NATION/WORLD Conservative Clinton critic, admits afair Idaho Rep. Chenoweth admits to extramarital affair The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 11, 1998 - 5A What constitutes impeachment? BOISE, Idaho (AP) -- For the second time in a week, a right-wing Republican tic of President Clinton has admitted .Wan afhir, in what may be the beginning o a stream of confessions prompted by the Monica Lewinsky case. The confession came from Rep. Ijlen Chenoweth, who was forced to .g public by The Idaho Statesman atler she committed what proved to be a tactical error: demanding Clinton's resignation and declaring in a campaign commercial, "I believe at personal conduct and integrity does matter." "Fourteen years ago, when I was a private citizen and a single woman, I was involved in a relationship that I came to regret, that I'm not proud of,' Chenoweth, 60, told The Idaho Sfatesman. "I've asked for God's for- giveness, and I've received it." Last week, another Clinton critic and Republican hard-liner, Rep. Dan Burton of Indiana, acknowledged *thering a child during an extramarital REPORT Continued from Page 1A months-long pattern of trying to derail the Jones harassment lawsuit, sources said. 'Ihe meeting occurred around the time there were growing signs that Jones' lawyers were about to expand their case ,ther women, including former White 'rouse volunteer Kathleen Willey. Willey would later go public with .allegations that the president made an unwanted sexual advance in the Oval Office. She was subpoenaed by Jones' lawyers two weeks after Clinton met with Lewinsky In the July 14 meeting, about 9:30 p.m., Clinton initiated a discussion with Lewinsky about reaching out to her friend Linda Tripp, to whom Willey had *nfided the alleged episode, sources farmiliar with the meeting say. ,The two noted that Tripp had been try- alTair in the early 1980s. "if you are going to throw stones and you live in a glass house, expect the glass house to be broken," said University of Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato. "I'm worried that we're going to have an interminable national Jerry Springer show." Democrats have been warning for months that those who pursue the Lewinsky case run the risk that their own peccadilloes will be exposed. "What this tells you is that Republicans who are trying to gain political capital out of the president's problems better look in the rear-view mirror before attacking their Democratic opponents," said Dan Sallick, a spokesperson for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. He said Chenoweth "dis- played sheer hypocrisy. Chenoweth campaigned on family values and first got elected in 1994 after it was disclosed that her opponent had had an affair. ing to reach presidential confidant Bruce I indsey for some time to tell him a reporter was inquiring about Willey. Clinton suggested Lewinsky persuade Tripp to get in touch with Lindsey again, and over the next several days he made several follow-up phone calls to see where matters stood, the sources said. About the same time, Clinton also acted on a long-standing request by lewinsky that he help her get a job back at the White House. She had been trans- ferred to the Pentagon in 1996 by aides suspicious of her behavior, and Clinton finally asked presidential personnel aide Marsha Scott in summer 1997 to see if there was a job she could find for the for- mer intern, the sources said. Lewinsky was never brought back to the White House, though. ihe White House scoffed at any sug- gestions that the contacts had anything to do with obstructing justice. L^s AnogeesTanes WASHINGTON-Abuse of power is such a legally vague term that almost no one could be convicted of it in court. Yet abuse of power was the basis ofan article of impeachment against President Nixon and is believed to be a charge leveled against President Clinton in the not-yet- released report by independent counsel Kenneth Starr. Even though the Constitution speaks of "treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors" as grounds for impeachment, accusations against a chief executive need not even be criminal offenses because, according to legal scholars, impeachment of a president is a hybrid process mixing politics and policy with the law. "Abuse of power can be any outra- geous, abusive conduct or any behavior that is inconsistent with the high office of president, even noncriminal conduct," said Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University. But Turley, a former Justice Department official and Clinton critic, added that Starr surely has included felo- nious conduct as well in his report to Congress, crimes such as perjury, witness tampering and obstruction of justice. While Clinton's supporters have argued that Congress should not dwell on lurid details of his sexual encounters with Monica Lewinsky, a relationship both have acknowledged, Turley contended that "only the details will reveal whether perjury was committed by Clinton. "Starr's obligation is to convey to Congress every criminal act this presi- dent may have committed," he said. The wide latitude for impeachable offenses is deeply rooted in American history. Scholars say that those who wrote the Constitution believed they needed a mechanism, as James Madison phrased it, for "defending the communi- ty against the incapacity, negligence or perfidy" of the nation's highest official. But neither did they wish to make a pres- ident subject to removal because of con- gressional pique or whim. AP PHOTO President Clinton apologizes for engaging in an "inappropriate" relationship with Monica Lewinsky at a Democratic fundraiser in Florida on Wednesday. Course #807 Test 1 Class 1 Class 2 Test 2 Sat. Sep 12 Sun. Sep 13 Wed. Sep 16 Sat. Sep 19 Class 3 Sun. Sep 20 Class 4 Wed. Sep 23 Class 5 Sun. Sep 27 Class 6 Wed. Sep 30 Class 7 Sun. Oct 4 Get An Edge. # Expert Instructors / Guaranteed Results I Maximum Class Size of 15 # Unlimited Extra Help # Proven techniques 15 practice computer GREs THE PRINCETON REVIEW 1-800-2REVIEW Class 8 Class 9 Class 10 Wed. Oct 7 Sun. Oct 11 Wed. Oct 14 Tests are from 9am-lpm Classes are from 6:30-l0pm ,n - __-_ BEFORE YOU PRESENT 4 14. YOUR QUALIFICATIONS, LET US PRESENT OURS. Bear Stearns cordially invites all seniors to meet with representatives from our Investment Banking Department: Tuesday, September 15' 6:00 PM Wolverine Room