NATION WORLD The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 15, 1998 - 5 Clinton calls for more *global al NEW YORK (AP) President dinton called yesterday for greater glob- al cooperation to restore growth in Asia, protect the economies of other threatened regons and "douse the flames of the international financial crisis." In a hastily scheduled speech deliv- ered to a small audience assembled by tte Council on Foreign Relations, he made no reference to the Monica Lewinsky scandal. 0 With the House of Representatives on the verge of deciding whether to consid- er impeaching him, he nevertheless pressed a balking Congress to approve his request to provide the International Monetary Fund with $18 billion. Clinton's remarks came as senior economic policy-makers of the Group of Seven - the United States, Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Italy and 'anada - issued a statement in ondon echoing his view that the industrialized nations must do more. However, both Clinton and the G-7 dficials stopped well short of advocating a coordinated cut in interest rates - a step financial markets have demanded as a sign that the major economic powers are willing to act aggressively to contain the spreading Asian economic slump. Asked if the administration was pushing for an interest-rate cut, * reasury Secretary Robert Rubin said: "Absolutely not" Just over a week ago, Federal Reserve Board Chair Alan Greenspan opened the door to a possible interest- rate, reduction if the economic slump oveiseas becomes more threatening. Hfe, too, stopped well short of promis- ing any such move. Officials and private analysts both -autioned that yesterday's pronounce- ments were only a start, and that the industrial countries still have not decid- ed on the kind of broad, coordinated cut in interest rates that financial mar- kets seem to want. .Fo Clinton, the economic turmoil around the world and its potential impact on the United States carries with it extraordinary consequences: The strength of the economy is widely viewed as the crucial remaining pillar * his wobbling political support. Clinton said yesterday that the United States has "profound interests" in preventing the slump from widen- ing, saying "there is now a stark chal- lenge not only to economic freedom but - if unaddressed - a challenge that could stem the rising tide of poiti- cal liberty as well.' .With one-quarter of the world living countries in which economic growth fsdeclining, the president said "We need to get credit flowing again. We need to get business back to making products, producing services, creating jobs" The program Clinton unveiled was short on specifics. But he said he had asked Rubin and Greenspan to convene a meeting in Washington next month of the finance ministers and central bank governors of the Group of Seven and their counterparts from emerging mar- Sets in the developing world. JOBS!!! FALL TERM Apply now at the Law Library-- e non-Law Students * Law Students - SI. Students Apply in person: Room S-I80 in the Law Library's under ground addition, 8-noon and 1-., Monday through Friday. Welcome back. *,.,NOW Go AWtAY! y: r Impeachment process has begun only twice in 220 years First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton glances at her husband as they wait to be introduced during a Democratic Party fundraiser in New York City yesterday. Starr repo draws Intern-et audienf~ce REACT Continued from Page 1 through the 445-page report the Office of the Independent Council submitted to them last week, alleging 11 offenses the office claims warrant the removal of the president. While Clinton's lawyers make their case to the nation on "Meet the Press" and "Face the Nation," it is now up to the 37-member committee to decide where to take the investigation. One option for the committee is to begin an impeachment inquiry into the affair. Article II, Section 4 of the Constitution of the United States pro- vides for the removal of the president after being convicted of "treason, bribery or other high crimes and mis- demeanors." This is the process advocated by the OIC and various members of Congress, but the White House claims that the report does not make enough of a case for impeachment. Political science assistant Prof. Vincent Hutchings said he is preparing to give a lecture on this topic to his legislative process class. He said the "high crimes and misdemeanors" stan- dard leaves room for legal interpreta- tion. "It's pretty vague. It is necessarily vague for political reasons," Hutchings said. "The framers wanted to leave it that way because they didn't know what could happen in the future." The report does not represent impeachable offenses, Hutchings opined, but he said he believes the committee will begin Kin inquiry. But the process will not be speedy, possibly dragging well into 1999, Hutchings added. "It's politically motivated," Hutchings said. "The Republicans are going to make every effort to prolong the embarrass- ment to the President, in part as pay- back for the (Richard) Nixon affair." Law Prof. Samuel Gross also said the report does not constitute grounds for impeachment, but he does say it appears the president comitted perjury. "On the perjury count, it's pretty clear" Gross said. "Taking the report at face value, it certainly sounds like he perjured him- self." But the question of whether that alone, or even that coupled with a fur- ther attempt to cover up the sexual liai- son is grounds for impeachment, is not as clear, according to Gross. "If these sorts of things are impeachable, it would be very unfortu- nate," Gross said. "It isn't abuse of power or genuinely serious criminal conduct." The final decision on whether to move to impeachment hearings will be made by the House Judiciary Committee, but all signs point to the beginning of an inquiry into the affair. This could lead to the drafting of arti- cles of impeachment by the commit- tee. These articles would then be voted on by the committee and the full House. If passed, the President would be tried on the Senate floor, where a two- thirds majority would be needed to convict and remove him from office. This process has begun only twice before in the 220 years of the Constitution. In 1974, articles of impeachment were drawn up for Richard Nixon, but the president resigned before the process went fur- ther. But in 1869, Andrew Johnson was just one vote short of being convicted by the Senate after the House voted to impeach. Another option for the members of Congress is censure, a similarly sel- dom used reprimand. Censuring some- one, which requires a vote in one or both house in Congress, formally con- demns a person's actions. Censure's most notable and famous use was the Senate's 1954 reprimand of Sen.. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin after his attacks on alleged communists. Speaker of the I louse Newt Gingrich was also censured for abuse of power, and torced to pay a $300,000 fine as a result. The only president censured was Andrew Jackson in 1834, after refus- ing to give documents to the Senate. But the measure was stricken from the Congressional Record as unconstitu- tional when Jackson's party returned to power in the Senate. Although it is unclear whether this option is constitutional, the idea is gaining popularity across the nation because it would allow Clinton to fin- ish his term while acknowledging his wrongdoing. "It's a symbolic measure to express contempt and displeasure," Hutchings said. "That is the most likely option now. It's probably going to happen." "Taking the report at face value, it certainly sounds. like he perjured - Samuel Gross University Law Professor Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON The titillating descriptions of sexual encounters between President Clinton and Monica Lewinsky contained in a special prosecutor's report drew far more readers to the Internet than the legal defense issued by the White House. A market research company, Relevant Knowledge, estimated Monday that about 10 times as many people downloaded the 445-page report by Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr than the 73-page response the White House issued before anyone there saw Starr's tome. The company, which tracks Internet traffic, said more than 6 million people read either Starr's report or the White House statement during the first two days after their release. "The frenzy to see the Starr report is like nothing we've ever seen before," said Jeff Levy, chairman of Relevant Knowledge. The company estimated that 5.9 mil- lion people read Starr's report on the Internet, compared with 606,000 peo- 'ple who read the White I louse defense of President Clinton. Relevant Knowledge projected its figures by watching about 8,000 ran- domly selected Internet users whom it considers representative of U.S. citizens 13 and over online. . KOREA Continued from Page 1 "The most impressive thing to me was the strong sense of confidence that Korea will make it in the world," Jacobson said. "And the strong sense of not blaming the outside forces but instead saying 'we've got to do it!"' As a graduate student at Yale University, I ong-Koo spent the summer of '61 in Ann Arbor on a fellowship studying quantitative political science. "Ann Arbor is an example of global neighborhoods as we go into the next century 'Hong-Koo said. Jacobson, who worked with Ilong-Koo when they served as vice-presidents of the International Political Science Association, said he was an excellent choice for ambassador because he was educated in the United States and he has an excellent understanding of the U.S. political and economic sys- tems. "Because the United States is critical to their economic recovery, (the Korean president) clearly picked the best per- son he could have to be ambassador at this critical juncture he is a man of enormous integrity," Jacobson said. E. IHan Kim, the director of the Mitsui Research Center at the School of Business Administration, introduced the ambassador as an old friend. Kim said he appreciated the speech's upbeat tone. The speech "was unusually thoughtful and positive," Kim said. "In his responses in the question and answer session, you can see a political theorist in practice because it was so logical" Hong-Koo was previously ambassador to the United Kingdom, he served as chair of the New Korea Party in '96- '97 and was the leading candidate for president of Korea until he pulled out in the last election. Kim Dae-jung, of the opposing party, won the presidency and subsequently asked Hong-Koo to serve as ambassador. LSA first-year student Davis Nathaniel said he attended the lecture to "hear an ambassador speak." But he said he was especially impressed by Hong-Koo's willingness to work as ambassador under an administration he originally opposed. Want A Challenge? Start your career off on the right foot by enrolling in the Air Force Off icerTraining School. There you will become a commissioned officer in just 12 weeks. 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