A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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s the Museum of Man and Nature , an interpretive museum with life-like reconstru ctions of Indians hunting buffalo and planetarium for the star-gazers among us . One of the more interesting replicas is of the Nonsuch , a two-masted sailing v essel called a ketch . The ship arrived in 1668 and was the first European ship to sail into Hudson Bay . It sailed out again to England with a cargo of furs , and it was that incident that eventually led to the founding of the Hudson 's Ba y Co. , the trading company that still exists and is most familiar in the form o f its department stores . Last March , that same company donated its entire hist oric archives collection to the museum , which will house it in a new $ 2.2 mill ion wing to be completed next year . The collection , which is said to be among the most extensive and detailed private historical resources ever maintained , p ortrays more than three centuries of the company 's history , including the ques t for the North West Passage the water route from the Atlantic to the Pacific th at took explorers 400 years to get right . ( End optional trim ) Winnipeg may no t offer the night life of New York or the glamour of Paris . But for a low-key , relaxing and safe place to visit , it is a very pleasant discovery . One of the big doings in London this summer is the 100th anniversary of the Tow er Bridge , marked officially on June 30 with fanfare and fireworks on the banks of the River Thames . Created for the centenary , `` The Celebration Story '' e xhibit in rooms and passages inside the bridge recounts the story of this Victor ian engineering marvel and city life 100 years ago ; for info , call ( 800 ) 781 -6088 . Nearby , at the Tower of London , dating to at least 1066 , the Historic Royal Palaces Agency says it willn't be refilling the big moat this year . The moat 's been dry for about 150 years , when it was declared a health hazard and drained . Although there 's a new cafe opening on the wharf outside the tower , the new $ 10 million jewel house for the royal baubles that opened in March is s till the big draw . For tower info , call ( 011 ) ( 44 ) ( 71 ) 709-0765 . The Q ueen 's digs at Buckingham Palace will again be open to the public from Aug. 7 t o Oct. 2 . London 's Stafford hotel is offering a special pass for its guests th at 'll take them to the head of the daily ticket queue ; ( 800 ) 525-4800 . Othe r notes : Say double-double toil and trouble in double-double time : `` Instant Macbeth , '' a 30-minute version of Shakespeare 's tragedy , just opened at the Waterside Studio Theater in Stratford-Upon-Avon , where down the street the Roya l Shakespeare Company is presenting the unabridged play in about 2 hours . For ` ` Instant '' info : ( 011 ) ( 44 ) ( 78 ) 929-5623 . It 's not four-legged jogge rs that you might be seeing at night crossing the roads near Westwood pasture in the northeast English county of Humberside . Environmentalists have proposed pu tting fluorescent leggings on local cows so motorists will able to moo-ve over b efore they hit them . -0- GLOBAL WHEELER : Although she 's been in a wheelchair since she was 2 , Annie Mackin is an intrepid traveler who 's logged four trips to Europe since 1978 . During her five weeks there last summer , the 40-year-old woman decided to write a guide for other disabled travelers , `` Wheelchair thr ough Europe . '' Many hotels that are accessible to the disabled are top-of-the- line , Mackin says , so she wrote her book with a budget in mind , seeking out a ccessible lodging from $ 90 to $ 110 a night , double . Although she traveled wi th an attendant , Mackin found many places accessible to those with good upper b ody strength . Some tips : Take the narrowest wheelchair you can find and jell c ell batteries that willn't tip over and spill , and remind the airlines to pack the chair carefully . Also , try to fly into London or Amsterdam where there 's accessible mass transit from the airport to the city so you willn't have to pay for a cab . European travel , she says `` can be difficult , can be challenging , but it 's not impossible . You miss a lot if you stay home . '' Send check or money order for $ 12.95 to Graphic Language Press , P.O. . Box 270 , Cardiff by the Sea , Calif. 92007 . Arizona-based Wheelchair Inc. has signed a contract wit h Avis to provide wheelchair-accessible minivans at 47 on-and-off airport Avis s ites in 29 states . Many locations are available now , but they all will be in t he next four months , company President Tammy Smith said . Rates range from $ 71 to $ 89 a day ; ( 800 ) 456-1371 . Another company , Wheelchair Getaways , rent s and sells specially equipped vans and other equipment in 80 cities , with rate s from $ 75 to $ 95 a day ; ( 800 ) 642-2042 . -0- QUICK TAKES : More Americans are planning to take more vacation trips this summer but for shorter periods of time than they did last year , according to an annual survey of 1,500 conducted by the Travel Industry Association of America and the Automobile Association . M ost popular activities : going to the beach , visiting friends or relatives , vi siting historic places and camping/hiking/climbing . Top destinations : Florida , California , Hawaii , New York and Texas . Apple Vacations is offering new pac kages to Las Vegas with nonstop service from Newark , N.J. , Mondays and Fridays ; ( 800 ) 727-3400 . Western-Union is setting up a temporary international mone y transfer agent location in Colleville-Sur-Mer in Normandy , France , through J une 13 to accommodate D-Day travelers ; ( 800 ) 325-6000 . can't stand the heat ? Try the kitchen at the Villa d' Este Hotel on Lake Como , Italy , for daily cooking demonstrations . Six-day trips begin Oct. 1 , 8 or 1 5 . Each morning , the hotel chef will prepare lunch ; participants can help or just watch . After lunch , guests can take optional excursions to food markets , vineyards , and cheese- and salami-making shops . Cost : $ 1,688 per person , i ncluding hotel for six days , breakfasts and lunches . Not included : round-trip air fare to Milan and ground transportation . Contact : MSW Columbia Travel , 6 30 Fifth Ave. , Suite 3070 , New York 10111 ; telephone ( 212 ) 332-8900 . -0- H ABLA EN PUEBLA : Two-week language programs in Puebla , Mexico , run June 26 thr ough Aug. 20 . Guests stay with selected families , participating in daily activ ities . After morning Spanish classes , participants have their afternoons free to explore open markets , the Great Pyramid of Tepanapa and the battlefield site of the 1862 Cinco de Mayo victory over the French that gave rise to a national holiday . Evenings are spent with the host family practicing language skills . W eekend excursions to Mexico City are available . Cost : $ 595 per person , inclu ding lodging , meals , ground transportation to Puebla ( 80 miles southeast of M exico City ) and Spanish classes . Not included : round-trip air fare to Mexico City . Contact : Language Experience Programs , 2432-F Moon Dust Drive , Chino H ills , Calif. 91709 ; tel . ( 800 ) 726-6644 . -0- HALLOWEEN JAZZ : An eight-day Halloween jazz cruise leaves Oct. 30 from New Orleans aboard Holland America 's Noordam for stops in Grand Cayman ; Ocho Rios , Jamaica , and Cozumel , Mexico . Round-the-clock , live , on-board jazz performances feature Diane Schuur , Bud dy Montgomery , Pete Candoli , Ernie Watts and many other musicians . Cost : $ 1 ,165 per person , double occupancy , including all meals and shows . Not include d : round-trip air fare to New Orleans . Contact : Labadie Productions , 303 Pot rero St. 19 , Santa Cruz , Calif. 95060 ; tel . ( 800 ) 350-7464 . -0- UMBRIAN R AMBLE : An eight-day easy walking trip in the Umbrian countryside of central Ita ly leaves Sept. 10 and Oct. 1 and 22 . The tour begins in the ancient city of To di , where participants stay in a converted Benedictine monastery . Each day , g roups walk to a new village , stopping frequently to visit wineries , churches a nd museums . Van assistance is always available and will carry luggage to the ne xt lodging , from a family-run hotel to a converted villa . Guests will stop to see frescoes at the church of San Francesco in the walled town of Montefalco , R oman ruins in Spello , and museums and churches in Assisi . Picnic lunches are p rovided by the guide en route , and dinners are eaten at local restaurants . Cos t : $ 1,720 per person , including accommodations , continental breakfasts , mea ls and guides . Not included : air fare to Rome and ground transportation . Cont act : Alternative Travel Group , 575 Pierce St. , Suite 604 , San Francisco , Ca lif. 94117 ; tel . ( 415 ) 431-6789 . -0- GREEK ISLES : A 45-foot sailing yacht takes up to seven guests through the Saronic Gulf south of Athens , stopping at Hydra , Aegina , Poros and Epidavros . Participants on this 15-day journey leave Los Angeles Oct. 7 , tour Athens the following day , then board the yacht for a week ; they can sit back or actively participate in the sailing . Afterward , g uests board an overnight deluxe steamer to Irakleion , Crete , to visit the anci ent ruins of Cnossus , the White Mountains and archeological sites on the wester n side of the island . Cost : $ 1,975 , including breakfasts , lunches while sai ling and two dinners , ground transportation and a guide . Not included : air fa re to Athens . Contact : Guides for All Seasons , 202 County Road , Calpine , Ca lif. 96124 ; tel . ( 800 ) 457-4574 . -0- MAYAN JOURNEY : Visit the mysterious M ayan ruins without breaking a fingernail on a 15-day deluxe train/cruise tour le aving Los Angeles Union Station on Oct. 9 . Participants will travel by private train in Pullman sleeping cars to New Orleans , where they stay two nights at th e Riverside Hilton hotel and tour the city . They board Holland America 's Noord am to cruise to the Yucatan and the West Indies , stopping at Cozumel , Mexico , for a day trip to the Mayan ruins of Tulum ; Grand Cayman ; Cartagena , Colombi a , and Jamaica . The ship returns to New Orleans for the flight home . Cost : $ 2,895 per person , including ground transport , meals and guides . Contact : Un common Journeys , 1529 Cypress St. 103 , Walnut Creek , Calif. 94596 ; tel . ( 8 00 ) 323-5893 . Richard Dooling is a traveler in two drastically different territories : the la w he practices today in Nebraska , and the folkways of the Mende people in the b acklands of Sierra Leone , where he once stayed . In his sardonic and decidedly untidy novel , `` White Man 's Grave '' ( Farrar , Straus & Giroux , $ 22 , 386 pp. ) , he pits the tribal magic of each against the other . There is no questio n who wins . Dooling has something of the beady , comical glitter of Evelyn Waug h though not his formal perfection but only in one eye . Waugh traveled in Sierr a Leone and wrote nastily about both whites and blacks . Dooling 's parody wicke dly impales his Americans ; his ingenious sympathies lie with the Mende villager s , giving his book an aspect beyond parody . The story goes roughly like this : Randall Killigan , a maniacally hard-charging lawyer in Indianapolis , has a st raying son , Michael , who went to Africa with the Peace Corps for two years , s tayed for four and has disappeared . While Randall fulminates , mobilizes his se nator and the State Department and offers large rewards , a second effort goes o n . Boone , an artist friend of Michael 's and a fugitive from an equivalent bul l elephant of a father , treks into the Sierra Leone bush . Eventually Michael t urns up along with an explanation for his disappearance . Most of the African pa rt of the story , which is most of the book , concerns Boone 's painful and illu minating encounters with a primitive village civilization . Painful for him , il luminating for us . The young man 's artistic veneer quickly burns off , disclos ing a hereditary , stiff-necked American prig . The priggishness , though , allo ws the author to show us what Boone refuses to see : how supremely and winningly , in the notion of primitive civilization , the noun demolishes the adjective . Dooling gives us a bravura display of satire with Randall Killigan , in war pai nt and tribal regalia , as a legal chieftain whose ambition is to be `` the syno nym for bankruptcy in the Seventh Circuit . '' He demolishes the lawyers for ban krupt firms . He lays the reeking carcasses of his victims upon his conference-r oom table , apportioning bits to the rival creditors ' lawyers . He is the most virile tiger in the jungle : the electronic notebook he carries into negotiating battle has twice as many bytes as anyone else 's . It contains for instant refe rence the entire Federal Bankruptcy Code , annotated . The imagery , of course , is purposeful as well as comic . As the search for his son goes on , with Boone encountering witches , shape-changers , juju medicine , the dumbstruck regard o f young villagers and the cryptic though essentially benevolent maneuvering of t he elders , Africa leaks into Indianapolis . Randall mysteriously receives a hid eous , skin-wrapped package that drips blood ; now and then it turns into a bat . For a while he wonders if he has a brain tumor ; gradually he realizes that it is witchcraft . It will turn out to be self-inflicted : he , we will learn by t he end , is possessed by a witch-spirit and has , in effect , become one . As on e character points out , the American counterpart of voodoo is lawsuits : Both a re used to kill , sicken or otherwise ruin one 's neighbors . The Mende hire wit ches , we hire lawyers . Dooling brings off his satiric parallel , which might o therwise seem forced , with a wit and outrageousness that make it work . His suc cess has large holes in it , though . He can satirize his countrymen but he is p lain awful when he attempts anything more inward with them . When Randall goes t o Mass and confession to try to stave off the witchery , his mental flailing is written in flamboyant cliche and interlarded with more cliche : lengthy quotatio ns from the liturgy . Satire has sunk out of its depth to become the mawkish thi ng it satirizes . In the African chapters , the author 's sympathy and responsiv eness produce writing whose humor is carried on a current of discovery and aston ishment . Only the Americans are flat . Michael , when discovered , is simply an American overachiever gone native . Boone 's cultural obtuseness has a narrativ e usefulness it allows the delicate complexities of the villagers to emerge more clearly but it turns him into a null character . An anthropologist who has live d with the Mende for years and has , in effect , become one of them , is conside rably less interesting than what he has to say . He is a good explainer but not much else . Oddly , the only American with any roundness or allure is a thorough ly reprehensible Peace Corps veteran , infinitely cynical about the villagers an d mainly in it for the adventure and the beer . He is alive , though , and authe ntic . And it is in evoking the life of Africa and in suggesting the wisdom and forbearance that underlie the `` superstitions '' of the Mende villagers that Do oling is at his best . There is , first of all , a vivid presentation not just o f what his Africa looks , feels and smells like but of the emotions of unease an d beguilement they can produce . The vast landscape seen from the descending air plane looks like `` an empire of solid broccoli tops stretching inland to the ho rizon . '' Boone rides a rickety truck into the interior ; people , animals and cargo are so jammed together that the passengers practice a kind of metabolism-l owering trance state . The villagers live in a fearful world of uncontrollable e vents : hunger , disease , the depredations of white settlers and diamond seeker s , and the arbitrary incursions of warring political factions whose maneuvering in the capital is felt 200 miles down-country . Dooling portrays the rich cultu re that can evolve from powerlessness to command one 's environment ; as opposed to Western culture , which has evolved from just the opposite . From command , that is , or a sense of command or look at our cities an illusion of command . T he suggestion is there without being explicit . It is fleshed out in countless s cenes in which Dooling gives life to a village that manages dignity and a subver sive humor in the teeth of what seem to us like invincible odds . The witchcraft , the magical secret societies , the shamanism , the taboos are ways of coping with unmanageable dangers both outside and within . In his portraits a visiting witch cleaner who runs a cotton thread around the village so nobody shall leave or enter until the place is cleaned ; the poignantly striving third wife of a lo cal political thug ; and above all , the elder who adopts Boone as his son so th at the villagers can see him as a real person , albeit an odd and misbehaving on e Dooling evokes the humane checks and balances of a deep world ; the logic , yo u might say , of its magic . WASHINGTON The fight for a tougher human-rights policy toward China was lost lo ng before President Clinton announced surrender last week . Clinton 's decision to throw aside his own campaign commitments on the issue bodes very badly for th e future of human rights as a core concept of American foreign policy . From now on , it seems , the United States ' human-rights policy will amount to talk , t alk and more talk . The battle to impose trade sanctions on China 's dictators w as lost , first , within and by the Clinton administration itself . Because of a lack of internal discipline , the administration couldn't even manage a coheren t effort to bluff the Chinese leadership into making at least some serious human rights concessions . Even administration officials concede that while some in t he State Department were trying to tell China 's leaders that the United States was prepared to be tough , the Treasury , Commerce and Agriculture departments o f the same administration-as well as many who occupy the economy policy precinct s of Clinton 's own White House-were sending the Chinese clear signals that said : Never mind . Ignore the State Department 's claptrap . There 's no way we 'll impose serious sanctions . The Chinese sat tight waited for the inevitable cave -in and the renewal of most favored nation trade status . That cave-in was made all the more inevitable by the behavior of the American business community . Bus iness leaders are , of course , free to lobby for whatever policy they want . In the United States , you don't face torture or prison for opposing government po licy , as you do in China . But if we 're counting on American business to be th e conveyor belt of human rights to China , we may be waiting a very long time . Every signal the business community sent to the Chinese government was that mone y and trade mattered a lot more than the rights of political dissidents rotting in jail cells . Why ruffle the feathers of the very people you 'll be doing deal s with ? `` The business community was shameful in the way they conducted themse lves , '' said Rep. Nancy Pelosi , D-Calif. , a leading congressional advocate o f human rights in China . `` They told the Chinese government , `` you hang toug h , they willn't revoke MFN . ' They associated themselves with the regime , and that was shameful . '' It can be argued , as Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen d id , that unilateral trade sanctions were the least practical way to advance the cause of human rights . Unilateral sanctions , he said , were more likely to hu rt us than the Chinese , since other countries would pick up the contracts the U nited States walked away from . But if ever there were a practical time for sanc tions , it is now , when the U.S.-Chinese trade balance is heavily in China 's f avor . Some serious human-rights advocates also opposed sanctions on the ground that increased trade and prosperity would inevitably make China a freer society . `` Not only does such trade help produce a middle class , with increasingly so phisticated political and social views , '' said James Finn of Freedom House , w riting recently in Commonweal magazine , `` but it introduces new information an d values into an insular society . '' Maybe so , but the relationship between ma rkets and freedom is far from automatic . China 's markets , after all , are not really `` free , '' given the large role played by the political and military l eadership in determing who will get rich . And as George Black of the Lawyers Co mmittee for Human Rights argued in the Los Angeles Times , China may be developi ng a system that he called `` market Stalinism . '' The government will let mark ets develop as long as there is no challenge to its political authority . It 's quite possible to say yes to Ronald McDonald and no to the Statue of Liberty-and to make that decision stick for a long time . But even assuming that Bentsen an d Finn are right , Clinton had a problem in renewing MFN that George Bush did no t . Bush actually believed sanctions were a mistake . Clinton , on the other han d , accused Bush of having `` coddled the regime , pleading for progress but fai ling to impose penalties for intransigence . '' The people of China , Clinton sa id in 1992 , `` are still denied their basic rights and liberties . They are den ied the right to choose their own leaders ; they are still imprisoned for simply calling for democracy ; they continue to suffer torture and cruel , inhuman and degrading treatment and punishment . '' And on and on and on . All those condit ions still apply . Yet Clinton , after so many threats and promises , was forced to back down . In doing so , he sent a message about all future American statem ents and undertakings about human rights : We may not really mean them . Forced to confront a contradiction between his stated commitment to human rights and hi Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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