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e to Nation of Islam head Louis Farrakhan . Muhammad said that Jews and Arabs we re `` the bloodsuckers of the black nation and the black community , '' and sugg ested that Jews brought the Holocaust upon themselves . After his speech was den ounced by the Rev. Jesse Jackson , the Congressional black caucus and President Clinton , Farrakhan was forced to reprimand Muhammad and suspend him from his ro le as top aide and spokesman . Although Farrakhan said he agreed with Muhammad ' s remarks , he disagreed with how he said them . Muhammad , however , said he wa s told his speech was `` repugnant , malicious , mean-spirited ... . I feel very hurt over those words , to be honest . '' He acknowledges the raw nerves his sp eeches touch , saying again and again , `` I 'm a truth terrorist , I 'm a knowl edge gangster . '' The following editorial appeared in Monday 's Washington Post : The United Stat es didn't create the Macedonia problem but by its sluggish diplomacy lets a fire spread that could yet ignite a second set of Yugoslav wars , rather than contri buting to closing down the ongoing first set . Washington does this mischief by bending excessively to an assertive Greek lobby , thereby stiffening Athens in i ts dispute with the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia , which is now a decla red state . A more independent policy would let Washington help move both sides toward necessary compromise . The dispute between Athens and what it calls , by the capital 's name , `` Skopje '' arises from Macedonia 's grip on a name , fla g and constitution that Greece claims are irredentist . Small and weak Macedonia badly overreached in its choice of nationalist symbols and rhetoric . Greece is supposedly a mature country , able to distinguish a short-term political victor y from a long-term strategic debacle . But in response it went off the deep end , imposing a crushing economic embargo and opening an effective campaign of poli tical isolation . Throw in multiethnic Macedonia 's sharpening internal tensions , and you have a recipe for pitching the so-far spared southern Balkans into th e northern Balkans ' fire . Washington 's role is curious . It has put nearly 60 0 peace-eepers on Macedonia 's northern border as a caution to Serbia . This rep resents a policy of stabilizing Macedonia . At the same time , though it recogni zes the `` Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia , '' it does not send an ambass ador . This conspicuous default has the effect of destabilizing Macedonia . How is this awkward contradiction to be explained ? The result corresponds to the ap peals of Greece and its friends . A look at Macedonia on a map tells the real st ory . The country abuts Serbia , including the inflamed Serb province of Kosovo , on the north and Albania , Greece and Bulgaria on its other borders . It could be the fuse that , once lit by , say , an explosion in tightly wound , majority -Albanian Kosovo , could touch off further explosions through the region . Unlit , however , Macedonia also could be the stopper . This is the double potential that American diplomacy has yet to grasp . Greece seems unfamiliar with the requ irement to think in a regional context . The United States is in a position to r ender Greece a true friend 's service to help it to rise above parochial politic al concerns and face the urgent requirement for a responsible regional policy . In Beijing in 1989 , one of the larger student-democracy movements in a century emerged . More than 3,000 young students gathered in Tiananmen Square , gaining the support and concern of people in China and around the world . Now , almost exactly five years have passed , and during these years , the world has changed tremendously . The communist `` camp '' has fallen apart . A new world structure has appeared . If we want to understand why there has been such a huge change i n so brief a time , we should not neglect the China democracy movement of 1989 a nd the response of the Chinese regime . That regime had reacted wrongheadedly ma ny times in countering the student movement . But never was the government more wrong than on that June night , when it used bullets and tanks to suppress the s tudents . Such brutal behavior astonished the world , and I cannot overstate my condemnation of it . But as a member of the leadership of the movement , I don't want to use more ink to express my anger . Rather , I want to look back at the main reasons for the failure of the democratic movement . In June 1989 , when st udents went to the streets , the only motive they had was to push the process of political reform through orderly , radical political expression . Their aim was to compel China to become a democratic , modern society more quickly . This pur e motive gained popular support ; it was also the fundamental reason students lo st their lives . As students , we never realized we were engaged in a political movement . Our goal was just to express our opinions , to try to represent the p eople 's voice . We wanted the government to answer questions and come up with s ome solutions to the country 's problems . Even the most radical students never thought of adopting the tactics of a general political struggle , such as having contact with the ruling class , learning about power struggles within it , arou sing the masses or making alliances with other political powers . We thought of ourselves as simply a student movement . This , I think , was why we had no effe ctive political means to resist government suppression . Furthermore , if we had treated our movement as a political movement , we would have accepted some sort of appropriate compromise . We should have known that political struggle is the art of compromise . But in reality , the students did not have any desire to pu rsue political interests . They merely wanted to express their political wishes . When the government labeled their action as `` anti-Communist Party , '' `` an ti-Socialist system '' or `` turmoil , '' the students reacted with strong resis tance . At that point , they did not want to compromise at all . That 's how the deadlock formed between the government and the students . Looking back from tod ay 's vantage point , we can see that if the students had withdrawn from Tiananm en Square of their own accord and adopted more meaningful measures of political struggle , they would not have had to pay such a price in lost lives . June 4 ha d an important impact on Chinese history even on world history . For China , the 1989 democracy movement was an important step on the road to modernization . Mo re than that , it served as a means to enlightenment . After several decades of political suppression , the value of democracy and freedom had little room in th e Chinese people 's heart . The 1989 movement opened that heart again . Its larg er meaning is beyond words . For a country to follow a democratic road , it must first meet a basic precondition : Its citizens must possess a strong desire for democracy and a civic consciousness . Not only intellectuals but influential wo rkers ' groups must show the social responsibility to help the larger society re ach this precondition . From this point of view , the June 4th movement helped t o build a strong foundation for realization of a politically democratic China . In the past five years , however , ordinary Chinese have generally distanced the mselves from politics . This detached attitude is the inevitable consequence of the bloody suppression of June 4 . Some hold the student movement responsible fo r this aftermath . They criticize the movement , saying it brought harmful effec ts to the process of China 's modernization . But these opinions are , in my vie w , very shallow . We must clear our eyes and see : The Chinese government is re sponsible for what happened . It 's normal for people to keep silent when they a re facing brute force . It is not politics but their own government that the Chi nese people have distanced themselves from . Nor would I say that people are det ached from politics so much as disappointed . Yet this situation will not last l ong , because the '89 movement has already planted the seeds of democracy . As s oon as the spring wind comes , the democracy flowers will bloom splendidly . Eve ryone who learns history knows that the more time that passes after an important historical event , the clearer what happened becomes . The same principle appli es to the '89 movement . The Chinese government totally denies the historical me aning of the '89 movement . This attitude has caused enormous dissatisfaction in side people 's hearts . If such dissatisfaction continues , China 's political d evelopment will not follow the right track . If we do not have political reform , there will be no big breakthrough in economic reform . The majority of Chinese have decided that only by following the road of reform can China reach wealth a nd power . I firmly believe that unless the '89 movement is rehabilitated , it w ill be impossible for China to transform itself peacefully into a modern society . Several thousand years of history have told us something : When you forget ol d suffering , it revisits you . Wang Dan , a dissident leader in China now worki ng as a freelance writer , was recently detained and released in Beijing . This article was translated from Mandarin by Kun Cody . LOS ANGELES The transformation was completed on a recent Saturday afternoon whe n I found myself standing on the lawn with a cordless phone in one hand and a Fr isbee in the other . I was talking with my wife about plans for dinner at a rest aurant on Melrose Avenue , and I was flinging the flying disk for our dog . And the thought occurred to me that I had become California Person . In the six year s since we moved to the land of low-fat milk and organic honey , I have survived drought , water rationing , drip irrigation , several earthquakes , a riot , ra in so heavy houses slid down hillsides , and trips to Cedars-Sinai Medical Cente r , where the stars go to die . I have stood at the top of Mount Hollywood with a bottle of Evian water in my fanny pack . My grocery store is at Melrose and Vi ne . My dog 's vet has valet parking . I know that morning clouds almost never m ean rain . I know all the words to `` I Love L.A. '' I no longer turn and stare when a '56 Thunderbird or a '57 Chevy rolls by . I am used to seeing and politel y ignoring famous actors when I go shopping . A movie location shoot is just the cause of a detour , not curiosity . I am used to seeing major sporting events o n TV at breakfast time . I pay 29 cents for a huge sack of crispy fresh cilantro instead of $ 2.45 for tiny brown bits in a shrink-wrapped package . I know how to spell `` Chardonnay , '' and I know not to serve it ice cold . I know that a tostada is not made by Dodge . I can figure out what time it is in Tokyo . I thi nk all those people in Washington , D.C. , my former home , are self-centered , pompous idiots who ought to get real jobs . I don't smoke anymore. I go to parti es here where nobody smokes , even outside . I expect flowers to bloom in my gar den on Christmas Day . I have swatted flies in January . I have seen the thermom eter top 100 in January . I love to chuckle over blizzard reports from cities wh ere I used to live . I no longer own a parka , and I can find only one of my glo ves . Umbrella ? It 's around here somewhere . I know the difference between a g ardener and a lawn guy . I know nobody has ever rolled a 300 game at the Hollywo od Bowl . I view 15 mph on the freeway as steady progress . I am used to waiting 20 minutes instead of five for a bus during rush hour . I know City Hall is the building Superman used to jump over on TV . I have hiked in the state park wher e helicopters used to land on `` MASH . '' I have been in the Griffith Park cave from which the Batmobile used to come roaring . I know how to get discount tick ets to Disneyland . My home improvement center is on Sunset Boulevard . I have f lown the redeye . I have seen my wife walk up to the mondoplex refreshment stand and order banana chips and herb tea . I know the best time of the year to visit Yosemite . I have seen buffalo roaming free on Catalina Island . I know that Ca talina is part of L.A. County. I know the location of the unmarked road to the b est beach at Big Sur . I know the difference between Cinco de Mayo and Mexican I ndependence Day . I know the best parking lot to use for a speedy exit from Dodg er Stadium . I can count on my fingers the number of times I have eaten red meat this year . I have seen the seismo-cam too many times , thank you . Now I certa inly have my doubts that any of this has made me a better person . But it does m ean I have adapted enough to this unique environment that I have a slightly bett er chance of surviving here than I did six years ago . For better or for worse , I am California Person . Hear me Roar . I am Strong . I am Invincible . NEW YORK When fX , the new cable network from Fox , begins programming Wednesda y , it will be available in 18 million U.S. households , said to be the largest launch of a cable channel in history . But fX 's gain will be C-SPAN 's loss . ` ` Some 1.1 million cable subscribers will lose C-SPAN entirely or see us part ti me due to cable systems picking up fX , '' said Brian Lamb , chairman of C-SPAN , the 15-year-old cable channel that televises congressional proceedings and oth er public-affairs events . Lamb blames provisions in the 1992 Cable TV Act for t his development , which he says gave Fox and the other broadcast networks an unf air advantage in rolling out new cable channels . `` This is government meddling in communications of the highest order , '' Lamb said angrily . `` I have nothi ng against fX , but the government has given the broadcast networks a powerful j ump-start with their new cable networks , an advantage that no one else has . '' What 's more , Lamb complained , the same law earlier led to another 2.5 millio n subscribers losing all or part of their access to C-SPAN programming . The Cab le TV Act prohibited cable companies from carrying a broadcast signal without th e consent of the station . If a station wanted to provide the signal for free , cable operators in the immediate area were obligated to carry it , even if they hadn't done so in the past the so-called `` must-carry '' rule that meant droppi ng or cutting back on existing channels . If a station didn't want to give away its signal , it could negotiate for `` retransmission consent . '' This is the r oute the networks took with the stations they own , but most cable operators bal ked at paying cash to the broadcasters , so many of them struck deals instead th at guaranteed space for network-owned cable channels in exchange for the right t o continue carrying their over-the-air programming . ABC quickly brought forth E SPN-2 , now available in 14 million homes ; Fox developed fX and NBC will launch America 's Talking , an all-talk channel , on July 4 , with an initial reach of more than 10 million homes . ( CBS chose not to go forward with a cable enterpr ise . ) fX 's weekday lineup will mix reruns of `` Dynasty , '' `` Hart to Hart , '' `` Fantasy Island , '' `` Wonder Woman , '' `` In Living Color , '' `` Batm an '' and `` Greatest American Hero '' with seven hours a day of original progra mming , ranging from an information show along the lines of `` Good Morning Amer ica , '' to a pet show , an issue-of-the-day show hosted by Jane Wallace a music video program and a viewer call-in show . Meanwhile , dozens of other new cable channels are struggling to find an outlet in the crowded cable universe . Most cable systems simply don't have the channel capacity to handle anywhere near the volume of programming that is being offered . If they decide to take something new , it often means dropping something else or forcing two services to share ti me on one channel . `` It 's the ` law of unintended consequences ' run amok , ' ' said Lawrence Grossman , president of Horizons Network , a proposed cable chan nel that would be a `` cultural C-SPAN , '' offering lectures , readings and oth er symposiums featuring authors , scientists and artists . `` The government has given the broadcast networks a preferred seat on the bus for their new cable ch annels , while all the new independent services have been pushed to the back of the bus . '' And with cable companies chafing under new rate cuts ordered by the Federal Communications Commission , new channels such as Grossman 's may not ge t a better seat anytime soon . The cable operators say that the government has s everely restricted their ability to generate the revenue needed to upgrade and e xpand . `` The FCC clearly intended to create incentives for new networks , but the most recent rules have had the opposite effect , '' Grossman said . `` They 've helped to create a situation that discourages new and innovative program ser vices . '' ( Optional add end ) Horizons Network and Ovation Network , a propose d fine-arts network whose executives include former National Gallery of Art cura tor Carter Brown , recently asked the FCC to look at the impact of its regulatio ns on smaller networks . Kathleen Waldman , deputy chief of the FCC 's cable ser vices bureau , said that the agency may do so . `` We are open to hearing argume nts about whether we 've provided adequate incentives to add new programming and maintain investment in public-interest programming like C-SPAN , '' Waldman sai d . `` We obviously didn't intend for the rules to discourage diversity in progr amming . '' The cable industry also has challenged the constitutionality of the `` must-carry '' rule , arguing that , under the First Amendment , the governmen t may not dictate the programming that cable operators offer . A decision by the U.S. Supreme Court is expected soon . If it votes to overturn the law , C-SPAN could win back some of the channel space it has lost . Some C-SPAN fans aren't w aiting for the government to act , however . They 've mounted local campaigns to protest the replacement of C-SPAN with fX . `` People are outraged that we are going to go off and they are going to get reruns of ` Dynasty ' instead , '' Lam b said . In McAllen , Texas , the announcement that TCI Cablevision planned to d rop C-SPAN in favor of fX prompted citizens to demand a meeting with the mayor . `` I 'm getting beat up by my customers , but I don't have a lot of options , ' ' said TCI General Manager Neil Hamen . `` We have contract obligations to take fX , we have to take broadcast signals , we 're channel-locked the people in Was hington who passed the regulations are reaping what they 've sown . '' AROUND THE HOUSE When finished painting , wipe off excess paint from can and li d and apply vegetable shortening around rims . This provides an airtight seal bu t allows easy opening next time . Welcome summer . Fill an empty fireplace with houseplants or a bouquet of baby 's breath . A flexible , cloth measuring tape w ill easily measure irregularly shaped objects for workshop projects . Seal small holes in window screens with clear cement glue . The repair will be almost invi sible . Store children 's outdoor toys in 30-gallon garbage containers . Label c ontents on top of each lid and keep container close to the play area in your yar d . Update your front door with a fresh coat of paint and new hardware ; the cha nge looks as good as a new door and is much less expensive . IN THE GARDEN Deter mine the pH level of your soil by purchasing a soil testing kit or calling your local extension agency . An abundance of mushrooms , moss or fungi in the lawn i s indicative of an imbalance and lime may need to be applied to the soil . HOLLYWOOD The competitive matchups disclosed by ABC , CBS , NBC and Fox in thei r recently announced fall schedules are more intriguing than usual , from the fr ontline battle of programs to the long-range ambitions mapped out in executive s uites . For viewers , who will see 30 freshman series in the new prime-time line ups 15 dramas , 13 comedies , one newsmagazine and `` The ABC Family Movie '' se veral matchups are sure to draw major attention : NBC is risking its top new ser ies of this season , `` Frasier , '' by pulling it from its cozy post- `` Seinfe ld '' slot on Thursdays and sending it into head-to-head competition with ABC 's `` Roseanne , '' one of the best and most-established comedies on TV . On Sunda ys , all eyes will be on Fox 's newly acquired National Football League games sw iped from CBS and how their lead-in will affect the tune-in for this highly watc hed night of TV , prized by advertisers and networks . With CBS reeling from a o ne-two punch by Fox , which also this week swiped eight of its key stations in a daring raid that brought it 12 new affiliates overall , the thing to watch is w hether and how the football games begin to have an impact on CBS ' audience domi nation on Sundays with `` 60 Minutes '' and `` Murder , She Wrote , '' both long -running CBS series that have benefited in the past from the football lead-in . Fox , now possessing the football games and commentators long associated with it , including John Madden , Pat Summerall and Terry Bradshaw will use the contest s to lead in to a new action drama , `` Fortune Hunter , '' and `` The Simpsons , '' which is returning to Sundays . These shows will be followed by Fox 's `` M arried .. . With Children '' and a new comedy , `` Wild Oats , '' about a group of 20-somethings . If football loosens CBS ' hold on Sundays , `` The Simpsons ' ' and two other returning , high-profile series that have registered only medioc re ratings ABC 's `` Lois & Clark : The New Adventures of Superman '' and NBC 's `` seaQuest DSV '' will be in place to make yet another assault at 8 p.m. on `` Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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