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tical '' and `` skeptical '' because at the outset , `` I was concerned somethin g was wrong '' in the FIAU drug trials . Opening the advisory panel meeting Thur sday morning , Varmus cited the FIAU trials and the recent scandal concerning ta inted data in breast cancer studies , and said `` the confluence of these two ep isodes '' had been cause for `` concern about the state of clinical trials in th is country . '' AT&T Corp. Thursday disputed an assertion that one of its computer scientists h ad uncovered a critical flaw in controversial encoding technology that the Clint on administration has embraced . The technology , which is known as the `` clipp er chip , '' is meant to protect the privacy of telephone and computer conversat ions , while still allowing law enforcement agencies to eavesdrop on suspected c riminals . The clipper chip , which was designed by scientists at the National S ecurity Agency ( NSA ) , is being used in civilian government communications , a nd the administration is urging private telephone and computer companies to adop t the technology . The standard has come under heated criticism from many in the computer community who fear that a `` backdoor '' built to allow legal wiretaps also might be used for unwarranted snooping by government officials and others . An article in the Thursday New York Times raised another potential problem wit h the clipper chip that criminals can close that back door and keep law enforcem ent officials out . It cited research by AT&T scientist Matthew Blaze . But AT&T officials said that Blaze 's findings did not apply to the clipper chip standar d adopted by the federal government . That standard covers voice , facsimile and low-speed data transmission . Blaze 's research , which will be presented in a few weeks to a scientific group , was examining vulnerabilities with computer-to -computer electronic mail encryption devices that are under development by the N SA , said Dave Maher , chief scientist for AT&T secure communications systems . AT&T said Blaze was not available to answer questions . In his paper , Blaze con cluded that the technique he discovered would have limited application for telep hone calls , but that it would be relatively easy to keep law enforcement offici als from eavesdropping on computer-to-computer conversations . He based his conc lusion on a review of a prototype that was supplied by the NSA , Maher said . Wh ile the NSA said it would review Blaze 's study and consider modifications , it said his techniques `` are not practical in real-world applications and are cons idered to be acceptable risks . '' The NSA statement also noted that there are s impler ways to prevent law enforcement eavesdropping . Lance Hoffman , a compute r science professor at George Washington University , said one way might be to b uild another layer of encryption around the clipper chip , a `` super encryption '' that would keep eavesdroppers out . Dorothy Denning , a computer science pro fessor at Georgetown University who evaluated the clipper chip standard for the government , said the Blaze finding would have no effect on the current standard s , which are targeted at telephone and not at computer communications . But Hof fman called the study another `` chink in the armor '' of the clipper chip . He and other clipper critics are skeptical about the comments that the flaw outline d by Blaze would be limited to computers . They said their ability to evaluate t he NSA and AT&T assertions were hampered by the fact that the underlying mathema tics are a classified secret . `` This goes to the heart of our criticism that y ou cannot trust a secret algorithm to grant you security , '' said Jerry Berman of the Electronic Frontier Foundation , a public interest group advocating the r ights of computer users . `` The irony of it is while we have been attacking it from a privacy point of view , this research pointed out a flaw that undermines the law enforcement side of the clipper chip . '' When IDB Communications Group 's stock price collapsed Wednesday in the wake of news that its auditors quit in a huff , the company 's 38-year-old founder admi ts he faced the same basic question over and over again from shareholders : Was he a crook ? No , Jeffrey Sudikoff insists , he 's not a crook . He understands that he 'll have to prove that , he says , and probably in court ( the sharehold er lawsuits are already piling up ) . But whatever else people want to say about him , Sudikoff has 900 employees , tons of telecommunications hardware and a lo ng list of clients worldwide to show that his 10-year-old , Culver City , Calif. -based business isn't some grandiose fraud . The devil , however , is in the det ails , and that 's why Wall Street let the stock plummet from 14 Tuesday to 7 1/ 8 by Wednesday 's close in wild trading . IDB 's auditors , Deloitte & Touche , abruptly resigned in an apparent dispute over certain IDB accounting practices . IDB says the disagreements are minor . But until Deloitte gives its side of the story ( it must , by law , within the next 10 days ) many investors will assume the worst that IDB 's books have been cooked . Ultimately , this is probably wh at we 'll find out : IDB didn't grossly misrepresent its sales and earnings grow th over the past few years . But in remaking itself from a $ 61 million TV and r adio signal relayer in 1989 to a $ 311 million international long-distance phone company by 1993 , IDB was guilty of too much hype and overly `` aggressive '' a ccounting . This is a game that small and large companies alike play , and it is aided and abetted by institutional investors on Wall Street . They want hot sto cks , and once the Street identifies a certified `` growth stock , '' the instit utions and their legions of analysts create high standards for the company to me et quarter after quarter . If your earnings come in under expectations just once , your stock may plummet by almost as much as if , say , your auditors were to quit . If , like IDB , you 're using stock to make big acquisitions within your rapidly consolidating industry competing with the likes of AT&T and MCI it 's mo re than a little important to keep the stock price up . Thus , companies like ID B find themselves in the business of managing earnings . With a sharp pencil , y ou can adjust and readjust your numbers take a capital gain here , delay a charg e there to make sure that your quarterly results meet Wall Street 's estimates . Wall Street understands this , and doesn't much care , as long as the basic tre nd in the business is strongly up . Purists may argue that there is only one set of accounting rules , and that aggressive accounting is by definition wrong . B ut the reality is that `` there 's discretion in accounting , and companies can be more aggressive '' if they choose , says Bruce Miller , a professor of that t rade at the University of California , Los Angeles . The role of the independent auditor is to make sure that aggressiveness doesn't turn into outright fraud . And because Deloitte gave unqualified opinions in support of IDB 's financial re ports in 1992 and 1993 , the auditors would face potential billions of dollars i n liability claims if they now were to recant those earlier opinions . `` Do we have aggressive accounting and a unique business that has subtleties of accounti ng ? Yes , '' Sudikoff admits . But Deloitte `` never had a problem with that in that past , '' he says . Disagreements about the numbers in 1992 and 1993 were always ironed out , Sudikoff says . And he notes , correctly , that it isn't unu sual for companies and their auditors to have disagreements . When the Deloitte partner in charge of the IDB account changed this year , the disagreements , fro m Deloitte 's point of view , evidently became insurmountable . Why ? Sudikoff c ontends he doesn't know , because the individual accounting items in dispute don 't appear major . IDB 's president , Edward Cheramy , blames a personality clash between himself and the new Deloitte partner . We 'll have to wait and hear fro m Deloitte . Thursday , some investors felt intrigued enough with IDB 's future potential in its international long-distance phone business to bid the battered stock up $ 1.19 to $ 8.31 on NASDAQ , in still-heavy trading . Sudikoff says thr ee of the Big Six accounting firms are already vying to take over the IDB accoun t . Assuming new auditors can certify that IDB has grown as it said it has , Sud ikoff says IDB 's course in international long-distance will remain the same : E at , or be eaten . And he concedes that with his stock price cut in half , IDB i s as much a potential target now as it may be an acquirer . LOS ANGELES When New York businessman Laurence A . Tisch made his first investm ent in CBS Inc. nine years ago , he was dubbed a short-term player . Wall Street expected him to sell his CBS shares quickly for a tidy profit . But Tisch confo unded the skeptics and is now completing his eighth year as CBS 's largest share holder and chief executive . Instead of a short-term player , critics now say he 's a short-term thinker whose miscalculations are coming home to roost . As evi dence , they cite Fox Broadcasting Co. 's raid last week of eight CBS affiliates , and CBS 's loss of National Football Conference broadcast rights to Fox for t he next four years . These critics predict that CBS 's value will inevitably dim inish under a protracted Tisch regime . Tisch in Los Angeles Thursday for a CBS affiliates ' meeting shrugs it off . `` I think we 're doing the right thing by shareholders , '' said the 71-year-old chairman during a breakfast interview . ` ` I think long-term , not short-term . '' With understandable pride , he points to 1993 earnings of $ 316.8 million , or $ 20.39 per share , nearly double the r esults of the previous year . Among the networks , CBS ranked No. 1 last year in daytime , prime time and late night ratings , in a `` triple crown '' feat acco mplished only once before in network television , when CBS dominated the 1983-84 season . His long-term strategy ? To invest in programming . `` We 've built th is asset ; we haven't diminished it , '' he continued , citing the increased mar ket value of CBS ' radio stations as an example . The radio properties could fet ch $ 800 million if they were for sale , compared to $ 400 million or $ 500 mill ion five years ago , he said . Indeed , Tisch worked hard to turn the network ar ound , and he won the respect of some of Wall Street 's most prominent analysts , who praise his discipline . `` The crazies are not in charge of this thing , a nd football is the classic example of that , '' said David Londoner , a managing director of Wertheim Schroder in New York . By his calculation , CBS would have reduced its per share earnings by 25 percent if it had matched Fox 's winning b id for a four-year package of Sunday football games . Still , the criticism pers ists . By selling off CBS 's recorded music business and publishing , the compan y 's remaining broadcast business is hobbled by government restrictions , and vu lnerable to economic downturns or new competitors . And unlike the other network s , CBS has not invested in cable television or business overseas . `` His prima ry asset is getting attacked and he 's got nothing else to draw on . If I were h im , I 'd sell it , '' said one big media investor who holds Capital Cities/ABC stock . But the investor who spoke on the condition of anonymity mused that Tisc h does appear to relish his status as a network chief , adding : `` I don't know how much he likes it as a toy . '' To such talk , Tisch responded : `` How coul d it be a toy after eight years ? I don't run around after stars ; you don't see me at the parties . I 'm not there because it 's a game or a toy . '' ( Begin o ptional trim ) As a youth in Brooklyn , he worked in his father 's clothing busi ness and his New Jersey summer camp , then entered New York University at age 15 . Tisch has a master 's degree in industrial engineering from the University of Pennsylvania . During World War II , he worked in Washington on military codes . Then , in 1946 , he dropped out of Harvard Law School to invest in a resort ho tel with his close-knit family . Over the next decade , the family built a chain of resorts before Larry and his younger brother Preston ( or Bob ) invested in Loew 's Theaters . After the death of their father in 1960 , the Tisch brothers merged their hotels with the theater chain and Larry became chief executive . Lo ews became their vehicle for shrewd investments in cigarette manufacturer Lorill ard , CNA Financial and , eventually , CBS . Although the theater chain was sold in the 1980s , the Tisch family still controls 26 percent of Loews Corp. , whic h boasted $ 13.7 billion in 1993 revenue . Loews controls 19.6 percent of CBS . Although Tisch has characterized his CBS holdings as a legacy to be passed on to his family , he acknowledged Thursday that none of his children have expressed interest in joining the CBS executive ranks . Nor does he think his brother Bob would step in as chairman , if anything unforeseen happened to him . He said the question of succession would fall to the CBS board . Like Loews , CBS has no ch ief operating officer . CBS directors have not questioned the need for one , Tis ch said . With just one business , he said CBS Broadcast Group President Howard Stringer effectively fills the role . The management is lean but collegial , Tis ch said . `` You don't have to go through channels . '' ( End optional trim ) `` We don't have our heads buried in the sand . But you show me the niche where we can be successful . I 'd like to see it ! '' said Tisch . Broadcasting , he sai d , has a `` bright future '' while he foresees trouble for cable TV operators w ho will have to engage in a price war with telephone companies to expand their b usinesses . `` We have over $ 1 billion in cash that 's earning 7 percent , 8 pe rcent , 9 percent . What better security does a company have , than to have that liquidity and those earnings that can't disappear on you ? '' he asked . If Random House had planned it down to the last banana cream pie , it could not have staged a more successful or appealing fracas to accompany the publication of Peggy Noonan 's new book . It began with a brief and curious pre-publication profile in New York magazine suggesting she was an original new self-launched st ar in the Manhattan social orbit without ever suggesting there was anything remo tely original about her or what she has to say . There followed newspaper review s of the book which were of such heroic savagery that they 'd have been more app ropriate in tone for the latest self serving drivel published by Richard Nixon o r Henry Kissinger , desperately trying to secure their place in history against such devastating assaults as the publication of H.R. Haldeman 's diaries and , a s the clock ticks , the more damning revelations that are sure to come from all the Nixon tapes still locked up in the National Archives . Noonan , after all , was merely a speechwriter for Ronald Reagan and George Bush . She wrote the thou sand points of light speech into which some White House superior penciled `` kin der and gentler '' in place of her `` more inclusive '' nation . Then there was a counter-flurry of whispering among those who asked if Noonan 's book could rea lly be as dreadful as they say . And now , that redoubtable enemy of wealth and privilege , Michael Thomas , writing in the New York Observer , has flown gallan tly to her defense with the argument , as near as I can tell , that while the bo ok may well be `` trite , silly , superficial and dumb , '' it is `` harmless at worst '' and unworthy of the volcanic mauling it has taken from Andrew Sullivan in The New York Times and Jonathan Yardley in The Washington Post . You 've nev er heard of Peggy Noonan ? Don't worry , she 's working hard to correct this . W hat is her new book about ? I haven't the faintest idea because , having sentenc ed myself to read her first one which served up Reagan covered with syrup and hi s wife Nancy covered with Noonan 's scratch marks I feel excused . I am strictly neutral on its merits , on Noonan 's charms and on the intriguing question of w hether a dreadful book of no particular consequence deserves the onslaught of cr iticism that has engulfed hers and , incidentally , ensured both its commercial success and Noonan 's climb up whatever socio-economic tree it is she is so assi duously trying to get to the top of . Anyway , as potential keeper of the flame of Reaganism , who 's to say that Noonan isn't a more decorative figure than som e of the other candidates , say , Patti Davis or Oliver North . Davis ' naked ro mp through the pages of the latest Playboy and North 's romp from the very thres hold of the penitentiary to riches and fundamentalist stardom are hardly better credentials . Anyway , all three of them say they are right with God . Noonan rh apsodizes , I 'm told , about her rediscovery of Catholicism . North 's worn-on- the-sleeve religiosity has given his campaign for the Senate the timbre of a Sou thern televangelical tent show . And even the buck-naked Davis , between undaugh terly swipes at her despised mother , tells Playboy how much she appreciates her father 's `` gift of faith . '' Put them all in a painted wagon and just imagin e the evil , the unmitigated un-Godliness , the worldly moral squalor and un-Chr istly liberalism they can save us from . AUGUSTA , Ga. . The first time Jesse L. Jackson rode buses through the South , he joined black and white Freedom Riders who worried about white racists shootin g at them during the civil rights movement as they campaigned for blacks ' right to vote . Three decades later , Jackson is embarked upon another bus tour of th e South , accompanied by black and white aides . Once again voting rights and vi olence are concerns , but this time the specific issues are black-on-black viole nce and preservation of majority black congressional districts created under the Voting Rights Act . Jackson has preached the `` dual subject of voting empowerm ent and stop the violence '' on a two-week tour of new congressional districts b eing challenged in five states as unconstitutional segregation . The legal quest ion is headed to the Supreme Court . Originally , the bus tour was conceived as a means to educate the public about the redistricting lawsuits , including one g oing to trial next month against the 60 percent black district of freshman Rep. Cynthia McKinney , D-Ga. , which stretches 260 miles from Atlanta 's suburbs to Augusta 's slums . The tour of seven states , which ends Sunday in Newport News , Va. , is being financed by Jackson 's National Rainbow Coalition , the affilia ted Citizenship Education Fund and the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation . J ackson estimated the cost at $ 250,000 . With crime a pre-eminent concern across the nation , the anti-violence message was added to Jackson 's `` southern voti ng rights tour '' and has often overwhelmed the original theme . In Dallas , whe re the trip began a week ago , his visit to the family of a 9-year-old boy kille d while eating ice cream on his porch dominated news coverage . In Atlanta , whi ch experienced 29 killings in the 31 days of May , Jackson 's plea for peace Wed nesday obscured his defense of McKinney 's district . `` Cynthia 's struggle .. . is in competition with 29 killings , '' Jackson acknowledged en route to Augus ta Friday . `` You can't keep your credibility and moral authority unless you ad dress the violence . '' But Jackson maintained that there is a connection betwee n violence and voting rights . For instance , he said fighting crime and mournin g its victims have diverted African Americans ' attention from jobs , justice an d political empowerment . `` On that journey from Selma to Montgomery , if three or four of us had shot each other , or there had been a drug bust , it would ha ve undercut our right to vote , '' Jackson said . He that lawmakers from distric ts drawn to have a black majority could help address criminal justice issues lik e stiffer federal sentences for possessing crack-cocaine than for possessing pow der cocaine . The disparate sentences have primarily affected black drug offende rs . `` We have to have politicians in office to protect us from the crime of th e crime system , '' Jackson said . The creation of black majority districts afte r the 1990 census led to the election two years ago of a dozen black southerners , who helped boostthe Congressional Black Caucus to a record 40 members . The r edistricting lawsuits are a threat , at least indirectly , to all of the souther n newcomers . Reps. Melvin Watt , D-N.C. , and Eva Clayton , D-N.C. , await the decision of a three-judge panel in Raleigh , which most observers expect to upho ld the remap . In Texas , a challenge to three districts , including a majority Latino one , in Houston and Dallas is scheduled for trial later this month . Bas ed on a judge 's comments at a pretrial hearing , McKinney 's district is so thr eatened with being overturned when a trial begins here July 18 that her father , longtime state Rep. Billy McKinney , D-Ga. , has renounced his decision to reti re from the legislature . `` When they redraw those lines , Billy McKinney is go ing to be sitting in that room , '' he told elected officials and leaders of you th programs here . McKinney 's district stretches from the predominantly black s ection of suburban DeKalb County whose upscale demographics one McKinney aide co mpared to Prince George 's County through rural farm areas to urban Savannah and Augusta . `` That 's the thing about these districts they bring black and white s together in a new kind of relationship , '' McKinney said . `` Previously , it Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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