WE f 1 41 at4 One hundred three years of editorial freedom Clinton names new White House counsel Widow of Malcolm X speaks on her mission By MPATANISHI TAYARI DAILY STAFF REPORTER Issuing a challenge to all Univer- sity students, the widow of Malcolm X said if she could conquer numerous adversities, anyone can. Bettey Shabazz, the spouse of El Hajj Malik El Shabazz (Malcolm X), spreads her own beliefs by giving speeches across the country. This evening at 7:30 in Rackham Auditorium, the University commu- nity will become one of the few to receive insights from the woman be- hind prominent leader Malcolm X as she discusses how multiculturalism came to be a significant part of her life after the violent murder of her hus- band. "(Multiculturalism) is one of the marks of the 21st century. Not only must we branch out, but we must get closer together in terms of understand- ing where we are and understanding areas we agree on and disagree and how they impact in positive and nega- tive ways on the running of this global system," said Shabazz in a 45-minute telephone interview yesterday. "I am not only for people who are members of the African diaspora, but for other people as well. I think we have to see ourselves as examples for our people but also for the world. "A number of different ethnic groups have reached out to me in a time of need and have given me their energy " and their time and their resources, and it is extremely important then that I produce on that level.... Part of their energy was a catalyst for kicking me into motion and doing what it is that I do today, not only for that but for other people as well." Adopted and reared in an African Methodist Episcopal church, Shabazz remembers living an uppermiddle class, nd virtually worry free, existence in Detroit. "I didn't have a difficult time grow- ing up; I had all of the things that any upper middle class young woman should have. It was later in life," Shabazz continued, "that I experienced hardships, (but) I think it was a very important lesson. "I . See SHABAZZ, Page 2 THE WASHINGTON POST WASHINGTON - President Clinton moved yesterday to quiet an uproar over White House ethics in the Whitewater affair by naming Lloyd N. Cutler, a respected Washington insider with consummate political skills, as special presidential counsel for a term limited at his request to about six months. Cutler, a 76-year-old native New Yorker who has walked the corridors of Washington power since 1946, was White House counsel for former Presi- dent Carter and has had former Secre- taries of State Henry Kissinger and George Shultz as clients of his law firm. He will succeed Bernard Nussbaum, who was forced to resign Saturday after receiving confidential information from TreasuryDepartment officials on a government investiga- tion involving an Arkansas thrift whose owner had business dealings with the president andfirstlady Hillary Rodham Clinton. "We wanted to get somebody in right away to assure people that this White House was operating according to ethical standards," an administration official said. In a White House news conference with the silver-haired, courtly Cutler, Clinton said he had found a lawyer of the required integrity. "I wanted aLloyd Cutler type of lawyer, so Ijust decided I would go to the original first and see how I could do." Accepting the post after two days of negotiationswitliClinton and White House chief of staff Thomas "Mack" Uloyd N. Cutler The new White House coup- Deputy secsa 76-yearoldformeraide dent J to President Carter, will memot work to assure the Clinton staff M administration operates ac- remova cording to ethicalstandards docum and complies with congres- Whitew sionaldemandsfortestimony He wil from senior aides. the cold McLarty, Cutler responded: "In gov- ernment, as in other aspects of life, trust is the coin of the realm, and, Mr. Presi- dent, I pledge myself to do what I can to assure that that trust is maintained." In the 130 workdays he agreed to serve - he amiably cited his "senior citizen" status, the tough job and his desire for time with the "very young and peppy wife" he married as a wid- ower in 1989 - Cutler will focus on honing procedures to "maintain public confidenceintheintegrity andtheopen- ness of the presidency," he said. Joel Klen CounseltothePresi- oel Klein sent out a to the White House Larch 3, to cease the at or destruction of ents involving the water investigation. 7 continue to oversee ection of documents Robert B. FIS Robert B. Fiske, tap Attorney GeneralJan in February to inve the Whitewater affai congressional lead hold off on an separ vestigation, saying i be "harmful to his o investigation." One issue for Cutler's immediate attention, he and Clinton said, is a request made yesterday by Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa) to call 40 Whitewater- connected witnesses at a scheduled March 24 House Banking Committee oversight hearing on the Resolution Trust Corp. Leach's proposed witnesses include McLarty; James McDougal, the former Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan owner who was had committed no wrongdoing in his Arkansas dealings. "I am very relaxed about this,"he said. ke Bernard Nussbaum pped by White House counsel Ber- etReno nard Nussbaum resigned in estigate the wake of turmoil over the r urged Clinton administration's ders to handling of the Whitewater rate in- land deal He will testify this t would week in front of a federal ngoing grandjury to discuss his role in the scandal "I did not do anything wrong. There is nothing here." Cutler, joining Clinton in praising Nussbaum and saying his predecessor suffered from "bad luck," nevertheless sought to distinguish his working phi- losophy from Nussbaum's. "Thecounselissupposedtobe coun- sel for the president in dffice and for the office of the presidency," Cutler said. A president's private affairs should be handled by "personal private counsel." See WHITEWATER, Page 7 Cutler pledges to comply with GOP calls for aides testimony THE WASHINGTON POST WASHINGTON - President Clinton and his new counsel, Lloyd N. Cutler, indicated a willingness yesterday to comply with congres- sional demands for testimony from senior White House aides about their meetings on Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan, although the presi- dent repeated that the special coun- sel investigating the allegations should be allowed to proceed unim- peded. Clinton also said it was unlikely he would assert executive privilege as a federal grand jury looks into a series of White House and Treasury Department'meetings about the government's investigation of Madison, a failed Arkansas thrift with ties to the Clintons. Clinton's comments came as he announced that Cutler had agreed to join the administration as special White House counsel, but only for a several-month stint while presiden- tial aides search for a permanent successor to Bernard Nussbaum, who resigned Saturday. Furor over the series of White See CUTLER, Page 7 COMMUNICATING THROUGH DANCE Israeli says Hebron massacre could have been prevented THE BALTIMORE SUN JERUSALEM - The massacre at Hebron could have been prevented if all the Israeli guards had been at their posts, a top military officer conceded at the opening of Israel's official in- quiry into the shooting. If four soldiers and a police officer had not been late arriving on duty Feb. 25, they might have prevented Dr. Baruch Goldstein from walking into the mosque where he opened fire, and killed dozens of Arabs, said Maj. Gen. Danny Yatom, head of the Army for the West Bank. "The (security arrangement) could have prevented ... the manner in which Goldstein operated, that is to say, the massacre," said Yatom. "He ... would not have been able to enter (the pray- ing hall)." The testimony came in the first day of hearings of a commission set up to delve into the mass murder by Goldstein, an extremist Jewish set- tler. Yatom said yesterday that 29 praying Muslims were killed in the attack; Palestinians say more. The commission, which includes two Supreme Court judges, a college president, an Arab judge and a former military chief, are charged with mak- ing an independent study of the mas- sacre. Similar commissions after past traumas in Israel's history have had considerable impact on the govern- ment. The commission began an extraor- dinary public airing of the events amid recriminations that government policy encouraged Goldstein's extremism and Army laxity failed to prevent his actions. See MASSACRE, Page 2 'U' profs influence enviromental policy Studies prompt Clinton executive order to deal with hazards By APRIL WOOD DAILY STAFF REPORTER A recent executive order signed by President Clinton that aims to identify and remove environmental hazards marks a hard fought victory for two University professors. SNRE Profs. Bunyan Bryant and Paul Mohai have been researching en- vironmental injustice and its relation to racial issues for years in the hope of spurring action. Bryant made a presentation yester- day at the School of Public Health on the various topics the pair studied and the actions that led to the order's sign- ing on Feb. 11. Bryant said that race and income are the two predominant factors affect- ing legislative decisions on landfill lo- cations and toxic waste storage. Bryant and Mohai found that in several cases, locations for waste disposal were in predominantly minority and low-in- come neighborhoods. One of the key cases studied a 1982 demonstration in Warren County, N.C. The demonstration followed an inci- dent where a transformer company sprayed PCB chemicals along a road runningthrough 14 counties. The dam- aged soil was removed and deposited in primarily Black areas. A subsequent uprising led to 500 arrests. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) then examined the im- mediate area around Warren County and discovered the three largest land- fills in that zone were located in minor- ity neighborhoods. Several conferences and commis- See STUDY, Page 2 JONATiTAN LURIME/Day Communication Prof. Terri Sarris dances at the Performance Network last night during a fundraiser for the Earwhacks Festival of avant-garde art. Stamps could cost 32ยข as early as next year TUE WuIAOUIfM/TfM MAT 1 ;:, - Z. 4.. y .^ 1. x :. ' r,.. - ? _ " . : 'U' police strengthen security on basketball court By LOU QUILLEN FOR THE DAILY Although Glossop said he has ob- served that the general relationship much force as necessary to stop them. However, "We are not going to use who had camped out overnight for a good seat at the game - had violated I