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<text id=93TT0103>
<title>
Oct. 25, 1993: The Week:News Digest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 25, 1993 All The Rage:Angry Young Rockers
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE WEEK, Page 17
NEWS DIGEST:OCTOBER 10-16
</hdr>
<body>
<p>NATION
</p>
<p> U.S. Isoventionism, Part I
</p>
<p> A ship carrying lightly armed U.S. and Canadian troops, sent
as part of an agreement between the United Nations and the Haitian
military that aims to restore President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
to power, was unable to dock in Haiti last week because a violent
mob of army-backed civilians threatened the troops' safety.
The U.N. Security Council later voted to reactivate an oil-and-arms
embargo on Haiti, which will take effect this week if the Haitian
military does not abide by the accord. President Clinton has
ordered six Navy vessels into the area to enforce the embargo
and has put troops on standby alert in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
</p>
<p> U.S. Isoventionism, Part II
</p>
<p> After two days of intense talks between Robert Oakley, President
Clinton's new envoy in Somalia, and aides to General Mohammed
Farrah Aidid, forces loyal to Aidid released Michael Durant,
the American helicopter pilot they had held for 11 days, as
well as a Nigerian peacekeeper held captive since last month.
President Clinton and Aidid both claimed that no deal had been
made for the prisoners' release, although the move coincided
with a new willingness on the part of Oakley and Clinton to
include Aidid's faction in efforts toward a political solution
to Somalia's problems. At week's end the Senate voted to keep
U.S. troops in Somalia until March 31, Clinton's announced withdrawal
date.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, Back Home...
</p>
<p> Although its attention was focused on crises abroad, the Administration
did not forget about its notion of overhauling the U.S. healthcare
system. The White House said it would propose that the government
pay 20% or 30% of the medical benefits of early retirees; the
figure had been 80% in earlier proposals. The Administration
also indicated that its plan would produce fewer savings than
had been hoped, reducing the deficit $70 billion to $80 billion
by the year 2000, not $91 billion. Officials expect to deliver
the legislation by the end of the month.
</p>
<p> Jobs Program a Dud
</p>
<p> According to a Labor Department report, retraining workers who
lose manufacturing jobs is not so easy as originally thought.
An evaluation of the government job-training program for workers
hurt by foreign trade found that only 1 in 5 retrained workers
landed jobs paying at least 80% as much as their former jobs.
</p>
<p> Cutting Further in the Budget
</p>
<p> As promised during the budget battle, the Administration plans
to cut an additional $15 billion from the spending plan passed
last August. The savings are expected to come from trimming
waste in the Federal Government.
</p>
<p> Partial Verdict
</p>
<p> The embattled jury in the Reginald Denny trial told Judge John
Ouderkirk they had decided on nine counts against two black
defendants but were deadlocked on seven others. Ouderkirk will
tell the panel this week whether to continue deliberations.
</p>
<p> More Police for Los Angeles
</p>
<p> New Republican Mayor Richard Riordan of Los Angeles announced
plans last week to hire nearly 2,500 officers over the next
five years and increase the number of officers on street beats
70%.
</p>
<p> Changes at the FBI
</p>
<p> Keeping a promise to increase the diversity in the fbi's upper
ranks, Director Louis Freeh promoted a woman, a Hispanic man
and an African-American man to assistant directorships at the
agency.
</p>
<p> Searching for Polly
</p>
<p> The pain of a small California town has attracted nationwide
attention after the brazen kidnapping of 12-year-old Polly Klaas.
The girl was taken from her Petaluma home during a slumber party
on Oct. 1 by a man who walked into the house and abducted her.
</p>
<p> WORLD
</p>
<p> Quake Toll Lowered
</p>
<p> Although initial reports put the death toll for last month's
earthquake in southwestern India at 28,000, the count has been
lowered to around 10,000. Critics say authorities are deliberately
undercounting to reduce the amount of compensation to victims.
</p>
<p> Russia Muzzles Press
</p>
<p> The Russian government banned a television show and 15 opposition
newspapers and ordered two others--including Pravda--to
fire their editors and change their names if they wanted to
remain open. The Press Ministry said the news organizations
had "promoted destabilization" during the revolt earlier this
month.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin Visits Japan
</p>
<p> President Boris Yeltsin made an uneventful visit to Tokyo for
two days and met with Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa. By leaving
Russia just one week after he suppressed the coup by retrograde
parliamentarians, he flaunted his confidence that he was in
control.
</p>
<p> Nobel For South Africans
</p>
<p> Nelson Mandela and F.W. de Klerk won the Nobel Peace Prize for
working "to peacefully end apartheid" in South Africa.
</p>
<p> Maastricht Passes Final Test
</p>
<p> Germany's highest court ruled that the Maastricht treaty on
European unification is constitutional, clearing the way for
the formal filing of ratification documents. Germany was the
final European Community member to ratify, which means that
the treaty will take effect Nov. 1.
</p>
<p> Middle East Nuts and Bolts
</p>
<p> Israeli and Palestinian negotiators met in the Egyptian resort
town of Taba to begin discussing details of the transition to
Palestinian self-rule, beginning in the Gaza Strip and Jericho.
Among the issues: security arrangements, the size of the Palestinian-controlled
zone around Jericho, the fate of thousands of Palestinians imprisoned
or deported by Israel and control of water sources.
</p>
<p> Papandreou's Back
</p>
<p> Greek voters returned Socialist Andreas Papandreou to power
as Prime Minister four years after scandal drove the 74-year-old
politician from the same office. He immediately reversed plans
made by his conservative predecessor, Constantine Mitsotakis,
to privatize large swaths of the Greek economy. Papandreou appointed
his wife Dimitra to a top advisory position.
</p>
<p> Chaos in Georgia
</p>
<p> With ethnic war threatening to fracture the former Soviet republic
of Georgia into several smaller units, ousted President Zviad
Gamsakhurdia seized the western province of Mingrelia. "This
can be compared to the French Resistance," said Gamsakhurdia.
Meanwhile, separatists who captured Abkhazia, the westernmost
region of Georgia, continued "ethnic cleansing"-style expulsions.
</p>
<p> South Korea Ferry Disaster
</p>
<p> Divers worked to recover bodies from a ferry that capsized in
the Yellow Sea 140 miles southwest of Seoul; at week's end 139
people had been confirmed dead in the accident; 69 survived.
</p>
<p> Satanic Verses Victim
</p>
<p> The Norwegian publisher of Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses
was shot in the back at his home outside Oslo by an unidentified
gunman. William Nygaard, 50, was expected to recover fully from
the attack. He is the third person to be injured or killed as
the result of an association with the book.
</p>
<p> BUSINESS
</p>
<p> Betting on the 21st Century
</p>
<p> In a merger with potentially historic implications for the communications
and entertainment industries, Bell Atlantic Corp. announced
it would acquire Tele-Communications Inc., the nation's largest
cable-TV operator, and its cable-programming affiliate, Liberty
Media. The resulting company could dominate the "information
superhighway" of the future. The complicated stock transaction
is valued at $21.4 billion.
</p>
<p> Deadly Devices
</p>
<p> C.R. Bard Inc., one of the world's largest medical devicemakers,
pleaded guilty last week to federal charges of selling untested
heart catheters. The firm will pay $61 million in criminal fines
and federal civil damages. The devices killed at least one person
and caused 22 others to have emergency surgery.
</p>
<p> A Slap for Wal-Mart
</p>
<p> An Arkansas judge found a Wal-Mart in Conway, Arkansas, guilty
of predatory pricing on pharmacy products and ordered the store
to raise its prices. (Ironically, health-care czarina Hillary
Rodham Clinton served on Wal-Mart's board until she became First
Lady.)
</p>
<p> More Cuts for Woolworth
</p>
<p> A prime victim of Wal-Mart's success has been the Woolworth
chain, which announced its second major reduction in size in
two years. It plans to close 970 stores and cut 13,000 jobs.
Some 400 of the shops to close will be the cheap general stores
that made the Woolworth name famous (others will include Kinney
shoe stores). After the closings, only 400 or so of the Woolworth
five-and-tens will remain.
</p>
<p> Sculley Out at Apple
</p>
<p> In a not so unexpected move, John Sculley stepped down as chairman
of Apple Computer after 10 years with the company.
</p>
<p> SCIENCE
</p>
<p> Better Minds Through Music
</p>
<p> Listening to Mozart makes students smarter--but only for 10
to 15 minutes. So argues a team of psychologists from the University
of California at Irvine that published its preliminary findings
in the British scientific journal Nature. Listening to relaxation
tapes or sitting in silence had no effect, but the college students
scored between eight and nine points higher on an IQ test after
hearing a Mozart sonata. In the future the team plans, a bit
tendentiously, to study whether repetitive music lacking in
complexity (translation: rock) lowers test scores.
</p>
<p> Science Nobelists
</p>
<p> The Nobel Committee favored gene research this year, awarding
the prize in Medicine to Briton Richard Roberts, 50, and M.I.T.'s
Phillip Sharp, 49, whose studies of the structure of genes led
to new theories about how creatures evolve and why genes go
awry. Half the Chemistry award was won by Kary B. Mullis, 48,
who created the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) as a means of
copying fragments of DNA. The other half went to Michael Smith
for related discoveries.
</p>
<p>-- By Eugene Linden, Erik Meers, Michael Quinn, Jeffery Rubin,
Alain Sanders, Sophfronia Scott Gregory
</p>
<p>NEW WORLD VOICE MAIL
</p>
<p>"This is the State Department Operations Center Office of Crisis
Management. To continue, press 1 now."--OUTGOING MESSAGE ON
A STATE DEPARTMENT PHONE LINE
</p>
<p>DISPATCHES
</p>
<p>Hash Slinger to the Stars
</p>
<p>By JEFFREY RESSNER, in Santa Monica, California
</p>
<p> At Patrick's Roadhouse, a hot-dog stand turned diner that sits
at show-business ground zero, on the Pacific Coast Highway between
Malibu and Hollywood, fresh slabs of bacon sputter on the grill
while movie moguls gossip about the wife of a top studio executive
and a national politician. The interior is pure beachfront eclectic,
crammed with mismatched furniture, bullhorns, rubber snakes,
paintings of World War II flying aces, antique mirrors, numberless
pieces of nautical kitsch. It's not only the campy charm, the
soulful coffee or the cheap and un-California-ishly cholesterol-rich
menu that keeps this dive jumping among the surfer and industry-big-shot
set. The real attraction is 72-year-old proprietor Bill Fischler,
who lords over his young cook Alfredo and his gorgeous Valkyrian
waitress Veronica while he greets and gooses the customers.
Part W.C. Fields, part Walter Matthau (plus a bit of the Three
Stooges' Curly Howard tossed in), Fischler is a wisecracking
curmudgeon with style. And with customers like Fischler's, style
counts.
</p>
<p> Yesterday Terminator co-star Linda Hamilton came in, as did
Zsa Zsa Gabor. Arnold Schwarzenegger is said to be a silent
partner in the place, and an enormous throne has been installed
for his regular visits. Jeffrey Katzenberg, who runs Disney,
brings his kids in for brunch during the summer. Julia Roberts,
Sean Penn and Robert Altman have all stopped in from time to
time. Even Bill Clinton has dropped by--twice, in fact, first
as a jogging candidate, and then in full presidential mode.
"If you want to run into me or ICM's Jim Wiatt or Jeff Katzenberg
or Arnold Schwarzenegger," says producer Steve Tisch (Risky
Business, Bad Influence), who sometimes brings his uncle, not
exactly funky CBS proprietor Laurence Tisch, "it's a good guess
one or all of us will be there any Saturday or Sunday morning."
</p>
<p> Unlike most people with a celebrated clientele, Fischler freely
offers his opinions of his customers. Asked about the battle
over Paramount, he picks Barry Diller (back booth, Sunday mornings)
to prevail. "He's a sharp, bright, aggressive barracuda, but
he treats everyone here as equals," says Fischler. Pet peeves
include stars accompanied by entourages, such as Sylvester Stallone.
"He brought three bodyguards with him and insisted that all
the nearby tables be kept empty." Even Schwarzenegger, who has
his own restaurant in nearby Ocean Park, isn't spared. "Arnold
is a good friend," Fischler says with a sigh, "but his place
is like Denny's with a nice carpet."
</p>
<p> Fischler is even willing to say that sometime customer Michael
Ovitz, chairman of Creative Artists Agency and the most powerful
person in show business, is a bit of a stiff. "I can kibitz
with everyone except him. He can afford to be independent, I
suppose." Judging by his candid razzing of the movie-business
elite, Fischler can obviously afford to be independent as well.
</p>
<p>WINNERS & LOSERS
</p>
<p>WINNERS
</p>
<p> HOWARD STERN
</p>
<p> His book is an instant megahit, proving his fans can read
</p>
<p> ROBERT OAKLEY
</p>
<p> U.S.'s new Somalia envoy takes charge, gets hostages released
</p>
<p> CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY
</p>
<p> After 40-year struggle, the IRS finally agrees to treat it as
a religion
</p>
<p>LOSERS
</p>
<p> BRAVES PITCHER GREG MADDUX
</p>
<p> $28 million contract, a Cy Young--and he chokes in N.L. final
</p>
<p> WOOL & MOHAIR RANCHERS
</p>
<p> Their WW II-era subsidies to be phased out, saving $500 million
</p>
<p> JEFF GRALNICK
</p>
<p> NBC News exec calls Aidid and Somalians "jungle bunnies"
</p>
<p>THE NEXT PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES? JIMMY CARTER.
</p>
<p>Right now Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's scheduled
return to office seems a bit dicey, but he should take heart
from a series of recent amazing resurrections of leaders around
the world. And remember: Gorbachev is mulling a run for the
Russian presidency.
</p>
<p> ANDREAS PAPANDREOU
</p>
<p> Prime Minister of Greece
</p>
<p> Wilderness years: 1989 to last week
</p>
<p> Reasons for losing office: Banking scandals; marital scandal
involving a stewardess
</p>
<p> BENAZIR BHUTTO
</p>
<p> Prime Minister of Pakistan
</p>
<p> Wilderness years: 1990 to earlier this month
</p>
<p> Reasons for losing office:
</p>
<p> Dismissed by President in power play; charges of corruption
</p>
<p> NORODOM SIHANOUK
</p>
<p> King of Cambodia
</p>
<p> Wilderness years: 1970 to last month
</p>
<p> Reason for losing office: Overthrown in a right-wing coup by
forces friendly to the U.S.
</p>
<p>INFORMED SOURCES
</p>
<p>ISRAEL'S DANGEROUS EXPORT TO CHINA
</p>
<p> Washington--The Clinton Administration is lobbying the Israeli
government and an Israeli company to halt the sale to China
of an advanced fiber-optics telecommunications system containing
U.S.-made microchips. Although the system is for civilian use,
intelligence officials fear the sale would give China the potential
to build a sophisticated military command-and-control system
that would be almost impossible to monitor. The trouble is that
liberalized post-cold war U.S. export laws leave officials largely
powerless to stop the transaction. Israel has agreed to halt
the sale temporarily while the U.S. studies the problem.
</p>
<p> THE ROAD TO AIDID RUNS THROUGH GEORGIA, EVENTUALLY
</p>
<p> Washington--When Jimmy Carter visited the White House last
month, he carried a message from Somali warlord Mohammed Farrah
Aidid of his willingness to cooperate with an investigation
into the killings of U.N. peacekeepers. Since Somalia wasn't
a front-burner issue then, President Clinton filed the tip away
but asked National Security Adviser Anthony Lake to debrief
Carter at some point. That point wasn't reached until after
the Oct. 3 attack that killed 18 U.S. soldiers. Lake flew to
Plains last Thursday to meet with Carter.
</p>
<p> WHITE HOUSE RATS (NO, NOT SUNUNU)
</p>
<p> Washington--Haircutgate, the budget battle, Somalia--and
now rats, hundreds of them. White House aides going home after
dark have had to bang on their briefcases and bags to scare
the beasts away. The 165 traps that have been strategically
positioned around the mansion grounds by the White House gardener--and baited with environmentally sound poison--have done
little to stem the invasion. Mrs. Clinton has taken over health
care; is this a job for Socks?
</p>
<p>SERIES KILLERS
</p>
<p>When an Ohio five-year-old was found to have committed arson
last week, his mother blamed Beavis and Butt-head, not the first
product of pop culture to be accused of inspiring specific acts
of violence:
</p>
<p> Murder in the Heartland, TV movie...shooting death in Canada,
May 1993
</p>
<p> MacGyver, TV series...fatal homemade bomb in France, 1992
</p>
<p> Stained Class, heavy-metal album by Judas Priest...shotgun
suicide/maiming in Reno, Nevada, 1985
</p>
<p> Taxi Driver, movie...John Hinckley's attempted assassination
of Ronald Reagan, 1981
</p>
<p> The Deer Hunter, movie (after its airing on TV)...deadly games
of Russian roulette, 1981
</p>
<p> Kojak, TV series...fatal shooting and robbery of elderly neighbor,
1977
</p>
<p> Born Innocent, TV movie...rape of a nine-year-old girl, 1974
</p>
<p> Helter Skelter, song...Manson murders, 1969
</p>
<p>CONTRARY TO POPULAR OPINION
</p>
<p>EVERYBODY KNOWS...
</p>
<p> ...That the scores of American schoolchildren on math tests
are far below the scores of Japanese schoolchildren on similar
tests.
</p>
<p> IN FACT...
</p>
<p> ...According to the Second International Math Assessment, the
mean score for the top 50% of American eighth-graders was about
the same as that for the top 50% of Japanese students. (Japanese
students in the bottom half, however, far outscore their American
counterparts.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>