A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
Download 9.93 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
ge banks at the expense of smaller ones . It gives the regulators more independe nce . And it strictly enforces the $ 100,000-per-account insurance limit . Georg e Kaufman , professor of finance and economics at Loyola University in Chicago , would love to see that limit dropped to $ 40,000 ( I 'd like to see it cut to $ 10,000 per person the size of the average U.S. bank account ) , but he admits t hat politics precludes such a move . So far , he says of the new system , `` it 's worked quite well . '' Which is probably why we haven't heard much about it . Success , especially in the world of money politics , gets little attention the se days . But look at the numbers : Annual bank failures have declined from 168 in 1990 to 42 last year to four so far this year ( those four , in April and May , involved small institutions ) . S&L failures have dropped from 315 in 1990 to 27 last year to 14 so far in 1994 . It 's true that low interest rates have aid ed this amazing turnaround , but it 's also true that banks have a penchant for snatching defeat from the jaws of victory-by recycling their profits into dubiou s ventures such as Third World loans , junk bonds and slick land deals . Who kno ws ? A real test of how the new , improved system stands up under fire may be cl oser than you think . The rankings for hard-cover books sold in Southern California , as reported by selected book stores : FICTION 1 . THE CELESTINE PROPHESY , by James Redfield . 2 . THE CHAMBER , by John Grisham . 3 . INCA GOLD , by Clive Cussler . 4 . REMEM BER ME , by Mary Higgins Clark . 5 . THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY , by Robert J ames Waller . 6 . THE ALIENIST , by Caleb Carr . 7 . `` K '' IS FOR KILLER , by Sue Grafton . 8 . LIKE WATER FOR CHOCOLATE , by Laura Esquivel . 9 . FIST OF GOD , by Frederick Forsyth . 10 . THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW , by Allan Folsom . NONFIC TION : 1 . IN THE KITCHEN WITH ROSIE , by Rosie Daley . 2 . EMBRACED , BY THE LI GHT , by Betty J. Eadie . 3 . MEN ARE FROM MARS : Women Are From Venus , by John Gray , Ph.D. . 4 . STANDING FIRM , by Dan Quayle . 5 . MAGIC EYE II , by N.E. . Thing Enterprises . 6 . BEYOND PEACE , by Richard Nixon . 7 . MAGIC EYE I , by N.E. . Thing Enterprises . 8 . BOOK OF VIRTUES : A Treasury of the World 's Grea t Moral Stories , by William J. Bennett . 9 . THE HALDEMAN DIARIES : Inside the Nixon White House , by H.R. Haldeman . 10 . REBA : My Story , by Reba McEntire w ith Tom Carter . CyberSurfing : Potholes , perturbations and predicaments observed on the inform ation superhighway : Most visitors to Paris are satisfied with their little Eiff el Tower souvenirs , but that 's obviously not enough for Michael Hayward , who seems to be an unusually sentimental sort . `` I 'd like to locate a source for the benches which are found everywhere in Paris city parks , '' he wrote in a re cent posting on the Internet newsgroup soc.culture.french . `` The older design .. . ( is ) shaped like an elongated ` S ' with narrow ` slats ' ( roughly squar e in cross section ) running lengthwise . The supports ( legs/backs ) are a some what ornately designed cast iron . As I recall , these benches are ( always ? ) painted a distinctive shade of high gloss deep green. .. . Has anyone else got f ond memories of these benches ? Has anyone else made an attempt to track down a source ? '' From France Olivier Clary responded with the lyrics of a popular son g : Les amoureux qui s ' becotent sur les bancs publics/ bancs publics/ bancs pu blics/ en s ' foutant pas mal du r ' gard oblique/ des passants honteux . ( `` T he lovers kissing on the public benches/ the public benches/ the public benches/ don't give a damn about the nasty glances/ of the shameful passersby . '' ) Par isian Gregory Miezelis , however , actually had an answer : The first place to l ook , said Miezelis , is Les Domaines , a French government agency that auctions off surplus equipment . He also suggested checking the Paris flea market 's man y antique dealers . Selling price ? About 950 francs plus 10 percent tax , or ro ughly $ 200 , although cybernaut Miezelis said he saw one sold at auction for on ly 350 francs . Evan Roth evanr ( at ) aol.com GETTING THERE : Once you 've gain ed access to the Internet , go to Usenet or Newsgroups and type : soc.culture.fr ench . On America Online , for example , go to the Go To menu , click on Keyword and type in Newsgroups . At the Newsgroups menu , click on the Expert Add icon . Type in soc.culture.french in the blank space and click Add . When asked if yo u want to add the newsgroup , click Yes . When the menu returns , click on the M y Newsgroups icon , and you will see soc.culture.french added to the list . Doub le-click on it and you 're there . -0- They Want His mtv.com Adam Curry wants hi s mtv.com . Curry , a longtime video jock for MTV , set up a music-news bulletin board on the Internet a year ago , using his home computer and the address mtv. com . Now he 's being being sued by his ex-employer for copyright infringement . Curry uses mtv.com to dish industry gossip ( `` cybersleaze , '' he calls it ) , and offers concert schedules , band interviews and commentary . He estimates 3 5,000 log-ins daily . Many of those users are now following the saga of Curry vs . MTV-from Curry 's viewpoint only . The cable music network , which prides itse lf on up-to-the-minute hipness , isn't `` jacked into the net , '' as Curry put it in a recent missive to his supporters . The on-line faithful have been flamin g MTV as `` totally lame '' and `` a pitiful network of corporate pigs . '' Wrot e a user named Daredevil : `` DON ' T LET THE LAMERS GET YOU DOWN ! '' Curry cla ims mtv.com began with the `` blessing and support '' of MTV execs , but after h e resigned April 25 , `` things got ugly . '' ( It probably didn't help that Cur ry posted a resignation letter on the Internet accusing MTV of selling out the ` ` M '' in its name . ) In federal court in Manhattan in May , MTV 's lawyers arg ued for an injunction against Curry 's use of mtv.com . Further hearings are sch eduled . `` This has nothing to do with Adam 's departure , '' says an MTV spoke swoman . `` We 've tried unsuccessfully for a year to get Adam to stop using the MTV trademark to market his services . '' Said the defiant Curry in e-mail : `` mtv.com will always exist on the net . '' Richard Leiby leiby ( at ) aol.com GE TTING THERE : To follow the Curry case using America Online , select keyword Int ernet ; then select WAIS & Gopher databases ; then select category Music ; then select the MTV Gopher folder ; then brainwaves.txt . Thirty-Two Short Films About Glenn Gould : Original Motion Picture Soundtrack ( Sony SK 46686 ) . With one exception ( Toscanini conducting the prelude to `` T ristan und Isolde '' ) , this soundtrack focuses on Gould playing the piano or o rgan , and it profiles his musicianship and quirky personality with as much vari ety and fascination as does the film . Besides the expected Bach selections , th is album features interpretations of Richard Strauss , Sibelius , Hindemith , Pr okofiev and Schoenberg . Like the movie , this disc is an excellent promo for So ny 's massive `` Glenn Gould Edition '' series . Ned Rorem : Piano Concerto for Left Hand and Orchestra ; 11 Studies for 11 Players ( New World 80445 ) . Rorem is known almost entirely for his songs , which deserve the praise they have rece ived , but his instrumental works merit equal attention . These examples , compo sed in 1991 and 1993 respectively , reveal him to be a master of modern styles , with a penchant for impressionistic and late romantic flavors . These recording s were made in the Curtis Institute , Philadelphia , with a student orchestra wh ose professionalism matches that of piano soloist Gary Graffman and conductor An dre Previn . Mahler : Symphony No. 4 ( London 440 315 , with text and translatio n ) . This beguiling celebration of youthful innocence and joy is an ideal intro duction to Mahler 's symphonies ( even more so than the muscular struggles and s harp-edged ironies of his more-popular First Symphony ) . Ernst von Dohnanyi and the Cleveland Orchestra precisely capture the music 's Viennese lilt and the su btlest details of phrasing and dynamic accent . In the final movement , Dawn Ups haw 's is the angelic voice that quaintly proclaims the joys of heaven . Monteve rdi : Arie e Duetti ( Capriccio 10 470 , with texts and translations ) . Soprano Mieke van der Sluis and countertenor Axel Kohler give unusually well-styled per formances of music that demonstrates the range of the Renaissance master 's geni us : short sacred works with Latin texts , duet madrigals and dramatic monologue s , and the nurse 's aria and final duet from `` The Coronation of Poppaea . '' Four instrumental numbers are played by the German ensemble Lautten Compagney , which also plays accompaniments . Ravel : Gaspard de la Nuit , La Valse ; Liszt : Ballade No. 2 in B Minor ; Prokofiev : Sarcasms ( Connoisseur Society CD 4195 ) . Pianist Sergei Babayan has chosen a program bristling with technical challen ges , but he never indulges in technique for its own sake . He is a musician ded icated to small nuances and atmospheric subtleties which are also crucial elemen ts in these pieces and he has the skill to make the music 's difficulties seem n onexistent . CAMBRIDGE , Mass. . In a first floor office next to John & Nick 's gas station , Karen Fox is looking for a few good sperm . Harvard sperm . MIT sperm . Smart little swimmers from the Ivy League . `` If our customers wanted high school dro pouts that 's what we would get , '' said Ronda Wilkin , spokeswoman for the Cal ifornia Cryobank , which operates the sperm bank here that Fox manages . `` No o ne has proven that Harvard , MIT , Princeton or Yale sperm produces smarter chil dren , but people like the idea . '' Wilkin said single women or married couples searching for a sperm donor base their decisions on an anonymous resume and pro file , and some find assurance in men who have a college degree . At the Cryoban k , a vial of sperm costs $ 135 to $ 165 , and there 's `` no extra charge for t he Ivy League , '' she said . There are now more than 100 sperm banks in the cou ntry , most located near selective universities . The Cryobank , one of the nati on 's largest , has locations near the University of California at Los Angeles ( UCLA ) , Stanford and Harvard . Specialists in the reproductive fields say the number of single women who want babies and couples with infertility problems is growing , and more people are turning to sperm banks . As more men and women tal k openly about their fertility struggles , the mystery is fading from the banks that store vials of sperm in liquid nitrogen . Many of these people are deciding that the 1990s conception of choice is academically correct sperm . Sperm banks like the Cryobank say they are responding to the demand and aggressively recrui t on college campuses , where they rank among the largest advertisers at campus newspapers such as the Harvard Crimson . Nobody knows how many men have donated sperm ( each bank 's supply is kept secret ) or how many babies are born thanks to donor sperm . But about 65,000 babies were born through artificial inseminati on in 1987 , the most recent year for which reliable figures are available , sai d Joyce Zeitz , spokeswoman for the American Fertility Society , which issues et hical guidelines in the field . Of those births , 35,000 were from pregnancies u sing the husband 's sperm , and 30,000 were from donor sperm . Since then , expe rts in the field say they believe the number has risen . `` Seems like everyone who you talk to has fertility problems , '' Fox said . `` The field of fertility medicine is growing fast . '' As it does , women have more sperm to choose from . `` I had a lady who wanted to know if we had a mathematician , '' Fox said . `` We did . '' Fertility specialists say it is not new that the anonymous donors who are being recruited for sperm banks are not average Joes . The first record ed use of frozen sperm for artificial insemination was in 1953 , according to Ze itz , who said in those early years it was not uncommon for fertility experts to use the sperm of medical students or other doctors . The field has expanded dra matically and some sperm banks have less rigorous academic qualifications for do nors . But the Cryobank will not accept sperm from men who are not attending or did not graduate from a four-year college . Even then , the bank says it refuses 95 percent of men who apply to be donors . Rejection can come for low sperm cou nt ( not enough millions per milliliter ) , low motility ( does not swim well ) or because some sperm is too difficult to freeze . Heart disease is a disqualifi er . And men over 34 or under 5-feet-9 can forget it , because young and tall ar e requirements too . `` We don't get requests for short men , '' Wilkin said . D onors are anonymous , known only by a number . Customers select them by flipping through a catalogue that includes extensive profiles of the men , from their me dical history to their musical talents . The catalogue also list the men 's alma maters , as well as their scores on Scholastic Achievement Tests ( SATs ) . Of course , much of this has been criticized as elitist . Another sperm bank , the Repository for Germinal Choice , known as the Nobel sperm bank , was nationally criticized for trying to breed a superior race when it sought out only Nobel lau reates as donors . One of that bank 's donors even spoke about the inherent or g enetic superiority of some people . This `` genius '' bank still exists , but it has since lowered its expectations : mere scholars now suffice . Cryobank says it is different from banks that have an IQ-cutoff . It takes sperm from donors w ho attend state schools , and it requires no intelligence tests . Cryobank offic ials say they are simply seeking the kind of donor that women want . Stephen Fra nk , opinion page editor of the Harvard Crimson , is not as worried about the of fspring as he is about the donors . He has written a column , `` Dollars for Spe rm , '' that questions whether this is a wise part-time job . Donors can earn $ 105 a week for what can amount to three 15-minute visits . While Frank says this is good pay for what some would hardly call work , he wonders whether sperm ban ks take advantage of young donors , who might regret their choices later in life . To limit the chance of accidental incest or a chance encounter with a strikin gly similar person , many sperm banks retire a donor 's sperm supply after its h as produced 10 children . But Frank is not sure those safeguards make much diffe rence . `` When I am 40 years old and have a family of my own , '' he said , `` I personally wouldn't want to have other kids running around who look like me . '' Get out your calculators . You 're going to need them to keep up with rising ca r prices , especially on best-selling cars and trucks . Take the Chevrolet Camar o . When the 1994 model was introduced last fall , it carried a base price of $ 13,399 . By Jan. 10 this year , that price rose to $ 13,499 . On May 9 , the pri ce went up $ 250 to $ 13,749 . Yet , the sporty Camaro and its companion Pontiac Firebird continue to sell at a brisk pace . Current sales are almost four times what they were in 1993 . So what 's going on here ? Partly it 's the end of rec ession . People are buying cars again and that 's creating high demand , which i s leading to higher prices . Partly it 's manufacturers such as General Motors C orp. scrambling to find money and ways to expand production . And partly it 's s hifting exchange rates putting pressure on Japanese companies to raise prices . `` We 're having the opposite side of the problem that we had two years ago , wh en we were shutting down plants because we couldn't sell enough cars , '' said J ohn F. Maciarz , GM 's marketing spokesman . `` Now our demand is so high , we c an't build enough cars and trucks . '' Oddly enough , Japanese automakers with t heir factories of legendary efficiency are experiencing similar capacity problem s , although their prices are rising faster than those of their American rivals . Since Oct. 1 , 1993 the beginning of the 1994 model year Japanese auto prices have risen an average $ 991 , or 5.8 percent , over what they were for comparabl e 1993 models , according to the latest pricing survey by Automotive News , a De troit-based industry trade journal . By comparison , prices for GM , Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. have risen an average $ 416 since last October , or 2.2 p ercent . Yet , the Japanese share of the car and truck market in the United Stat es for the first four months of this year stood at 23.1 percent , up two-tenths of a percentage point over its 1993 level . Domestic auto companies held a 74.2 percent share , down six-tenths , according to figures compiled by Autofacts Ear
ly Warning Report , another industry trade journal . `` That sort of pokes a hol e in the argument that higher prices necessarily mean lower market share , '' sa id Joel Pitcoff , an industry analyst for Ford . `` In spite of their higher pri ces ( and ) our increases in quality , in spite of the fact that more Americans are beginning to buy our cars , the Japanese are still making gains ; and we 're not taking them lightly . '' However , some analysts have argued that U.S. auto makers could gain more share if they absolutely held the line on prices , or low ered them . But that conventional wisdom assumes the U.S. companies have enough capacity to meet even existing demand for their products , said Chrysler spokesw oman Karen Stewart . Chrysler is losing sales , and chances to increase market s hare , largely because it is having a hard time building all the cars people wan t to buy , Stewart said . Chrysler 's much-in-demand Neon car is an example . Th e company has a backlog of about 35,000 orders for the subcompact , Chrysler off icials said . Chrysler so far has raised its 1994 car and truck prices an averag e $ 389 , 2 percent higher than they were last year . But , as is becoming commo n with Japanese and U.S. car manufacturers alike , those Chrysler increases came in steps an average $ 244 in October 1993 , and mini-hikes totaling an average $ 145 since then . The strategy is to avoid turning off consumers with one , big price jump , Stewart said . ` ` .. . People tend to deal with price increases m uch better if you keep the increases moderate and spread them out over time , '' she says . Consumers still will be able to find bargains in what has become a s eller 's market , industry officials said . But those bargains most likely will be found on slower-selling models . Also , a best-seller in one community may be a dud in another , where the price might therefore be lower , some industry off icials said . If an icy comet strikes a large , gaseous planet while everyone is watching , d oes it make a sound ? Well , yes in a way . It 's this summer 's buzz . Comet Sh oemaker-Levy 9 , which resembles a string of pearls , is on a collision course w ith Jupiter . On July 16 , the first of the comet 's 21 major chunks will plumme t into the planet 's gassy atmosphere . For the following five days , piece afte r icy piece dives into Jupiter . What happens next , scientists aren't sure . Th is kind of comet is the first one astronomers ever have seen-in fact , this is t he first time humanity will witness space real estate smacking a planet . Caroly n and Gene Shoemaker and David Levy discovered this one-in-a-thousand-lifetimes comet on March 25 , 1993 , at the 18-inch Schmidt telescope at Mount Palomar Obs ervatory near San Diego . The trio found the comet by studying pictures taken wi th the telescope two nights earlier . In the photographs , Carolyn found what sh e called a `` squashed comet . '' To verify it , Levy and the Shoemakers wanted to see it again . But the night was cloudy in Southern California . Levy contact ed Jim Scotti at the Spacewatch Telescope at Kitt Peak , Ariz. Scotti aimed his telescope at the object and reported a few hours later : `` Have you got yoursel ves a comet ! '' It featured multiple nuclei and tails . Astronomers conclude th at eight months earlier , on July 7 , 1992 , the comet passed Jupiter and the pl anet 's gravity tore the comet into 21 major bits . Apparently , the comet chunk s will mostly hit on Jupiter 's far side , but the planet spins fairly fast , gi ving scientists some hope to catch residual events . To see it , you 'll need a telescope large enough to capture Jupiter 's detail . `` I heard NBC was initially interested but wanted to play down the suicide and the drugs , '' says Dave Thompson , author of the quickie unauthorized bio `` N ever Fade Away : The Kurt Cobain Story . '' Thompson is referring to newspaper r eports that network television had considered a movie about the short life and s udden death of Nirvana 's lead singer . In the wake of three `` Long Island Loli ta '' and two Menendez brothers movies not to mention just about every sweeps we ek special in recent years such restraint is probably more indicative of Attorne y General Janet Reno 's attentions than late-blooming industry conscience , thou gh a Los Angeles Times report noted that the networks weren't particularly inter ested in the youthful demographics of Nirvana fans and felt that older audiences wouldn't know who Cobain was and probably wouldn't care . Thompson is an intere sted observer because the film rights to his paperback book have been picked up by Los Angeles-based Paradigm Talent , which is talking to interested producers and has already assigned one of its clients , Richard DiLello , to write the scr ipt . DiLello , who has written scripts for `` Colors '' and `` Bad Boys , '' is Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling