NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 12, 1998 - 7A I Clinton turns to voters for support Los Angeles Tunes WASHINGTON - Embroiled in a budget fight with an impeachment- minded Congress, President Clinton yesterday urged voters to turn the upcoming midterm election into a national referendum on his presidency, clearly hoping they will send Washington the message that they care more about pocketbook issues than the Monica S. Lewinsky scandal. With just 22 days to go before the Nov. 3 elections, Clinton's comments significantly elevated the stakes. Most .analysts believe, and polls suggest, that Republicans could make broad gains i* both houses of Congress in part because outrage r over the president's adulterous affair with a young intern could energize Republicans to vote in geater numbers than Democrats. But Clinton expressed confidence that voters will reject a Republican-led impeachment drive against him. "That is a decision for Americans. I trust them. I think they'll make the right decision," he said. The president made his remarks at the start of an afternoon White Homse strategy session with Capitol Hill Democrats on the budget nego- tiations with the GOP majority in Congress. A houeh the new fiscal year is nearly two weeks old, Clinton and the Republicans have yet to agree to a comprehensive spending plan for fiscal 1999. With little progress yes- terday, negotiations to resolve their many differences may well keep Congress in town for several more days, preventing them from going home to campaign. Cliron also seemed eager to join that fray. He is scheduled to hit the campatn trail to raise money and stump for Democratic candidates in Talks fail to bring agreement KOSOVO Continued from Page 1A Milosevic agree to an expanded interna- tional monitoring mission to verify com- pliance with demands of the U.N. Security Council. Those demands include an immediate cease-fire, a withdrawal of special troops in the province, allowing refugees to return home and beginning talks with ethnic Albanians on Kosovo's future. Kosovo is a province of Serbia, the main republic of Yugoslavia. About 90 percent of its 2 million people are eth- nic Albanian, and most of them want independence or substantial self-rule. Meanwhile, journalists heard sporadic gunfire yesterday and saw white and gray smoke rising from about six houses in the ethnic Albanian village of Makrmalj, about 20 miles west of Pristina. Ethnic Albanian rebels claimed the activity was part of a Serb police oper- ation. Police prevented the journalists from getting closer than about a half- mile from the village. The Pentagon is continuing military preparations if Holbrooke's mission fails. Six U.S. B-52 bombers arrived in Britain yesterday and a contingent of A-10 anti-tank planes flew from Germany to Italy. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), warned yesterday that Americans may be killed in the bombing raids. "There will be significant jeopardy there because the Serbians have a very good defense sys- tem," the former Navy pilot said on "Fox News Sunday." In Bucharest, the Romanian govern- ment agreed to allow NATO to use its airspace in "emergency and unpre- dictable situations" if the alliance launches airstrikes against Yugoslavia. The positioning of more U.S. planes within range and preparing them for attacks were clearly designed to convince Milosevic of Washington's resolve to force compliance with U.N. demands. After a late-night session with Milosevic, an exhausted-looking Ray to sit RAY Continued from Page 1A gram in any way and I apologize for that:" The Athletic Department's initial pro- posal, submitted to the NCAA on Oct. 2, called for Ray's current three-game sus- pension to be sufficient punishment. The NCAA did not agree and handed down a larger penalty of two additional games, causing Ray to miss Michigan's contests against Northwestern and Indiana. Though he has been cleared to return to Ethnic Albanian leader Ibrahim Rugova watches as U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke points to media Saturday In Pristina, Yugoslavia. AP PHOTO President Clinton makes a statement before meeting with Democratic congressional leaders yesterday about the overdue federal budget. Holbrooke insisted early yesterday "nothing has changed" in the Yugoslav leader's stand. Holbrooke called the sit- uation "very serious" and said he was looking for "peaceful, acceptable" alternative to the use of force. A statement from Milosevic's office, issued after the talks and distributed by the government's Tanjug news agency, said all U.N. conditions have been met for a political settlement. But Milosevic seemed to be separat- ing U.N. demands from the U.S. insis- tence on verification. Serb sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Milosevic has refused to budge on a monitoring force. Washington is pressing for that because Milosevic has broken promises in the past. A source close to Milosevic indicat- ed that he was ready to comply with other conditions. International efforts to end the seven- month crisis have accelerated following allegations that Serb police massacred scores of ethnic Albanian refugees. Concern is mounting that winter will bring a humanitarian disaster if thousands remain homeless by the first snowfall. The United Nations has condemned recent massacres of ethnic Albanians, but has not endorsed airstrikes. The Clinton administration, however, believes it does not need a new U.N, resolution for the attacks. Russia, which fiercely opposes NATO airstrikes, called its NATO representative and ambassador to Belgium back to Moscow yesterday for emergency consul- tations on the potential attacks. "Everything should be done to pre- vent bombing," Dmitry Yakushkin, President Boris Yeltsin's spokesperson, told reporters. New York and Florida. The plan drew fire over the weekend from GOP lead- ers who complained that Clinton should remain in town until a new fed- eral budget is completed. But the president was unapologetic. "What I intend to do is to bring the issues to the American people," he told reporters at the White House. "What I'd like to see this election be about is the American people and their future, not about Washington, D.C.," he said, allud- ing to the impeachment inquiry by the House Judiciary Committee over allegations that he committed perjury and obstructed justice while attempting to conceal an affair with the former White House intern. The president's remarks seem to be a calculated, but nonetheless high-risk, strategy. If Republicans score major gains on Nov. 3, they will surely portray the results as a public rebuke of the president, thus complicating his leg- islative agenda and his hopes of avoiding impeachment. To be sure, his job-approval rat- ings remain high, and poll after poll shows that most Americans want an expeditious resolution to the Lewinsky matter short of impeach- ment. .__ out next two team activities and practices, Ray's status who wor as ateamcaptainremainsupinthe air. He in this w began practicing yesterday with his team- because t mates, but Carr said the issues of captain- Becau ship and his starting role "will remain current st between the two of us and the team." football f While Carr expressed his relief at the action is situation's closing, referring to it as an ken to so "educational experience," his plans to athlete is protect the rest of the team from viola- ing the in tions have not changed. "The1 "From my own experience, I think the to under best course of action is to educate our stu- their ca dents and try to prevent this from happen- impact o ing to our other student athletes,"he said. the resp "We have former players at Michigan our abili who are what they call runners, people to better Netanyahus( games k for agents, and there is no way vorld that we can isolate them hey're right on our campus." se former players have access to tudent athletes and the Michigan facilities, policing such improper difficult. Carr said he has spo- me runners, but that the current primarily responsible for avoid nappropriate contact. thing that student athletes need rstand is that this can impact reers," he said. "Agents can our program negatively. I think onsibility has to come back t6 ity to better educate these kid make proper decisions?' '.0.abinet w AAA! 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