The Battalion LITICS Monday • DecembeiM GOP threatens Reno with contempt Clinton takes me as FBI is urged to act independently of harmony to bf 0 J Washington chf ( WASHINGTON (AP) — Republi cans threatened Attorney General Janet Reno with contempt of Con gress Sunday over her decision to forgo an independent counsel’s in vestigation of White House cam paign fund raising. One GOP senator, Orrin Hatch of Utah, said he is asking FBI di rector Louis Freeh to by pass Reno, his boss, and in vestigate alle gations of De mocratic impropriety in fund raising. “I have no doubt that the political ap pointees in the department who have been influencing her are do ing nothing but protecting the president,” Senate Judiciary Com mittee chair Hatch said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, shot back: “Was it protecting the presi dent when she appointed four in dependent counsels that all took aim at the White House?” Before the cameras were turned on, Glenn flashed Reno a thumb-to-forefinger Reno OK sign and told her he admired her for standing up to her principles on the independent-counsel decision. Tuesday, Reno announced her decision not to request a court- appointed independent counsel to look into fund-raising calls President Clinton and Vice Presi dent A1 Gore made from the White House. In a 69-page brief and ac companying news conference, she said they had broken no fed eral laws. Furious over Reno’s decision, Re publicans used Sunday’s talk-show circuit to lob a series of threats at her and the Justice Department. Rep. Dan Burton, chair of the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee, said on “Fox News Sunday” the panel will con sider recommending a contempt of Congress charge if she refuses to comply with its subpoena seeking Freeh’s memo endorsing an inde pendent counsel. “We’re going to reach maybe a little crisis here,” Burton said. Asked whether he would cite Reno for contempt, he said: “That’s the step we’ll have to look at next.” But he acknowledged an inher ent problem with that action: “Obviously, if we cited her for contempt, it would have to go to the Justice Department for carry ing out that contempt citation. And she would be making the de cision on that.” Reno did not rule out sending Burton the memo, with sensitive in formation blacked out. On “Face the Nation,” Reno in sisted: “‘I’m not protecting anybody. If I were protecting people, I’d close up the shop and go home.” She said Clinton and Gore are not out of the woods. “We have not closed this investi gation in any way,” she said. “No one has been exonerated.” Republicans said that is not rea son enough for her to continue an investigation of the man who ap pointed her, which both the GOP and FBI director Freeh consider a conflict of interest. Hatch surprised Glenn on the program with the disclosure he plans to send Freeh a letter Mon day asking him to investigate De mocratic fund-raising irregulari ties separately from Reno, even though the FBI is part of the Jus tice Department. “He should conduct an indepen dent investigation without regard to the Justice Department, other than reporting to them and cooperating with them and talking to them,” Hatch said. “He should do it inde pendently, because that’s the only way we’re going to have, it seems to me, a way around these conflicts of interest that clearly exist.” Hatch’s House counterpart, Ju diciary Committee Chair Henry Hyde, R-Ill., said his panel will hold hearings on how to overhaul the Justice Department — with a critical eye trained especially on the Public Integrity Section, which advises Reno on the fund raising probe. “It’s a little difficult to have confi dence looking at their track record,” Hyde said on “Fox News Sunday.” “We’re going to look at everything, we’re going to look at the people who run them, their attitudes, how much they spend. We can fashion legisla tion that will accomplish what we think are the appropriate goals for the Justice Department.” In a separate development, Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., whose Governmental Affairs Committee held inconclusive hearings on the fund-raising question, said his pan el would refer criminal perjury charges against several witnesses. He identified none of them, but The Washington Times reported Sat urday one would be Interior Secre tary Bruce Babbitt. WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Clinton told District of Co lumbia residents Sunday he is ded icated to making the nation’s beleaguered capital "a shining city on the hill for all America.” “I don’t believe our national government has always been the best neigh- m u , , bor to the city of Washing ton,” Clin- | ton said, but he ; added: “We | are com- mitted to becoming a better i neighbor.” Crum bling condi tions in the District were the focus of Clinton’s visit to Metropolitan Baptist Clinton did not hurt the da “I don't believethejl indicated that eveiyi start in the sameway'] But AbigailTheal servative authorwhEp the Akron dialogued Sunday" the exdusj was unfair. She ut| add divergent views8| ry board on race. "1 want to heartlie| say it is racist.’’Then “You can makemorea we don’t have a mow Although Sunday played to a largelyt aides hoped imageso!(| ing letters from blaj singing along withs mid entering thedebtli trict’s future would m conversation beyondh platitudes that cameo Metropolitan’s par Gore pushes global-warming solution Signing of pollution treaty still in question at Kyoto conference WASHINGTON (AP) —When asked about the uncertainties of global warming, President Clin ton often defers to his chief environmental ad viser— A1 Gore. “Read the vice president’s book,” is Clinton’s advice to those who question the need to rein in heat-trapping greenhouse gases. Gore was arriving Sunday in Kyoto, Japan, to press before delegates from 150 nations the U.S. position greenhouse gases must be cut but not so rapidly as many demand. En route, the vice president gave no assurance an agreement was in sight. “It’s a very tricky situation, and success is far from assured,” he told reporters aboard his plane. “A lot of issues are undecided.” The United States would stabilize greenhouse gases, principally carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels such as coal and oil, at 1990 levels over a period of roughly the next dozen years. Envi ronmentalists have embraced a tougher Euro pean proposal that would cut emissions 15 per cent beyond the U.S. plan. The Clinton administration decided to send Gore to the contentious climate conference after days of debate with political advisers anxious it might backfire on the vice president if no treaty emerges or if he is viewed by environmentalists as accepting a weak agreement. Gore would not be easily persuaded to stay away. “It is an issue about which he feels very strong ly and personally,” Carol Browner, head of the En vironmental Protection Agency, a member of Gore’s staff when he was in Congress, said. Five years ago, in writing Earth In the Balance, Gore cemented his credentials among environ mentalists with his very personal plea to protect the Earth from humans’ mischief. He warned in the book of impending envi ronmental crisis because of human dabbling in the Earth’s natural balance. The threat of global warming, he says, is “the most serious problem that we have ever faced.” But his call then for “bold and unequivocal ac tion” on global warming and other environmen tal threats also has been flung back at him by some environmentalists, who now criticize as too timid the administration’s proposal before the delegates gathered in Kyoto. As word of Gore’s visit circulated in Kyoto, some environmentalists hoped it signaled ad ministration willingness to move closer to the European numbers. But two-thirds of the way into the 10-day conference, there has been little movement toward consensus, not only on levels of greenhouse emission reductions but even on what gases the treaty should cover. Church, in the heart of the District’s Dr . H. Be Hvher Hidisfei black community. But th< e subtext tht :re, say mgNackiO!* I clearly was to show Clinto: n himself the * legac; of slavericMpI crossing the invisible bar tiers that for perpe iu.nmgwrftdH i make religious worship one * of Amer- tio ns in\A ashington. I. I ica’s most segregated pract ices. "There ■ comesamoJK I The visit came as Clint< m’s year- life i wher i 1 must decJR long campaign for racial reconcil- tio n from my past.’ill iation shifted into a highe r gear af- "Y\ 1e will not lay allo:M ter last week’s town hall m iceting in lei ns at tli u'leetofra. |r Akron, Ohio. That gathe ring was we wink i at mismamri® / followed by several oth ers con- ine :ompe tence that vened by Clinton aides - — one of he aped u port ourseiv which has drawn fire for having a Clinto n did notp black-only audience. po licies e n tax relief arr The closed, invitat ion-only tri< :t. He r eitcrated hi' event last week at a Dali; is muse- lot :al home rule and um, presided over by bla< ;kTrans- pa y close r attentiont:f/f portation Secretary Rodney ler ns t)f those who Slater, was organized b y Dallas W1 rite House'sshadov Municipal Court Judge Vonceil Hill, a friend of Slater’s. Sylvia Mathews, deputy chief of staff overseeing the race effort, said the Dallas meeting was an “isolated incident” that would not be repeated. Slater’s spokesman Bill Schulz said the reaction was an encouraging sign that people of all races are eager to talk. "Clearly, this was a missed op portunity,” Schulz said. Hill told the Dallas Morning News having an all-black audience r, OALLERIA VJ DAY SPA 11. Welcomes Renee Experience the best in Quality & Price Acrylic or Gel full set $20 fills $15 in & out in 30 minutes 'n 822-5756 Comer of Villa Maria & Cavitt Due to Student Requests m NOW AVAILABLE UNTIL 12:00 MIDNIGHT " For Department of Food Services Meal Plan Customers, Some UmitatioTVi apply. ATTENTION! Coming this SPRING! by Student Request! Commons & Sbisa Dining Centers UTB' m LEARN TO FLY NOW, “One of the gifts! administration can tel 21 st century is a nation that is a shining city onl all America,” he said. 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