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s promise to put economics at the center of American foreign policy , Clinton ch ose economics . It is not an irrational choice . But its implications will not b e lost on China 's dictators , or on dictators anywhere else . What 's most trou bling is not Clinton 's flip-flop but the fact that it appeared so inevitable . Human rights served America 's interests in the Cold War as a rallying cry again st Soviet power . But now that the Cold War is over , a lot of policy makers are starting to see concerns over human rights as a barrier to a rational , self-in terested American foreign policy . In the case of China , after all , there were not only concerns over trade but also over cooperation against North Korea . If human rights are destined to give way to cold-eyed realism whenever the going g ets even remotely tough , then let 's be honest about it . Let 's stop rationali zing by pretending that what we really cared about in this MFN business was `` o pening up '' China to democracy . If we 're unprepared to come to the defense of the lives and liberties of others when doing so might inconvenience our own pur suit of happiness , we should at least admit it to ourselves . It ranks up there with the world 's other great unanswerable questions : Will M adonna 's career ever get back on track ? Are Roseanne and Tom going to reunite ? When will Susan Lucci ever get her Emmy ? And now we have : `` Why bother with sex ? '' OK , we guys know why . But Rosemary Redfield , a Canadian evolutionar y biologist , wants the female of the species to know that when their hormones a re in hysterics , when their libido is wired , when they 've got `` making whoop ee '' on their brain cells , they should think twice about having sex . Redfield , a researcher in the Department of Zoology at the University of British Columb ia in Vancouver , wrote in the journal Nature that a female would be more likely to have genetically healthier offspring by not mixing her genes with those of a male , whose sperm is more likely to carry mutations than are her eggs . She wa s talking about hypothetical , computer-modeled species lonely , dateless amoeba , to you and me . But because there were no single-cell spokes-creatures availa ble to comment , we had to interview humans . `` This is male-bashing at the mol ecular and biological level , '' Dennis Palumbo , a psychotherapist in private p ractice in Los Angeles , said of Redfield 's findings . Redfield , who was unava ilable for comment , told the Washington Post that her ideas on sexual reproduct ion `` do not apply to the vast majority of human males , who make many very imp ortant non-genetic contributions to their offspring . '' Still , Palumbo asked : `` Are we , as men , basically on the way out ? It sounds like that . `` But on the other hand , male scientists have sort of been the voices of record for so many years that some part of me now thinks that this is an attempt by female res earchers to balance the voices out there . '' Helen E. Fisher , research associa te in the department of anthropology at the American Museum of Natural History i n New York and the author of `` Anatomy of Love '' ( Ballantine , 1992 ) , said the study by Redfield `` is providing balance to the subject and pointing out th at there are some maladaptive consequences to sex as well . '' `` It 's more ada ptive to clone yourself than it is to reproduce with a male partner who may intr oduce mutations and produce a more shoddy offspring , '' she added . Too bad peo ple can't be more like strawberries , Fisher said . `` Strawberries clone themse lves when they are in the middle of a nice good patch . But when they get to the edge of the patch and they have to branch out into dangerous frontier , they re produce sexually instead . `` And that is useful to them because they 've got mu tant and new kinds of strawberries that may survive in very unpredictable circum stances , '' she said . `` The same could be said of human beings . It has long been said that there is variety in offspring . '' As far back as Darwin , scient ists have argued that reproduction is possible through parthenogenesis , or virg in birth . Ellen Kriedman says Darwin be damned . The author of `` How Can We Li ght a Fire When the Kids Are Driving Us Crazy : A Guide for Parents to Be Lovers '' ( Villard , 1994 ) said any woman who has ever had an orgasm wouldn't want t o put the kibosh on sex . `` There 's nothing like it . It 's the closet act you can engage in . It 's intimacy . It 's loving . It fulfills your need to be hel d and to be touched and to be connected with another human being , '' she said . `` Aside from the biological , it is psychologically and emotionally satisfying to be engaged in the sexual act . '' ( Optional Add End ) Palumbo said he doesn 't like the notion of eliminating the `` middleman '' or the sexual act from pro creation . `` There 's already a growing body of literature delegitimizing the n eed for males . Our culture already suffers from the lack of fathers , a crucial aspect of the dysfunction in families . I know if I were a woman , I would be f rustrated by how many men abrogate their responsibility as fathers . '' Maybe , Palumbo said , Redfield 's work `` will be a clarion call for men to hang around , '' even though the biologist `` was studying amoeba who missed out on intimat e dinner dates , going to the movies and holding hands . '' Christine Martin , a former erotic film actress and exotic dancer , said Redfield 's sexual reproduc tion theory reeks of `` female supremacy . '' Martin , who resides in New York , teaches a class in `` How to Drive Your Woman Wild in Bed '' at the Learning An nex in Los Angeles . `` Men have been battered by feminists and are confused by courtship and how to please women , '' she said , adding that Redfield 's conclu sions `` are anti-male to me . And the fact that it is anti-sex is pretty anti-h uman because sex is not only for reproduction , it is for pleasure , relaxation and intimacy . '' Madge Sinclair was `` flattered '' to be asked to be involved . Talia Shire tol d her husband she was really lucky in life : `` I have had the chance to work wi th the very best and that 's a wonderful feeling . '' And Justine Bateman and Ja smine Guy found working on the fictional segments of TBS ' `` A Century of Women '' to be a great learning experience . Directed by Academy Award-winning Barbar a Kopple , the fictional segments of the documentary follow the lives of four ge nerations of women in one family . Teresa Wright , Olympia Dukakis , Talia Shire , Justine Bateman and Brooke Smith play the women who gather to celebrate the b irth of Bateman 's daughter . Madge Sinclair and Jasmine Guy play mother and dau ghter African American friends who join in the celebration . Throughout the cour se of the gathering , they discuss the changes women have seen and fought for ov er the course of the century . `` To me it just showed that everything starts wi th the family , '' Sinclair says of the fictional scene . `` You can find every single instance of anything that happens in your life within the family . It onl y is multiplied to that many powers when it goes out in the community . Everythi ng that happens in the community happens to the family . '' Originally , Sinclai r worried that her and Guy 's characters were included to fill a quota . But the n she realized their inclusion made perfect sense . `` If we are talking about t he journey of women , this is about where we have arrived at from a place where black women and white women could barely talk to each other in public , except i f one was giving orders and the other was saying , ` Yes ma ' am . ' `` To have a family as closely knit as that one was to feel comfortable enough with these t wo women to invite them to a happening , I thought it was pretty nice and indica tive to where I think we have arrived , which is a happy place . '' The weeklong shoot brought all the actresses closer together . `` I came out with such enorm ous respect for all of those women , '' Shire says . `` It was hard to say goodb y . '' Guy recalls how much they talked about about their lives and careers when the cameras weren't rolling . `` For me , Justine and Brooke Smith , to get a p erspective from Olympia and Talia , I think , was really invaluable . At least w here I am , I 'm still trying to plot everything out and pursue specific goals . I think Olympia said to me one day , ` You can't plan this career . Your career just is . ' It was a relief to know that because you are kind of fighting a los ing battle thinking we are in control of this business . '' Bateman believes the documentary is important for women her age . `` I 'm 28 and I need to see this stuff , '' she says . `` I came into a world where I already had the vote . I al ready had equality the most equality we 've had . And to see that this was hard won , I can be really grateful for where I am now . '' Tina Hill is always asked the same question : Did she know she was making histo ry when she became a `` Rosie the Riveter '' during World War II ? Yes and no . `` I knew I was making history for myself , but I didn't know I was making histo ry for anyone else . Always as a little child , there were two or three things I always wanted in my house . I didn't want a leaky roof and I didn't want a lot of fussing and fighting . Up until now , I have had some leaks , but I 've had n o fighting ! '' Hill , now 76 and living in Los Angeles , is among the women pro filed on the first installment of TBS ' six-hour `` A Century of Women . '' The Texas native migrated to Los Angeles in 1940 to seek a better life . She found u nheard-of economic freedom for a black woman when she began working in one of th e many defense-industry facilities sprouting in Southern California during World War II . After the men returned from the war , she continued working at the pla nt , run by North American Aviation ( now known as Rockwell ) . She retired in 1 980 , after 37 years . `` They didn't have a lot of jobs for black people then , especially women , '' Hill says . `` Some of them had jobs working in the hotel s . They had a few black teachers . '' When Hill came to Los Angeles to stay wit h an aunt , all she could find was domestic work . Then came the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor . `` I went home and married my childhood sweetheart . He went into the service and I came back to Los Angeles again . They were hiring people , so I went to the plant and put in my application that day . She applied at Nor th American Aviation . `` They hired me and they sent me to a training school fo r six weeks . They paid you the same thing as if you were working regular . That old 40 cents an hour was a lot of money . I would bring home about $ 16 a week . '' As a domestic , she earned $ 40 a month . She was happy working at the plan t , she recalls , `` as long as I was making some money that was sufficient and I was able to spend it as I wanted to . I was home with my family when night cam e . That 's what I liked . '' World War II , she says , `` helped every woman wh o was breathing air because they learned to manage things and do things . We jus t learned a lot . We learned how to do things we thought we couldn't do . '' If there was racism at the plant , Hill says , `` you couldn't show it . Roosevelt was a good president and he opened up the doors and things for us to go in these different places to work . '' Whites , she says , `` didn't want us to get ahea d . They wanted us to stay back . Hitler got the black woman out of the white wo man 's kitchen . '' As spring turns to summer , more and more people are enjoying activities outdoo rs . The American Cancer Society estimates that between 700,000 and 1 million ca ses of skin cancer will be diagnosed this year . Although many forms of skin can cer are highly curable , it can be a fatal disease . To reduce the likelihood of developing skin cancer , wear clothing that the sun cannot penetrate and use a sunscreen with a sun protective factor ( SPF ) rating of 15 to 30 . REMEMBERING D-DAY : Sunday and Monday , news services will cover the major cere monies commemorating the D-Day invasion 50 years ago , including a parachute dro p . Some stations will offer documentaries and special programs . Other planned TV coverage : SUNDAY On ABC , Joan Lunden will report from St. . Mere Eglise , F rance , site of the parachute drop , for `` Good Morning America/Sunday . '' `` This Week With David Brinkley '' will originate from Chateau de Vierville . Brin kley , who covered the D-Day invasion , will be joined by Sam Donaldson , Cokie Roberts and George Will . For CBS , Charles Osgood will anchor `` CBS News Sunda y Morning . '' Segments will include a report by Tom Fenton and Andy Rooney 's v isit with D-Day veteran paratroopers en route to France aboard the Queen Elizabe th II . For NBC , Bryant Gumbel and Katie Couric , Tom Brokaw and Brian Williams will anchor at Normandy . On cable , CNN reports are anchored by Frank Sesno in Normandy with reporters Bruce Morton and Richard Blystone and two analysts , Br itish historian Paul Beaver and French historian Francois Bedarida . CNN airs th e Drumhead Service from Portsmouth , England , with remarks by the Archbishop of Canterbury in the morning . Arts & Entertainment runs several movies and docume ntaries including the series `` D-Day . '' Later A&E also offers `` Eye on Histo ry : D-Day '' featuring first-person stories from retired Vice Adm. John D. Bulk eley , historian Stephen E. Ambrose and Paul Stillwell , author of `` Assault on Normandy , '' among others . On Sunday night Discovery Channel repeats `` Norma ndy : The Great Crusade '' ; `` CNN Presents ... '' offers `` D-Day : The Great Crusade '' ( Lou Waters and Judy Woodruff host ) ; The Disney Channel carriess ` ` World War II : A Personal Journey '' ; and The Learning Channel offers `` This Century : War . '' MONDAY NBC , ABC and CBS will cover the 50th anniversary eve nts beginning at 7 a.m. EDT . For ABC , Peter Jennings reports from the American Cemetery at Colleville , overlooking Omaha Beach , where troops from the United States Army 's 1st Infantry Division and 29th Division landed . ABC 's `` World News Tonight '' will air from Normandy , followed by `` Day One . '' Sheila Mac Vicar reports on the search for a former Nazi general who is still wanted by the United States , Britain and Canada for the alleged murder of unarmed prisoners of war . For CBS , Harry Smith will co-anchor from the American Cemetery with re ports from Fenton and Bill Plante ; Rooney , who was a soldier in the D-Day inva sion ; former CBS News anchor and correspondent Walter Cronkite , who covered th e invasion of France in 1944 for United Press ; and David Eisenhower , grandson of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower , Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces . `` CBS E vening News '' includes coverage from Rita Braver and Mike Phillips , among othe rs , in Normandy . For NBC , the anchors are Brokaw , Gumbel and Couric . Willia ms also anchors coverage live for NBC News ' `` Nightside , '' as well as the jo int French-United States ceremony at Utah Beach at 4:30 a.m. EDT . PBS carries ` ` D-Day Remembered : A Musical Tribute from the QE2 '' from Cherbourg Harbor , w ith Walter Cronkite , Bob Hope , Tommy Tune , Vera Lynn , Helen Mirren and other s ; and then Bill Moyers 's `` From D-Day to the Rhine , '' follows World War II veterans as they returned to the battlefields . This 1990 documentary includes new interviews . On CNN , Sesno continues to anchor with Blystone and Morton . L ive coverage includes a memorial service aboard the USS George Washington , the Ranger Assault Ceremony from Pointe du Hoc and the U.S.-French Ceremony at Utah Beach with President Clinton and French President Francois Mitterrand . `` Larry King Live '' originates from Normandy ( repeating that night ) . Later. Lou Wat ers anchors `` D-Day Remembrances . '' LOVE ON THE RUN : Sunday night on NBC . T his action-adventure follows the exploits of a business entrepreneur ( Anthony A ddabbo ) and a Canadian heiress ( Noelle Beck ) . After exchanging intoxicated m arriage vows on a whim in Greece , the newlyweds realize they don't get along an d decide to divorce . But her father ( Len Cariou ) orchestrates a clever financ ial scheme to ensure that the two remain partners both in marriage and in the co mpany , Adventure Inc. , an operation that allows clients to go anywhere and do anything for a price . THE ESSENCE AWARDS : Monday night on Fox . Sinbad and Van essa Williams host this entertainment special celebrating achievements of eight African-American men . The awards were taped April 22 . Honorees are Eddie Murph y and Denzel Washington and film-maker Spike Lee ; Benjamin Carson , director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Medical Institute ; civil-rights activi st Robert P. Moses , director of the Algebra Project for mathematics education ; musician/composer Quincy Jones ; Joseph E. Marshall Jr. , director and co-found er of Omega Boys Club , which promotes academic achievement ; and the Rev. Jesse Jackson , president of the National Rainbow Coalition . WASHINGTON It is one of those rare spring days when Washington city is at its m ost beautiful , and Vermont filmmaker Jay Craven is nostalgic . `` I used to liv e here , '' he says , taking in the sights of Georgetown as he ambles toward the Potomac River `` 1970 to '71 . '' College ? you wonder . Government family ? Mi litary brat ? Nope . `` I was a full-time anti-war activist , '' says Craven . I t was no small time in his life and not only for the obvious reasons . Raised by his grandparents , Craven grew up more or less alone and had always longed for a place where he felt at home , a community . He discovered both in the anti-Vie tnam War movement , as well as something equally valuable : his ability to organ ize and make things happen . These days he is still leading a charge and still e xtolling the virtues of community . But now his venue is a feature film , `` Whe re the Rivers Flow North , '' a made-in-Vermont opus funded mostly by Vermonters , set against a singular time and place in the state 's history . Craven , 42 , and his co-producers are distributing the movie too . Encouraged by the buzz at the recent Sundance Film Festival , which gave it two extra screenings , the te am turned down eight distribution offers that seemed too limited . `` We want to see it play across the country , '' Craven says , `` at least in every town in New England and New York with a movie theater . '' The film has opened cautiousl y to appreciative reviews , first in Vermont , New Hampshire and Upstate New Yor k , then two art houses in Boston . Since then it 's been getting released gradu ally elsewhere . Taken from a novella by Vermonter Howard Frank Mosher , and a s creenplay by Craven and Don Bredes , the movie tells the story of an old Vermont logger and his Native American housekeeper-companion and their battle in 1927 t o survive the construction of a big hydro-electric dam that threatens to flood t heir land . The logger , Noel Lord ( Rip Torn ) , is defiant no amount of money will buy his lifetime lease and livelihood . His companion , Bangor ( Native Ame rican actress Tantoo Cardinal ) , is more pragmatic . Craven , who also directed , has lived almost 20 years in the poor , rural country where much of `` Rivers '' was filmed . He moved there after his Washington sojourn and a couple of yea rs in New York . `` I wanted to be in a place where there was a stronger sense o f community , '' he says of his decision to leave New York . `` And I was intere sted in the challenge of mingling with people unlike myself . '' So just around the time of the Saturday Night Massacre ( Craven still chronicles that period in political terms ) , he set out with a girlfriend to visit a poet friend in Verm ont and stayed . After a lonely first year spent researching Vermont history and nursing an arm he 'd broken carrying wood , Craven , an activist by nature , st arted the Catamount Arts Center . Using it as a base , he put together a 16mm se ries of American and European film classics , which he showed in church basement s and town halls around the state . He also taught history , journalism and film -making at an alternative high school and fathered a son . By the time he set ou t to make `` Rivers , '' he had more than a decade of community activity and per sonal contacts behind him . He also had a couple of documentaries and a 30-minut e fiction film to his credit ; both were helpful when he reached out for funding to his friends and neighbors , some of them conservative Yankee Republicans he never dreamed he 'd be buddies with in his anti-war days . Craven , his producer and wife Bess O' Brien and associate producer Lauren Moye ( both of whom were p regnant ) systematically worked the state . They brought cocktails and homemade hors d' oeuvres , a chance to be part of a major motion picture and a fund-raisi ng style borrowed from charitable giving . Individuals and businesses from all o ver the state , and some from neighboring New Hampshire , participated . Even th e ads that paid for the publicity brochure were local : Bailey 's Country Store , the Rotary Club of St. Johnsbury , the National Life of Vermont insurance comp any . Grants from 11 foundations ( including the National Endowment for the Arts ) , $ 475,000 in business loans and a $ 500,000 foreign-sales advance completed the almost $ 2 million budget . Finally , during the cold , wind-swept fall of 1992 , the movie was shot . Nearly half the cast and crew are or have been resid ents of Vermont ( or New Hampshire ) including Michael J. Fox and Treat Williams , who have small character roles in the film . More than 100 local extras , inc Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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