LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 20, 1999 - 7 Clinton lawyer attacks prosecutors WASHINGTON (AP) -- White House Counsel Charles Ruff opened President Clinton's impeachment defense yesterday with ringing statements of Clinton's innocence, an attack on the House's "rush to judg- ment" and a fervent plea to the senators who will decide the president's fate: "He must not be removed from office." *Speaking so quietly at times that some senators strained in their seats to listen, Ruff declared that "William Jefferson Clinton is not guilty of the charges" leveled by the House. Ruff spoke from his wheelchair, his breastpock- et copy of the Constitution on a nearby table, a few hours before Clinton's delivery of the State of the Union address across the Capitol in the House chamber. The awkward juxtaposition - a somber trial in the shadow of a moment of grand political pageantry - prompted some congressional Republicans to announce they would skip the president's speech. Many more said they would attend out of respect for the office if not for the current occu- pant. In an opening statement, Ruff offered a point-by- point rebuttal of each allegation, criticized Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr for his handling of witness Linda Tripp and accused the House of "prosecutorial ... fudge" on one key piece of evi- dence. "We will defend the president on the facts and on the law and on the constitutional principles that must guide your deliberations," he pledged. VIGIL Continued from Page 1 remain close together while "bearing the unbearable," Kirschen said. The memorial service was held not only for the students, but also for the *ourners. "It's such an integral part of the Jewish tradition to take care of all those alive," said Jill Halman, Zwerdling's aunt. "I know Celia would have been con- cerned with the people" at the service, said Marc Halman, Zwerdling's uncle. Close friends of Zwerdling and Metzger created scrapbooks of various pictures and other memorabilia for the niversity community to fill. The scrap- books will be sent to the students' fami- lies.Both Metzger and Zwerdling are from Silver Spring, Md. Marc Halman said the service was "really important for all those kids that the two of them touched." Services for Metzger and Zwerdling will be held again tonight and tomorrow night in the South Quad Taylor House third floor lounge and dining hall. Funeral services for Zwerdling will be held Friday at 10 a.m. at the Temple Sinai in Washington, D.C. A memorial service for Metzger will be held tomor- row morning in Silver Springs, Md. The service is scheduled to be held at a the- atre in Silver Spring, because of Metzger's love of theater and her plans to become a director. Zwerdling and Metzger had planned to live together next fall. The conditions of the other two stu- dents injured in the accident have improved, Munson Medical Center officials said. As of yesterday, Rosen was in "stable condition" said Munson Medical Center nursing supervisor Mark Baranski. Smith was discharged yesterday morn- ing in "good condition," Baranski said. "I think things will progress very well." Sgt. John Block of the Grand Traverse Sheriff's Office said there was "no evidence of excessive speed," but the speed Smith was driving might have been too fast for the poor road condi- tions. There was no alcohol involved, Block said. Two other vehicles were involved in Monday's accident when the Jeep slid out of control while turning on a down- hill curve. One of the cars was side- swiped, while the other vehicle, a one- half to three-quarter ton van was totaled in the accident. Neither of the drivers were injured, Block said. There were other accidents on Monday but none as severe as the one that took the lives of the two students, Block said. "That was the most serious one that day," he said. Counseling is available for students through the University Counseling and Psychological Services. MINORS Continued from Page 1 policy committees "shape" minors and "coordinate" well. University of Michigan Associate Dean for Undergraduate Education Robert Owen said the specifics of the proposed minor program - including a possible minimum grade point average - are still being discussed. At the University of California at Berkeley minors also vary by department but each requires students to take five upper-level courses as well as the intro- ductory work leading up to those courses. Margaret DiStasi, director of the Office of Undergraduate Advising at Berkeley, said permitting students the opportunity to minor can allow them to explore their own interests. "Students can pursue things that are esoteric,' DiStasi said. "Things that parents who want their children to make a living might not approve of." But Sanders said for some students the decision to minor is just the next logical step. "After (students) meet their distribu- tion requirement they realize they only need two more courses and decide why not, it will look good to employers" Sanders said. Not all colleges offer such opportuni- ties. Michigan State University and the University of Wisconsin do not allow stu- dents to tailor their electives into a minor. Wisconsin Assistant Dean Barbara. Wiley said the university does not offer minors because there is "no pressing need" and minors do not necessarily give more depth to a col- lege education. "We don't feel minors mean much academically," Wiley said. But Sanders said that minors might be just what some students need. "Some people only want 15 hours of credit in history or political science;' Sanders said. Other schools, such as Penn State University, have found that students minoring in a subject may pose an additional enrollment stress for courses necessary for both students majoring and minoring in the sub- ject. "In heavily enrolled departments it can create a bottleneck," said Susan Welch, Dean of the College of the Liberal Arts at Penn State. But, some administrators said any snags in the program are minimal in comparison to the benefits of a student- electing a minor. "I hope its something Michigan looks at seriously. It's a very rich opportunity for the students," Flaherty said. GOP reassures nation, WASHINGTON (AP) - Promising lives will continu to concentrate on "practical matters" practical matters, topped by broad income tax cuts, ones." Republicans assured the nation last Dunn, one of t night that the Senate impeachment trial GOP women in the of President Clinton would not tear the in the response by country apart. (R-Okla.), a teleg "Our country is not in crisis. There are star and one of th no tanks in the streets," said Rep. House Republican Jennifer Dunn (R-Wash.) presenting the Smiling broadly nationally televised GOP response to the together on a balc president's State of the Union address. domed Capitol lo "No matter what the outcome of the ened background. president's situation, life in America They echoed pt will go on," Dunn continued. "Our in the day by Ser CAM PUS Continued from Page :. "There are two factors that are working sort of in opposition to each other" Edy said. "One is that more people may be interested this year, but on the other hand, more and more net- works are showing alternate programming. It used to be there was nothing you could watch but the State of the Union." Political science Prof. Mel Laracey, who teaches a course on the office of the American presidency, said the speech *was an opportunity for Clinton to shift the public's and Congress' focus away from his impeachment. "This is his chance to make his case directly to the peo- ple' Laracey said. "It's a time-honored technique to go directly over the heads of Congress." Students who watched Clinton's address thought the topic of impeachment was rightfully left out of the speech. "I'm not interested in that at all,' said LSA sophomore Will Johnson, who was among a small crowd watching the address on a television in the Michigan Union. "I don't think it's the time for that?' LSA junior Justin Shafer, who glanced at the televised speech while studying in the Union, said the possibility of Clinton mentioning the impeachment trial peaked his inter- est. e n the ie F R eni e le Y, ' on on lan mal to be filled with push for a 10 percent cut in all income not constitutional tax rates and eliminate the "marriage penalty" paid by millions of two- most prominent income couples. House, was joined There is enough money in the budget .ep. Steve Largent surplus, they said, to work out a plan to ic former football safeguard Social Security while allow- younger breed of ing people a tax cut. "Mr. President, 'aders. give it back," declared Dunn. the two appeared She added that Republicans want to ny with the white- focus on creation of personal retire- ming in the dark- ment accounts to "give working Americans the choice to invest" some ns outlined earlier Social Security money in private mar- te Republicans to kets. "I want to see if he talks about the impeachment;" Shafer said. "I don't think he should. It's not affecting his policies." Kelley Boland, president of the College Democrats, said Clinton's speech gave the public a favorable impression of him. "I think his speech tonight was representative of how he's run the country," said Boland, an LSA junior. "It shows that he's focused on ... moving the nation forward. "He can't dwell on" the impeachment, she said. "It's not in his hands now" Laracey said that through his speech Clinton managed "to rise above the current situation in Congress. "Just looking at him you'd never know there was any problem" he said. Some students who watched in their residence hall rooms shared similar opinions. "Although he's going through a lot of turmoil in his pri- vate life, as the president, lie's fulfilling his duties;' LSA sophomore Gautam Kher said. "I'm pretty impressed with what he's said so far" LSA sophomore Julie Hay said. "All of these things are far more important than what Congress has been doing lately?" But, LSA sophomore Jeff Siersma, said he chose to watch ESPN instead of coverage of the speech last night. "I knew it was on," Siersma said. "I'm trying to avoid it. I'm tired of it all." CLI NTON Continued from Page 1 sat stonily side by side. Demanding that Washington reserve $4 trillion in expected budget surplus- es to shore up Social Security and Medicare, Clinton declared, "First things first." In a new salvo against smoking, Clinton announced the Justice Department will sue the tobacco industry. He also is seeking a 55-cent- a-pack tax on cigarettes. "Our children are targets of a massive media cam- paign to hook them on cigarettes," Clinton said. Clinton also urged spending billions of dollars for new programs in child care, education, crime-fighting, the environment and the Pentagon. And he called for raising the minimum wage by $1 an hour over two years to $6.15. "With our budget surplus growing, our economy expanding, our confi- dence rising, now is the time for this generation to meet our historic respon- sibility to the 21st Century," Clinton said. "Let's get to work." Clinton's speech came eight hours after White House lawyers began defending the president in a Senate trial, arguing he was innocent of per- jury and obstruction of justice charges and "must not be removed from office." Two special guests sat in the House chamber with First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton as the president spoke: civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks and baseball slugger Sammy Sosa. Clinton singled out his wife, saying "I honor her" for her work with children and on behalf of the nation. On education, the president said he would send Congress a plan that for AP PHOTO First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton stands next to Chicago Cubs rightfiekler Sammy Sosa prior to President Clinton's State of the Union address yesterday. the first time holds states and school districts accountable for their progress and rewards them for results, he said. Schools that fail to comply could lose some of the $15 billion the federal government spends on education. "I believe we must change the way we invest that money, to support what works and to stop supporting what doesn't," the president said. No child should graduate from high school "with a diploma he or she can't read," Clinton said. In his remarks on foreign policy, Clinton said the United States will continue to contain Iraq's Saddam Hussein. "And we will work for the day when Iraq has a government wor- thy of its people," Clinton said. In the aftermath of the killing of more than 40 ethnic Albanians in Kosovo, Clinton said the United States and NATO allies "are pressing the Serbian government to stop its brutal repres- sion in Kosovo, to bring those respon- sible to justice." He also proposed $4.2 billion - a 70 percent increase - to dismantle and destroy Russia's nuclear arsenal and redirect the work of Russian scien- tists from weapons to civilian research. On Social Security, Clinton's propos- al sets up a monumental fight over how to protect the giant retirement program and deal with GOP tax-cutting ambi- tions against a background of $4 trillion in projected surpluses over 15 years. The president's proposal would cre- ate new 401(k)-style retirement accounts for workers and invest some of Social Security's cash reserves in the stock market for the first time. HEAD COACH WANTED for 13 yr. old baseball league. Practices to start immed. Indoor practice facility already obtained. Team sponsor & partial team in place & ready to play. 2-3 eves./wk. req. Contact Tom Plunkett at 747-6020 for further info. HOUSE CLEANER light childcare. $12/ hr. Mori. & Fri. mornings. Reliable. 665-4974. HOUSECLEANER/MORNINGS organize, file, projects, errands, yard, pets, MAC skills. Sn.-Sat. 9-1 pm. $8-$10/hr. 9964847. BS JOBS,JOBS!!! 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