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claims that 100,000 Bosnian Serbs have been killed in rebel-held territory over the course of the war and that at least 150,000 Serbs remain in those areas of B osnia still under government rule . Those figures , however , are regarded by fo reign aid agencies and diplomats as somewhat inflated . Considering the number o f refugees , fatalities and loyalists , Karadzic rules over only about 500,000 B osnian Serbs , Berberovic argues . However , Sarajevo high school teacher Bozo D jondovic notes that not all of those in government territory are remaining there of their own free will . `` There are a lot of people , and not only Serbs , wh o can't wait to leave this city , '' says Djondovic , who like all adult men in the Bosnian capital is prevented from leaving by a wartime security order . `` I still wouldn't go to Karadzic 's side . My family is in Montenegro , and I woul d go to join them in a minute if I could . It will not be much better there , bu t it couldn't be as bad as it is here . '' After the Serb Assembly proclaimed it s aim of restoring Bosnia 's territorial integrity and restated its commitment t o ethnic tolerance , an anti-nationalist underground movement based in the rebel stronghold of Banja Luka contacted the Serbian loyalists in Sarajevo through a circuitous network of supporters reaching as far as Australia . `` If there are some brave enough to risk contacting us , we have to assume that there are a lot of people who don't support Karadzic but are too frightened to show any sign , '' says Stevo Latinovic , a Serbian journalist working for Bosnia 's government- controlled radio . LAS VEGAS Sounding like a conservative politician and preacher , Nation of Isla m leader Louis Farrakhan spoke reproachfully Saturday night of a vain society `` where greed , lust and an inordinate self-interest have taken over , '' and sco lded blacks for not organizing and taking more economic control of their communi ties . Speaking in Las Vegas , the 61-year-old Muslim leader avoided much of the politically explosive language that in the past 10 years has made him a controv ersial figure and drawn the enmity of a broad spectrum of political and religiou s leaders . Instead , Farrakhan emphasized his theme of self-empowerment and sel f-discipline among blacks , urging them to organize economically and socially . `` The Polish organize , the Jews organize , '' he said in a speech before 6,000 at the Thomas & Mack Center at the University of Nevada Las Vegas . `` What is wrong with you ? .. . You have been here longer than any racial or ethnic group , and you have less to show for it . '' Six days after his former spokesman was shot in Riverside , Farrakhan did not comment directly on the ambush , but said : `` We live in such a dangerous hour. .. . To hurt people because you disagree with them is totally unacceptable in civilized society . '' Farrakhan spent much of his speech addressing the much-publicized criticism of him . `` While talk o f racism and anti-Semitism swirl around my head , I 'm here to let you know that calling Farrakhan a racist and a bigot and an anti-Semite is not going to help you solve your problems , '' he said to sustained applause . `` I deplore racism . I am saying it again : I deplore racism . `` To be a racist , to me , is to b e one who promotes his or her race as superior to , or better than .. . any othe r race. .. . That 's wickedness . '' Farrakhan spoke extemporaneously for severa l hours . In a thundering voice , he railed against depriving other human beings of their rights . `` Although I want to see black people uplifted , '' he said , `` I will never resort to evil to uplift black people at the expense of others . '' He also described the notion of him being against white people as `` silly . '' `` We have done nothing to keep white people from being successful . We ha ve done nothing to keep Jewish people from being successful . We do not marshal our energy , time , money or talent to block any individual from achieving their talents , '' he said . `` So do not use false labels to describe Louis Farrakha n . '' Farrakhan 's remarks were dramatically different in tone from those by Kh allid Abdul Muhammad , who spoke a week ago in Los Angeles . Muhammad , who had been suspended as a top aide and spokesman because of anti-Semitic and anti-whit e remarks during a speech in November , reiterated those sentiments last week . Farrakhan who had gotten in trouble in February for saying he basically agreed w ith Muhammad did not make any direct reference to the shooting of Muhammad in Ri verside , Calif. , allegedly by an ousted Nation of Islam member . Farrakhan sus pended Muhammad , 46 , as his senior aide after a speech in which Muhammad calle d Jews `` the bloodsuckers '' of the black community , criticized the Pope and u rged the killing of South African whites . Muhammad was shot last week in the le gs in an ambush in which four of his bodyguards and a bystander were also wounde d . ( Optional add end ) James Edward Bess , 49 , an ousted minister of the Nati on of Islam , pleaded not guilty to charges of attempted murder and assault . Po lice believe he acted alone . In his speech Saturday , Farrakhan apologized to t he audience for the stringent security requirements . Everyone in the arena was searched with hand-held metal detectors and frisked before being allowed to ente r . Mindful of his venue , Farrakhan also noted that `` gambling is forbidden in the Koran , '' and called Las Vegas `` a city founded in sin . '' He said prepa id reservations at a hotel were canceled at the last minute , forcing him to mak e a last-ditch effort to find a room to stay so he could speak . Saying that his reservations were canceled because `` they must have found out it was I who was coming , '' Farrakhan said : `` Since I 've been here , I have felt like Mary t rying to find a place to give birth to her baby . '' The following editorial appeared in Sunday 's Washington Post : North Korea has flagrantly and deliberately broken the rules by which the world is trying to pr event the spread of nuclear weapons . President Clinton is right to demand sanct ions , but to be effective , sanctions will require vigorous enforcement by Chin a , Japan and Russia . Clinton has to build an alliance among a group of countri es that are all , in varying degrees , unenthusiastic and disinclined to take re al action . But to fail to respond to North Korea 's transgressions would be hor ribly dangerous , especially for its neighbors . If the North Koreans can build warheads with impunity , they already have missiles capable of reaching Beijing , Osaka and Vladivostok . And the risks don't end at the 1,000-kilometer radius . The North Koreans have been willing to sell missiles to anyone with cash and m ight be ready to do the same with warheads . If the world lets their present beh avior pass without response , it might as well abandon any further attempts to e nforce the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty where it counts . That will send an unambiguous message to Iran , Iraq , Libya and all the other despotisms with lar ge ambitions and scores to settle . The North Koreans have said they would regar d sanctions as an act of war . That would be national suicide , but it 's imposs ible to be sure that they wouldn't attack . The United States has rightly said t hat the rest of the world can't allow that kind of threat to deter penalties for violating a crucial treaty . It is , unfortunately , worth chancing a war to en force the nuclear rules in North Korea , just as it was worth a war to enforce t hem in Iraq . In Iraq the United States was able to organize rapidly an alliance that drew on some of its longstanding NATO allies in Europe , as well as Arab c ountries that it had armed or otherwise helped over the years . Building a simil ar alliance in the Pacific will be much harder . This country has a deep relatio nship with Japan , but it 's characterized in security matters by Japanese passi vity reflecting the strain of pacifism in Japanese politics . Russia is in the t urbulent process of working out an entirely new posture toward this country . As for China , it still regards the United States with deep suspicion as an advers ary if not an enemy . The North Korean nuclear case is the anvil on which Americ an diplomacy will now try to hammer out this new Pacific alliance . If it fails , the costs could be enormous . If it succeeds , it will not only make all count ries safer , but also will set an impressive precedent for co-operation among wh at may well be , in the next century , the world 's four most powerful states . COLLEVILLE-SUR-MER , France One was a hunter with Indian blood in his veins who trapped coyotes and could fix anything mechanical . Another had dark hair and w ore glasses and remains something of a mystery . Another was a quiet boy who wei ghed maybe 100 pounds and probably should have leaned a bit more on the trigger of his machine gun . For 50 years the three have lain here among thousands of ot hers , beckoning relatives and friends who wish they had known them better . `` I think he said he was married , '' says George Wilson , 73 , of the quiet , thi n buddy he has come to visit at the American cemetery and memorial for the first time in a half-century . Nearly 4,000 visitors are defying chilly weather to pa ss through this resting place above Omaha Beach for the 50th anniversary of the Normandy invasion . The parade includes veterans from other World War II campaig ns , history buffs , the curious and John Q . Public. For these visitors the whi te Italian marble crosses and Stars of David symbolize the massive scope of an e vent that freed Europe and changed history . But for people like Wilson each pie ce of marble has a face . `` Every chance we got , me and him were together , '' says the Rockford , Ohio , farmer here for his first visit since landing near P ointe-du-Hoc on June 6 , 1944 . `` Probably be my last , '' he says . All day th e visitors file into a cemetery reception center with names written on scraps of paper . A woman opens a fat book and runs her finger down the list on one of th e pages . The questioners watch until it stops . If the person asking is a relat ive , an electric cart pulls up to take him or her to the gravesite . A caretake r wipes the marble face with wet sand from Omaha Beach to bring out the letters . Then he takes a snapshot that is given to the relative free of charge . Others , for whom the names represent friends , are given locator maps of the burial s pot amid the 9,386 sites . Then they set off for the last part of a pilgrimage t hat sometimes started an ocean away . One of the main reasons Wilson returned wa s to find the grave of his friend Russell Woodward . He was about 20 , didn't sm oke or drink and liked Red Cross donuts . `` He was kind of like me , '' Wilson says . Sometimes for the men who come here the experience is a confrontation wit h how little they actually knew about someone upon whom they often depended for their lives . Even though he and Woodward were good friends , Wilson did not kno w what his job was before the war or where to locate his relatives . What he doe s remember is seeing his friend battle a Nazi machine-gun nest . Woodward was ne w to the gun and peppered the Germans with small bursts instead of a steady stre am of fire . The enemy knew better . In seconds Woodward was slumped over his gu n , Wilson says . Sometimes the face on the marble reflects only a photograph . Joanne Miller was born after the war and never knew her uncle except as a dark-h aired man with spectacles in a photo . The Boston woman knows that William Babbi tt was past draft age and didn't have to go to war but chose to anyway . He was hit in the head by a sniper a month after landing on Omaha Beach . This is her f irst visit to the cemetery , and she wishes she had known him . In a book that r elatives fill with comments , she simply writes , `` God bless . '' When Harold Lucey looks at the cross on his brother 's grave , he sees a stocky hunter who s hot rabbits and trapped coyotes in rural Nevada . His brother , Raymond , 23 , m ade it safely ashore on Utah Beach but was killed by shrapnel in mid-July in the battle for St. Lo . Raymond , like his brother one-fourth Shoshone Indian , was always helping out neighbors when their cars and lawn mowers broke down , and d espite being his big brother , never shooed him away on his frequent hunting tri ps . Even after 50 years , Luceycan hardly talk about the loss without being ove rcome by his emotions . Lucey wants his two grandchildren he brought on the trip to know the reason the cross is there . `` I want them to know the reason he di ed , '' he says . `` It can't be forgotten . It 's that simple . '' Traveling the battlefields of Europe , President Clinton got what he called `` good news from the home front '' as the unemployment rate dropped sharply from 6 .4 percent to 6 percent in May , the lowest level since 1990 . That wasn't the o nly good news . During the month 191,000 new jobs were created much less than th e 285,000 feared on inflation-antsy Wall Street but well over the 170,000 monthl y rate required for Mr. Clinton to achieve his goal of 8 million new jobs by ele ction day , 1996 . Financial markets remained calm . The May numbers are likely to heat up debate among economists and within the administration about what cons titutes `` full employment '' the optimum number of jobs that can be filled with out triggering inflation . In the 1970s , Democrats and labor unionists aimed at getting unemployment below 4 percent . But with increased volatility in the wor k force , as more people move more rapidly to different kinds of jobs , there is a growing consensus that 6 percent is the more correct number . If so , the May figure ( which is subject to readjustment , probably higher ) would indicate th at the Federal Reserve Board had it about right by pushing up short term interes t rates from 3 percent to 4.25 percent in the February-to-May period . The large r question now is whether further increases will be necessary to keep the econom y from overheating . On this , the various economic indicators are mixed . Laura Tyson , the president 's chief economic adviser , offers as good a diagnosis as any when she says the `` economic expansion continues right on track . '' By he r definition , this would be 3 percent growth rate this year and 2.9 percent nex t a pattern that leads Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen to say the economy appea rs stronger than at any time in the past 20 years . Bentsen and Tyson have consi stently refrained from criticism of the Fed 's interest rate increases while sof tly suggesting enough is enough . If this is constructive caution , it is clearl y attuned to the president 's wishes . History shows that while former President Carter succeeded in pushing down the unemployment rate from 7.7 percent to 5.8 percent during his first two years , he also ignited the double-digit inflation that led to his defeat in 1980 . That is a pattern President Clinton must want t o avoid . Politicians exult in job growth for the 8 million currently unemployed , but wise ones know that inflation is a curse that affects the entire voting p ublic . So while Fed chairman Alan Greenspan takes his licks from growth-minded Democrats , Clinton seems well and rightly content to let interest rates rise an d unemployment rates drop to levels where they are in equilibrium . The economy seems to be in that pleasant state right now , which is indeed good news from th e home front . RIVERSIDE , Calif. . As story lines go , this one could rejuvenate a flagging s oap opera : A freshman congressman picks up a known prostitute , parks his car o n a side street and is caught by police with his pants unzipped . He starts to f lee but thinks better of it . For five months , the police withhold information about the incident and the congressman stonewalls , saying `` nothing happened'' -until the local newspaper sues the city for the police reports . Then the congr essman confesses to being found `` in an extremely embarrassing situation , '' b ut says he didn't know the woman was a prostitute , didn't pay for sex and thus didn't do anything illegal . He apologizes for his `` inappropriate '' behavior and attributes the escapade to his father 's suicide and the breakup of his 15-y ear marriage . He asks for understanding , notes he has sought counseling and ge ts on with his reelection campaign . Do the voters believe he has told the whole truth ? Will they forgive him ? Find out Tuesday night after the polls close in the California primary and The Days of Ken Calvert 's Life continue . Calvert , R-Calif. , a real-life lawmaker who barely won his seat two years ago , is tryi ng to fend off a Republican challenger and recover from a damaging scandal that has made him the subject of jokes in his own community and good material for Jay Leno as well . While President Clinton grapples with the future political conse quences of the Whitewater affair and a pending sexual-harassment lawsuit , at le ast a dozen members of Congress have seen their own careers jeopardized by eithe r personal indiscretions , alleged ethical breaches or allegations of criminal m isconduct . The most powerful , Rep. Dan Rostenkowski , D-Ill. , was indicted la st week on 17 felony counts of fraud and embezzlement and forced to surrender hi s Ways and Means Committee chairmanship . He maintains he is innocent . Although the number of scandalized lawmakers is relatively small , and the controversies surrounding them vary in severity , each new episode adds a layer to the public 's deep suspicions about their politicians . `` Nobody feels good about who 's representing them anymore , '' said Sande Burman-Wilson , a mortgage lender inte rviewed at a candidates ' forum in Riverside . `` It used to be a highly touted kind of job . '' Calvert 's race in western Riverside County is being watched na tionally as a barometer of how voters respond to tainted incumbents . The Capito l Hill newspaper Roll Call named Calvert the most vulnerable House member facing re-election . Democrats , who came within 519 votes of beating Calvert two year s ago , are salivating at the thought of a rematch this year . Republicans , eve n some of those who support him , are nervous about the general election should Calvert dispose of his conservative GOP challenger , who has strong support from evangelical Christians . Interviews conducted in Calvert 's district last week indicate several strains of dissatisfaction among voters . Some are upset with C alvert , believing he exercised poor judgment and then tried to cover up his act ions . Other voters are upset with the news media for what they see as too much scrutiny of politicians ' private lives . Still others have grown so accustomed to the transgressions of elected officials that they have tuned out . As they se ek another term , lawmakers whose political reputations have been jeopardized by controversy are employing varying strategies to combat their problems and impro ve their images . Rep. Walter R. Tucker III , D-Calif. , reportedly a target of an FBI bribery investigation of Compton city government , has portrayed himself as the latest victim of a `` pattern of attacks on African-American politicians '' that is a carryover from Republican administrations . A former Compton mayor and member of a prominent political family , Tucker took out an ad in a communit y newspaper circulated among black churches proclaiming his innocence and planti ng the notion of a racially motivated conspiracy . Rep. Martin R. Hoke , R-Ohio , who was caught on videotape referring to a TV producer 's `` beeeg breasts '' and denied an allegation by a law firm 's secretary that he pinched her on the t high , has been meeting periodically with leaders of women 's groups in his dist rict . At their urging , he recently held a town hall meeting on women 's issues . Rep. Joseph M. McDade , R-Pa. , who has been under indictment since 1992 for allegedly taking more than $ 100,000 in bribes and illegal gratuities , said , ` ` There 's no strategy . I 've announced I 'm innocent and fighting the charges . Plain and simple , my people don't believe it . '' McDade also reminds voters that he is the ranking Republican on the House Appropriations Committee , a lawm aker with seniority . `` The guy is bringing home bacon , '' said a Democratic o fficial , who acknowledged being unable to mount a serious challenge against McD ade . Sen. Charles S. Robb , D-Va. , trying to address lingering questions about his personal life , released an extraordinary five-page letter before announcin g his re-election campaign . In it , he denied ever using drugs but admitted to behavior `` not appropriate for a married man . '' Calvert , a 40-year-old real estate developer from a prominent Riverside County family , tried the Robb appro ach , releasing a statement on April 22 to explain his actions after midnight on Nov. 28 , 1993 . That is when Corona police , checking on a driver they suspect ed was asleep or unconscious , found Calvert in a parked car with Lore Lindberg , a twice-convicted prostitute with a heroin habit . His campaign manager says p olling indicates the episode is not hurting Calvert and shows him with a big lea d over S. Joseph Khoury , a finance professor at the University of California at Riverside who finished second in the 1992 GOP primary . ANAMOSA , Iowa Richard Schwarm , Iowa 's Republican Party chairman , describes Rep. Fred Grandy , R-Iowa , as a `` risk-taker . '' He earned that reputation in 1986 , when he returned to his home state and recaptured for the GOP a House se at Democrats had held 12 years . That made Grandy , an actor whose best-known ro Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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