NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 13, 1999 - 5 'Trial Freshman Senate launches White House denies charges 8 new Senators WASHINGTON (AP) -Talk about hitting the ground running. Eight fresh- men have launched their Senate careers by plunging directly into the presidential impeachment trial even before moving into- their permanent offices. "It's kind of like playing in the World Series without having gone through the rest of the season, let alone going through spring training," said one of them, Sen. Peter Fitzgerald (R-Ill.) "It's a quick way to make you understand that you're a part of one of the most important bodies in the world," said another newcomer, Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio). "I get goose bumps thinking about it." Normally, Fitzgerald, Voinovich and their six newly minted colleagues would be spending a relatively leisure- ly January focusing on hiring staft house-hunting and learning the ways of the Senate. Instead, they have stepped straight into the vortex of a consti- tutional, political and media mael- strom, their schedules bulging with meetings, interview requests and time for poring over stacks of legal documents. "It's intense" said Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.), his state's former governor. "It's more than I was used to as gover- nor, except in truly critical moments. I assume this is more than normal, but I have nothing to compare it to." i 24 EDWARDS D- N.C. TRIAL Continued from Page 1 Justice. House officials have until noon today to turn over the written record in Clinton's impeachment case. Democratic sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said they would carefully scrutinize the sub- mission to make sure it did not include material that is irrelevant to BAYH BUNNING D-I ND. R- KY. CRAPO R- I DAHO FI TZGERALD R- ILL. LI NCOLN D- ARK. SCHUMER D- N.Y. VOI NOVI R- OHil the two articles of impeachment passed by the House. Presidential allies are prepared to object if they believe the House has included material that was not part of the two articles, these sources said. They added that Abbe Lowell, the lead lawyer for House Judiciary Committee Democrats during proceedings in the House, had met with Senate Democratic #CH aides recently and would be reviewing the material. The White House worked against AP PHOTOS today's deadline for submission of . Besides its own trial brief. One outside nning (R- adviser, speaking on condition of ho), and anonymity, said it was being draft- ed to suggest that House bout the Republicans drew conclusions from ation and the evidence that went far beyond served on prosecutor Kenneth Starr's own ittee that analysis of the evidence. eachment The adviser said the brief, which must still be approved by the presi- his." dent, is expected to highlight contra- in nublic dietory testimony and try to make n vich, who strong case that the key witnesses in who was the case - Monica Lewinsky, Betty Currie and Vernon Jordan - all made statements that support Clinton's denials of wrongdoing. For instance, House prosecutors and Starr both concluded, from Lewinsky's testimony, that Currie's retrieval of presidential gifts was an act of obstruction by the president. But White House lawyers will argue that Currie testified Clinton never asked her to pick up the gifts and that Lewinsky testified Clinton never told her directly he was retrieving the gifts and that she just assumed the Oval Office secretary was acting on orders from the president. The adviser said the White House brief also is unlikely to attack Lewinsky's credibility, instead dis- missing contradictions between her testimony and the president's as dif- fering recollections. "The brief will argue Clinton admitted to an intimate relationship with Lewinsky and that in any rela- tionship there is room for differing recollections," the adviser said. Republican members of the House Judiciary Committee will present the case for Clinton's removal from office. Pending last minute changes, Rep. Henry Hyde (R-111.) will make brief opening comments, followed by Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.), who will speak for about an hour. Other Republicans, including Reps. Asa Hutchinson (R-Ark.), James Rogan (R-Cal.) and Ed Bryant M-Tenn ) will detail the evidence after which Rep. Bill McCollum (R- Flo.) is expected to deliver a summa- ry. How busy are they? Voinovich canceled plans to return to Ohio last weekend to attend swearing-in cere- monies for state officials. Fitzgerald did the same, and has so far limited most interviews to Chicago-area news organizations to avoid being overwhelmed. And Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.), a former House member who returned to Arkansas two years ago, has been staying with friends because she has had little time to search for a home for her family. Unfailingly, the freshmen speak of the responsibility they bear and the awe they feel as jurors as the Senate considers whether to remove President Clinton from office. Only one other group of senators has performed this task: In 1868, when President Andrew Johnson was acquitted by a single vote. "You really think: 'What will my grandchildren read about this?,"' Lincoln said. Fven so, she is among four of the eight newcomers who previously served in the House and had at least indirect knowledge of what it would be like serving in the new chamber Lincoln, they are Sens. Jim Bu Ky.), Mike Crapo (R-Ida Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.). "I'd rather be talking a issues I ran on, like educa crime,' said Schumer, who s the House Judiciary Comm issued the articles of imp( against Clinton last month. "I don't like having to do t Three of the others served office at home: Bayh; Voino' was governor; and Fitzgerald, a state senator. .Muslims continue to fast for Ramadan LIKE TO WRITE? JOIN THE DAILY. CALL 76342459 FOR MORE INFO. CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - There are memories in a tear that rolls down Youssef Ibrahim's weathered cheek The retired 67-year-old carpenter, smiling, remembers his first Ramadan with his wife. His shy, 19-year-old bride chased him out of the kitchen and, laughing, chided him for getting in her way. He waited patiently for her to join him before breaking his fast and then gently kissed her hand in *anks for the meal. Now, more than 40 years later, it is another Ramadan, the month when Muslims fast during day- light to mark God's revelation of their holy book, the Koran, to Prophet Mohammed. Ramadan began Dec. 20 in Egypt with the sighting of the new moon and will end next week when a new crescent appears, start- ing the next month in the lunar calendar. Ibrahim's wife has been dead seven years, and he is kneeling in a dusty courtyard in Cairo's City of the dead, shivering from the evening chill. The walls of as wife's brick tomb are crumbling, its door covered in dust. He waits for the call to prayer, when he will break his fast by her gravesite, a somber ceremony he began when she died. "I miss you, Jehan. I miss you." The call to evening prayer envelops Cairo. Different lives converge at this moment, brought together by faith and family. Another day of'fasting is over, sacrifice replaced by indulgence, the illicit - at least in terms of food - now licit. Rutted dirt roads wind through the City of the Dead, home to not only the deceased, but to thousands of the poor who live in the mausoleums for lack of any alter- native. Televisions cast a surreal glow over the tombs. On screen, a young Egyptian actress, singing off-key, dances her way through the nightly television show "Ramadan's Riddles?' Cairo's streets - almost always jammed with traf- fic - are suddenly still as most people already have rushed home to eat. After hours on his feet standing guard outside one of Cairo's riverfront hotels, police officer Sayed Abdullah is seated on a rickety wooden chair. His meal of a "ful" sandwich, an Egyptian specialty of mashed beans, is balanced in his lap. Eating slowly to avoid going back on duty, he watches the odd car whiz by. A driver late for the Ramadan meal races by blowing his horn, hoping to get home before the choicest cuts of lamb or chicken are snapped up. "Look at that madness, that stupidity," says Abdullah, shaking his head. "Always a rush, always the horn. Why not just drive slowly and enjoy the quiet. What if they crashed or killed someone?" "Is ... a meal worth a life?" he asks. That is a question Khalid Nassar is asking him- self as an irate driver zips by, missing him by inch- es. Seated in the middle of a bridge exit ramp, next to a tray of strategically placed broken eggs, Nassar is weeping and doing his best to look pitiful. "Ramadan is about helping the poor, and I'm poor," says Nassar, an admitted convert. He explains his game: he begs for spoiled eggs from grocers, then breaks them on the pavement in hopes people will think he has accidentally dropped his fam- ily's food. "God says that we must first try to help ourselves before turning to Him," he said. "That's all I'm trying to do here, help myself." But Nassar's hopes for sympathy and charity fail. No one stops to give money. Perhaps everyone is too rushed. Instead, Nassar gets an insult. "You idiot," yells the driver of a car swerving around him. "You'll be killed, God willing." 747-9400 1220 S. University SPRING Above McDonalds BREAKERS NO ONE TOPS OUR PRICES!! HOT NEW BULBS!! rT2c:$e PNERiETANIs Taningallsemstr 20 Sessions 1 $49.95"11$39.95' 1 irt 00ony+1 ersesonC7 1 N srvcefes Expires 1/30/99 1 L....._...e..J L mm ... ur_.. m . m .. . i Crunch for raising campaign ioney begins with new year Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - On New Year's Day, when most folks were focused on 1999, Brian Kennedy was casting his sights ahead to 2000. Kennedy is no millennium kook; he a political aide to Republican presi- ential hopeful Lamar Alexander. And for Kennedy and others like him, the chime of midnight was as distinctive as the jingle of a cash register - and as loud and clear as a starting bell. Welcome to Campaign 2000. Entry fee: $55,000 a day. A serious run for president will like- ly cost $20 million or so, which for practical reasons must be raised almost entirely in 1999. And so Alexander, er two years of unofficial campaign- ing that followed his 1996 run, on Friday became the latest in a flurry of candidates to lay the legal groundwork for a White House bid by establishing a campaign exploratory committee. In the two weeks bracketing New Year's Day, nearly a half dozen candi- dates or possible candidates took the' first steps toward running, underscoring 'ow a drastically compressed political lendar, and its fund-raising demands, are driving this presidential contest. "We're talking about a five- or six- week campaign at the most," Kennedy said of the rapid-fire regimen beginning in February 2000 with the Iowa caucus- es and New Hampshire primary. Which means the run-up in 1999 - and the capacity to raise $55,000 a day from now until Dec. 31 - may prove more important than ever. "The old rules are gone," said Tad Devine, a veteran Democratic strategist, speaking of the days in the '70s and '80s when the nominating season unfolded with all the languor of winter melting into spring. Back then, a candi- date like Jimmy Carter in 1976 or Gary Hart in 1984 could use a strong show- ing in Iowa or New Hampshire as a springboard, gathering momentum and, especially, money to propel them through the contests in the weeks and months that followed. But in 2000, "anyone who wants to be competitive is going to have to have their money banked by the end of this year, said Dan Schnur, a California Republican strategist. Blink and you might miss the whole thing. 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