2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 24, 1996 NAlmom/wORILD UNION Continued from Page 1 Instead, the President offered a hand- ful of modest proposals aimed at easing middle-class anxieties, including a $1,000 scholarship for the top 5 percent of all high school graduates. Aides said it would cost taxpayers $125 million. He called for tax incentives for busi- nesses that clean up abandoned proper- ties and expansion ofa federally funded college work-study'program to 1 mil- lion students, up from 700,000 now. He called for an FBI-led war against youth gangs and for legislation protecting workers' pensions and insuring health care benefits for employees who change jobs or have preexisting conditions. Next week, Clinton is scheduled to formally lay down a 1997 budget that cuts $297 billion in domestic discretionary spending over seven years, $159 billion more than he was proposing amonth ago. Clinton did not emphasize his fights with Republicans over the budget. The President reiterated his position that the Republicans should accept an increase in the federal debt ceiling and agree to abalanced-budget deal that locks in $600 billion in savings while deferring settlement of major differences. What Clinton did emphasize in the budget was the human side to the gov- ernment shutdown, in the form ofRich- ard Dean, a Social Security Adminis- tration employee flown to Washington to sit in the audience and have his story told by the President. Speeches mark 1st debate of '96 nice The Washington Post WASHINGTON - President Clinton was longer and stronger than Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole (R- Kan.), his possible re-election oppo- nent, as they faced off last night in back-to-back television speeches that were, in effect, the first debate of the 1996 campaign. The odds favored the President, who delivered his thoughts in the ceremo- nial splendor that surrounds the an- nual State of the Union address. Dole, responding for the GOP from his flag- bedecked Capitol office, drew the philosophical and political differences sharply but sounded flat and unemo- tional as he read from the TelePrompTer. "Dole didn't look very hot," said Tim Hibbits, an independent pollster in Port- land, Ore. "He seemed old and tired. Republicans who want to beat Clinton may not think he's the guy who can pull it off." a NATIONAL REPORT 0 3rd govt. shutdown may be coming WASHINGTON - Republican congressional leaders searched Monday for a way to avoid a new federal shutdown at week's end, but they showed little desire to heed Clinton administration pleas for quick action to head off a first-ever federal default by March 1. Eager to avoid election-year blame for the third partial closure of federal agencies since November, top Republicans hoped for congressional passage as early as today of legislation keeping programs functioning for perhaps anot month. Without such a bill, dozens of agencies would once again have to p some operations in mothballs after the close of business Friday. The trick for Republican leaders, especially in the House, was balancing conservatives' demands for budget slashes with a bill President Clinton would sign. They were considering financing affected agencies at about 75 percent of last year's levels and eliminating some minor programs whose termination Clinton might accept. House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) said 12 to 15 small programs might also be killed. GOP aides listed possibilities as the National Biological Survey, which studies endangered species, and the Bureau of Mines, which the administration has already shut under GOP pressure. AP PHOT Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) delivers a televised response to President Clinton's State of the Union address last night. NewsAnalysis A senior official in the last three Republican presidential campaigns, speaking anonymously, said, "Clinton did a great job. I think he'll get a bump up in the polls from this." Dole, this consultant said, "came across as having no soul." A second Republican public relations man called it "a pretty grim night for the GOP. (Clinton) took a lot of our issues and made them sound like his own." Going into the evening, Clinton faced a serious challenge. He would be talk- ing to a room dominated by his political adversaries, at a time when polls said most Americans were disgusted by the impasse over the budget and the federal government shutdowns. Intentionally or not, Clinton framed his address in a fashion that dramatized the partisanship of the Republican Con- gress. On most of the applause lines that brought Vice President Gore and the Democrats to their feet cheering, House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) also seated behind the President, sat with hands folded looking grim. Judge rescinds his order for newspaper to surrender photos Woman with Down syndrome receives new heart, lung SAN FRANCISCO - A woman with Down syndrome who was ini- tially refused a heart-lung transplant because doctors didn't think she was smart enough to handle the afteref- fects underwent the desperately needed operation yesterday. Sandra Jensen is believedtobethe first seriously retarded person in the United States to receive a major transplant. She was listed in critical but stable condition - routine for transplant recipients - after the five-hour op- eration, which came after Stanford Medical Center reversed course. "I'm ecstatic. This is a miracle,"said Dr. William Bronston, a state rehabilita- tion administrator and friend who helped lead the fight for Jensen's transplant. "The struggle to get Sandra on the transplant list was really a struggle to get everyone in the country on the list." Jensen, a high school graduate who has worked on behalf of people with Down syndrome, has lived on her own for several years. She has acted as a spokeswoman for the mentally disabled in California and attended President Bush's signing of the Ameri- cans with Disabilities Act in 1990. The Sacramento woman had con- genital heart problems. Lawyers question O. Simpson on alil LOS ANGELES - Nearly four months after he walked out of court a free man, O.J. Simpson finally was com- pelled to account under oath for his movements the night his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald L. Goldman, were slashed to death outside herhome on June 12,1994. simpson answered questions yester- day for the second consecutive day. hind closed doors in an attorney's fice in a deposition for wrongful death civil lawsuits filedby the victims' fami- lies. Monday's session focused mainly on events well before and after the murders. Simpson did not testify at the criminal trial against him, in which he was found not guilty, and thus has never had to explain in detail what he was doing at the time of the slayings. By Jennifer Harvey Daily Staff Reporter Students at The Minnesota Daily, the University ofMinnesota's student news- paper, learned yesterday they can keep an undisclosed number of unpublished photographs taken at a 1993 campus rally, at least for a little while. Hennepin County District Court Judge John Stanoch said yesterday he did not have the authority to order Edi- tor in Chief Michele Ames to surrender the photographs to law enforcement officials while the matter is still in the appellate process. "The ruling today was the one we hoped for," Ames said. Hennepin County prosecutors are seeking the photos because they may resolve conflicting witness accounts of an alleged assault that occurred during the rally, which was covered and photo- graphed by a Minnesota Daily staff member. The matter was referred to Stanoch when the prosecutors argued Monday that the photos should be turned over to them immediately after the Minnesota Court of Appeals reapproved the sub- poena for the photos last Friday in a 2- 1 decision. Ames said the staff must now wait to find out ifthe Minnesota Supreme Court will hearthe case, which was submitted to them on Monday. "We could know in five minutes or we could hear next month," Ames said. On Monday, Ames said she would not turn over the photos, even ifStanoch ordered her to surrender them. She said that turning over the photos would keep sources from sharing infor- mation with journalists and lead the public to see the media as evidence faults for prosecutors and police. She said surrendering the photos conflicts with press freedoms. Ames said yesterday's decision was a small battle and a larger issue remains to be decided. She said she remains optimistic about the Supreme Court's acceptance of the case. "We'll take our victories where we can find them," she said. SKATING AROUND THE V Rabin's assassin denies premeditation TEL AVIV, Israel - At the start of his trial yesterday, Yitzhak Rabin's as- sassin admitted he fatally shot the Is- raeli prime minister following a Tel Aviv peace rally last fall, but said he was not guilty of premeditated murder because he would have been just as happy to paralyze his victim. Yigal Amir, a 25-year-old Jewish law student, pointed out to the three- judge panel in Tel Aviv District Court that he had aimed his pistol at Rabin's spinal cord, "at the seam of the suit," rather than at the prime minister's head. "I did not mean to murder Prime Min- ister Yitzhak Rabin, the man. I meant, as a prime minister, to remove him from the road," Amir said. "The goal was to stop his political activity. My intention was to shoot him in such a way that would pre- vent him from serving as prime minister, either by paralysis or, for lack of another choice, by death." When Judge Edmond Levy asked why Amir had fired three times, Amir said, "Just to make sure that I hit him." Amir appeared to be hoping for a manslaughter conviction, which car- . R. L D )7A ries a maximum 20-year sentence rather than the mandatory life sentence of a premeditated murder conviction, but his two-lawyer defense team was at odds over the strategy. Russian officials seelP to end corruption MOSCOW - To the new parliament's overwhelming must-do list, Russia's top cops yesterday sought to add another urgent item: anti-corrup- tion legislation. Calling corruption a threat to the very nation, four Interior Minis i brass urged lawmakers to pass a punishing wayward government offi- cials, from the traffic police officer who takes bribes to tear up tickets to the regional governor in cahoots with organized crime. "Even if the law is imperfect, if it is adopted it will at least be a declaration" that the state plans to crack down on corruption, pleaded Maj. Gen. Nikolai Getman, who directs the ministry's trans- portation sector. "It is better to hayS law with drawbacks than no law at afF' - From Daily wire services The Micnigan Daily (ISSN 0745-96i) is published Monday through F-riday during the rail and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $165. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS; The Michigan Daily. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY: Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu ~ _J ..~I .~- .. 5U 1VIW 4 ~ 1 m I DITnRIA/ STAFF M1CH; NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Lisa Dines. Andrew Taylor. Scot Woods. STAFF: Cathy Boguslaski, Kiran Chaudhri. Anita Chik. Jodi Cohen, Sam T. Dudek, Jeff Eldridge, Lenny Feller, Ronnie Glassbtrg, Kate Glickman, Jennifer Harvey. Amy Klein. Stephanie Jo Klein, Jeff Lawson. Laurie Mayk, Heather Miller, Soumye Mohan. Laura Nelson. Tim O'Connell, Anupama Reddy. Alice Robinson, Megan Schimpf. Matthew Smart, Michelle Lee Thompson. Christopher Wan, Katie Wang, Will Weissert, Josh White. CALENDAR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James M. Nash, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Adrienne Janney. Zachary M. Raimi. STAFF: Bobby Angel. Patience Atkin, Niraj R. Ganatra. Ephraim R,Gestein, Keren Kay Hahn, Judith afka Chris KayeJeftW Keating, Joel F. Knutson, Jim Lasser, Ann Markey. Erin Marsh. Brent McIntosh, Scott Pence. David Schultz, Paul Serilla. Jordan Stancil. 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