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dic to attack the U.N. `` safe area '' of Gorazde , precipitating another crisis . One of the great successes of the U.N. operation in Bosnia , hammered out in tandem with U.S. diplomatic efforts , was the March peace settlement between Cro at and Muslim factions that fought a vicious war for more than a year in central Bosnia in parallel with the main conflict pitting the Muslim-led government aga inst Serb secessionists . Lt. Col. John McColl , commander of British forces in the region , Rose and the U.S. diplomats and military officers who brokered the accord saw it as the beginning of a process that would spread into the 72 percen t of Bosnia held by the Serbs . Charles E. Redman , U.S. special envoy to the Bo snian peace talks , says that now that Muslims and Croats have stopped fighting they should sign a peace agreement that would give them 51 percent of the countr y and the Serbs 49 percent . But Aligic commands a corps of Bosnian fighters at least half of whom lost their homes in Serb expulsion campaigns known as `` ethn ic cleansing . '' His eyes , therefore , tend to see the Muslim-Croat deal not a s a harbinger of peace but as the facilitator of more war . `` The federation me ans open roads . Open roads mean guns . And that means my men can go home , '' h e said . While Rose was telling Aligic that continuing the war was `` pointless , '' Muslim infantry and Croat tanks were attacking Bosnian Serb positions near Tesanj , northeast of Travnik , in a joint probe marking the first time in more than a year that the Croat militia had fought alongside Muslim forces in central Bosnia . Muslim and Croat forces also cooperated against Serb fighters around t he strategic Serb-held town of Brcko in northeastern Bosnia earlier this week wi th Croat tanks lobbing a few rounds from their positions in Orasje to the north and Muslim gunners shelling the city from the south . Rose called the fighting ` ` minor skirmishes . '' Bosnian commanders view the renewed cooperation as steps toward bigger ones . One of the goals of the Tesanj attack appears to be to cut a road running south from the Serb-held town of Teslic that supplies Serb gunne rs on Mount Vlasic , a strategic peak overlooking Travnik . Aligic 's men recent ly have attacked Serb positions there . Successful Muslim-Croat cooperation arou nd Tesanj could bode well for more Muslim-Croat teamwork around Travnik , Aligic said . U.N. officers and many European diplomats have never taken the mostly Mu slim army seriously . Just last week , Douglas Hogg , Britain 's deputy foreign minister , called on the Muslim government to acknowledge it had lost the war . In their meeting on Tuesday , Rose told Aligic he would need at least four years to retake the land he had lost . The Muslim commander 's response was simple : `` The general 's mathematics could use a little work . '' VLADIVOSTOK , Russia Twenty years after being stripped of his citizenship , hus tled onto an Aeroflot airliner and sent into unwanted exile , Alexander Solzheni tsyn returned triumphantly home Friday , eager to reacquaint himself with a coun try he acknowledged had been `` altered beyond recognition . '' The Nobel Prize winner , who spent the last 18 years living quietly in southern Vermont , told a crowd of more than 2,000 people gathered in this port city 's main square that Russia had shed communism only to encounter more hardship . `` I never doubted t hat communism was doomed to collapse , but I always feared what the price would be , '' he said . `` I know I am coming to a Russia torn apart , discouraged , s tunned. .. . I would like to search with you for ways to get out of the 75 years of our quagmire . '' The square in which Solzhenitsyn delivered his address is still named `` The Fighters for Soviet Power . '' Despite a long trip , Solzheni tsyn appeared delighted to be back in Russia , smiling and waving to the crowd a s it applauded and cheered him . He was then whisked off in a minibus to the Vla divostok Hotel , which was certain to provide the 75-year-old writer with a quic k dose of new Russian reality : The hotel has not had hot water for days , its e levators are on the blink , and among the guests are a number of the tough-looki ng Russian `` biznessmeni '' who flourish here today . The hotel administration did , however , clear out the miniskirted women who , according to male visitors , frequently knocked on doors in the middle of the night , offering their servi ces . Solzhenitsyn flew to Vladivostok from Anchorage , Alaska , with his wife , Natalya , 54 , his youngest son , Stephan , 20 , and a horde of reporters docum enting his historic trip home . During a brief refueling stop in Magadan , the h eart of the brutal Soviet prison-camp network that he documented in his multi-vo lume account , `` The Gulag Archipelago , '' he briefly disembarked , reached do wn to touch the ground and told reporters , `` I bow my head .. . where hundreds of thousands if not millions of our executed fellow countrymen are buried . '' The writer intends to travel slowly across Russia to see firsthand a country he has only read and heard about for the past 20 years . Solzhenitsyn and his wife are having a house built in a leafy district on the outskirts of Moscow , but th eir plans to move in have apparently been delayed by construction problems . The Solzhenitsyns have kept their home in Cavendish , Vt. , for their sons , who ar e U.S. citizens and grew up in the United States . Solzhenitsyn told the Russian news agency Tass that he had chosen this formerly closed port , home to the onc e mighty Soviet Pacific Fleet , instead of Moscow because he wanted to hear ordi nary Russians and not those living in a city `` that has been living a privilege d life '' at the expense of the rest of the country . There has been extensive c overage of Solzhenitsyn 's return in Russian newspapers , and the local airport erupted in pandemonium Friday when more than 100 local and foreign journalists a nd camera crews broke through a security line and besieged the writer as he desc ended from his plane . Solzhenitsyn attempted to calm people , saying , `` Every one stop . Take as many pictures of me as you want . '' Solzhenitsyn 's return i s important to Russia not only because he is , as poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko calle d him , `` our only living classic . '' His dissident years and unbending opposi tion to the Soviet regime made him a hero to democracy activists . At the same t ime , nationalists have hoped to claim him as a standard-bearer thanks to his ch ampioning of the values of Russia 's roots and religion and his calls for a unit ed Slavic nation . In his remarks Friday , and over the past few weeks , Solzhen itsyn has said he intends to play only a moral or social role in the new Russia , not a political one . Still , his comments have clearly had a political edge . He has criticized the economic reforms of President Boris Yeltsin and his admin istration for wreaking havoc with people 's lives , denounced the International Monetary Fund , dismissed Ukrainian nationalist sentiments and called ultranatio nalist leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky a `` clown . '' He told Tass Friday that his life as a writer is basically complete and it was time to `` get down to hard wo rk on rebuilding and reviving Russia . '' Whether Solzhenitsyn will have any imp act is unclear . Russia has changed dramatically in the last three years , and t here may be little room for writer-prophets who offer moral guidance to the mass es . Many Russians , particularly the young , have not read Solzhenitsyn 's book s and seem uninterested in his suggestions that Western ways have polluted Russi a . At the same time , many here are clearly searching for someone untainted by the last few years of chaos and broken promises , a moral force in a country tha t is struggling with the loss of all past certainties . Dissident Nobel Prize-wi nning physicist Andrei Sakharov fulfilled that role for many , but since his dea th in 1989 there has been no one . Solzhenitsyn , with his Tolstoyan beard and m oral rectitude , has the same aura . He remains a larger-than-life figure for ma ny because of his willingness to risk all to write the truth about the horrors o f Soviet totalitarianism . For his work , the West gave him the 1970 Nobel Prize for literature and called him the worthy successor to Tolstoy , Fyodor Dostoyev sky and Anton Chekhov . His rulers called him a traitor . He was hounded and har assed , turned into an official non-person , with his books forbidden and unpubl ished . In 1974 they forced him into exile , hoping that , removed from his home land , his angry , overpowering voice would grow still . It did not . Solzhenits yn has described his time in Vermont as his most productive and peaceful ever . And indeed , when the old treason charges against him were officially judged `` groundless '' in 1991 , following the failed hard-line Communist coup , he chose not to return immediately . He wanted first to finish what he says will be his last work , `` The Red Wheel , '' a massive account of Russian and Soviet histor y . Friday night he was finally home . WASHINGTON The hours are just as grueling , the salary 's likely to be lower , and the position comes with a heap of public disdain . Nonetheless , this year n early three dozen physicians are trying to trade their stethoscope and white coa t for the job a seat in Congress . The bumper crop of physician-candidates dovet ails , of course , with the Clinton administration 's effort to push a national health care reform plan through Congress . If the practice of medicine is going to be revolutionized , some physicians want to have a say in it . `` If health c are were not on the front burner , I don't think I would be running , '' said su rgeon George Craig , a Republican activist challenging Rep. Jerry Lewis , R-Cali f. , in the primary . Dentist Ron Franks , a Republican from Maryland 's Eastern Shore challenging Sen. Paul S. Sarbanes , D-Md. , said he is concerned that hea lth care policy is being determined without the direct input of health care prof essionals . `` I believe that all health care providers .. . realize the danger and I plan to invite them to participate in my campaign , '' he said . Currently only two members of Congress are physicians both in the House and one , Rep. J. Roy Rowland , D-Ga. , is retiring . More than 35 doctors are candidates this ye ar . A study by Congressional Quarterly shows medicine barely edging out profess ional sports and acting as prior occupations of members of Congress . The runawa y leader in the breakdown : lawyers . `` I think it 's incredible that we have 2 39 attorneys and two physicians and we 're about to write major changes in healt h care , '' said Wyoming House candidate and ophthalmologist John Herschler , a Democrat . Sheila McGuire , a dentist and epidemiologist running in Iowa said as far as she is concerned `` lawyers are well represented in Congress . '' The pr oblem , she said , is the under representation of doctors and a lack of familiar ity within Congress of the workings of the health care system . McGuire and Hers chler are living the attorney-physician tension in more ways than one ; each is running against a lawyer . Herschler 's opponent is a personal injury lawyer who handles malpractice cases , a point Herschler enjoys drawing attention to on th e stump . But that opponent , Bob Schuster , counters that being a doctor is not an automatic edge in this year 's election , and might even be a negative . `` If that were a credential to solving the health care problem , we wouldn't have a health care problem . '' McGuire 's opponent , Mike Peterson is painfully awar e , however , that doctors carry at least one helpful campaign credential : `` a lot of personal wealth , plus they 've got a lot of friends with personal wealt h . '' Of course , so do many attorneys . But , Peterson said that his work as a small town attorney and part-time state legislator does not begin to even the p laying field . Doctors are not the only medical candidates this year , There is a smaller but equally determined pool : nurses . Cheryl Davis Knapp , a nurse ru nning in Florida 's 12th Congressional District , holds that the Founding Father s intended members of Congress to be `` everyday working people , '' and that do ctors are not that . `` Certainly , I don't think most people are in the positio n of most doctors . But I think most people are in the positions of . . . nurses , in terms of finances . '' According to the American Nurses Association , the only nurse ever elected to Congress is freshman Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson , D-T exas . The gulf between doctors and nurses extends beyond fiscal matters . `` Mo st physicians see the system only from one side and that 's their side. .. . The y 've only seen it from their narrow perspective , '' said nurse practitioner Ri ta Tamerius , who is running for a California Houseseat . Tamerius advocates gre ater utilization of nurses for primary care , which she says physicians oppose . The nurses and doctors running for Congress realize that health care expertise does not guarantee victory . `` People hold their own physician in high esteem b ut are suspicious of the medical community as a whole , '' said Rowland , one of the House 's two doctors . `` I think if a physician is known in the area that he or she 's running in , that will be helpful . '' Congress 's other physician , Rep. Jim McDermott , D-Wash. , a leader in the health care reform debate , rem inds physician-candidates of what they will miss if elected . `` You don't get t he immediate gratification. .. . Nobody says thank you the way patients do . '' WASHINGTON Two years ago , Rep. Karen L. Thurman , D-Fla. , a civic-minded form er school teacher with strong political appeal to women , was part of a Democrat ic victory march led by female candidates who appealed to Republican-leaning vot ers alienated by their party 's anti-abortion stands and its tilt to the right . This year , Florida Republicans will try to overcome the loss of those voters , especially college-educated working women , with a candidate whose appeal is ge ared directly toward a once rock-solid Democratic electorate of poor and working -class whites , especially white men . It would be tough , in fact , to pick a R epublican more different from Thurman than the candidate likely to win the GOP n omination in Florida 's 5th Congressional District : Big Daddy Don Garlits , kin g of the quarter-mile drag strip . `` My family was Democratic going back to the days before the big Depression . We loved the Democratic Party , '' said Garlit s , 62 , who has taken a car from a standing start to 287 mph in 440 yards . `` But somewhere in the early '60s , they got the idea you didn't have to work. .. . They got on these ideas like there should be no corporal punishment in the sch ools , a lot of funny ideas . If you are very young and have a baby , they give you money for it ; and if you have another , they give you more money . '' Citin g the Bible and Judeo-Christian principles , Garlits said , `` The man should be the head of the family . I believe that because he 's got the strong hand . '' But , he added , `` Head of the family is one thing , we are not talking about o ut in the business world . '' Garlits says he is prepared if Thurman attacks him as `` anti-woman . '' `` I 'm going to bring in Shirley Muldowney , '' a three- time drag strip world champion , Garlits said . `` I 'm the guy who first signed her papers ( to enter competition ) and I intimidated the other two guys to sig n , so I have always been for women 's rights , before it was politically correc t . '' The Thurman-Garlits contest is an extreme example of the slow transformat ion of the Democratic and Republican parties , as the increasing influence of va lues , education and gender are working in overlapping ways to weaken the image of a working-class Democratic Party battling a management and Wall Street-domina ted GOP . Candidates such as Thurman women who can win support from Republican a nd independent voters concerned with such issues as health care and abortion rig hts have become crucial to a Democratic Party seeking to be competitive in an in creasingly suburban and college-educated electorate voters who have been most co mfortable with the GOP . One of the most important growth areas within the Democ ratic Party is among young , single working women with college educations . Conv ersely , Garlits , whose parents were poor farmers , is part of a modest but sig nificant movement in the GOP , a movement that has produced `` bubba Republicans '' in the South , and statewide candidates in the North with roots in Catholic , working-class and immigrant families the classic Democratic profile . The Repu blican gubernatorial and Senate nominees picked last month by primary voters in Pennsylvania are , respectively , Reps. Thomas J. Ridge , an Irish-Slovak with w orking-class roots in Erie , and Rick Santorum , the son of an Italian immigrant who represents a Pittsburg district . Reps. Rod Grams of Minnesota and Ronald K . Machtley of Rhode Island have good chances to win the GOP nominations for sena tor and governor , respectively , and both earned their political spurs by winni ng in Democratic-leaning blue-collar and working-class districts . Rep. Vic Fazi o , D-Calif. , chairman , Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee , said he views the loss of some traditional Democratic voters as `` a naturally occurring phenomena . `` We are the party that is nominating people who are compatible '' with the suburban , well-educated voter , Fazio said , adding that Democratic v ictories in suburban areas may be the counterpart to the Republican victories of the 1980s among blue-collar `` Reagan Democrats . '' One of the most important developments driving the transformation of the parties by gender and education i s the emergence of what might be best described as liberal and conservative valu e coalitions of voters . The partisan inclinations and demographic make-up of th ese Republican and Democratic voters runs directly counter to the classic divisi ons of the New Deal era . Voters in the 1992 election holding decidedly `` liber al '' views on abortion and gay rights were very well-educated , young and femal e 52 percent with college degrees , only 23 percent over age 50 and 68 percent w omen according to a study by Alan I . Abramowitz of Emory University . The firml y `` conservative '' voters on these issues were less well-educated and older 24 percent with college degrees , 48 percent age 50 or older and 57 percent were m en . Among some groups , such as young , single college-educated voters , the pa rtisan gulf between the sexes has reached such high levels `` that we ( pollster s ) joke among ourselves about how these people are going to have trouble findin g compatible spouses , '' said Democrat Celinda Lake . `` Clinton has definitely polarized the gender gap , '' said Republican pollster Linda DiVall . Younger w omen , she said , are more Democratic in part because they `` tend to be employe d in government social service , education , and look to a more activist governm ent . '' Greenberg said that female Democratic candidates are important not only in their ability to win in more upscale , suburban districts but also because ` ` they are seen as new , as outsiders .. . not part of the old-boy system . They reinforce the image of the Democratic Party as new and reformist , and they als o emphasize some of the secular side of the Democratic Party , '' strengthing th e perception of the party as supporting abortion rights . Female candidates in c ompetitive congressional districts were able to go `` beyond what normal Democra ts can do , '' because women are seen in many cases as representing `` change fo r the current system , '' said freshman Rep. Maria Cantwell , D-Wash . In 1992 , female candidates were involved in disproportionately high numbers in the close st contests in the nation , and this year they are disproportionately facing tou gh re-election fights against well-financed opponents . In addition to Thurman , the women the Democratic Party depended upon in many middle-to-upscale , genera lly suburban districts , include Reps. Elizabeth Furse ( Ore. ) , Jane Harman ( Calif. ) , Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky ( Pa. ) , Carolyn B . Maloney ( N.Y. ) , Leslie L. Byrne ( Va. ) , Lynn Schenk ( Calif. ) and Cantwell . While women are only 11 percent of the House membership , they make up virtually half of the wi nners in the closest races won by House Democrats in 1992 . JERUSALEM Ariel Sharon , Israel 's hawkish former defense minister , launched a campaign Friday to oust Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in the 1996 elections , de claring his intention to form a broad right-wing coalition and lead `` a rescue mission to save the Land of Israel and the Jewish people . '' But Sharon 's anno uncement was more a challenge to Benjamin Netanyahu , chairman of the opposition Likud Party , who has been feuding with Sharon . Netanyahu angrily demanded Sha ron 's expulsion from the party . `` Arik Sharon is a permanent subversive , '' he said . `` The time has come for such a man to leave Likud . '' Sharon laughed off Netanyahu 's demand , replying , `` I hope Mr. Netanyahu will at least perm it me to stay in the country . '' Former Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir , defeate d by Rabin two years ago , tartly rebuked Sharon , saying he `` should find more useful things to do in the national interest than undermine it . '' Ze ' ev `` Benny '' Begin , son of the late Prime Minister Menachem Begin and a longtime Sh aron foe , said that the burly former general is as likely to win the premiershi p as he is the world tennis championship . And some members of Rabin 's Labor Pa Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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