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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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012389
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01238900.030
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1990-09-17
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WORLD, Page 39GRAPEVINE
MANUEL SLEPT HERE. In fear of an assassination plot, Panamanian
strongman Manuel Antonio Noriega has ordered a security check of
his inner circle, and no longer sleeps in the same bed two nights
in a row. Afraid of being poisoned, he has many of his meals
prepared by Norma Amado, a close adviser. Amado happens to be the
mother of Noriega's mistress, which suggests that if the dictator
ever has a lover's quarrel, he may want to consider eating out that
night.
OH, NOT HIM AGAIN! Guess who the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee has asked to address its national
convention in Washington in April? Hint: he wears a kaffiyeh, seems
to like traveling and was refused a U.S. visa last November, when
the U.N. invited him to speak. Yasser Arafat, who last week
accepted the latest invite, plans to reapply for a visa. But will
he get it this time? Though Arafat has since met U.S. conditions
for dealing with the P.L.O., the incoming Bush Administration is
certain to draw fire whether it approves or rejects the visa
request.
CULTURE SHOCK. Japanese companies are using cheap labor along
the U.S.-Mexican border to turn out everything from car parts to
stereos. Problem is, the Japanese supervisors and their families
are homesick. So in El Paso the firms opened a Japanese restaurant
and a math school for Japanese children. Most locals still prefer
Tex-Mex to sushi, but some El Paso mothers are wondering aloud how
they can enroll their kids in the Japanese classroom.
TURNING THE CHAIRS. The French diplomat was baffled when
Morocco's King Hassan II, a longtime friend, initially gave him a
frosty reception in Rabat recently. As it turns out, the problem
began when French President Francois Mitterrand visited the palace
for a tete-a-tete with Hassan not long before. Mitterrand plunked
himself down on an ornate divan, haughtily assuming it was meant
for him rather than his royal host. Forced to pull up the simple
straight-backed chair reserved for visitors, the monarch exacted
his revenge on the French envoy.