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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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082189
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08218900.030
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1990-09-19
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NATION, Page 26Grapevine
FOREIGN FIREPOWER. News photos of George Bush meeting with
Prince Bandar of Saudi Arabia in Washington last week included a
surprising detail: one of the prince's bodyguards was openly
packing a pistol in a hip holster. Many Americans might assume that
the Secret Service maintains a monopoly on firepower, but the U.S.
has reciprocal arrangements with other protection services. The
deal: foreign bodyguards carry guns when their VIP visits the U.S.,
and American agents do so when the President goes abroad. More
worrisome to the service are the hundreds of armed local policemen
near the President when he makes speeches at home. They might begin
shooting in the event of a disturbance, posing more danger than an
assassin would.
IN A STATE AT STATE. In a rare rebuff, Secretary of State James
Baker refused to take along Alexander Vershbow, the State
Department's top Soviet specialist, when he met recently with
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze. Career Foreign Service
officers complain that Baker has cut them off, preferring to confer
with a few longtime assistants. The only way the State Department
knows what Baker is up to, says a senior officer, "is by reading
his testimony on the Hill or seeing what he's putting out for press
guidance."
THE BLUE PAGES. The June 29 issue of the Congressional Record
could be rated X, thanks to remarks inserted by California
Congressman William Dannemeyer. In a piece titled "What Homosexuals
Do," the conservative Republican cites sexual practices --
including some involving vegetables and light bulbs -- that he
maintains are commonplace among gays. Dannemeyer's unorthodox entry
prompted Indiana Democrat Andrew Jacobs to ask the House ethics
committee to clarify standards for placing "unspoken, not to say
unspeakable, remarks in the Congressional Record."
THE OTHER BERLIN BLOCKADE. More than 40 years after the Berlin
airlift, West Germany is trying to break another blockade: an
Allied monopoly over East-West air traffic. The U.S., Britain and
France allow only their airlines to fly the lucrative air corridor
from the Federal Republic into Berlin. The Allies also control the
entire border zone, in effect barring direct traffic between major
cities of the two Germanys. Bonn is skirting the Allied monopoly,
if not breaking it: Lufthansa will fly from Frankfurt in West
Germany to Leipzig in the East by detouring through Czechoslovakia.