1 "Airlow/waftim) The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 11, 1995 - 5 Wbitewater 0 Sen. D'Amato to scrutinize her involvement with failed Arkansas savings and loan Newsday 'ASHINGTON - Hillary Rodham (nton's role as a Rose Law Firm partner will come into sharper focus today as the Senate Whitewater Committee convenes hearings in the "Arkansas phase" of its investigation. The ins-and-outs of her involvement with Madison Guaranty Savings, the failed Arkansas thrift, are a critical aspect of the Whitewater investigation. The savings bank was owned and operated by the Clintons' Whitewater partner, - hearings to focus on Hillary Clinton's actions James McDougal, and the relationship is central to Republican allegations that McDougal steered illegal cash to the Clintons through Rose. This round of hearings also will attempt to explore Hillary Clinton's efforts to lobby state regulators, including state Securities Commis- sioner Beverly Bassett Schaffer - on behalf of Madison. Going back to the 1992 presidential campaign, Hillary Clinton has steadfastly as- serted that she steered clear of representing clients appointed by her husband, who was then the governor. In a news conference yesterday, the panel's chairman, Sen. Alfonse D'Amato (R-N.Y.),criti- cized Hillary Clinton and said the White House is engaging in a strategy of "delay, deception and withhold" in failing to release documents sought by the committee. President Clinton's lawyer, Bob Bennett, told CNN Tuesday night that the White House has been fully cooperative and forthcoming with investigators and dismissed D'Amato's investi- gation as election-year "partisan politics." As a result, Republicans may have to go to court for the information, D'Amato said, assert- ing that it is "very unlikely" the panel will complete its probe by its Feb. 29 deadline, pushing the investigation further into the presi- dential election year. "We are determined to go ahead,"D'Amato said. It's anticipated that today's scheduled lead- off witness, Richard Massey, will deny Hillary Clinton's repeated assertion that he was the "very young bright associate" who brought Madison as a client to Rose in 1985. Massey is now a Rose partner. Although he knew officers at Madison and was supervised by Hillary Clinton, Massey told Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. regulators in October 1994 that he did not know how or why the troubled thrift hired Rose shortly after he joined the firm. His friend and Madison officer, John Latham, told Resolution Trust Corp. investigators last July that McDougal - Madison's owner and the Clintons' partner in the doomed Whitewater land deal - suggested he hire Rose because he had "friends over there," particularly the Clintons. In recently released notes of a political dam- age control discussion about Madison and Rose during the 1992 presidential campaign, Clinton political adviser Susan Thomases wrote that then-Rose partner Webster Hubbell said that Massey "will say he had a lot to do with getting the client in." In May 1995, Hillary Clinton told the RTC: "I don't believe I knew anything about any of these real estate projects" financed by Madison. But records released by the White House to D'Amato last week offer evidence that Hillary Clinton was deeply involved in Madison's busi- ness dealings. During his news conference yesterday, D'Amato said the panel is particularly inter- ested in Hillary Clinton's statement to FDIC officials that she did no significant legal work on Castle Grande, a trailer park deal described by regulators as a "sham." Chechen hostage . crisis tontinue, PERVOMAYSKAYA, Russia - Russian troops allowed a con 'Chechen rebels and 160 hostag head for Chechnya yesterday, the rounded them as terrified hos begged the Russians not to shoo guerrillas issued an ultimatum: gu teed safe passage or dead hostag arlier in the day, the rebel k eased up to 3,000 hostages seiz -a surprise attack Tuesday on the si .ern city of Kizlyar. The rebels had up in a hospital with the hostage demanded Russian troops with from Chechnya. Russian officials allowed abou rebels to leave Kizlyar under 1 military escort, but helicopters fir the convoy of 11 buses and two t *t approached the border, and sian troops later surrounded it. The hostage crisis was the later barrassment for the Kremlin, whi been unable to suppress the Che insurgency in 13 months of fight At least 33 people were killed raid on Kizlyar, which is in the Ru republic of Dagestan, bord Chechnya. Dozens were report jured. lgjhen the convoy pulled omayskaya, a village six mile the Chechen border, rebels w green Islamic headbands emerged the 11 buses and two trucks. Ho grenade launchers onto their shou they took up positions along th umn of vehicles. The 160 hostages, including than 100 ' women and children mained inside. Children peeke the buses' shattered win ile their mothers and other w .Serbs fic First lad begins tour wi new book on children s (AP) voy of ges to n sur- stages t. The uaran- Cs. s had zed in south- holed s and hdraw at 250 heavy red on rucks Rus- st em- ch has echen ing. in the ussian ering ed in- into s from earing d from isting Aders, e col- more n, re- d out dows, omen AP PHOTO Hostages from Klzlyar, held by Chechen rebels, wave from their bus at Russian soldiers not to shoot yesterday afternoon. Chechen rebels freed up to 3,000 rebels In Klzlyar, which they had seized Tuesday. vigorously waved pieces of white bedsheets, shouting at the Russian sol- diers not to shoot. Two helicopters buzzed the column and several armored vehicles stood nearby. Once they reached Pervomayskaya, the rebels released eight Dagestani of- ficials who had accompanied them to guarantee safe passage, news reports said. Transport helicopters swooped down just south of Pervomayskaya to drop off Russian troops. As the sun set, the soldiers began digging in while icy winds whipped snow off the flat, deso- late fields. By nightfall, the situation was not resolved. Russian officials were nego- tiating with the Chechens to seek a way to avoid more bloodshed. Russian officials claimed the Chechen convoy was held up by Dagestani civilians blocking the road with 20 cars to demand the release of the hostages. Villagers, however, said a bridge along the road to Chechnya was blown up earlier in the day by a Russian helicopter. In Moscow, the Russian government indicated it would deal with the rebels decisively. President Boris Yeltsin said they would have to answer for their actions and accusedthem ofbreaking their word by not releasing all the hostages near the Chechen border. Prime Minister ViktorChernomyrdin said the rebels would be punished but nothing would be done that would en- danger the hostages. "We aren't going to start frontal at- tacks or act according to an eye-for-an- eye principle, since we feel convinced that death only brings death," he said. "But the bandits and terrorists will be punished." Chernomyrdin said Russia would never meet the separatists' demand for independence. "Chechnya is Russia," the prime minister said. Rebel leader Dzhokhar Dudayev, in hiding in Chechnya, warned that "events on a larger scale" than Kizlyar were possible, the ITAR-Tass news agency said. The raid appeared aimed at showing the Russians that the Chechens are far from defeated and can still strike at will, even within Russia itself. The leader of the raid, Dudayev's son-in-law Salman Raduyev, said from his seat on one of the buses that he went ahead with Tuesday's attack even though he suspected Russian authori- ties knew about it. WASHINGTON (AP) - It was Mother's Day. Aproud Hillary Rodham Clinton sat in church, awaiting 4-year- old Chelsea's answer to the minister's question: What would she give her mommy if she could give anything in the world? "Life insurance," Chelsea chimed. No, little Chelsea had no plans to knock off her mom. She simply thought people with life insurance were guaran- teed to live forever. "It was the best Mother's Day gift I could have received. This tiny child wanted me to live forever," Mrs. Clinton says. "Isn't that what being alive is all about - being loved like that?" Mrs. Clinton relates the story in her new book on raising children, "It Takes A Village," due in bookstores this week. The book is a compilation of axioms ("Children do not arrive with instruc- tions"), family anecdotes and the expe- riences Mrs. Clinton gainedduring more than 25 years of advocacy work on behalf of women, children and fami- lies. Publication comes as Mrs. Clinton is under fresh attack from Republicans concerning Whitewater and White House travel office firings. Questions are certain to follow the first lady on the road as she promotes her book, starting Tuesday in Little Rock, Ark. "This is something that she is very proud of and is very excited about," said spokeswoman Lisa Caputo. As for questions from Mrs. Clinton's critics, Caputo said, "Only time will tell." "It Takes A Village, And Other Les- sons Children Teach Us," published by Simon & Schuster, draws its title from the African proverb, "It takes a village to raise a child." Mrs. Clinton writes that she chose the title as a reminder that "children will thrive only if their families thrive and ifthe whole ofsociety cares enough to provide for them." She underscores one of herhusband's main political points: Government has an obligation to care for the young, the poor and the vulnerable. "Government has to do its part to reverse the crisis affecting our chil- dren," Mrs. Clinton writes. "Children, after all, are citizens too." But most engaging are the first lady's recollections of raising Chelsea, the Clintons' only child, against a back- drop of state and national politics. The first lady says she weathered a spate of difficulties and deaths in 1993 by "Government has to do its part to reverse'the crisis affecting our children. Children, after all, are citizens too" - Hillary Rodham Clinton recalling one of Chel sea's nursery rhymes: "As I was standing in the street /As quiet as could be / A great big ugly man came up / And tied his horse to me." The rhyme, she says, "summed up the absolute unpredictably and frequent unfairness of life." When Clinton was governor of At- kansas, they used role-playing to help Chelsea deal with political attacks against her father. The child would al- ternately pretend to campaign as her father, then an opponent. They also were determined to give Chelsea normal experiences, even if they wound up looking silly in the process. Mrs. Clinton would frequently lie beside Chelsea in a front hallway at the governor's mansion, "watching the dancing rainbows" of sunlight bounc- ing off the crystal chandelier. One night, Chelsea wanted to taste a coconut, which she'd read about in her Curious George story books. They bought a coconut, but had a hard time opening it, Mrs. Clinton writes. "Finally we went out to the parking lot of the governor's mansion, where we took turns throwing it on the ground until it cracked. The guards could not figure out what we were up to, and we laughed for hours afterward." Clinton, she says, was an eager father from the start. Once he excitedly called her to watch baby Chelsea turn over. "He ... told me in all seriousness that he was sure she understood gravity. A few minutes later, she rolled off the bed and fell onto the carpet. So much for her grasp of physics!" e Sarajevo after new violence erupts Los Angeles Times SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina -Struggling to prevent amass, violent exodus of Bosnian Serbs from the nearby suburbs they control, interna- "nal mediators yesterday brought to- gether Serb and Muslim-Croat govern- ment officials in this capital for the first time since war began nearly four years ago. The unprecedented meeting came a day after an anti-tank rocket, fired from one of the Serb-held suburbs, slammed into a crowded streetcar in the center of Sarajevo, killing one person, injuring xrly 20 others and eroding the confi- ce of some Bosnians in their NATO peace-keepers. And even as the officials met for three hours, hundreds of Serbs could be seen loading trucks with furniture, ap- pliances and, in one case, a kitchen sink as they prepared to flee districts around Sarajevo that will revert to government control under the U.S.-brokered Bosnia peace plan. The recent attack and threats of more *lence have apparently discouraged the White House from including Sarajevo on President Clinton's itiner- ary when he visits Bosnia this weekend, government officials here said. In Vogosca, a Serb suburb a few miles northeast of Sarajevo, moving trucks lined the main residential road yesterday, and entire families were packing. "After three years of war, we cannot live together," said Mile, a Bosnian Serb policeman. "The only thing I can trust is a divided city." Mile, who did not want his last name published, was joined by relatives who hauled a sofa, carpets and appliances onto the cracked sidewalk. A 5-year- old contributed his sled. Serbs fear reprisals from a Muslim- led government and its followers who withstood the Bosnian Serb siege of Sarajevo. They are threatening to leave en masse, burning their houses behind them. Because such violence would wreck the peace process, the senior civilian administrator of the Dayton, Ohio, agreement, Swedish diplomat Carl Bildt, convened leaders of the Sarajevo Serbs and Sarajevo Muslim and Croat officials for a first-ever meeting of the two sides inside the capital. Earlier meetings on technical and military mat- ters have been held at the airport out- side Sarajevo, a"neutral" facility under U.N. control that formed the borderline between government and Serb terri- tory. It was the first time a Bosnian Serb official has publicly visited Sarajevo since the war started. "I am pleased after four years to be back in the city, and I am not afraid," said Maksim Stanisic, president of the executive board of"Serbian Sarajevo," as he emerged a little wide-eyed from the meeting. Bildt said he was trying to treat Sarajevo as one city so that the different sides become accustomed to the idea of a united capital. He cautioned against expecting very much to come from the initial contacts, but he welcomed the government's new decision to proclaim amnesty for most soldiers. Meanwhile, U.S. Navy Adm. Leighton Smith, commander of NATO's peace force in Bosnia, trav- eled to Belgrade to enlist the support of President Slobodan Milosevicofneigh- boring Serbia in stopping additional attacks like Tuesday's rocket-blasting of the Sarajevo streetcar. "The president agrees with me 100 percent that this was a heinous act, an act of a terrorist, an act of an individual who himself or herself was trying to do damage to the (Bosnian) peace agree- ment," Smith told reporters. As Smith spoke, his representatives in Sarajevo sought to downplay the attack as an isolated act of common crime. The act was caused by a 64 mm light anti-tank rocket fired from a high-rise apartmentbuildingin Grbavica,a Serb- held district of the city. MASS MEETINGS Jan. 168, 1 and 24 at 7 p.m. in the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard St. I1 Lecture Series presents I .3." 6:00 pRD ,%~ IF-= L-41= 4C1 1\.,/1 IFE !! -I FI I1)9th, A UM MAJOR EVENTS/DIVISION OF STUDENT AFFAIRS PRESENTATION JuanWilliams January 15,1996 7 p.m. McKenny Union Ballroom N A R JA OICV 7 UARty "1996 'S Political analyst for the "Outlook Section" of the Washington Post, Williams is best known as the author of Eyes on the Prize --America's Civil Rights Years, 1954- 1965. His extensive experience as a broadcast journalist includes panelist appearances on Washington Street An w m v s!1