2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 14, 1999 NATION/WORLD White House lawyers, prosecutors give stances AROUND THE NATION IMPEACH Continued from Page 1A argument on behalf of the team of House prosecutors known as managers. He promised to present "a block- buster of a speech" that will demonstrate "very clearly that the president committed impeachable offenses." "I think our case is very solid - if people will lis- ten," Sensenbrenner said yesterday. He last tried a case in court in 1975. The trial begins at 1 p.m., 358 days after the presi- dent's relationship with Monica Lewinsky became public. The 130-page memorandum submitted by Clinton's lawyers bears the stark designation: In Re Impeachment of William Jefferson Clinton President of the United States. It misspelled the president's name. The White House team argued that the alleged offenses do not amount to high crimes and misde- meanors and that the evidence does not support the perjury or obstruction charges. They also ROOF MINI Continued from Page 1A Continued f by residents did not have to evacuate "I think' their homes. came abut ft With the blizzard conditions said LSA-St Michigan has experienced this month, Associat roofs are particularly susceptible to col- Owen said t lapse. In the Detroit area, there were lum commi several reported incidents of collapse faculty befo due to an overload of snow. "We ares , The total amount of snow for the hopeful tha Detroit area already has reached more end of the s than 23 inches and is rapidly approach- Each LS ing the record-setting amount of 29.6 arid propos inches in 1978. More than 28 inches of Some depa snow has fallen on Ann Arbor this minors, Ow month. posal are tl It is expected to continue snowing minors and this week, and Ann Arbor may receive elect a min( several additional inches. "So far, th - The Associated Press contributed to has been po this report. Some stu argued that Clinton's rights as a criminal defen- dant were violated because the articles of impeachment contain more than one charge each and do not delineate specific charges of wrong- doing against him. For instance, they fail to specifically identify "a single allegedly perjurious statement, and charging obstruction of justice without identifying a single allegedly obstructive action by the president." In sum, said Clinton's legal team, "The Articles of Impeachment that have been exhibited to the Senate fall far short of what the Founding Fathers had in mind. They fall far short of what the American people demand be shown and proven before their democratic choice is reversed. And they even fall far short of what a prudent prosecutor would require before presenting a case to a judge or jury." The articles approved by the House Dec. 19 "prop- erly state impeachable offenses," House representa- tives wrote in a scant, five-page memorandum. Their document states: "Wherefore, the House of Representatives states that both of the Articles of Impeachment warrant the conviction, removal from office and disqualification from holding further office of President William Jefferson Clinton." Clinton's legal team is made up of five attorneys from the office of the White House counsel and six from a private Washington firm. As presented by the president's lawyers, the ques- tion facing the Senate is this: Whether the will of the American voters who twice elected Clinton should be disregarded because, "in the final analysis ... he had a wrongful relationship and sought to keep the existence of that relationship private?" Should Clinton be removed from office, they asked, because he "used the phrase 'certain occasions' to describe the frequency of his improper intimate contacts with Ms. Monica Lewinsky" when there were II such contacts over 500 days? France proposes lifting Iraqi embargo UNITED NATIONS - France proposed a plan yesterday to lift the embargo on Iraqi oil sales and replace the U.N. program of intrusive weapons searches in an attempt to break an impasse among Security Council members about how to deal with Iraq in the aftermath of a U.S.-led bombing campaign. The proposal, which French diplomats said could lead to a resumption of Iraqi cooperation with U.N. inspectors- emphasizes ensuring that Iraq does not acquio new supplies of the weapons of mass destruction that the council forbade follow- ing Iraq's defeat in the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Until now, U.N. efforts have focused on finding and destroying any prohibited weapons in Iraq's existing arsenal. Iraqi resentment of that policy caused President Saddam Hussein's government to defy the inspectors from the U.N. Special Commission, or UNSCOM, and led to American and British air and missile strikes Dec. 16-19 against Iraq. Since then, the defiant Iraqi government has refused to permit UNSCOM to return, and the council has been divided about how to coax or force Iraq to cooperate. The division has been especially deep among the Security Council's five per- manent members, each able to veto any decision. While the United States and Britain advocate a continued hard line, France, Russia and China have called for a more flexible approach that would ease the crippling economic sanctions and elin* inate the more intrusive aspects of the weapons search. ORS rom Page IA what is unique about this resolution was that it rom the students and the faculty at the same time," G President Sangeeta Bhatia, an LSA senior. e Dean for Undergraduate Education Robert he report would have to be passed to the curricu- ttee, the LSA executive committee and the LSA ore the minor program could be implemented. still in the process of reviews" Owen said. "I am t we can get a vote by the LSA faculty by the emester." A department would have to develop minors se them to the LSA curriculum committee. artments have already had discussions about ven said.He added that the strengths of the pro- be encouraging aspect of the interdisciplinary the individual choice that allows a student to or. he input I have received from faculty and students sitive," Owen said. dents with double concentrations who attended a meeting with LSA interim Dean Patricia Gurin and other LSA faculty including Owen to discuss majors and minors said they would have appreciated the time and money saved by the ability to elect a minor. "There was a vote in the last election," Naheedy said. The results showed an overwhelming support for the minor option. Naheedy estimated the vote was 900-50 in favor of the program. "I haven't heard any very serious objections to it' Owen said. Other universities, including Big Ten rival Indiana University, already have minor programs. "It's a proposal that is way overdue," said biology Prof. Michael Martin. Martin said that while there are some logistical kinks that the program needs to work out, it is for the most part an all- win, no-lose situation. "We are somewhat out of step by not offering it to our students," Owen said. Part of the task force's mission was to examine the minor programs at about 20 other universities. "If they can solve their errors I don't see why we can't solve ours," Martin said. Court: Police have leeway on property WASHINGTON - Police who seize an innocent owner's property during an authorized raid need not tell them just how to get it back, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday. In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court said officers who search a home with a warrant must leave a notice saying they were there. If the owner is absent, they must also describe what has been seized. But officers are not required, then or later, to give the homeowners instructions on how to retrieve the items. In many instances, seized items are put in the care of the judge who issued the search war- rant, and the homeowners must obtain a court order to obtain their property. The case of Lawrence and Clara Perkins of West Covina, Calif., showed how an ordinary couple can fall through the cracks of the legal system. For imore than a year, the two were out $2,469 in cash that had been taken from their home. The case also illustrates how the Supreme Court is unwilling to impose new rules on city and state officials. Pork protesters sted iD.C. 0 WASHINGTON -. Capitol police rounded up 12 members of an animal- rights group yesterday after they set bales of hay afire on the Capitoi steps to protest government plans to help the pork industry. "The pork industry is a violent and bloody industry. It should be outlawed, not subsidized," said Michael McGraw, a New York-based spokesperson for PETA, People for the Ethical Treatmen of Animals. Capitol Police spokesperson Dan Nichols said two of the 12 were arrest- ed after the incident on the lower west terrace and charged with igniting an incendiary charge on the Capitol grounds, arson and destruction of prop- erty. All of the charges are felonies. Nichols said no one was hurt. a I AROUND THE WORLD THE PRINCETON6 REVIEWwwreview.com The Princeton Review is not affiliated with Princeton University or ADA. "OnhbsVerge eta New Millennium: What is Dr.Kin"g's DreaM9 Banker's resigation shakes markets RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - Brazil's central banker unexpectedly resigned yesterday, and his successor devalued the currency by 7.6 percent, roiling world financial markets. Many feared the economic contagion could spread through Latin America and even threaten the United States. Wall Street fell sharply after the announcement that Central Bank chief Gustavo Franco had stepped down. Investors worry that if Brazil falls, Latin America's largest economy and most populous country could drag oth- ers in the region into the maelstrom. An estimated 2,000 American busi- nesses operate in Brazil, including such giants as IBM, Coca Cola, Ford and General Motors. U.S. banks have a $27 billion stake in Brazil, and weak opera- tions overseas could pinch profits back home. In Washington, President Clinton consulted with the IMF and the G-7 group of wealthy nations, saying: "We have a strong interest in seeing Brazil .,, carry forward with its economic reform plan and succeed. Just a day earlier, Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin listed Brazil as among his chief concerns, along with the financial mess in Russia and Japan continuing struggles to right its econo- my. Russia ang at U.S. for securit sanctions MOSCOW -- Russia reacted angrily yesterday to the US. decision to impose sanctions on three more Russian inst tutes suspected of helping transfer missi and nuclear technology to Iran, saying the charges were groundless and would com- plicate U.S.-Russian relations. Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov denounced the measures as "counter- productive." The Foreign Ministry issued a state- ment saying the allegations "have no grounds whatsoever"and the three insti- tutes "are in full compliance" with Russian and international law. Eleventh Observance Monday, January 18,1999 1:30 PM Hale Auditorium, Assembly Hall Tappan and Hill Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Followed by Audience Participation and Reception .................................. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is publisned Monday tnrougn -rday uuring the tilan U winte t erms students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. 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