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<text id=94TT1509>
<title>
Oct. 31, 1994: Chronicles-The Week:October 16-22
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Oct. 31, 1994 New Hope for Public Schools
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CHRONICLES, Page 19
The Week: October 16 - 22
</hdr>
<body>
<p>NATION
</p>
<p> The Politics of Association
</p>
<p> Trying to bolster the flagging campaigns of two Democratic heavyweights,
President Clinton traveled to New York and Massachusetts and
stumped for Governor Mario Cuomo and Senator Edward Kennedy,
both of whom have apparently decided that the President's pariah
status is nothing compared with theirs. "The fog is beginning
to clear," proclaimed the hopeful President in Framingham, Massachusetts,
as he urged voters to pull Democratic levers "for the agents
of change, not for the agents of yesterday."
</p>
<p> The Politics of Immigration
</p>
<p> Republican California Governor Pete Wilson's re-election strategy
hit an unexpected snag when former Housing Secretary Jack Kemp
and former Education Secretary William Bennett made a big show
of their opposition to California's popular ballot Proposition
187. Wilson has avidly supported the measure, which would bar
illegal immigrants in the state from receiving public services.
Kemp and Bennett lambasted it as a "fundamentally flawed, constitutionally
questionable `solution'" and castigated politicians who would
use the issue of illegal immigration for political gain. Wilson
shot back that the two "Washington" G.O.P. pols had hung around
the capital "too long."
</p>
<p> The Politics of Crime
</p>
<p> Was it a calculated political ploy or a spontaneous burst of
maternal anger? California pundits spent the week scratching
their heads over whether Democratic underdog Kathleen Brown
had helped or hurt her campaign to unseat Wilson by invoking
a family tragedy. In a televised debate the week before, during
which Wilson had continued to pound Brown as being soft on crime,
she had thumped him back with this: "You cannot imagine what
it's like to be a mother...waiting for your daughter to come
home in the evening and having her come home and comfort her
because she's been raped...You can't understand that, so don't
question my commitment to be tough on crime." The next question:
Did the revelation of her daughter's rape give Brown momentum,
or did questions about the context of the revelation slow her
down?
</p>
<p> The Politics of Taunt
</p>
<p> Florida Governor Lawton Chiles and Republican challenger Jeb
Bush squared off in one of the most heated and taunt-ridden
debates of this election season. From Bush: "I know the Governor
gets all upset when I bring up my mama and daddy. He just can't
handle that." And from Chiles: "I don't see where...past service
gives ((parents)) the opportunity to give one of their sons
Texas and the other Florida." (George W. Bush, another son of
the former President, is seeking the governorship of Texas.)
</p>
<p> The Simpson Case
</p>
<p> Judge Lance Ito spent much of the week doing legal pirouettes.
After threatening to throw out key DNA blood tests because the
prosecution may have taken too long to submit blood samples
for analysis, Ito backed off and decided the tests should be
admissible. Then, after having resumed the screening of prospective
jurors, he decided to suspend the questioning temporarily. Reason:
the need to ponder the impact of a sensational, allegedly tell-all
book by a friend of Nicole Simpson's that accused O.J. of threatening
his wife. Finally, Ito decided to reverse an order he had issued
earlier in the week barring reporters from portions of the jury-selection
process after defense attorneys dropped their opposition to
the presence of the media.
</p>
<p> Texas Submerged
</p>
<p> Large swaths of southeastern Texas were deluged by torrential
rain and widespread flooding. Pipelines burst under the roiling
San Jacinto River, sending burning gasoline snaking downstream.
At least 18 people lost their lives throughout the drenched
region, and some 13,000 were chased from their homes.
</p>
<p> Not-So-Crystal-Clear Water
</p>
<p> The private non-profit Environmental Working Group released
a study showing that traces of five commonly used agricultural
weed killers are seeping through soil and streams and into the
drinking water of some 14 million Americans, mostly in the Midwest.
The poisons pose slightly increased cancer risks. The Environmental
Protection Agency acknowledged there was cause for "concern"
but not "alarm."
</p>
<p> Fewer Coins in the Tin Cup
</p>
<p> Though the '90s are often presented as a more caring decade
than, say, the '80s, Americans are apparently giving less of
their time and money to charitable causes. Independent Sector,
a coalition of volunteer groups, reported that 3.4% fewer Americans
volunteered last year than in 1991; during the same period,
the average annual donation among the 73% of households that
give slipped $19, to $880.
</p>
<p>WORLD
</p>
<p> More Peace in the Mideast
</p>
<p> Jordan and Israel announced formal agreement on a peace treaty,
the first such pact between Israel and an Arab nation since
the treaty with Egypt in 1979. After 46 years in an official
state of war, the reconciliation will boost commerce and facilitate
travel between the two countries. President Clinton will join
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan's King Hussein
for the official signing ceremony on Wednesday on the border
between the two countries.
</p>
<p> More Terror in the Mideast
</p>
<p> Seeking to undermine Israeli-Arab peacemaking, a suicide bomber
from the Hamas organization of Palestinian Islamic militants
detonated a package of tnt on a crowded bus in normally placid
Tel Aviv; 21 people were killed. The especially grisly suicide
attack came just days after the bloody denouement of a Hamas
kidnapping in which two Israeli soldiers and three Palestinians
died. Rabin vowed to crack down on Hamas suspects and urged
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat to do the same.
</p>
<p> Nuclear Buyout
</p>
<p> After months of a tense standoff, the U.S. and North Korea reached
a broad agreement that would freeze and then dismantle North
Korea's declared nuclear program (but not, perhaps, all of the
secret weapons program) and move the nations toward normal political
and economic relations with each other for the first time. In
return for the halt, the Clinton Administration and its allies
will provide North Korea with two light-water reactors, worth
an estimated $4 billion, as well as up to 500,000 tons of heavy
oil a year. International inspectors will be allowed to monitor
North Korea's declared nuclear sites to make sure the freeze
is carried out, but it will be at least five years before they
can inspect sites Washington suspects contain clues to the North's
nuclear-weapons program.
</p>
<p> Haiti's Smoother Ride
</p>
<p> Jean-Bertrand Aristide pledged to appoint a Cabinet not only
of the poor, whose cause he championed, but also of the wealthy
elite--the very people who helped oust him from power three
years ago. A diverse government, he insisted, would prevent
upheaval and ease the transition to democracy. Meanwhile, with
the cost of gasoline soaring to $37.50 per gal. on the black
market, the U.S. and Aristide signed a $15 million agreement
to stabilize prices.
</p>
<p> Kohl's Big Slide
</p>
<p> Chancellor Helmut Kohl's 12-year-old governing coalition survived
major losses in Germany's national election, clinging to a narrow
majority in the parliament over the combined opposition. High
unemployment, particularly in the country's eastern sector,
and swelling public debt contributed to the Christian Democrats'
drop in seats, from a 134-edge to just 10. American-style disillusionment
with incumbents ran so rampant that former communists from East
Germany, who now call themselves Democratic Socialists, won
30 seats.
</p>
<p> Christmas Talks
</p>
<p> The British government propelled the Northern Ireland peace
process further by announcing that talks could start before
Christmas. Calling the quiet of the Irish Republican Army's
guns "more compelling than words," Prime Minister John Major
explained that the seven-week-old cease-fire was enough for
British officials to begin preliminary talks with Sinn Fein,
the I.R.A.'s political wing. Major also lifted travel restrictions
within Britain on two top Sinn Fein leaders and said all border
crossings with the Republic of Ireland will be opened.
</p>
<p> Saddam's Isolation
</p>
<p> Saddam Hussein must have felt lonelier by the day last week
as even somewhat friendly nations registered their disapproval
of his aggressive behavior toward Kuwait. The United Nation's
Security Council voted unanimously to condemn his actions. The
Russian Foreign Minister, Andrei Kozyrev, who had tried to ease
pressure on Iraq, said he did not want to "dramatize" the situation
and affirmed that Washington and Moscow were in agreement on
the need for full Iraqi compliance with U.N. resolutions. Finally,
U.S. jets flew dry runs over Iraq as a forceful reminder of
their heavy presence in the region.
</p>
<p> Foreign Minister Surfaces
</p>
<p> Rwanda's Foreign Minister, Jean-Marie Ndagijimana, who allegedly
vanished in New York City earlier this month--along with $187,000
in cash he had brought with him to finance the country's embassy
in Washington and its United Nations mission--surfaced in
Paris. He denied taking the money. Rwandan officials at the
U.N. claim that the mission is left with "zero" cash.
</p>
<p>BUSINESS
</p>
<p> GM's Flaming Pickups
</p>
<p> After a two-year federal investigation of 4.5 million pickup
trucks, Transportation Secretary Federico Pena accused General
Motors of knowingly manufacturing defective trucks with exposed
fuel tanks that can explode and burn in side-impact crashes.
The Department of Transportation has scheduled a public hearing
in December to decide whether the nation's No. 1 automaker should
recall its line of pickups built between 1973 and 1987. In a
1988 redesign, GM moved the fuel tanks inside the trucks' protective
body frames.
</p>
<p> U.S. Probes NASDAQ
</p>
<p> The Justice Department has launched an antitrust investigation
of the dealers who make NASDAQ's stock markets, a move that
will probably result in cutting their profit margins. The inquiry
centers on possible price fixing in the spread between what
investors pay and then sell stocks for on NASDAQ. As a result,
Justice charges, the computer-trading system of NASDAQ, which
bills itself as the "stock market for the next 100 years," gives
big traders advantages over small investors.
</p>
<p>By Kathleen Adams, Robertson Barrett, Michael D. Lemonick, Lina
Lofaro, Michael Quinn, Alain L. Sanders and David Seideman
</p>
<p>HEALTH REPORT
</p>
<p> Good News
</p>
<p>-- Yo-yo dieting--i.e., cycles of weight loss and gain--may not be harmful to your health after all. A new study has
failed to find incidences of increased body fat and heart and
metabolic problems that were hinted at in earlier research.
</p>
<p>-- The controversy about RU-486, the French abortion pill, may
be moot. Research shows that a combination of two drugs already
available in the U.S., methotrexate (a cancer and arthritis
medication) and misoprostol (an ulcer drug), is 90% successful
at ending pregnancy if given during the first eight weeks.
</p>
<p> Bad News
</p>
<p>-- More than a quarter of all pancreatic-cancer cases appear
to be caused by smoking. That adds up to nearly 7,000 victims
each year in the U.S. alone. The disease, often not detected
until after it has spread, is generally fatal.
</p>
<p>-- A powerful anticlotting drug often given to heart-attack
patients can have some very serious side effects. Two separate
studies have shown that when given in moderately high doses,
heparin can cause excessive internal bleeding that can lead
to paralyzing and even lethal strokes. Heparin is believed to
be reasonably safe when taken in lower doses.
</p>
<p> Sources--GOOD: Journal of the American Medical Association.
BAD: Journal of the National Cancer Institute; Circulation.
</p>
<p>BELLETTRIST OF THE WEEK
</p>
<p> Was Faye Resnick's book about Nicole Simpson a caring tribute
to a slain friend? Was it manipulative? Was it cynical? Was
it optioned?
</p>
<p>INSIDE WASHINGTON
</p>
<p> An Offer Roone Arledge Couldn't Refuse?
</p>
<p> David Kendall, Bill Clinton's private lawyer, has been working
very very hard to keep Whitewater out of the headlines. On Sunday,
Oct. 16, he flew from Washington to New York City to persuade
ABC News not to air a piece about Arkansas state trooper L.D.
Brown, who says he has given information to Whitewater investigators
that may help substantiate a former Arkansas municipal judge's
claim that Clinton pressured him into making a fraudulent small-business
loan. Though Kendall made ABC newspeople aware of certain episodes
that may call the trooper's credibility into question, network
sources say the up-close-and-personal presentation was in no
way responsible for their decision to hold off on running the
story.
</p>
<p>WINNERS & LOSERS
</p>
<p> Winners
</p>
<p> ANN RICHARDS--Texas floods provide nonstop photo op for Governor in tight race.
</p>
<p> CHANCELLOR HELMUT KOHL--Written off in spring (including by us), he survives German vote.
</p>
<p> CONNIE CHUNG--Scoops husband Maury Povich for first Faye Resnick interview.
</p>
<p> Losers
</p>
<p> PRINCE CHARLES--No one's buying his victim pose in maudlin new authorized bio.
</p>
<p> JUDGE ROBERT CAHILL--Baltimore jurist under fire for giving wife killer an 18-month sentence.
</p>
<p> THE NASDAQ STOCK MARKET--Embattled board now being investigated for price-fixing.
</p>
<p>SECRETS OF HIGHLY PAID CAMPAIGN CONSULTANTS REVEALED!
</p>
<p> It's not hard to figure out what candidates are being told to
say this fall:
</p>
<p> "George Pataki, politics as usual."
--Attack ad for New York Governor Mario Cuomo against his Republican
opponent
</p>
<p> "It's politics as usual."
--Representative Martin Frost (D-Texas), answering accusations
of election-law violations
</p>
<p> "We need Bill Martini in Congress to end...politics as usual."
--New Jersey Governor Christine Whitman, endorsing a local
Republican candidate for Congress
</p>
<p> "Burns is clearly `politics as usual.'"
--Jack Mudd, Democratic challenger to U.S. Senator Conrad Burns
(R-Montana)
</p>
<p> "Old-style politics as usual."
--Broadcast ad for Connecticut gubernatorial candidate William
Curry, Democrat, on his Republican opponent John G. Rowland
</p>
<p> "It's cynical, Washington politics as usual."
--Virginia Senate candidate Oliver North, criticizing a Bill
Clinton fund-raising appearance for Democratic incumbent Charles
Robb
</p>
<p>JUDGE THEM NOT BY THEIR COVERS
</p>
<p> Two headline-making books went on sale last week: Crossing the
Threshold of Hope by Pope John Paul II and Faye Resnick's Nicole
Brown Simpson: The Private Diary of a Life Interrupted. Some
preliminary store-by-store sales figures (through Oct. 21)
<table>
<tblhdr><c><c>Pope<c><c>Resnick<c>
<row><c type=a><c type=i>Ordered<c type=i> Sold<c type=i>Ordered<c type=i> Sold
<row><c>B. Dalton, New York City<c>600<c>60<c>200<c>55
<row><c>B. Dalton, Los Angeles<c>140<c>1<c>160<c>60
<row><c>Waldenbooks, Denver<c>140<c>0<c>50<c>10
<row><c>B. Dalton, Chicago<c>40<c>3<c>80<c>10
</table>
</p>
<p>MADELEINE ALBRIGHT: MUSE
</p>
<p> The Iraqi government newspaper recently published a poem addressed
to Madeleine Albright, the U.S.'s feisty ambassador to the U.N.
It is by Ghazi Al-Tha'i, described as "a famous poet."
</p>
<list>
<item>1.Albright, Albright
<item>Alright, alright
<item>You are the worst
<item>in the night
<item>Why do you throw-over
<item>the peace leaves
<item>and maintain the papers of fight?
<item>Why do you hate the day
<item>And love the night?
<item>Don't put out the light.
</list>
<list>
<item>2.Albright
<item>Blind hatred without proof
<item>Deception, deception, deception
<item>And wailing
<item>Wailing
<item>Wailing.
</list>
<p>
((Note: There are four more stanzas.))
</p>
<p>THE 10 MOST POPULAR HALLOWEEN COSTUMES SOLD LAST WEEK AT TOYS "R" US
</p>
<list>
<item>1) Mighty Morphin Power Rangers
<item>2) Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
<item>3) Simba (from The Lion King)
<item>4) A generic witch
<item>5) Nala (from The Lion King)
<item>6) Belle (from Beauty and the Beast)
<item>7) Jasmine (from Aladdin)
<item>8) Barney
<item>9) A generic angel
<item>10) Batman
</list>
<p>NOT THE LOVE BOAT
</p>
<p> "It is a great job for deviant human beings."
--Departing Representative Fred Grandy (R-Iowa) on serving
in Congress
</p>
<p>NETWATCH--News, Culture, Controversy on the Internet
</p>
<p> Al Gore Had a Hand in This
</p>
<p> A spiffy Peter Max rendition of the White House, a Camelot-ish
photo of the President on horseback, recorded meows from Socks--these offerings and more are available at the White House's
strenuously friendly new Internet site (address: http://www.whitehouse.gov).
Users can also "tour" the mansion (except the family quarters)
and download cartoons poking fun at Al Gore. More in the familiar
style of the federal government are the retrievable studies
and press releases from the likes of the EPA and the Small Business
Administration. White House officials stress that the site was
designed by non-taxpayer-funded interns.
</p>
<p> E-mail Netwatch at timestaff1@aol.com
</p>
<p>BATTLE OF THE BUZZ WORDS
</p>
<p> Last week's champ "Gridlock" vs. challenger "Hot Button"
</p>
<p> Number of mentions in the press and on TV talk shows, through 10/20.
Hot Button:40, Gridlock:112
</p>
<p>DISPATCHES: THIS OLD PALACE
</p>
<p>By Amy Wilentz/Port-Au-Prince, Haiti
</p>
<p> Jean-Bertrand Aristide's presidential palace was in a state
of wild disarray all last week, though the Haitian government
did manage to put on a fairly elegant reception for some 500
distinguished visitors and guests on the Saturday of Aristide's
return--a triumph all the more remarkable for the palace's
lack of running water. The President's people had been especially
nervous since a number of the invitees supported the 1991 coup
d'etat against Aristide and were no doubt looking forward to
a social debacle. But the Americans arrived with six portable
toilets, and the Haitians lugged water up two flights of stairs
to the reception level, and the party came off more or less
without a hitch.
</p>
<p> That was the new government's first taste of what awaited it
inside the palace, Haiti's seat of government. The ritzy residential
floor, decorated by Michele Duvalier in the slickest French
style of the late 1970s, had not been occupied since Aristide's
quick exit in 1991 and was, according to a member of Aristide's
kitchen cabinet, "unlivable"--dusty and moldy and smelling
faintly of sewage. The beautiful granite bathrooms had all been
destroyed, their fixtures removed.
</p>
<p> Upstairs in the President's offices, the situation was worse.
The computers Aristide had left behind when he was booted into
exile had been stolen. Every last bit of office equipment was
gone--Aristide's staff members were still begging pens from
journalists on the day after he arrived--and only a very few
electrical outlets were working. As late as last Wednesday,
there was still just one functioning phone in the entire palace.
</p>
<p> Aristide wanted to spend his first night home at his private
residence just outside town, but he was told by his security
people that his safety there could not yet be guaranteed. So
he chose to remain in the palace and slept in his office on
a pull-out couch sent over by a helpful friend. There was no
working shower; the President had to bathe a la paysanne--peasant style--using buckets of water and a sink.
</p>
<p> The President's discomforts, however fleeting, reflect some
of the more basic needs his government will have to address
in its first few months in power. Schools languish in disrepair.
Garbage is piled high around the capital, and the municipal
dump is an unsightly waterfront horror that breeds disease.
Roads are barely navigable; in some places, the potholes have
grown so large and deep that they are known in Haitian Creole
as tonmbo, or tombs. At midweek, gasoline had still not made
it to the nation's pumps, and the stockpiled supplies of street
dealers were dwindling. It was a characteristically Haitian
irony that only when the embargo was over did the gas shortage
begin.
</p>
<p> Despite all the problems facing his country, and despite his
difficulties bathing, Aristide is plainly delighted to be home.
"Look," he told Time, "obviously we're not going to solve everything
in our first few days, and if we just don't shoot ourselves
in the foot, we'll be doing a good job."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>