
<p> MEAT LOAF
</p>
<p> The '70s shlock rocker scores big as his new album improbably
debuts at No. 3
</p>
<p>LOSERS
</p>
<p> IMELDA MARCOS
</p>
<p> Convicted of corruption in Manila, facing an 18-year sentence
</p>
<p> PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA
</p>
<p> Residue of Tiananmen helps kill Chinese bid for 2000 Olympics
</p>
<p> TERRY McDONELL
</p>
<p> On Esquire's 60th anniversary, the editor is booted as ads drop
Speaking Of Health-Care Reform
</p>
<p> "We've made a lot of progress on, you know, pasta and things
like that--but tofu has been hard for us."
</p>
<p>-- HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON, ON THE EFFORT TO IMPROVE THE PRESIDENT'S
EATING HABITS
Informed Sources
</p>
<p>Hair Today, Lawsuit Tomorrow
</p>
<p> Washington--BARBARA BUSH has got herself into a tangle with
hairdressers Yves and Nancy Graux. During the Bush Administration
they agreed to do hair and occasional makeup for the First Lady
in exchange for a nominal fee_and the promise of free publicity.
Not wanting the image of cosmetic fussiness connected to the
nation's Yankee grandmother, however, the White House skipped
the publicity. The Grauxes, who can't get the Bushes to pay
up, are expected to file suit any day.
</p>
<p> Moscow's Mixed Signals
</p>
<p> Damascus--Syrian President HAFEZ ASSAD is watching events
in Moscow closely. According to a Syrian insider, Russian President
Boris Yeltsin and would-be President Alexander Rutskoi sent
conflicting signals to a Syrian delegation that visited Russia
to discuss the Middle East not long before last week's crisis
in Moscow. "Rutskoi talked like the old communist leaders,"
says the insider. "He told the Syrians to `stand up to imperialist
aggression' and promised `the Russians will back you.' But Yeltsin's
people told the Syrians to do what the Americans told them."
</p>
<p> Don't R.S.V.P. to Tailhook '93 Just Yet
</p>
<p> Washington--Navy flyers will want to reconsider attending
the TAILHOOK ASSOCIATION CONVENTION set to begin Oct. 10 in
San Diego. Navy brass sent a memo to active-duty and reserve
flyers telling them that after years of cooperation, the Navy
has "terminated all support, direct or indirect, for the Tailhook
Association." Meanwhile, Navy Secretary John Dalton has quietly
summoned to D.C. some two dozen officers who attended Tailhook
to give them a chance to explain their conduct before their
court cases go forward.
New Ideas In Leisure Wear
</p>
<p> "The Governor did not want to wear it...he just put it on
to be polite."
</p>
<p>-- AIDE TO FLORIDA GOVERNOR LAWTON CHILES, ON WHY CHILES WORE
A BULLET-PROOF VEST WHILE TOURING THE SITE IN MIAMI WHERE A
GERMAN TOURIST WAS MURDERED
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>