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investment intact . The B shares , however , have early-withdrawal charges and s o-called 12b-1 fees , used to pay brokers ' commissions . The costs of A and B s hares tend to even out after eight years . The emergence of C shares , according to fund executives , recognizes that many investors still resist paying commiss ions to buy mutual funds . C shares thus charge only an annual fee . The biggest advantage of C shares is that they give investors the freedom to change their m inds about where they want to keep their money without paying a penalty . Any in vestor who tends to be uncertain about his or her fund investments will understa nd how comforting it is to have that freedom . William E. Chapman , the executiv e vice president for marketing at Kemper Mutual Funds , which is adding C shares , said he thought they would appeal to investors in the same way some motorists prefer to lease a car rather than buy . Leasing , he noted , might be a better deal for a motorist who wanted the car for only a couple of years . While only a few companies have offered level-load shares up to now , that is changing . Jus t last week , Kemper and another major fund groups said they were getting into t he level-load business . The Calvert Group , which runs a family of social inves tment funds , added level-load shares to its stock and bond funds . Kemper said it was combining two groups of funds and , henceforth , 21 funds would offer inv estors three kinds of shares . The shares are similar to those offered by many c ompanies that sell funds through brokers . These are the Kemper offerings : Clas s A shares . The investor pays a maximum upfront commission or load of 5.75 perc ent . The amount is deducted before the money is invested . Class B shares . The re is no upfront load . However , an investor who leaves the fund before the end of six years will pay a declining withdrawal charge , which starts at 4 percent and goes down to zero . ( If you leave after six years , you pay no withdrawal charge . ) The investor also pays an ongoing 0.75 percent a year charge , known as a 12b-1 fee ( used to pay brokers ) , plus a 0.25 percent service fee a total of 1 percent . At the end of six years , the B shares convert to A shares and t he 12b-1 fee is dropped . Class C shares . There is no upfront sales charge or w ithdrawal fee , only an ongoing fee totaling 1 percent a year . This is composed of a 0.75 percent 12b-1 charge and a 0.25 percent service fee . Kemper says the se `` pay as you go '' shares are advantageous for investors who are likely to s tay in a fund for only three or four years . An investor who stayed in a level-l oad fund for 10 years would wind up paying more than an investor in either an A share or B share fund . As for brokers , C shares will give them their commissio ns over a period of years , instead of when they sell a fund . Some fund officia ls hope the greater ease of selling level-load shares will encourage brokers to accept delayed payments . ( The mutual-fund industry also has created a D class share , which is a lot like a C class , or level-load , share . However , a D sh are could also carry a small upfront sales charge . But that 's a story for anot her day . ) At Calvert , Vice President Steven J. Schueth said his company adopt ed level-load shares to help brokers compete with no-load funds , which sell by mail or phone and have no sales charges . `` The concept of level-load is not on ly here to stay but it is a trend that will pick up speed over the next couple y ears , '' Schueth said . Chapman said Kemper felt it was important , in a compet itive market , to give investors as many choices as possible . However , the lev el-load business may have potential hazards for investors and fund companies . T he danger to the investor involves full disclosure . The level-load share allows a broker to say : `` This fund has no sales charges . '' But it willn't be the whole story . The broker also must tell the investor : As long as you are in the fund , you will pay at least a 1 percent yearly charge , on top of the fund 's regular management fees . The danger to the fund company is that level-load inve stors will make too much use of their freedom to go in and out of the funds . So me observers have suggested these movements , especially during periods of marke t crisis , could require fund managers to hold cash to meet redemptions and poss ibly to sell securities into a declining market . That could prove costly to oth er shareholders . At Kemper , Chapman agreed level-load shareholders might be qu icker to change than others but said he did not think it would be a problem for managers . A recent study by Lipper Analytical Services Inc. of how bond-fund in vestors behaved during April lends some credence to the idea that level-load sha reholders are likely to flee faster than other shareholders when markets encount er turbulence . With interest rates rising and bond values falling , investors t ook more money out of bond funds in April than they put in . Lipper 's study fou nd that level-load investors were the most active group of redeemers , compared with investors who held A or B shares . Clearly , one of the major marketing the mes of this age is to give people more choices whether it is ice cream , yellow pages or mutual funds . The new level-load shares give investors a chance to cha nge their minds without paying a penalty . And that 's a great choice . WASHINGTON Quick . Name the inspector general at the Department of Transportati on . Name one at any agency . Known mostly to government bureaucrats and congres sional oversight committees , the average `` IG '' is an anonymous person lookin g over the shoulders of mostly anonymous government decision makers , regulators and contractors . It 's one of those nameless , faceless , but very powerful jo bs in Washington . But A . Mary Schiavo , 38 , inspector general at DOT since 19 90 , is making a name for herself , especially with the Federal Aviation Adminis tration . In the last year , the IG 's office at DOT has changed its focus from auditing obscure DOT contracts and programs to overseeing major programs and inv estigating safety-related issues . She says the new areas were `` big holes '' i n past IGs ' patrolling of the department 's halls . Though her staff has been r educed , Schiavo has issued 2,456 audit reports and has reeled in 149 indictment s and 95 convictions aggressive growth in the number of cases being pursued . Mu ch of this attention has gone to the FAA . Subjects include : How the FAA makes sure that only approved parts are used in aircraft maintenance and repair ( Schi avo 's high-profile `` bogus parts '' investigations ) ; security at airports ; a delayed computer modernization program ; aircraft and pilot inspections ; and how the FAA manages its fleet of vehicles ( she believes poorly ) . It 's not th at the FAA disagrees with all her findings . But it has complained about the qua lity of some of her work . The agency also points out that there has never been a crash of a major airliner related to `` bad '' parts and has sent her a 67-pag e response saying it continued to `` non-concur with many of the recommendations . '' And she was overruled by the Office of Government Ethics on a finding she made in a controversial case involving whether Frank Lorenzo , fallen airline em pire builder , should fly again . Schiavo , a licensed pilot and a seasoned pros ecutor ( most of her predecessors were auditors ) , is unfazed . `` We don't jus t want to be the time and attendance cops , '' she said . Sen. Wendell H. Ford , D-Ky. , an influential member of the Committee on Commerce , Science and Transp ortation , has put the brakes on the nomination of Ricardo Martinez as National Highway Transportation Safety administrator . Using one of the Senate 's most ti me-tested delay tactics , Ford placed a `` hold '' on Martinez 's nomination , w hich the Clinton administration advanced several months ago . Mark L . Day , a s pokesman for Ford , had no comment on the delay ; administration officials backi ng Martinez were similarly mum . That hasn't stopped the rumor mill . Speculatio n within the administration and on Capitol Hill is that Ford , who is from the b ourbon state , believes Martinez will be tough on drinking and driving due to hi s experience as an emergency-room physician in California and Georgia . Others s uggest a deal is in the making between Ford and Transportation Secretary Federic o Pena over doing a few things for Delta Air Lines Inc. in Kentucky . What kinds of things ? No one 's saying . `` He wanted to get Pena 's attention , and he g ot it by holding up Martinez 's nomination , '' one government source said . And the DOT gets the award for press release of the week . Its Maritime Administrat ion , which is filled with knowledgeable old sea dogs , described the design on a new commemorative flag as `` an eagle , perched on a red , white and blue shie ld , and a fouled anchor . '' And what does `` fouled '' mean ? Especially with an eagle nearby ? `` Twisted , '' said a Maritime spokeswoman . As in a rope dra ped around the anchor . WASHINGTON `` The Flintstones , '' a $ 45 million dinosaur that hired no fewer than 36 screenwriters and stars John Goodman , Rick Moranis , Elizabeth Perkins and Rosie O' Donnell , isn't just awful . It bombs itself into the Stone Age . A s Fred Flintstone might have put it : yabba-dabba-boo . After faithfully duplica ting the TV show 's familiar opening sequence in which Fred Flintstone ( Goodman ) knocks off work , howls for joy , slides down his Bronto-crane tail and foot- shuffles away in his prehistoric car the movie suffers immediate comic extinctio n . Leadenly directed and almost soberly scripted , it never captures the campy brightness of the original series the herky-jerky animation , the wacky sound ef fects , the distinctive character voices and that cheesy laugh track . In the th ird-rate plot ( and there 's no telling who among the Flintstone 36 came up with this gem ) , scheming boss Cliff Vandercave ( Kyle MacLachlan ) and his comely secretary ( Halle Berry ) promote unsuspecting Fred as a vice president , then f rame him for embezzlement , intending to abscond with the ill-gotten profit . Fr ed , enjoying a life of unprecedented luxury , is obliged to fire Barney ( Moran is ) and watch his friend sink into poverty before realizing his mistakes . If t he performers are imitating their cartoon forebears , it is barely apparent . Go odman 's sweat-induced , growly offerings completely bypass Fred 's lovable , pi gheaded innocence . The actor never attains Fred 's gravelly timbre . And with h is blond-dyed hair and zombielike demeanor , Moranis seems more like a zoned-out Warhol groupie than Fred 's perky buddy . The greatest asset of Perkins 's Wilm a is that Perkins looks the part . O' Donnell 's dead-on Betty Rubble giggle is the funniest thing in the movie , but it merely underlines how bad everyone and everything else is around her : The child actors who play Bamm-Bamm and Pebbles are completely forgettable . Fred 's pet dinosaur Dino , with its chintzy eyes a nd unconvincing animatronic gyrations , looks like a low-budget Muppet . And eve n Elizabeth Taylor , trundled out to play Fred 's insulting mother-in-law , fall s disappointingly short of imperious . She isn't exactly helped by the mediocre bones the screenplay tosses her way . While the movie officially scripted by Ste ven E. de Souza , Tom Parker and Jim Jennewein labors through its primeval ooze , it churns out incessant , dull visual gags , including a Stonehenge-meets-'50s -America and the `` pigasaurus '' creature under the sink that serves as a garba ge disposal . It also heaves out unfunny Hollywood `` inside '' jokes : The movi e opens with a `` Steven Spielrock Presents '' credit ; Halle Berry 's character is named Sharon Stone ; George Lucas 's `` Tar Wars '' is playing at the local theater . When , inevitably , Fred locked out of the house by his pet saber-toot hed tiger thumps the door and yells `` Wilma ! '' , it doesn't bring `` The Flin tstones '' to a triumphant close . It just sets the audience free . `` The Flint stones '' is rated PG . TOKYO Hushed and respectful , wearing our best suits , nervously reviewing our lessons on imperial etiquette , we stood stiffly at our assigned spots on the th ick green carpet of the elegant reception chamber . Suddenly , the rice-paper do ors slid open , and muffled steps could be heard coming down the long palace cor ridor . `` Remember , '' an earnest gentleman from the Imperial Household Agency hissed , `` this is a social occasion . '' Well , sort of . With final preparat ions underway for their 16-day royal visit to the United States next month , Jap an 's soft-spoken Emperor Akihito and his wife , the even softer-spoken Empress Michiko , invited a group of American journalists beneath the graceful fluted ro ofs of the Imperial Palace Friday to share a few sips of royal tea and a few wor ds with royalty . Before the tea party , the reporters were required to attend a one-hour lecture on court history and protocol by the vice grand master of cere mony , who sternly adjured us not to carry cameras , recorders or even notebooks into the royal presence . Throughout the 40-minute session with the emperor and empress , an extremely uptight corps of courtiers and palace bureaucrats kept p rodding and poking at us to make sure we stood only in the right places and spok e only at the right times . And yet the handsome , stylish imperial couple radia ted such regal charm and aplomb that they managed to give the imperial tea the f eeling of a `` social occasion '' after all . Relaxed and natty in his trademark double-breasted suit , with a pure white handkerchief folded into three perfect peaks in his breast pocket , the gray-haired Akihito now in his sixth year on t he Chrysanthemum Throne , embodying the world 's oldest ancestral monarchy seeme d considerably more at ease than he had at a similar occasion four years ago . E ven when the conversation turned to delicate political matters , the 60-year-old emperor was unfazed . He spoke an ordinary , easy-to-understand Japanese sharpl y different from the arcane court language employed by his royal ancestors . Aki hito was asked , of course , about the decision by Japan 's political leadership to cancel a scheduled imperial visit to Pearl Harbor . That stop was removed fr om the royal schedule for fear of a political backlash from right-wing elements here , who insist Japan owes no apology to the United States for World War II . In reply , Akihito noted calmly that he is a strictly symbolic monarch under Jap an 's postwar constitution . The elected government decides his travel schedule , he added , and he of course will do what the government tells him . The empres s , meanwhile standing across the room in a pale green kimono with wispy orange and white wildflowers painted along the lavish obi , or belt put on an even more impressive performance . The past year or so has been one of the most trying fo r Michiko , 59 , since her marriage 36 years ago . In an unprecedented display o f public `` disrespect , '' the empress was criticized in several national magaz ines . The complaints were minor , even trivial but they were considered shockin g in a nation that reveres its royalty . The empress collapsed last fall and los t the ability to speak . Court officials blamed this mysterious malady on `` dee p sadness '' because of the bad press . It has been only a matter of weeks since Michiko fully regained her speech . But she did just fine Friday , chatting eas ily , if softly , in clear English with just a few worried glances over her shou lder at the official interpreter . It would be bad form not to mention a violati on of the ground rules to quote what their majesties had to say . Let it suffice that they are aware of current economic friction between the world 's two riche st nations and hope their trip in June will help ease tension in the U.S.-Japan relationship . Both emperor and empress spoke fondly of previous trips to the Un ited States . Akihito said he still has vivid memories of a visit to Washington decades ago , when he first saw the beautiful array of national monuments lined up along the Mall . He also recalls an auto trip through the vastness of norther n Wyoming , when the royal motorcade passed only two other cars in the course of a four-hour drive . In the entire Japanese archipelago , there is nothing appro aching such wide open spaces . But if the royal couple handled this social occas ion with grace , the phalanx of ladies-in-waiting , stewards , palace bureaucrat s , maids and butlers spent the afternoon in a twitter making sure every detail of the tea party was exactly in place . Some 40 minutes before the session was t o begin , we were ushered into a large and tastefully opulent room where the gre en carpet was offset by a high ceiling of polished blond cedar and walls made of rice-paper shoji screens that muted the sunlight outside to the soft glow chara cteristic of older Japanese homes . We were told precisely where to stand , prec isely where to clip on our name tags and precisely how to greet the royal couple ( with Western-style handshakes rather than Japanese-style bows ) . As the empe ror and empress approached each of us , a courtier with a booming voice called o ut an identification . This introduction focused on the things that matter in Ja pan , group affiliation and title , with the individual 's name thrown in as an afterthought : `` The Washington Post newspaper , bureau chief , Reid-san . '' B ut as we sipped our tea from delicate china cups , stirring the liquid with ster ling spoons bearing the 16-petal chrysanthemum crest that only the imperial fami ly can use , the royal couple seemed to make everything copacetic . `` I wish we could get together more often , '' the empress said and sounded like she really meant it . TOKYO Japan 's Cabinet Friday approved the schedule for Emperor Akihito 's stat e visit to the United States next month , but canceled , as expected , a planned visit to the Pearl Harbor memorial in Honolulu . The Pearl Harbor stop sparked political controversy here because some right-wing nationalists fear an imperial visit would be construed as an apology for the sneak attack on Dec. 7 , 1941 , that pulled the United States into World War II . As a compromise , the Cabinet decided Akihito will stop at the Punch Bowl military cemetery in Honolulu , wher e he will lay a wreath in honor of American war dead . Akihito and Empress Michi ko will spend four nights in Washington during the 16-day trip , from June 11-15 . They will be the guests of honor at President Clinton 's first state dinner o n June 13 . The royal couple will also visit Atlanta ; Charleston , S.C. ; Charl ottesville , Va. ; New York ; St. Louis ; Denver ; Los Angeles ; and San Francis co .
TRAVNIK , Bosnia-Herzegovina Lt. Gen. Michael Rose , the commander of U.N. troo ps in Bosnia , took a delegation of NATO officers to meet Gen. Mehmed Aligic ear lier this week . At the appointed time , the Bosnian Muslim general burst into t he room , sucked in his formidable gut and jerked his right hand into a snappy s alute . Nonplussed , Rose extended his arm to shake Aligic 's hand . The U.N. co mmander , a by-the-books British officer , does not salute a man with no hat . B ut Aligic Bosnian rascal , lover of women and drink , gloriously incorrect and o ne of the most successful military leaders of the mostly Muslim Bosnian army ref used to shake . The NATO commander for southern Europe , U.S. Navy Adm. Leighton Smith , stepped in and saved everyone a bit of face , participants in the meeti ng recalled . Looser American rules allow hatless salutes . Aligic , his salute returned and his pride intact , settled into his seat and the meeting began . Th e fleeting standoff in this beautiful Bosnian town , which reclines along the La vsa River valley like , Nobel Prize-winning novelist Ivo Andric once wrote , `` the pages of a half-opened book , '' dramatized a yawning gap in understanding b etween officers of the U.N. operation here and the military men of the warring B osnian factions that have brought Europe its bloodiest conflict since World War II . Denizens of different cultures and different worlds , using different maps to fight different wars according to different rules , they can neither shake ha nds nor salute when they meet . The ramifications of this gap in perception are significant , affecting everything in Bosnia from the peace process in Geneva to cease-fire agreements on the ground . It is one of the reasons why what seems t o be a step toward peace in the United Nations ' eyes can , in other eyes , turn out to be a stumble toward more war . Rose , born 53 years ago in Quetta , then a British colonial garrison town in what is now Pakistan , cites the Prussian m ilitary thinker Karl von Clausewitz to sum up his evaluation of this conflict . `` The war , '' he said with the firm belief of a former war college commandant schooled in the unassailable logic of NATO strategy , `` has long ago reached it s limit of exploitation . '' Aligic , 47 , part Turkish vizier , part Communist commissar , trained in the arts of protracted struggle in a culture where Occide nt and Orient collide , where black marketeering verges on virtue and tending th e graves of ancestors constitutes a duty , begs to disagree . `` We don't make w ar here on the basis of West Point , '' he said . Rose predicted , for example , that his masterpiece , a successful cease-fire around Sarajevo that rode on the back of a NATO ultimatum last February , would spread rapidly across Bosnia . I nstead , it was followed by a decision by Bosnian Serb military leader Ratko Mla Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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