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- NATION, Page 48Grapevine
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- POISON PEN. Nancy Reagan may feel better now that she has
- had what she calls My Turn, but reviewers have blistered her
- best-selling book for its get-even tone. The New York Times:
- "Smugness infects these memoirs." The New Republic: "Whining."
- The Boston Globe: "Hoity-toity." The Washington Post critic
- counted 42 pages on which Mrs. Reagan wrote that she was
- outraged, irritated, furious, angry or annoyed. Even her agent
- Mort Janklow concedes that Nancy vented "her pent-up anger."
- That, he claimed, was what made it "a wonderful book."
-
- FIRE AWAY. If the cold war had ever become so hot that a
- U.S. or Soviet leader had decided to go ballistic, would all
- those ICBMs have worked the way they were designed to? Under the
- INF treaty the Soviet Union has the option of destroying 100
- SS-20 intermediate-range nuclear missiles by launching them,
- unarmed, into test ranges. So far, it has fired off 72 SS-20s
- and, to the amazement of one U.S. Air Force observer, "all those
- suckers flew." Since the U.S. chose to destroy its comparable
- Pershing missiles by blowing them up, no one will ever know
- whether its birds were equally reliable.
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- NICE WORK, JOE. Shipworkers repairing a 650-ft.-long gash
- in the Exxon Valdez at San Diego's National Steel and
- Shipbuilding Co. are amazed that Captain Joseph Hazelwood and
- his crew kept the tanker from sinking after it ripped into a
- reef in Alaska's Prince William Sound last March. After the
- collision, the crew quickly sealed off the hatches to the ship's
- tanks, in effect creating a bubble that helped stabilize the
- vessel. Though he concedes that the accident should not have
- occurred, NASSCO Vice President Fred Hallett asserts that only
- the "incredible seamanship" of the Valdez crew prevented the
- spill from being much worse. Says Hallett: "Imagine an oil spill
- not of 11 million gallons but 60 million."
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- POPPING PILLS AND PUMPING LEAD. To build muscles that will
- help them outwrestle suspects, some police officers have taken
- to popping anabolic steroids. But mental-health experts warn
- that the drugs can make users emotionally unstable and
- aggressive. Such concerns were expressed in Houston after
- Patrolman Scott Tschirhart, a body builder, fatally pumped six
- shots into an armed off-duty security guard he had stopped for
- speeding on Nov. 15. While not linking the killing to steroid
- use, Police Chief Lee Brown has proposed random drug testing of
- his men.
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