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- NATION, Page 36Grapevine
-
-
- YOUR TIME IS UP. Connoisseurs of cornball speechifying are
- dismayed by the temporary demise of the congressional equivalent
- of The Gong Show: the wacky period when the One-Minute Rule allows
- members to wax eloquent on such topics as the joy in Chicago over
- the Cubs' making the play-offs. So many Congressmen were acting
- like would-be Willard Scotts that Speaker Tom Foley last week
- suspended the One-Minute Rule until Congress deals with serious
- business like the deficit.
-
- RETURN TO SENDER. Charles Keating, owner of Lincoln Savings &
- Loan, is accused of frittering away $1.1 billion. He also gave at
- least $1.3 million to organizations affiliated with five Senators
- who met with the Federal Home Loan Board about his thrift. The
- Senators -- Democrats John Glenn of Ohio, Alan Cranston of
- California, Donald Riegle of Michigan, Dennis DeConcini of Arizona
- and Arizona Republican John McCain -- deny they were pressuring the
- board to go easy on Keating. After the Government brought fraud
- charges against Keating last month, DeConcini returned the
- contributions (Riegle had done so earlier). So far McCain, Cranston
- and Glenn have not.
-
- LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBUCK. Ever since Bob Farmer, Mike Dukakis'
- fund-raising ace, became the Democrats' treasurer last winter, many
- of the party's financial backers have pressed chairman Ron Brown
- to name a corporate heavyweight as finance chairman. Brown's likely
- choice is Monte Friedkin, a millionaire whose ties to Jewish causes
- could help Brown with a constituency that mistrusts him because he
- advised Jesse Jackson.
-
- BUSY SIGNAL. When a Los Angeles businessman called the local
- Drug Enforcement Administration to report his suspicions about
- mysterious 18-wheelers dropping off shipments at a nearby import
- business, he got either a busy signal or no answer at all. Finally,
- he called the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, where
- somebody picked up the phone. The ATF passed along the tip to the
- DEA, leading to a record seizure last week of 20 tons of coke
- valued at $8 billion. Explains a rueful DEA agent: "Our phones are
- so busy, it's a little hard to get through."