12 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 1, 1994 GOP Continued from page 1 infuriated Republicans and appear to be helping create momentum for some Democrats. Oliver North's Senate race in Vir- ginia has created deep intraparty rift and attracted the most national atten- tion. The number of North's GOP critics grew last week to include Nancy Reagan, who asserted the former national security aide had lied to her husband about the Iran-Contra affair and couldn't tell fact from fan- tasy. But the North dispute, which has focused on his character and fitness for office, is less significant than the two mayoral desertions and others that reflect a split between GOP mod- erates and conservatives. "What you have here are a bunch of Republicans who basically are say- ing 'we don't want any government.' And a major part of the Republican Party won't go that far,' said Tony Coelho, senior advicer to the Demo- cratic National Committee. He said the officials who have jumped the fence of challenged GOP tenents foreshadow the problems the party will face reconciling its factions in the 1996 presidential campaign. Haley Barbour, chairman of the Republican National Committee, attributed the two mayoral endorse- ments to local feuds, alliances and cash flows. "Some officials want to have more state and federal money out into their city budgets," he said. GUNMAN Continued from page 1. from the ground or from the air," Bentsen said. The Secret Service re- portedly would like to see part of Penn- sylvania Avenue closed off for security reasons. Bentsen said yesterday, "The review will take into account the need to keep the White House as open and accessible to the public, consistent with the needs to protect not only our presi- dent and his family, but also protect one of the foremost symbols of the United States and what this nation stands for." Wearing a black polo shirt and black jeans, Duran only uttered his name when U.S. Magistrate Deborah Robinson asked for itduring yesterday's arraignment. Assistant U.S. Attorney John Finnegan asked that Duran undergo a 30-day psychiatric evaluation, citing concerns from a handwritten note found in the ex-soldier's truck. Finnegan and Holder would not comment on the contents of the letter. Law enforcement sources yesterday said the letter differs from a note they also found. Duran's public defender, Leigh Kenny, balked at a 30-day evaluation for her client. Robinson instead or- dered Duran to submit to a 24-hour examination by the District of Colum- bia Department of Social Services. Holder stressed that the examina- tion is to determine whether Duran understands the charges against him and is able to assist his lawyer, not to measure whether he is insane. White House studying vulnerability. Public access may have to be further restricted Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON -Treasury Sec- retary Lloyd Bentsen said yesterday that the Clinton administration is re- sponding to Saturday's shooting at the White House by reviewing "every aspect of how the White House com- plex could be attacked - from the air or from the ground," and acknowl- edged that public access might have to be further restricted. At a news briefing, Bentsen said recommendations will be made by early next year for upgrading secu- rity, such as possibly closing off the two-block stretch of Pennsylvania Avenue that runs in front of the man- sion or stationing more guards on the sidewalk. Bentsen's remarks came as a fed- eral magistrate ordered Francisco Martin Duran, who is charged with raking the White House with bullets Saturday, to undergo psychiatric test- ing to determine if he is mentally competent to stand trial. Magistrate Deborah Robinson is- sued her ruling at the request of fed- eral prosecutors, who said the con- tents of handwritten notes found in Duran's pickup truck suggested the Whit. Hose scurity White House security has been under review since Sept. 12, when a small plane crashed on the grounds. Saturday's shooting again pointed out the system's weak links, A look at the security now in place: clinton was watching Oval television here at the l~ timeonf th e honetino------ --------8 the press, etc., have sidewalk. People often special entrances. press up against the Visitors must pass fence to see the White security checks. Dogs House. Motion sensors check every vehicle and cameras detect entering the grounds, intruders, and guards sniffing for bombs. patrol the grounds. precautionary move was needed to ensure a fair trial. Duran fired 20 to 30 rounds from a semi-automatic assault rifle Saturday afternoon while stand- ing on a Pennsylvania Avenue side- walk in front of the White House. Administration officials acknowl- edged that a review of security proce- dures, which began after the Sept. 12 crash of a light plane on the White Surroundings What's next Sharpshooters are stationed The Secret Service on the rooftop. Airspace would like to expand around downtown security perimeters, Washington, D.C.,;is perhaps blocking off restricted. Streets are Pennsylvania Avenue blocked to traffic when the to traffic. Clinton president's motorcade resists this option, passes. The president's fearing the White path in and out of the White House would be cut House is frequently varied. off from the public. AP House south lawn, now centers on a sensitive question that long has been avoided: whether the president's house should, after two centuries, be put out of reach of the public - at the cost of dimming its status as a leading symbol of the nation's democracy and detracting from a prime experi- ence of visitors to the capital city. "The review will examine what- ever means might be available, in- cluding state-of-the-art technology, to better protect the White House and our national leaders," Bentsen told reporters. Asked how security needs could be balanced with the public's desire for access to the national landmark Bentsen said, "Well, obviously yoi can't have a totally open White House. .'You have to achieve a balance insofar as making it as accessible as you can to the American people and in turn giving the protection that's necessary for this nation's leaders and their families." He announced he was appointing an outside advisory com- mittee to assist in the review. The panel will include William H. Webster, former director of the FBI and CIA; David Jones, retired Air Force general and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Judith Rodin, a psychologist and president of the University of Pennsylvania. At his court hearing, Duran, a husky man dressed in a black polo shirt and black jeans, was asked only for hi* name as he stood in the heavily guarded courtroom. He made no statement, and will officially enter a plea later this week. Under U.S. law, if Duran were judged to be incapable of understand- ing the proceedings or aiding his at- torney, he could not be tried unless he underwent psychiatric treatment. With a week to go, Clinton campaigns for Pa. senator - The Washington Post PITTSBURGH - President Clinton embarked yesterday on a fi- nal week of campaigning before the midterm elections, joining forces with one of the Senate's most endangered Democratic incumbents, Sen. Harris Wofford (Pa.), to warn of an impend- ing Republican assault on Social Se- curity benefits. In rallies at Philadelphia's City hall and the Pittsburgh convention center, Clinton and Wofford struck the same theme, emphasizing that Wofford's Republican opponent, Rep. Rick Santorum, had proposed raising the eligibility age for collecting So- cial Security benefits. "My opponent says delay Social Security until you're at least 70," Wofford told the Philadelphia rally. "I say, not while I'm in the Senate." Clinton said the Republicans' "Contract with America" would re- quire Social Security cuts of $2,000 per person annually and Medicare cuts of $1,800 a year in order to achieve the promised balanced bud- get and tax cuts. "That's $3,600 a year out of the most vulnerable people in this country. ...That is wrong, and we must not allow it to happen," Clinton said. "So I say to you, say no to this radical attack on Social Security." Wofford has begun running com- mercials that focus on the Social Se- curity issue, and the Democratic Na- tional Committee yesterday unveiled a $750,000 ad campaign hammering away at the Social Security issue. The party billed this as a response to GOP ads about a White House memo list- ing cuts in Social Security and Medi- care as budgetary options. "Republican leader Newt Gingrich once proposed phasing out Social Secu- rity," one ad says. "Ollie North just called Social Security 'a gag,' also proposing its phase-out.... Now Republicans across America have signed a radical new con- tract that could cut Social Security ben- efits by almost $2,000 a year." North recently suggested that So- cial Security be made voluntary, a step that senior citizens groups say would destroy the current system. Gingrich in 1986 proposed phasing out the existing Social Security pro- gram, but has since renounced that position. The $2,000 figure is based on Democratic calculations of how much entitlement programs would have to be cut to balance the budget under the Republicans' proposed "Contract with America." In taking on Republicans on the Social Security issue, Clinton and the Democrats open themselves to poten- tial criticism. A recently leaked memo by their own budget director, Alice Rivlin, outlined a package of poten- tial cuts in Social Security, such as capping benefits of wealthier recipi- ents, increasing the retirement age and reducing cost-of-living adjust- ments. But the president and his top advisers insist he has no plans to take any of those steps. Haley Barbour, Republican National Committee chairman, called the ads "a desperate attempt to change the subject. Democrats may think these scare tac- tics will work on Halloween, but people see through the Big Lie campaign." AP PHOTO- President Clinton gestures to the crowd with U.S. Sen. 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