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- WORLD, Page 39GRAPEVINE
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- MANUEL SLEPT HERE. In fear of an assassination plot,
- Panamanian strongman Manuel Antonio Noriega has ordered a
- security check of his inner circle, and no longer sleeps in the
- same bed two nights in a row. Afraid of being poisoned, he has
- many of his meals prepared by Norma Amado, a close adviser.
- Amado happens to be the mother of Noriega's mistress, which
- suggests that if the dictator ever has a lover's quarrel, he
- may want to consider eating out that night.
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- OH, NOT HIM AGAIN! Guess who the American-Arab
- Anti-Discrimination Committee has asked to address its national
- convention in Washington in April? Hint: he wears a kaffiyeh,
- seems to like traveling and was refused a U.S. visa last
- November, when the U.N. invited him to speak. Yasser Arafat,
- who last week accepted the latest invite, plans to reapply for
- a visa. But will he get it this time? Though Arafat has since
- met U.S. conditions for dealing with the P.L.O., the incoming
- Bush Administration is certain to draw fire whether it approves
- or rejects the visa request.
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- CULTURE SHOCK. Japanese companies are using cheap labor
- along the U.S.-Mexican border to turn out everything from car
- parts to stereos. Problem is, the Japanese supervisors and
- their families are homesick. So in El Paso the firms opened a
- Japanese restaurant and a math school for Japanese children.
- Most locals still prefer Tex-Mex to sushi, but some El Paso
- mothers are wondering aloud how they can enroll their kids in
- the Japanese classroom.
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- TURNING THE CHAIRS. The French diplomat was baffled when
- Morocco's King Hassan II, a longtime friend, initially gave him a
- frosty reception in Rabat recently. As it turns out, the problem
- began when French President Francois Mitterrand visited the
- palace for a tete-a-tete with Hassan not long before. Mitterrand
- plunked himself down on an ornate divan, haughtily assuming it
- was meant for him rather than his royal host. Forced to pull up
- the simple straight-backed chair reserved for visitors, the
- monarch exacted his revenge on the French envoy.
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