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in the final status talks . A government-assisted exodus of settlers would also send the clearest possible signal to the Palestinians that the Israeli governme nt is serious about ultimately withdrawing from the West Bank . This would great ly strengthen the position of Palestinian moderates who have been negotiating wi th the Israelis . Moreover , a major return of Israeli settlers from the territo ries would help limit violence in coming years . With respect to extremists on t he Israeli side , it would demonstrate that the effort to create permanent facts on the ground has failed and that Israelis were leaving the territories regardl ess of attempts by extremists to disrupt negotiations . An exodus of settlers fr om the territories would also refute the claim of Palestinian extremists that th e only way to end the occupation is to mount violent attacks on Israelis . The p recedent of ample compensation paid to settlers who left the Sinai when peace wa s achieved with Egypt has created an expectation of compensation among Israeli s ettlers . They will not leave without it , and the real choice is whether the pr ocess begins now or in five years . Logic says do it now . Khalil Jahshan is exe cutive director of the National Association of Arab Americans . William Quandt i s a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution . Jerome Segal , president of the Jewish Peace Lobby , is a research scholar at the University of Maryland . WASHINGTON She is a web of contradictions a woman whose name is almost synonymo us with loyalty to Bill Clinton but who has a way of giving him bouquets laced w ith stinkweed . Betsey Wright , President Clinton 's longtime chief of staff dur ing his Arkansas governor days and now a Washington lobbyist , is widely regarde d as smart and politically savvy . But for some reason , she says things on occa sion that make other Clinton advisers cringe . She coined the phrase `` bimbo er uptions '' in an interview during the presidential campaign on the spur of the m oment , she later said , because she couldn't bring the term `` gold digger '' t o mind . It was meant to be snide , putting down the women who claimed past liai sons with Clinton , but quickly took on its own life among Republicans and the m edia . `` Nobody ever told her to say anything about it , '' says a former Clint on campaign aide . `` She just came out with this quote . '' Most recently , she has been at the center of a small controversy over her statement , as quoted in a novella-size article about Hillary Rodham Clinton in The New Yorker , that `` a great many people ( are ) talking very seriously '' about a potential Hillary run for the presidency . Such comments come at a bad time , when polls are show ing renewed suspicion of the first lady 's power after she 'd attempted to put t hose concerns to rest . Wright denies making those remarks . But opinion in Clin ton circles is split . `` Sure she said it , '' says one White House staffer . ` ` She wants to be the center of attention . And she becomes the center of attent ion and realizes that it doesn't help her , so she backs off . '' `` I have neve r heard her in public or private utter anything that was not in support of Bill and Hillary , '' says Bev Lindsey , executive director of the Department of Arka nsas Heritage and wife of White House senior adviser Bruce Lindsey . `` I know B etsey wasn't out there saying some of those things that were quoted in the artic le . '' Bev Lindsey adds that she also was misquoted in the piece . Clinton camp aign strategist James Carville , who has often clashed with Wright , is giving h er a sort of backhanded benefit of the doubt . He suspects that Connie Bruck , a uthor of the New Yorker piece , `` set out to get somebody to say that '' and pe rsisted until someone did . It was `` the journalistic equivalent of a forced co nfession , '' he says . The normally talkative Wright wasn't returning calls las t week . But Bruck is standing by her quote and she says she didn't browbeat Wri ght to get it . `` You couldn't browbeat Betsey that 's my sense of it , '' she says . `` I didn't feel that she intended to harm Hillary and Bill . Was I a lit tle surprised that she would say something that I realized when printed could be startling ? Yes , I was surprised . '' If Bruck was surprised , others weren't . Some speculate that Wright is seeking a subtle form of revenge because , after years of devoted service to Clinton , she wasn't given a leading role in the pr esidential campaign . Others speculate that if Wright 's performance is sabotage , it isn't conscious . Either way , some Clintonites have been asking themselve s : With friends like Wright , who needs Rush Limbaugh ? The Texas-born Wright h as been a lifelong political player . She met Bill and Hillary Clinton in 1972 , when all three worked on George McGovern 's presidential campaign in Wright 's home state . After Clinton became governor of Arkansas , then lost his re-electi on bid in 1981 , Wright relocated to Little Rock . That 's when she began a rela tionship with Clinton that she would subsequently describe as `` almost symbioti c . '' Wright was happy to be Clinton 's lightning rod , associates say , and to absorb the bolts that otherwise would have struck her boss . In exchange , howe ver , she demanded control no scrap of paper passed through the office without h er involvement . She was a renowned workaholic who virtually never took time off showing up between 5 and 6 a.m. each day and staying late . So when she abruptl y departed for a rare vacation in August 1989 , Arkansans noticed . `` I am told that Bill and Betsey have been at each other 's throats lately , but that this is not particularly unusual , '' Arkansas Democrat-Gazette political columnist J ohn Brummett wrote then . `` Their relationship apparently is volatile , love-ha te . '' Clinton blamed Wright for a political initiative that had put him into u ncomfortable conflict with state legislators , Brummett continued . `` Her abras iveness used to get on my nerves and I considered her too protective of the boss . But now I realize that Bill needs protection sometimes , and Betsey has kept him out of a lot of trouble . '' Wright 's vacation turned out to be permanent , and the transition was handled none too smoothly . If Wright felt that Clinton had pushed her toward the door or at least failed to support her adequately she never said so publicly . She served at Clinton 's request as head of the state D emocratic Party , throwing herself into an ambitious and relatively expensive pr ogram of organizing the machine . In September 1991 , with the party more than $ 25,000 in debt , she resigned . She had `` spent far too much '' on 1990 electi ons , she acknowledged . Wright herself hadn't been paid for months . In 1992 , she contacted the presidential campaign after Gennifer Flowers surfaced with her allegations about an affair with Clinton . She knew the real dish on Flowers , Wright said later , and others in the campaign didn't . In her view , these newc omers James Carville , George Stephanopoulos and the others permitted the Flower s story to get bigger than it should have . Wright joined the campaign team but she never fit in very comfortably . With her sense of proprietorship , Wright wa s not fated to get along with the campaign 's `` white boys , '' as some insider s dubbed them . `` Can you imagine what happened when Carville started screaming and yelling and Betsey didn't shut up and started screaming and yelling back at him ? '' one campaign aide says . But Wright wasn't someone to be dismissed lig htly . She knew Clinton very well . Everyone assumed she had nuclear capabilitie s . Those who are loyal to Wright and they tend to be longtime Clinton allies wi th Arkansas roots maintain that the `` War Room '' crowd was harder on Wright th an they should have been . Brummett says Wright recounted to him a meeting with Carville and Stephanopoulos in which they criticized her because some of Clinton 's potential liabilities had not been resolved in the past . `` One said , ` Ho w could you let Bill Clinton be governor for 10 years and not answer the marijua na question ? ' And she began to cry . '' But Wright also maintained that she ha d tried that on some points , Clinton was hard to manage . `` And what did Carvi lle and Stephanopoulos get him to do ? '' Brummett asks . `` He stood up and sai d he didn't inhale . '' Wright acknowledged some of the stress she felt during t he campaign in tearful comments that she made at a post-election forum of campai gn players at Harvard . She complained bitterly about attacks on Arkansas and Cl inton 's record as governor , including some that came from within the campaign . But at the same forum , Wright continued with remarks that didn't necessarily favor Clinton . A reporter asked Carville why Clinton never denied having an aff air with Gennifer Flowers . `` He certainly did , '' Carville replied . `` He sa id it any number of times . '' `` Now , what he said , James , was .. . ' ' Wrig ht interjected . `` Let 's not do a slick Willie here . '' He had said that Flow ers was lying , Wright explained . `` And she was , and she has been lying since she was 3 years old . '' A defense of Clinton , perhaps but one that raised the very possibilities that Carville had been attempting to dispel . After the elec tion , Wright came to Washington . She never had a job in the administration and said she didn't want one . After years of service , she said , she was broke . It was time for her to earn some money and , pushing 50 , time to prepare for he r retirement . She joined the Wexler Group , lobbying with some success on behal f of the American Dietetic Association and the American Forest and Paper Associa tion . Wright has demonstrated that she can tap straight into Bill or Hillary 's office at least to get her clients a hearing , even if their wishes aren't alwa ys granted . The relationship `` has been a good thing for her , for us , for ou r clients , '' says Anne Wexler . Arkansans are much warmer to Wright than the c rowd that gathered around Clinton during and after the presidential campaign . T hey know she is complicated and volatile , but she also is one of them certainly more so than the boys in the War Room . They recognize her past loyalty to Clin ton and offer their own support . `` Arkansans have an appreciation of the histo ry , '' says Skip Rutherford , a Little Rock attorney who formerly chaired the s tate Democratic Party and worked in the Clinton campaign . `` The truth of the m atter is , she came in and helped Bill Clinton after a stunning defeat . She hel ped position him for a '92 victory . '' The Carville crowd `` got Bill Clinton a s he was a national candidate , '' he says . `` We saw Bill Clinton coming out o f the ruins of an upset defeat . And what we saw was Betsey Wright rebuilding th e tower . '' Retirees are increasingly finding themselves on their own when it comes to heal th-care coverage . A new survey shows that most companies in the United States c ut employees off from all coverage the moment they retire , and those that conti nue to provide coverage shift most of the cost onto the retiree . The nationwide study of 2,395 employers by A . Foster Higgins & Co. , a New York-based benefit s consulting firm , shows that among large companies those with 500 or more empl oyees workers who take early retirement are somewhat more apt to get continued c overage than those who have reached age 65 and are eligible to receive governmen t health insurance under Medicare . Among large companies , 46 percent provide s ome form of coverage for early retirees , while only 39 percent provide insuranc e for Medicare-eligible retirees . But fewer than one in five large employers is willing to pay the entire cost of health care for retirees , while 40 percent o f the companies that do offer some form of health-care coverage require the reti ree to pay all the costs . Even at full cost , however , it may be cheaper for a retiree to buy coverage from his or her ex-employer than to buy an individual i nsurance policy . Stephne Behrend , the managing consultant who conducted the su rvey , one of the larger of its kind in the United States , said it showed a con tinuing `` gradual erosion '' in employer health-care benefits for retirees . `` Each year we 've seen a significant number of companies that say they 've termi nated their benefits for retirees , '' Behrend said . A new Census Bureau study shows a similar decline in employer health-care coverage for active workers . Th e overall percentage of workers covered by employer health plans , it concludes , dropped from 66 percent in 1979 to 61 percent in 1993 . Labor Secretary Robert B . Reich said the Census report shows a drop in coverage in every category of workers and employers . Behrend said that this year Foster Higgins revised its s urvey methods to gauge better what 's taking place among smaller companies . `` What we get is a much better picture of smaller companies and just how limited p ost-retirement benefits are from smaller companies , '' she said . The survey , she said , shows there is not a great difference between large and small compani es when it comes to health care benefits for active employees . `` The differenc e really happens in the smaller companies when you get to the post-retirement ar ea , '' she said . According to the survey report , `` small employers are much less likely to offer retiree coverage ; only 8 percent offer coverage to retiree s under age 65 and 9 percent offer it to Medicare-eligible retirees , '' general ly people age 65 or older . Benefit consultants have long maintained that the av ailability of health care benefits is often a major factor in retirement decisio ns by employees . The Foster Higgins survey underscores that . `` Whether or not an employer offers retiree coverage appears to have some effect on employees ' retirement decisions , since most employees are not eligible for Medicare until they reach age 65. .. . Two-thirds of those retiring were under age 65 , '' acco rding to the survey . Among small companies , people tend to hang on longer so t hat they can move straight to Medicare . At companies with fewer than 500 employ ees , the survey showed , 70 percent of those retiring were over age 65 . The su rvey also said that 73 percent of small employers required both early retirees a nd Medicare-eligible retirees to pay the full cost of any company-provided insur ance benefits . Behrend said that even with the retiree paying the full cost , h owever , it provided some advantage for the retiree because it often guaranteed the continuation of coverage regardless of preexisting medical problems . The Fo ster Higgins survey showed that the cost of providing health care benefits to re tirees rose an average of 7.9 percent last year . The average cost per retiree w as $ 2,735 in 1993 , compared with $ 2,534 the year before . When the age of ret irees is considered , there is a dramatic shift in costs to the company . The su rvey shows that the average cost for early retirees , those under age 65 , was $ 5,216 per employee . The cost for people 65 and older , who can tap Medicare , averaged $ 1,786 . This is particularly relevant in today 's work force as major corporations , often those with the most expensive health-care plans , continue to reduce the size of their work force and turn to new technology to become mor e competitive . During the first three months of the year , an average of more t han 3,000 jobs was lost each day as the result of corporate downsizing . That nu mber began to slow slightly to fewer than 2,000 jobs a day in the second quarter of the year . Many companies have used retiree health benefits to lure older em ployees to leave . WASHINGTON Paul Green Houston , a longtime Washington correspondent for the Los Angeles Times and author of its popular weekly `` Washington Insight '' column , died late Sunday after a two-year battle with colon cancer . He was 52 . Houst on joined the Los Angeles Times in 1965 as a staff writer in Los Angeles and was assigned to its Washington bureau in 1972 . He first covered the California con gressional delegation before his beat was expanded to include all of Congress . He served a term as chairman of the Standing Committee of Correspondents , the o rganization of news reporters assigned to Congress . Houston played a prominent role in The Times ' coverage of the Watergate affair , including the impeachment proceedings against former President Nixon , and later the Iran Contra scandal . Several years ago , drawing on his experience and contacts , he took over the newspaper 's Washington Insight column , which features behind-the-scenes glimps es of the capital 's processes of power . `` He had the best sources of anyone o n the Hill , '' said Times Washington Bureau Chief Jack Nelson . `` I covered im peachment with him , and he had better sources than I did . He was extremely wel l-liked . '' Said House Speaker Thomas J. Foley , D-Wash. , `` Congress had a go od many journalists covering the Hill in recent years , but Paul Houston was in the handful of the best . Few had covered it longer or better . '' Houston , who was named after the Pulitzer-prize winning playwright and family friend Paul Gr een , was born into a writing family in Chapel Hill , N.C. . His father , Noel H ouston , was a prize-winning journalist and novelist who authored the best-selli ng 1946 novel `` The Great Promise . '' His mother , Kay Replogle Houston , was a noted gardener and cook . Houston demonstrated an early interest in journalism in his high school years and then as an English major at the University of Nort h Carolina at Chapel Hill where he wrote for the Daily Tar Heel and was assistan t sports publicity director for the university . He was graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1963 . After graduation , he moved to Houston where he worked as a reporter for the Houston Chronicle for a year , and then joined the San Francisco Examine r , where he worked for another year . In 1968 , at 25 , he became the youngest recipient of the Nieman Fellowship for journalists at Harvard University . He wa s an avid sportsman who enthusiastically pursued tennis , golf and body surfing , and , in fact , scored 81 , with two birdies , in a golf match four days befor e entering the hospital for the last time this month . He was also a devoted coo k , reader , trombonist and punster . He is survived by his widow , Virginia ; t wo daughters , Katherine and Susanna ; and a sister , Diana Houston , all of the Washington area . WASHINGTON What 's approximately 48,000 years old , has 1,394 legs , is steady , generally healthy and likes to work ? Those are the combined stats more or les s of the 697 men and women who have been in federal government service here 50 o r more years . Most were in their 20s , or teen-agers , when they came to work b efore D-Day . They have been on the job longer than the average American has bee n alive . At a time when the federal government is pushing early retirement and paying workers $ 25,000 bonues to leave , people who stick around for 50 years s tick out ! Some are the institutional memory of their agency . All the club memb ers were on the job before President Clinton was born , before TV or CDs or PCs , and when the outcome of World War II was still in doubt . Their Washington was a boom town where movies were run night and day to accommodate shift workers , and where women vastly outnumbered men in most government offices . Most walked or took the trolley ( 10 cents ) to work . About that time The Washington Post l aunched a `` Government Girl Plane Drive . '' The idea was to get $ 1 from G-gir ls ( that was a legal term in those days ) to buy a warplane for both the Army A ir Corps and the Navy . The White House supported the drive . Each aircraft was to be named GOVERNMENT GIRL and each would carry a logbook with the names of all donors . Donors names were posted in front of the Post building . It was a diff erent town and time . One who remebers is Bernice Watson . She 's with the Feder al Mediation and Conciliation Service . Mid-June marks her 50th year in governme nt . Like thousands of other G-girls ( including my mother ) she was recruited f rom small towns to come to Washington . Many planned to work for the duration of the war , then go home . A lot of them are still here . Watson and the late Mur iel Fortenberry Freeman , came fresh from high school to be civilian clerk-typis ts in the brand-new Pentagon building . The young ladies , from Magnolia , Miss. , took the 26-hour train from New Orleans to Washington 's Union Station . Afte r signing forms , they were taken to their government-approved rooming house at No. 2 Logan Circle . A vigilant landlady insured that no men patriotic locals an d Nazi spies were equally suspect ever got above the first floor lounge area . W atson giggled when she remembered the lounge `` dance band '' a nickelodian that supplied tunes for not-too-close dancing . Working a 5 and a half day week for $ 38 left little time or money for exotic entertainment . Like many of the warti me temps , Watson stayed and added to the city . Her son , Lawrence Thomas , is now a lieutenant in the Metropolitan Police Department . She still lives in town . Why has she worked so long ? `` Well , I had a good reason , I needed the mon ey , '' she said . Now she works because otherwise `` I 'd go crazy. .. . You ha ve to get out of the house . '' She likes the FMCS , and it likes her . If you c an't be at her June 15 luncheon party , raise a glass from wherever for that han g-tight , hang-tough 50-year bunch . NEW DELHI , India Nine-year-old Raju and his big brother , Mantu , had a carefu Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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