,Quayle att The Washington Post inner ci SAN FRANCISCO - Former "Ou Vice President Dan Quayle returned group, to the scene of his infamous "Murphy Comm Brown" speech yesterday and opened cisco. up a broad new front in his attack on 1960s - the "poverty of values" in America. has tak Continuing along acomeback trail fruit. TI * e hopes will transform him from a to welfa diculed former vice president to a are actu serious presidential candidate, Quayle cal can said the country is living the conse- through quences of a generation of feel-good As morals and the absence of an ethical society' code of conduct for young people. He tainmen said the impact has been especially therelig harsh on fatherless children in the bear res 4Vhite House o limits as aifron WASHINGTON (AP)-State-imposed con- gressional term limits threaten the election sys- tem, the Clinton administration said in its first ,fficial word on the volatile campaign issue. .,pporters of limits said the opposition "will come back to haunt the president." The administration's position is stated in an Aug. 31 request filed by Solicitor General Drew Days III seeking permission to participate in Supreme Court oral arguments over the validity of an Arkansas term-limits measure. Days, the administration's highest-ranking courtroom lawyer, told the court the Arkansas law "poses a particular threat to the federal stem in that it makes membership in the Con- ress dependent on regulation by the states." The Arkansas measure "contradicts the fram- ers' design, which was to fix the qualifications for office in the Constitution itself, and to deny the power to add further qualifications to both the Congress and the states," Days told the court. Voters in 15 states including Michigan have adopted such limits since 1990, and more states e onsidering them in this year's elections. W'Arkansas adopted term limits in 1992, while Clinton was governor. He opposed them then. Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers said Thurs- day, "The president has generally said over the course of the last 10 years that he has some real reservations about term limits.... He believes the voters should have the opportunity to elect their leaders." During the presidential campaign Clinton said he was opposed to limits for Congress but derstood the voter frustration behind the move- ent. He argued term limits would hurt small I TWO( A dwlstwielj Now you can really c1l a limited time, it comes bun from Apple. It's all the softw takes you through every asp created for your student lifest The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 9, 1994-- 9 acks America's 'poverty of values' in speech ties. r poverty of values spares no Quayle said in a speech to the onwealth Club of San Fran- "The pop philosophy of the - 'all truths are relative' - en root and it is bearing bitter be ills we sometimes attribute are queens and deadbeat dads ally manifestations of an ethi- ncer that has metastasized all levels of society." in 1992, he said many of 's institutions, from the enter- nt industry and the media to gious and political institutions, sponsibility for the problem. 'The pop philosophy of the 1960s ... has taken root and it is bearing bitter fruit.' - Dan Quayle former U.S. vice president "Little wonder then that so many young people live among ethical chaos," he said. "Everywhere they turn for guidance they see behavior that is wrong and yet is accepted, even in church.... It's time for each profession and discipline to set its own house in order." Quayle's 1992 speech sparked what he has described in his book, published this spring, as the "ideo- logical firestorm of my vice presi- dency." In that speech, delivered shortly after the riots in Los Angeles that were sparked by an initial verdict in the Rodney King trial, Quayle de- cried the dissolution of the family structure in America and added: "It doesn't help matters when primetime TV has Murphy Brown - a character who supposedly epito- mizes today's intelligent, highly paid, professional woman --mocking the importance of fathers, by bearing a child alone and calling it just another lifestyle choice." Quayle found himself mocked in the press, ridiculed on television, and the target of an episode of the "Murphy Brown" show. Since then, he has been treated more generously. The Atlantic maga- zine ran a cover story last spring en- titled, "Dan Quayle was right," and even Health and Human Services Sec- retary Donna Shalala, in testimony before Congress, said his overall con- clusions - that children who live in households with two parents present have a better chance to make it in society - was correct. Yesterday, he said his criticism of Murphy Brown was meant to raise alarms about absent fathers and fa- therless children, not single out single mothers for attack. "What I was talk- ing about then, and what I am reiter- ating today, is the importance of fa- thers. ... Raising a child is not just a mother's responsibility, it is a father's responsibility too." Quayle could not have asked for a better reception for the first of several major speeches he plans this fall. ipposes term it to democracy states, which depend on the seniority of their representatives to gain influence in Congress. He said voters should first demand signifi- cant congressional reform, including lobbying restrictions and campaign financing changes designed to make challengers more competi- tive. Advocates of limits said he was making a mistake. "Mr. Clinton, who has surrounded himself Voters in 15 states including Michigan have adopted such limits since 1990, and more states are considering them in this year's elections. with the consummate Washington insiders, is swimming against the tide on this," said Cleta Mitchell, director of the Term Limits Legal Institute. Mitchell called the administration's move to enter the Arkansas case "a political decision, and the wrong decision politically." The Supreme Court's argument session has not yet been scheduled, but may be held in late November. The court could respond as early as Oct. 3, the start of its new term, to Day's request to participate in the case. The first term-limits amendment was adopted by Colorado voters in 1990. States that followed suit in 1992 were Arizona, Arkansas, Califor- nia, Florida, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Ne- braska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Washington and Wyoming. ALL'S FAIR Navy lieutenant settles out of court with Tailhook hotel Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Paula Coughlin, the Navy lieu- tenant who first disclosed the sexual antics at the 1991 Tailhook convention, reached an out-of-court settlement Thursday with the association that sponsored the annual affair. Her lawsuit against the Hilton Hotel in Las Vegas, however, was still scheduled to come to trial Monday in Las Vegas. If it does, it will be the first public airing of exactly what happened that night. More than 80 women joined Coughlin in accusing the Navy fliers who makeup the association of fondling them and forcing them to run down a gauntlet of revelers. The settlement was announced in Las Vegas in ajoint statement by Nancy Stagg, the attorney for Coughlin, and John E. Gormley, the attorney for the Tailhook Association, which takes its name from an apparatus that helps airplanes land on aircraft carriers. "This matter has been resolved to the mutual satisfac- tion of both parties, the terms and conditions of which are confidential," their statement said. The Navy and Marine Corps investigated 140 cases of alleged sexual harassment and sexual assault, but all were dismissed or punished administratively without a court martial. Nevertheless, the Defense Department concluded that harassment and assault had taken place and that the convention was replete with indecent expo- sure and drunken grabbing and pawing of women. Las Vegas U.S. District Court Judge Philip Pro has asked the lawyers for Coughlin and the Hilton Hotel to meet Friday and try to reach a settlement. But sources close to the case believe this is unlikely. Coughlin has asked for damages but has not specified the amount. 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