2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 11, 1997 NATiON/WORLD -- GOP:Gore should have reguae fns WASHINGTON (AP) - Challenging the legality of Vice President Al Gore's fundraising calls, Senate Republicans disclosed memos yesterday that they said indicated he should have known some money he solicited was covered by a law barring sueh calls on federal property. Democrats and the White House argued that the memos were not specif- ie enough to raise warnings for the vice president, who faces the possibility of a special prosecutor being appointed to investigate his calls. The documents showed that Harold Ickes, then White House deputy chief of staff, advised both Gore and President Clinton that the Democratic Party media fund - for which Gore solicited money - was using "hard money" donations. A February 1996 memo indicated that the party was allocating the first $20,000 of large donations to "hard money" accounts. The term refers to donations used directly to support federal candidates. Such contributions are covered under a law that outlaws fund-raising solicita- tions on federal property. Gore has steadfastly maintained the calls from his White House office were legal. The White House says the vice pres- ident believed he was asking for "soft money" - donations exempt from fed- eral limits and not used to support can- didates - when he made the solicita- tions in late 1995 and early 1996 for the media fund. But Republicans at Senate hearings into fund-raising abuses repeatedly challenged Gore's explanation. Sen. Arlen Specter, (R-Pa.), said the memos raised the possibility that Gore "knew that a solicitation for $20,000 would be a solicitation for hard money in violation of the federal statute." With Gore's future as a presidential candidate at stake, Democratic National Committee chair Steve Grossman angrily accused the panel's Republicans of trying to "undermine, paralyze and ,mU i ANDERSEN CONSULTING ANDERSEN WORLDWIDE SC INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS COME HOME-TO OPPORTUNITIES IN... ASIA EUROPE LATIN AMERICA MALAYSIA PHILIPPINES JAPAN S.KOREA HONG KONG THAILAND SINGAPORE INDONESIA TAIWAN FRANCE GERMANY BELGIUM LUXEMBOURG SWITZERLAND AUSTRIA NETHERLANDS VENEZUELA BRAZIL ARGENTINA MEXICO We are seeking candidates who have permanent work authorization in any of these countries with plans to return home after completing their bachelor's or master's degrees in fields related to: * Business Administration (Masters of Business Administration) * Management Information Systems Computer Science * Computer, Electrical, Industrial, Manufacturing & Mechanical Engineering * English * Psychology e Journalism and Mass Communication * Mathematics We will be visiting University of Michigan on October 13th to interview international students who will graduate in Fall 97, and Spring and Summer 98. To be considered for one of these positions, please submit your resume by September 29th to your career center for the ANDERSEN WORLDWIDE interview schedule or to: potentially destroy the Democratic Party." Despite the "steady diet of partisan warfare," Grossman said "the vice pres- ident is in perfectly fine shape." Speaking to reporters outside the hear- ing room, Grossman got into a debate with Specter in front of TV cameras. Specter said the panel was merely try- ing to get at the facts. The White House and Democratic Party general counsel Joseph Sandler, who was shown the memos at yester- day's hearing, insisted Gore had no way of knowing that $120,000 of the money he solicited would eventually end up in the party's hard money cof- fers. MIDEAST Continued from Page IA The two also differed over the cur- rent value of the Oslo peace agree- ments, which provided for specific steps by both sides leading over time to increased cooperation and eco- nomic ties. Netanyahu has effectively repudi- ated the Oslo accords by holding up tax revenue transfers to the Palestinian Authority, which adminis- ters the Palestinians' self-governed areas, and by announcing after a Sept. 4 suicide bombing in Jerusalem that Israel would suspend further troop withdrawals from the West Bank. Albright restated the U.S. position, which is that accelerated "permanent status" talks on major issues such as the fate of Jerusalem should proceed in tandem with, not as a substitute for, full implementation of the Oslo agreement. Albright obtained no specific com- mitments of any kind from Netanyahu that she could offer Arafat when they meet in the West Bank city of Ramallah today, officials said. U.S. officials said that Albright is in a delicate position here because she is arguing two seemingly contra- dictory propositions. One states that Arafat will be unwilling or unable to sustain a con- certed fight against terrorism unless Netanyahu gives him some of the political and economic sweeteners called for in the peace agreement. The other states that Arafat and his Palestinian Authority have an obliga- tion to wage an all-out campaign against terrorism and Israel doesn't owe them any inducements to under- take it.' Netanyahu yesterday derided reports of large-scale arrests by Palestinian law enforcement offi- cials, saying that "unfortunately much of this is intended for show." He said Israel wants an all-out effort "to catch not the sardines, but the sharks - the sharks who organize" by breaking up groups of potential ter- rorists and arresting their leaders. A U.S. official said Albright shares the Israeli view that Arafat has not done enough to crush terrorism. Asked the definition of enough, he replied, "We'll know it when we see it," adding that it would include steps taken voluntarily instead of under pressure and the volunteering of information "before we already have it." This evening, Albright made her first visit to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust memorial and museum here. For Albright, who discovered only this year that her grandparents were Jews who perished at the hands of the Nazis, the ceremony in which she rekindled Yad Vashem's eternal flame was not only a statement of respect for Israel but part of her personal quest to learn more about the fate of her relatives. Last week she went to the Czech Republic, where she was born, and visited Terezin concentration camp, where her grandparents died. "I am filled with emotion," she said of her visit yesterday. "The his- tory remembered here is at odds with all that we would like to believe about ourselves and about our world. ... We must never allow ourselves to be at peace with the Holocaust or to believe that we have somehow mas- tered its lessons," she said, her voice breaking. Early yesterday, Albright went to Hadassah University hospital at Mount Scopus to visit people injured in the Sept. 4 bombing, which killed eight people, including the three bombers. "When you actually see the people and see the individual injuries it brings it home," she said. One was Daniel Miller, 19, of Miami, who was injured on his first day in Israel as a student. His mother, Grizzi, urged Albright to bear the Tobacco companies don't get tax break WASHINGTON --The Senate dealt a fresh blow to tobacco companies yes- terday, voting to block them from reducing their payments under the pro- posed national settlement by the $50 billion an increase in cigarette taxes is expected to raise. A provision slipped quietly into the tax-cut bill that was enacted last month with great fanfare would have let the industry subtract the cost of the tax increase from a pending $368.5 billion national settlement. But criticism of the provision began to mount after details became public of how the industry got the provision into the bill - without debate or a known sponsor - and climaxed with an over- whelming 95-3 vote to revoke it. "It sent a clear message to the tobac- co industry: ... Don't try this kind of back-room deception in the future," said Sen. Richard Durbin, (D-Ill.), who sponsored the amendment to repeal the "$50 billion windfall." A spokesperson for tobacco compa- nies said the industry had no com- ment. Durbin, who failed to strip the provi- sion from the tax bill before the Senate passed it because of Congress' desire* recess for August, argued that taxpa- ers shouldn't have to underwrite the cost of the settlement. 40 years after death, Ness' ashes dispersed CLEVELAND - With bagpipes playing in the background, the remains of former G-man Eliot Ness were driven yesterday in a black 1938 Buick to th final resting place - a quiet cemetery lagoon. Ness' ashes, kept by his son and his son's widow for 40 years, were laid to rest with full police honors. The famous FBI agent who rained Chicago speakeasies and smashed-Al Capone's liquor operations during Prohibition died broke in 1957, having spent some of his later years worki. for the Cleveland Police DepartmentU AROUND THEATON Clinton wants trade-negotiation power WASHINGTON - Facing skepticism among Democrats, President Clinton asked Congress yesterday for expanded trade-negotiation authority that he said was "absolutely critical for our world leadership." Key Republicans reserved judgment until seeing details. "The global economy is on a very fast track to the 21st cen- tury. The question is whether we are going to lead the way or follow," the president said in White House remarks as he embarked on a campaign akin to the 1993 struggle over 3 NAFTA. In general, Clinton is seeking restoration of authority that he Clinton and other presidents have had over nearly a quarter-century to negotiate international trade pacts subject to a speedy yes-or-no vote in Congress without amendments - a process known as "fast-track" Many Democrats, including Rep. Richard Gephardt, (D-Missouri), the party's leader in the House, are poised to oppose the legislation unless it contains work and environmental protections designed to prevent high-paying American j from disappearing beyond America's borders to nations where workers are paid lit- tle and environmental protections are lax. - ~~-1 Maggie M. Chan Andersen Worldwide International Recruiting 8000 Towers Crescent Drive1 Vienna, Virginia 22182htt Fax: (703) 734-2938 e-mail: international.recruiting@awo.com Visit our home page at p:/www.ac.com Report faults Kenya on human rights NAIROBI, Kenya - The human rights situation in Kenya is growing steadily worse, officials of Amnesty International said yesterday as they launched a new worldwide campaign to force change in this East African state. The Kenyan government regularly violates the civil liberties of ordinary citizens by thwarting protest rallies, arbitrarily arresting people and treating prisoners inhumanely, the London- based human rights group said, warn- ing that Kenya could lose its position as a stable environment for investment and development in the region. The organization called on the inter- national donor community to hold the government of Kenyan President Daniel arap Moi responsible for its actions. Amnesty said it will mobilize million- strong membership in a publicity cam- paign that will attempt to force an end to restrictions on fundamental freedoms in Kenya, and pressure the government to honor human-rights commitments it has made butsofar fiedto respect The campaign comes at a time when the country is already besieged by host of political and economic prep sures. Rumors run rampant about National Party BEIJING - In the days leading to this week's important national meeting of the world's largest and most powe-1 Communist Party, rumors and politi intrigue were so rampant here that edi- tors of the People's Daily newspaper felt compelled to scold the Chinese for spec- ulating about personnel changes in their country's leadership. As usual in prelude to the once-every- five-years national party meeting, most public speculation centers on subtle and not-so-subtle reshuffling in the Politburo and key government posts. One duty of the congress is to endor candidates for key government po - Compiledfrom Daily wire reports. S@ Much Better Yo u'll Be Hooked. Introducing Gillette Series + 5 . it a AM1 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall 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, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campys sub- scriptions 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 St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-0552; circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. 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