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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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1990-09-17
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ETHICS, Page 90MOST OF THE DECADE
Snappiest Salute. American political morality divided along
the Oliver North fault line. While his superiors nodded approval,
the rogue Marine lieutenant colonel diverted proceeds from arms
sold to the Iranians to aid the contras and then lied to Congress.
The resulting furor produced hearings, headlines and Ollie dolls.
In the end, the colonel paid a fine of $150,000 and put in 1,200
hours of community service. Parade rest!
Most Brazen Fake. Hitler fans got an unexpected thrill when
the German magazine Stern claimed to have uncovered the Fuhrer's
secret diaries. At first historians, including Hugh Trevor-Roper
(The Last Days of Hitler), authenticated the volumes, and several
well-known publications goose-stepped along. But German and other
experts soon concluded that the diaries were audacious forgeries.
Best Monopoly Game. The scandal of the homeless was hardly
alleviated by the Department of Housing and Urban Development,
where Secretary "Silent Sam" Pierce and his minions took care of
the greedy and ignored the needy. Well-connected consultants,
developers and mortgage companies collected hundreds of millions
of dollars -- real ones -- in building contracts and foreclosure
sales for low-income housing. They did not pass GO, or go to jail
-- yet.
Biggest Bottom Line. Pentagon procurement officers gave a new
meaning to the term royal flush. They paid a vendor $600 apiece
for airplane toilet-seat covers that should have cost about $25.
Other examples of military largesse: a $7,622 coffee machine, a
$400 hammer and a $659.53 ashtray.
Sheikest Sting. In a 1980 operation called Abscam, FBI agents
posing as wealthy Arabs pretended to be buying Government
influence. The operatives filmed several dozen officials happily
accepting bribes. Captured in livid black-and-white were a Senator
and six Congressmen. In all, four legislators were sent to federal
prison. Among the biggest fish hooked was New Jersey Senator
Harrison ("Pete") Williams.
Most Unsportsmanlike Sportsmen. Strong of limb and yellow of
eye, Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson lost his 1988 Olympic gold medal
and his unofficial title as the world's fastest human being for
using steroids. Carl Lewis, who won four gold medals in Los
Angeles, now holds the record. Pete Rose, possibly the last living
man to sport a Beatles haircut, was banned for life from the game
he loves for betting on contests involving his own team. (He can
apply for reinstatement in 1990.) The former Cincinnati Reds
manager, who set the major league record for most career hits
(4,192), admitted that he had a gambling problem. "I'm kinda
lucky," said Rose. "I still have a good financial statement . . ."
First Abdication. Crowned in 1983 as the first black Miss
America, Vanessa Williams became the first to relinquish the title
in disgrace. Raunchy pictures of her had appeared in Penthouse,
tarnishing the pageant's prim image. Williams was forced off the
throne but was allowed to keep some $125,000 earned from her (fully
clothed) public appearances.
Dirtiest Dealer. He was Wall Street's advance man of the greed
decade. Slick securities speculator Ivan Boesky made millions with
investors' money. The inside trader paid a record $100 million to
settle civil charges for his high jinks and later was sentenced to
three years in a federal prison. When he was recently released on
a furlough, he emerged sporting a ragged Howard Hughes-style beard.
Most Prurient Preachers. Holy Hypocrisy! America's first
televangelist Jim Bakker paid some $265,000 to cover up a sexual
misadventure. Later he was convicted of misspending millions of
followers' dollars. Rival preacher Jimmy Swaggart called the Bakker
scandal a cancer. That was before Swaggart was photographed
visiting a prostitute named Debra Murphree. According to Murphree,
he was "kind of perverted . . . I wouldn't want him around my
children."
Gamiest Campaign. A lot of politicians monkey around, but Gary
Hart lost his cool, his credibility and his candidacy in the 1988
U.S. presidential race after his dalliance with model Donna Rice
on a yacht called Monkey Business."I've made some mistakes," Hart
conceded. "Maybe big mistakes, but not bad mistakes." Said Rice:
"Everybody's got some old bones in their closet, and now mine are
out."