The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December_6, 1994 - 7 Bentsen to resign Treasury position Administration accuses Gingrich of 'false' remarks Economic adviser Robert E. Rubin to fill secretary post, Clinton officials say The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Treasury Sec- retary Lloyd Bentsen has told President Clinton that he will resign early next year and Clinton will tap economic adviser Robert E. Rubin to replace him, perhaps as early as today, Clinton ad- ministration officials said yesterday. Bentsen's departure will deprive *Ie president of an experienced legisla- tive strategist just as the White House gears up for battle with a Republican- controlled Congress. Rubin's move to Treasury would thrust him from a behind-the-scenes coordinating role, in which he has been considered highly effective, into a high-profile position as the administration's most visible spokesman on financial issues. Rubin, a millionaire investment anker who left his position as co- chairman of Goldman Sachs & Co. to head Clinton's National Economic Council, is not expected to make any major policy shifts. But he is unlikely to match Bentsen's instincts for deal- ing with Congress. The front-runner to replace Rubin is Deputy White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles, officials said, who *on high marks within the administra- tion for defending Clinton's health care plan against fierce opposition from small business when he headed the Small Business Administration. And the team is likely to lose an- otherplayer by spring. Commerce Sec- retary Ronald H. Brown is the "leading candidate" to be the chairman of the Clinton re-election campaign, two se- nior officials said yesterday. One of those officials, who has spoken with Brown, said such a move would likely come in late March or April. Bentsen, 73, who hadthepresident's respect but whose counsel on a variety of policy issues was often disregarded, raised the prospect of his departure with Clinton in September, adminis- tration officials said. He told the presi- dent of his intention to resign over the weekend, according to officials. Bentsen, whose third Senate term would have expired this year if had not joined the administration, will be exit- ing on a high note, after helping Clinton win congres- sional approval for a new global trade agreement last week. But while at t Treasury, the de- partment has had ' its share ofembar- rassment: a disas- trous Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Bentsen and Firearms op- eration against a religious cult in Waco, Tex., questions about the Secret Service's effectiveness protecting the White House and a con- troversy about how Treasury handled an inquiry into a failed savings and loan with which the president and Hillary Rodham Clinton had busi- ness dealings. Asked after a speech before large audience at the National Press Club yesterday whether he was stepping down, Bentsen said: "I would say, in paraphrasing Mark Twain, the news is premature. I'll let you know." The Washington Post WASHINGTON -The Clinton administration yesterday aggressively seized on comments by future House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) to sug- gest Republicans have engaged in a pattern of reckless public statements that raises questions about their ability to govern as the majority party in Con- gress. White House Chief of Staff Leon E. Panetta twice met with reporters yes- terday to accuse Gingrich of making "absolutely false" statements in assert- ing on Sunday that a quarter of the White House staff had used drugs within four or five years of seeking their jobs. In response to questions from Re- publican congressmen, the White House this year formally submitted written information to a House sub- committee attesting that "about 1 per- cent" of White House job applicants had indicated earlier drug use. "The time has come when he has to understand that he has to stop behaving like an out-of-control radio talk show host and begin behaving like the Speaker of the House of Represent- tives,"Panetta said of Gingrich. . Later in a second session with re- porters, Panetta said the White House "cannot do business" with Gingrich if he continues to make unfounded per- sonal allegations. He said Gingricl's comments and those by Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) last month that Clinton might need a bodyguard if he visited North Carolina, were part of "troubling pattern" from new Republican leaders. "I think what's ... troubling here is that this seems to be a pattern now.- It started with Jesse Helms, and now it's Newt Gingrich, in which basically there are reckless charges made, reckless ac- cusations that impugn people's integ rity. No evidence. No facts. No founda- tion,justbasically smear and innuendo." The White House response signified that despite talk of cooperation with the new Republican majority, the Clinton team intends to portray the GOP as ex- tremists without the temperament to gov- ern. Future Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich (right) speaks to Dick Armey (R- Texas) on Capitol Hill yesterday. Girl quits high school, advances to college BOYNE CITY, Mich. (AP) - With or without her high school di- ploma, April Mattson is determined to pursue a college degree. April, 17, is skipping her senior year and has become a full-time student at North Central Michigan College. "She's outgrown high school," said April's father, Greg Barber Mattson. "I can't imagine still being in high school," April said, sitting comfortably in the college library. "It seems really mo- notonous tome." Getting a high school diploma isn't important to April. She just wants to write and illustrate books. "She knows what she wants," her father said. "And she's willing to work for it." Even though April decided to quit high school for college, the absence of a diploma has caused problems with funding and acceptance at some schools. She is not eligible to test for a General Education Diploma since she is not 19 years old or in jail. School officials have been uncom- fortable with April's desire to skip a step. Boyne City High School Princi- pal Xavier Gaudard said he's con- cerned about what criteria will be used for students taking the step. Without fulfilling the school board's requirements, he cannot grant her a diploma. "Every year we have people who don't graduate because of half credit," he said, noting a need to adhere to policy. Dave Munger, dean of students at NCMC, said the college doesn't know- ingly accept high school juniors or seniors unless they are also taking classes at their high schools. "We are not in the business of steal- ing students from high school before their graduation," he said. A compromise appears to have been reached. After looking at the options, April has become a duo-enrolled student by taking an art class at Boyne City High School and classes at the college. If she passes an equivalency test for Con- sumers Education and transfers three of her college credits to high school, Guadard said she will get a diploma. April said she sees it as a way to avoid wasting a year because of society'srules. "They need to look at kids as indi- viduals instead of numbers," Greg Mattson said. "Each student is differ- ent. There's a lot of students who by the time they're in 11th grade, they're bored. They've learned all the school can teach them." 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