-NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 25, 1998 - 7 . , '. Reno concludes: Gore didn't lie AP PHOTO Iraqi President Saddam Hussein roads in one of his offices in Baghdad on Monday. U.S. actions depend on Iraq cooperation with U.N. Inspectors. U.: Its for Iraq .cooperation WASHINGTON (AP) - Attorney General Janet Reno concluded yesterday there is "clear and convinc- ing evidence" Vice President Al Gore did not lie to campaign finance investigators and she declined to order further investigation by an independent counsel. "The evidence fails to provide any reasonable basis for a conclusion that the Vice President may have lied," Reno advised a special court. "There are no rea- sonable grounds to believe that further investigation is warranted" into an allegation that Gore lied to Justice Department investigators last year about how a Democratic media fund was financed. It was the second time in a year that Reno refused to have an outside prosecutor examine Gore over his telephone fund-raising or what he said about it. For Gore, it removed a potential obstacle to his ambition to run for president in 2000. White House spokesperson Joe Lockhart said President Clinton "believes the vice president has Queen ends birthright vote tradition LONDON (AP) - Surrounded by pageantry, Queen Elizabeth II opened a new session of Parliament yesterday with a starkly untraditional announcement: The government plans to strip unelected aristocrats of their 600-year-old birthright to vote in the House of Lords. Rows of lords in ermine-collared scarlet robes broke with another tradition after the announcement, when instead of listening to the monarch in silence they let out muted growls. Elected lawmakers of the House of Commons who clustered behind the Lords chamber also violated the tradition with occasional cheers. The move is part of a legislative program for the coming year that the queen, reading out a speech written by Prime Minister Tony Blair's Labor gov- ernment, described as focusing "upon the modern- ization of the country." Well, a bit of modernization. With Her Majesty's assent, for example, the Lord Chancellor - the country's chief judicial officer - turned his back on the queen and walked away after handing her the government's speech, instead of shuf- fling backward. And a handful of quaintly named offi- cials, such as Silver Stick in Waiting and Maltravers Herald Extraordinary, were absent. But much of the elaborate show was right on track. The queen rode from Buckingham Palace with her husband, Prince Philip, in a horse-drawn carriage escorted by a cavalry regiment in scarlet gold tunics astride magnificent horses. An official called Black Rod, in knee breeches and stockings, summoned the commoners to the chamber to hear the queen. And even though the Lord Chancellor thought it all right to turn his back, others inched backward ahead of the queen. The legislative program she read out - the second always acted within the letter and the spirit of the law." Gore spokesperson Christopher Lehane said, "The vice president is pleased." Republicans were not. "Once again, the Attorney General has failed to fol- low the law," said Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.). "For the past two years, the attorney general has made it clear she is committed to protecting the president" Burton faulted her for rejecting the advice of FBI Director Louis Freeh to order an independent counsel, which Freeh has been advocating for more than a year. Steve Forbes, a would-be Republican presidential candidate in 2000, said, "This raises the question of Ms. Reno's fitness to remain in office." Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) suggested asking a court to order Reno to turn the case over to a counsel. "We need to take these matters out of the hands ofthe attorney general, who appears to be acting politically and not in accordance with the act," agreed Senate Judiciary Committee Chairperson Orrin Hatch (R- Utah). "Personally, I think it is going to take legislation." Reno vowed her 120-member campaign finance task force would continue the investigation that has already charged .4 people, including prominent Democratic donors and fund raisers. "Today's determination does not mean that our work has ended," Reno said in a statement. "We will continue to vigorously investigate all allegations of illegal activity." Indeed, she is in the midst of 90-day preliminary inquiries about President Clinton and his former deputy White House chief of staff, Harold Ickes. She must decide within two weeks whether independent counsels are needed to continue those probes. Officials say no counsel is likely to be named in the Clinton matter, which involves whether he and aides illegally financed issue advertisements during his 1996 re-election campaign. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Clinton administration now seems willing to play a waiting game with Iraq. Even as the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise and five escort ships Sjoined the U.S. naval fleet in Persian Gulf waters, President Clinton and his senior advisers were not even threatening Saddam Hussein with the kind of blistering rhetoric that led up to Clinton's decision nearly fwo weeks ago to launch airstrikes. He called off the attack at the last minute after the Iraqi leader promised U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan he would permit unfet- tered searches. Saddam had prohib- ited field searches on Aug. 5 and halted all monitoring on Oct. 31. Clinton set five tough criteria for judging Iraq's promise to comply and indicated defiance of any of them ~could prompt a U.S. attack. One was -that Iraq must turn over to the U.N. Special Commission, or UNSCOM, all documents bearing on the produc- tion of nuclear, chemical and biologi- cal weapons and missiles that could be used to deliver them. Clinton has now taken a cautious approach, waiting for more "facts" and saying the United States should not "overreact," while Defense Secretary William Cohen was sounding only mildly hawkish. "I don't believe Iraq should be in the position of declaring unilaterally that documents are irrelevant to the needs and requests of the UNSCOM inspectors" he said at a joint news conference with German Defense Minister Rudolf Scharping. "So we will continue to follow it, but much depends upon the level and degree of cooperation on the part of the Iraqis' Cohen said. State Department spokesperson James Rubin said it was clear that the Iraqis wanted "to dodge their obliga- tions" to provide the documents. But, he said, documents were only part of "a broad spectrum of activities" on which Iraq must cooperate. "It includes allowing the inspec- tors to go where they need to go," Rubin said, adding U.N. inspectors had been allowed to go about their work for a seventh straight day with- out any problems. Whether Clinton reverts to force could depend on whether Iraq throws roadblocks in the path of U.N. inspectors in a way that is so outrageous that France and Russia would support the United States. That kind of comprehensive test could take weeks to develop as Richard Butler, head of the U.N. weapons commission, and his fellow inspectors go about their searches in a deliberate way. "We're waiting, we are expecting the Iraqis to cooperate," Peter Burleigh, the acting U.S. representa- tive to the United Nations, said Monday. "They have said they are going to." AP PHOTO Britain's Queen Elizabeth 11 addresses the house of Parliament yesterday. Ending six centuries of tradition, the queen announced the Labor Party plans to strip hereditary peers of their right to vote in the legislature. since Labor swept the long-ruling Conservative Party from office 19 months ago - also included a shake- up of welfare benefits designed to make things tougher for the work-shy, a reform of legal funding and greater protection for rape victims. But one item promises to provoke the most debate. "A bill will be introduced to remove the right of hereditary peers to sit and vote in the House of Lords;' the queen intoned. "It will be the first stage of a process of reform to make the House of Lords more democratic and representative." The House of Lords, which revises and examines government legislation, is composed of lords who inherited their titles, and life peers, who are award- ed titles. The elected House of Commons has the power to pass legislation even if the House of Lords rejects it, but the nobles can stretch out the process, stalling bills for months. Critics charge that Blair is wrong to remove the often independent-minded blue bloods before setting up a new arrangement. A commission is due to report within two years on a new version of the chamber. "He wants to create a House of Cronies, behold- en to him alone," Conservative Party leader William Hague jeered at Blair in the Commons later yesterday. Some blue bloods prepared for a filibuster in the chamber, which could delay the legislation for up to a year. "It is exceedingly easy to bung up the system," said the Earl of Onslow, whose family motto is "Quick without Impetuosity." "I am happy to go to this sort of extent and length to make sure that what comes after me is better and can act as a check," he said. :.. 7 . Airport opening gives hope or sttehoo AAA! 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Info: Call 1-800-446-8355 www.sunbreaks.com DAHANIEH, Gaza Strip (AP) - Thousands of Palestinians watched with glee yesterday as the first Palestine Airlines flight touched down at their. new Gaza International Airport - a concrete sign for Palestinians that their homeland was one step closer to statehood. As crew members waved the Palestinian flag from the pilot's window of the Fokker 50, the emotional crowd began a spontaneous celebration of dance and song set to last for days. "The meaning of the airport is free- dom and the feeling that you are a citi- zen in a country," Shaban Khalil, a man from Gaza City, said jubilantly. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat smiled broadly and flashed a victory sign on the tarmac as he greeted each of the seven planes that landed yesterday. "This is a preparation for the declara- tion of the Palestinian state," he said. Built with $75 million in contribu- tions mainly from Japan, Gaza International has one 2-mile-long run- way -- long enough to accommodate all but the biggest jumbo jets. The one passenger terminal for arrivals and departures resembles an Arabian desert palace with arches and multi-colored Moroccan tiles and includes a VIP lounge. In the first weeks, airport operations will have to rely on some improvisa- tion. Major pieces of equipment, including those for the control tower, are still at the Israeli port of Ashdod. Yesterday's planes were guided in by a portable control panel installed in a van. Israel, which feared a solely Palestinian-run airport would mean enemies could land at its doorstep or smuggle weapons to the Palestinians; held up the opening for two years over security concerns. Under the airport agreement negoti- ated during last month's U.S.-spon- sored Middle East summit in Maryland, Israel will continue to con- trol the airspace and can shut down the airport at any time. With a full-time but discreet moni- toring presence there, Israel will pre- approve all flight schedules and passen- ger lists, although no Israeli will sit in the control tower or operate any area of the airport. AP PHOTO The pilot of Yasser Arafat's personal plane holds a Palestinian flag after landing his plane for the first time in Gaza's newly opened International airport yesterday. America Online purchase of Netscape creates a formidable foe to Microsoft SPRING BREAK -Reps Wanted. A apulco 7 nights air & hotel from $5691 rson quad. Other destinations avail. 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