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Duffy, C.S.P., Paulist Fathers Vocation Office 415 W. 59th St. New York, NY 10019 Page 10 The Battalion Tuesday, February 20,1S| Tu Texas congressman not trying to follow Leland’s footsteps WASHINGTON (AP) — At his swearing-in last month, Craig Wash ington wiped tears from his eyes and asked his House colleagues for their prayers and advice, saying he had not come to the Capitol to “try to be king of the Hill.” In the weeks since he became Texas’ newest congressman, Wash ington said he has been on the re ceiving end of an outpouring of friendship from many who knew his predecessor, the late Rep. Mickey Leland. “People loved Mickey,” Washing ton said in a recent interview. “It’s like I were Mickey’s little brother or something. They kind of pat me on It’s like I were Mickey’s little brother or something. They kind of pat me on the head and want to make sure I’m doing OK.” — Rep. Craig Washington, replaced Mickey Leland the head and want to make sure I’m doing OK. And that has been a great advantage to me — it’s sort of like having Mickey here to show me around.” Leland, who was chairman of the House Select Committee on Hunger and an activist in helping solve Afri ca’s famine problems, died last year when his brush plane slammed into a mountain in Ethiopia on its way to a refugee camp. “I didn’t realize the many lives that he touched and the many ways he touched them ’til I got up here,” Washington said of his longtime friend and Democratic ally from Houston. “There’s been an outpour ing of friendship directed toward me by many people who loved Mickey.” Although Leland’s reputation “parted the Red Sea for me” on Ca pitol Hill, Washington said he would not necessarily follow in his foot steps, other than to trying to be as compassionate. “Mickey was more a citizen of the world,” Washington said. “I guess I’m a little closer to the United States, maybe because I studied the law and the Constitution. I’m a little bit more comfortable working inside the system, perhaps than was Mickey. I don’t think he was any more liberal than I am; I don’t think you can get any more liberal than I am.” Washington, a 48-year-old Hous ton lawyer, served in the Texas Leg islature for 16 years. He arrives in the capital with a reputation as a champion of liberal causes, includ ing abortion rights, gay rights, AIDS health care and support for the poor. He also faces two court hearings in connection with his law practice. Two judges in Houston have im posed jail sentences — one for 15 days and the other for 30 days — for Washington’s failure to heed notices to appear in court on behalf of cli ents. While Washington said he is con cerned about the matter, he is not al lowing it to distract him from his congressional duties. “To use an old East Texas ex pression, it doesn’t touch me top, side or bottom,” he told reporters the day he took office. He also de fended his credentials as a lawyer, saying: “There are many people who think I’m the best lawyer in Texas.” Washington, meanwhile, has had his staff research what has been done in Congress on three issues im portant to his district — health care, education and crime and drugs — so that he can help support any pro posed legislation. His first piece of legislation is be ing drafted and would require “any banker or bank employee who par- 66 I guess I’m a little closer to the United States, maybe because I studied the law and the Constitution.” — Rep. Craig Washington, ticipates in putting ... United States currency into the drug system, upon conviction, be sentenced to life with out parole.” Washington complained that bankers can make millions of dollars from an illegal drug transaction but face only a slap on the wrist if caught. “When is the last time you’ve seen one hauled off to prison in hand cuffs, held down by the police with somebody’s foot on their neck, like you see the 17-year-olds,” Washing ton said. “They end up getting a sus pended sentence ... some commu nity service — come down and work with the little ghetto kids, that’s their punishment,” he said. Washington said he also would like to find solutions for the growing number of middle-income families who are Finding it impossible to fi nance their children’s college educa tion, as well as for a host of other problems in education. Library prints collection of quotation WASHINGTON (AP) - A, Otto von Bismarck once sai( “Politics is the art of the possible — as possible as wrongly attril uting the quote to a legendary^ ish barkeeper. For pundits and politick; wanting to punch up their prr. nouncements with such pithyte marks, help is at hand. For$2i the Library of Congress will pre. vide 2,100 similarly sage saying; and with the right attribution. Over the years the libran Congressional Research Servit has found itself continually bo®, barded by requests for appropr. ate quotes for use in papers am speeches. Its researchers have discovered that many a quote popularly a tributed to a famous person w* actually uttered or scribbled! someone else: for example, k ( .erman chancellor’s commente: politics often is attributed toFii- ley Peter Dunne’s Mr. Dooley. The 520-page volume, entitled “Respectfully Quoted: ADictioi. ary of Quotations Requested from the Congressional Reseated Service” and for sale by theGoi eminent Printing Of fice, hassei eral similar examples. Lincoln’s “You can fool aid the people some of the timeam some of the people all of thetio ..." has never been verified,tie volume points out. Nor has “La them eat cake,” alleged to been said by Marie Antoine® when informed the French per pie had no bread. “Winning isn’t everything,#! the only thing,” generally attrif uted to f ormer Green Bay Pack coach Vince Lombardi, was act# ally said by Red Sanders at Vat derbilt in 1948, the volume rt ports. In fact, it adds, Lombard! alwavs denied having said it. Other co i rections in attri ution include “It is betterthatom hundred guilty persons escap than one innocent person shok— suffer,” of ten attributed to Sis | pi erne Court justices Oliver Wet dell Hoi mes or Louis Brande K actually was first stated bv Bent min Franklin. Currently the most requestd quotation, the Research Sera says, is from a 1977 speech of k mer Vice President Hubert H, Humphrey: “It was once said that themon! of government is how ih Girl Girl day test government treats those whoatt in the dawn of life, the children those who are in the twilight« life, the elderly; and those wk are in the shadows of life-tk sick, the needy and the hand R (Cor icapped.” Convent near Auschwitz relocates to end dispute WARSAW, Poland (AP) — A cornerstone was laid Monday for a prayer center that officials hope will end the long-festering dispute over a Roman Catholic con vent at the Auschwitz death camp. Also Monday, Edgar Bronfman, president of the World Jewish Congress, met with President Wojciech Jaruzelski and Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki and declared later: “There are no outstanding problems be tween the Jewish people and Poland.” The convent housing about a dozen Carmelite nuns on the edge of the Nazi death camp has angered Jews and others worldwide who see it as an intrusion of Christian symbols at a site where most of the victims were Jews. The Roman Catholic church agreed at negotiations in 1987 in Switzerland to relocate the nuns to an interf aith prayer and education center farther from the camp, but a February 1989 deadline for moving the nuns was missed. After Polish church officials balked last year at fulfil ling the agreement, the Vatican intervened in Septem ber and upheld the decision. The new Solidarity-led government of Mazowiecki also has worked to speed up construction of the new center. Cardinal Franciszek Macharski of Krakow, whose archdiocese has jurisdiction over the site near the southern Polish city of Oswiecim, presided at the cor nerstone-laying ceremony. Mazowiecki, meeting in Warsaw with Bronfman, said his government’s support of the project was illustrated by the presence at the ceremony of Jacek Ambroziak, head of the Office of the Council of Ministers and the prime minister’s close aide. Bronfman called the laying of the cornerstone “very important. Citing the prayer center construction, Poland'splai to launch full diplomatic relations with Israel n«I week, and the government’s pledge to fight anti-Se® tism, Bronfman said outside Mazowiecki’s o(fc “There are no outstanding problems between theJp ish people and Poland.” But Bronfman said he did not know exactly w interfaith center would be completed and the® 1 moved. “I don’t think deadlines are useful,” he said. "Itffi ates a kind of emotionalism that I think is not good s did not press for an absolute deadline. The spirits as soon as possible.” He also expressed concern at what he called “arest! gence of anti-Semitism in Poland.” This “is part I suppose of the price of democrat' Bronfman said. “If you are free to do anything else,'' are free also to not like people.” But he said the government’s stance against an Semitism is “very clear.” “I express the intention of the Polish government all matters relating to Polish-Jewish relations toarran? them successfully and to remove all frictions,” V wiecki said in a brief statement after the meeting. “We are thoroughly opposed to any form of a® Semitism and we believe that ... it should be com teracted by every means.” The new religious center at Auschwitz will beabotfi quarter-mile from the death camp on a nine-acre site Known as the Center for Information, Dialogue,B ucation and Prayer at Auschwitz, it will include meek rooms, exhibition and conference halls, a library a:< accommodations for nearly 100 people, PAP said seen R; State lue Tex; ante; “V oape liter; Rain and socie Ill unde said. peo and sirn che che che soci Rep t THE ANDSTONE CENTER i«ie (409)690-3 OR 1-800-421-6322 tn-pr sente more force Fi, shou rity I secur pensi mone term: “I the s Rains lent i they .heg; Foi posec years ■them fendt also s Eating Disorders? 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