8 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 8, 1995 NAnamlwaftuD r I I ~1 I I I .1 -I - 1- -I' r I DOT lit I WOLVERINES FOOTBAL GAME AND GET 107 I I I I HET LUTELYFR I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Packwood accusers celebrate resignation Newsday WASHINGTON - Gena Hutton didn't make it home in time to watch her harasser's resignation speech on televi- sion, but that didn't stop her from cel- ebrating. "He finally did it!" a gleeful Hutton said from her Eugene, Ore., home yester- day after Bob Packwood announced he was quitting the Senate. "It's finally over!" From the women who filed sexual harassment complaints against Packwood, to their attorneys, to women's organizations, as well as other senators, news of the Packwood's res- ignation was greeted by loud cheers and moments of somber reflection. "Certainly it's the egregious nature of this case; the conduct that Sen. Packwood is (accused of) ... would have been un- acceptable at the time Christopher Co- lumbus discovered America," said Sen. Richard Bryan (D-Nev.). For Hutton, who told the Senate Eth- ics Committee that Packwood force- fully kissed her outside a Eugene res- taurant while she was a campaign vol- unteer in 1980, Packwood stepping down brings closure to a lengthy, emo- tionally painful process. "I'm sorry he didn't do it sooner," Hutton said. "He could have saved Or- egonians and the entire country a lot of grief. This is the best of all possible scenarios that I would have thought of: Be expelled or resign." Packwood's departure surprised Jean McMahon, who was applying for ajob with the senator when, she charged, he kissed and grabbed her in an Oregon motel room in 1976. "I'm still amazed that he would do it after three years," McMahon said of Packwood's departure. "I'm not the slightest bit sorry. What he did was an affront against human beings, denying what he did time after time again." In Portland, Ore., lawyers who repre- sent other women who told of unwanted advances by Packwood gathered around a television set and burst into shouts and cheers as Packwood delivered his announcement on the Senate floor. "I'm very, very satisfied," said McKanna, who represented Cecilia Lighthill. "It's been a long time, and a long time in coming. But this is a just result." But not everyone was celebrating the endofPackwood'scareer.JaenetteFruen, AP PHOTO Sen. Bob Packwood (R-Ore.) leaves the Senate television gallery after Interviews. "It's a time to be thoughtful of our own behaviors." "While this is not a cause for celebra- tion, there is a sense of satisfaction," said Patricia Ireland, president of the National Organization for Women, not- ing that Packwood was a longtime sup- porter of women's issues. Ireland praised the Senate for ad- dressing "an abuse of power" but chas- tised it for not holding public hearings on the allegations against Packwood. "Without them, he pan go around and say he was unable to confront his \ accusers, and that's unfortunate," she said. Bryan argued that the impact ofcom- mittee recommendation was clear. It "should send a message to every woman in America that the United States Sen- ate recognizes that this kind of conduct is intolerable and will exercise the ulti- mate sanction." Hutton said the end of the Packwood case has a wider impact as a victory in the war against sexual harassment in the workplace. "It sends an incredibly strong mes- sage for people in the workplace that people in position of power cannot manipulate people in lesser positions." Boxer executivedirectorofPortland's Women's Legal Advocacy Fund, which provided free legal assistance to those who filed complaints against the senator, said yes- terday was "not a time of elation." "I think it's a real sad time," she said. I I I I I I I ---mow M--ow I I 7PORTM I I I College Football USA96.108 Division 1-A teams. Seven conferences. Four bowl games. One video game. Including all I I the moves you need to take the Wolverines to the top a m m