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ouncement . The Chicago lawmaker 's lawyers had urged him to consider the deal b eing offered by U.S. . Attorney Eric Holder , a Clinton administration appointee . Although it was understood to have meant a one-year prison term and his resig nation from Congress , the bargain would have spared Rostenkowski and his family the humiliation of a public trial and possibly a longer prison term . Under the rules of the House Democratic Caucus , an indictment on felony charges punishab le by a prison term of more than two years would mean that Rostenkowski would ha ve to relinquish his chairmanship , until and unless he were acquitted . The imp lications of his removal go far beyond the effects on the 35-year congressional career of a single lawmaker . Rostenkowski , whose legislative deal-making skill s are considered unparalleled in Congress , is one of President Clinton 's most crucial allies in the administration 's uphill efforts to pass comprehensive hea lth care legislation this year . Rostenkowski , 66 , was considered so vital to the passage of the health bill that Clinton went to Chicago to campaign for him earlier this year , when it appeared that he faced a strong challenge in the Dem ocratic primary . The Ways and Means Committee has already begun its deliberatio ns on the health bill , and it now appears it will lose its chairman just as it is to start its voting after Congress ' weeklong Memorial Day recess . Ways and Means is one of five committees in Congress that have jurisdiction over the bill . In the last few days , as negotiations between Rostenkowski and federal prose cutors reached a critical phase , a pall had settled over the House . While few House members had been willing to discuss it on the record , the situation had s eemed to overshadow all the House 's official business , and was the topic of ma ny whispered conversations in the corridors and cloakrooms of the Capitol . Alth ough the chairman had agonized over the choice before him , the idea of pleading guilty had gone against all his instincts , friends said . `` He finally came t o closure late this afternoon , '' spokesman Jim Jaffe said Monday . The helm of the committee is expected to pass to the second most senior Democrat , Rep. Sam Gibbons of Florida . Though genial and well-liked , Gibbons has not been tested on such major legislation . His expertise is in trade matters . Though Rostenko wski would relinquish the chairmanship , he could still exert considerable influ ence as a member of the committee . The Democrats on the panel are fiercely loya l to him , and have received many breaks for their constituents from him in the past . Also , he hired the Ways and Means Committee 's entire staff . ( Optional add end ) Rostenkowski is represented by Robert S. Bennett , a leading Washingt on attorney well known for his defense of public officials and others accused of white-collar crimes . It is expected that Bennett , who also is representing Cl inton against a sexual harassment suit filed by Paula Corbin Jones , could delay any trial until after the November elections . The federal investigation of Ros tenkowski has been under way for more than two years . Among the charges that pr obably would be included in an indictment : That between 1985 and 1991 , he ille gally converted stamps from the House Post Office to cash for his personal use . A key witness against him is likely to be former House Postmaster Robert V. Rot a , who pleaded guilty to misdemeanor embezzlement charges last July . That he i mproperly used office funds to buy lavish gifts for friends from the House Stati onery Store . On the advice of his lawyers , Rostenkowski earlier reimbursed Con gress for about $ 82,000 of purchases , without admitting wrongdoing . That he c onverted government-leased cars to his personal ownership . That he used governm ent funds to pay `` ghost employees '' people who were on his payroll but did no work . All told , the charges could be such that the chairman would face a leng thy prison term , if convicted . RIVERSIDE , Calif. University of California officials said Monday that Khallid Abdul Muhammad , the controversial Nation of Islam figure shot in the legs here Sunday night , disregarded an elaborate security plan by continuing to answer qu estions outside the gymnasium where he had just given a speech . The alleged gun man has been identified as James Edward Bess , who authorities said is a member of a `` subset of the Nation of Islam '' in the Tacoma , Wash. , area . Bess was severely beaten by a crowd of bystanders and had to be rescued by police . He i s under heavy guard at a local hospital . Muhammad , 43 , is listed in stable co ndition at another local hospital . He was an aide to Louis Farrakhan , head of the Nation of Islam , until he was demoted following a national outcry over anti semitic remarks he made during a speech last November in New Jersey . Some membe rs of the crowd that beat Bess shouted that the gunman worked `` for the Jews . '' Minutes after leaving the gym , Muhammad was shot at close range while standi ng at the top of some steps about 100 yards from the gym entrance on the Univers ity of California at Riverside . The security plan drawn up by campus police and Muhammad 's bodyguards had called for him to exit quickly through a rear door a nd leave by car . Authorities had no explanation for why Muhammad did not follow the plan . Five of his bodyguards were also wounded in the attack . Only one of the bodyguards was wounded seriously enough to be in the hospital tonight . The investigation into the shooting is being handled by University of California ca mpus police , who would not speculate Monday on the motive for the attack . Acco rding to Leon Forrest , former editor of the Nation of Islam 's newspaper , Muha mmad Speaks , the shooting of Muhammad by a disgruntled Nation member is reflect ive of ongoing leadership problems in the organization . It was not uncommon for people to join the Nation and then leave , often over ideological differences o r a belief that power was not distributed in an equitable way , said Forrest , n ow chair of African American studies at Northwestern University . Joseph E. Lowe ry , president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference , said he regarde d the shooting , which he deplored , as an `` internal conflict '' in the Nation of Islam . Police said they found three weapons of Bess 's in addition to the 9 mm handgun used in the shooting . Two additional 9mm weapons were found at the s cene . In his vehicle nearby , they said , they found a rifle with a telescope s ight . Riverside Police Chief Ken Fortier said that police are not ruling out a conspiracy but they believe Bess acted alone . He said Bess has not been charged yet . Forrest recalled the shooting 29 years ago of Malcolm X , a former Nation of Islam leader who broke away and attracted a following of young blacks . Thre e members of the Nation of Islam were convicted of the killing . University offi cials said security arrangements for Muhammad 's Sunday appearance had been adeq uate . `` There was good security , '' David H. Warren , the university 's execu tive vice chancellor said at a news conference here Monday . `` What went wrong was he ( Muhammad ) completely broke with what his scheduling was and his routin g was . '' Since being suspended by Farrakhan in February , Muhammad has continu ed to make controversial speeches , describing himself at one point as a `` trut h terrorist '' for the Nation of Islam leader . He has done little to soften the rhetoric that first gained widespread attention in an address Nov. 29 at Kean C ollege in New Jersey that was later denounced by President Clinton , Congress an d many black and Jewish leaders . In his two-hour speech here Sunday , Muhammad sounded many familiar themes , including the need for blacks to overcome white r acist oppression and the attempt by Jews in the entertainment industry to promot e negative images of blacks . University officials said Monday they considered b locking Muhammad from speaking but decided to allow it because they feared being sued . After protests from Jewish groups on campus , however , they refused to allow Muhammad 's bodyguards to conduct searches of the audience , and they also insisted that reporters be allowed to bring recording equipment into the gym . WASHINGTON Ezra Taft Benson , head of the Mormon Church since 1985 , secretary of agriculture from 1953 to 1961 and a pugnacious force in matters of church and state for much of his life , died Monday at his home in Salt Lake City . Church officials said he had been hospitalized briefly last week for congestive heart failure . He was 94 . Incapacitated since 1989 and unable to speak or , at times , to recognize even close relatives , Benson spent his last years under the 24- hour care of nurses in his apartment across the street from church headquarters . His last public appearance was at the funeral of his wife of nearly 66 years , Flora Amussen Benson , in 1992 . The severity of his condition became public la st year when one of his grandsons , tired of what he said was a charade involvin g posed pictures and letters signed by an automatic pen , denounced Mormon leade rs for participating in a deception . His grandfather 's absence , Steve Benson conceded , had made little difference in running the church , whose bureaucracy he compared to that of the former Soviet Union . `` To me , it was just further evidence of the systematic illness that has affected the hierarchy of the church , '' said Benson , 39 , a Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist for the Arizona Rep ublic . The grandson , a sixth-generation Mormon , later left the church . Benso n became the 13th president , prophet , seer and revelator of the Church of Jesu s Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1985 , after the death of Spencer W. Kimball. P residents of the Mormon Church serve for life . He took over leadership of a chu rch that was 156 years old and had about 6 million members worldwide . During hi s administration , the church membership grew to nearly 9 million , church spoke smen said . Benson was president of the Boise ( Idaho ) stake , or district , of the Mormon Church in the late 1930s and headed the Washington stake from 1940 t o 1943 . He was chosen as a member of the Council of Twelve Apostles , the churc h 's ruling group , in 1943 . Three years later , he became president of the chu rch 's European Mission , headquartered in London . When he was appointed agricu lture secretary , he took a leave of absence from his duties as eighth-ranking c hurch apostle . After leaving government service in 1961 , he devoted his life t o church work full time . Yet he did not become a stranger to controversy . He s poke out on a variety of social and political questions . He attacked the civil rights movement as advancing communism , called the graduated income tax `` Marx ist , '' attacked detente with the Soviet Union , lambasted the women 's movemen t and became closely associated with members of the reactionary John Birch Socie ty . When he became church president in 1985 , many observers wondered whether t he Mormon Church would take a turn to the political right and whether Benson , w ho had been restrained in his comments in recent years , would begin to speak ou t again on political issues . When he took office , Benson expressed love for `` every creed , color and political persuasion . '' `` Some have expectantly inqu ired about the direction the church will take in the future , '' he said . `` Ma y we suggest that the Lord , through President Kimball , has sharply focused on the threefold mission of the church : to preach the gospel , to perfect the sain ts and to redeem the dead . We shall continue every effort to carry out this mis sion . '' During his years as agriculture secretary , Benson opposed increases i n parity payments , intended to ensure farmers stable prices for crops . He also opposed soil bank schemes , which would pay farmers for cutting production , sa ying he was dead against paying farmers for doing nothing . In the spring of 195 6 , President Dwight D. Eisenhower was forced to take measures to bolster fallin g hog prices , after protests from Republican members of Congress representing t he Midwest farm vote . Benson opposed measures to help those small farmers , say ing the farmers were inefficient and the government should not pay to bail them out . But members of Congress pointed out just how crucial the farm vote could b e in a presidential election year , and farmers got what they wanted . Benson 's image as a foe of many small farmers was bolstered when he was battered by eggs thrown at him during a speaking engagement in South Dakota . Another time , Dem ocrats on the Senate Agriculture Committee hectored him so persistently that it took him 90 minutes to get through three pages of testimony . Authorities say on e measure of his unpopularity among farmers was the steady loss of Republican vo tes in congressional elections in farm states during the 1950s . Another measure was the sure-fire success with farm crowds of Democrats campaigning for the pre sidency in 1960 when they promised that , if elected , they would fire Ezra Taft Benson . Benson is survived by six children . RIVERSIDE , Calif. . A former Nation of Islam minister who clashed with fellow Muslims had a small arsenal , including a hunting rifle with a scope , when he a llegedly shot black nationalist Khallid Abdul Muhammad and five other men outsid e a university auditorium , authorities said Monday . The suspect , identified a s James Edward Bess , 49 , opened fire just after Muhammad finished a speech on the University of California campus . Khallid Muhammad a former Nation of Islam spokesman known for his fiery anti-Jewish , anti-white rhetoric was shot in the legs . He and a bodyguard were reported in stable condition . Four other bodygua rds were treated and released . Law enforcement authorities said they have not r uled out a conspiracy in the shooting , but they believe Bess was acting alone . Investigators have not offered a motive . People familiar with the suspect desc ribed Bess as a contentious figure and a devotee of Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan . Bess had been removed from his post as a leader of the Seattle area mosque . He once wrote an open letter in a black community newspaper criticizin g the mayor of Seattle for denouncing remarks by Farrakhan . And , on another oc casion , he told television viewers in Seattle , where he frequently appeared on public access TV , that violence was the way to deal with black leaders who let down the black community . `` If this false leadership continues I willn't be s urprised to see the same thing as happened in South Africa , where the black wom an was hacked to death with a axe and .. . thrown on a fire and burned up , '' B ess said . `` Matter of fact , I think that 's what needs to take place with thi s leadership . They ought to be doused with gasoline and burned in public . '' A former top aide to Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan , Muhammad had been o ne of Farrakhan 's most vituperative lieutenants until a verbal assault on Jews , Arabs and whites provoked denunciations by the Rev. Jesse Jackson , black memb ers of Congress and President Clinton and led to his suspension . Despite his su spension , Muhammad has publicly remained so loyal to Farrakhan that many wonder if he continues to speak for Farrakhan . He says only that they remain in conta ct but adds , `` We don't have the closeness that we had . We don't have the com munication that we used to . '' Muhammad had come to Riverside to make the secon d of two speeches in the Los Angeles area over the weekend ( Riverside is about 60 miles east of Los Angeles . ) The shooting Sunday night occurred despite tigh t security inside the University of California , Riverside , auditorium during h is two-hour speech . The 500 members of the audience were frisked as they entere d the room . In addition to two city police officers , about 50 members of the F ruit of Islam the security arm of the nation of Islam were present . Muhammad dr ew cheers during his speech when he described whites as satanic and Jews as oppr essors . In a speech in Los Angeles Saturday , Muhammad referred to Jews as `` b agel-eating '' and `` hook nosed '' and contended that `` the black holocaust is 100 times worse than any other holocaust '' . But police and university spokesm en spokesman said that security personnel were caught by surprise when Muhammad left the podium and said he would continue to field questions outside . Muhammad said he was going outdoors because he had been told apparently in error that th e sponsoring organization had to give up the gymnasium or pay additional costs . University officials acknowledged they were apprehensive about Muhammad 's spee ch on campus , sponsored by the African Student Alliance , but said that to have blocked the talk would have been a denial of free speech . When he came outside , Muhammad , 43 , was hit in both legs by shots fired from a 9-mm handgun . One bodyguard , Cakliph Saduik , 33 , was shot in the upper right back . Another gu ard , Barnado Puckett , 34 , was shot three times . Terrell D. Strait , 20 , was shot in the left shoulder and stomach . Steve L. Washington received a minor gu nshot injury , and Thomas L. Harri had a minor gunshot graze to the back . Bess was was severely beaten by a crowd of people who had witnessed the shooting . Au thorities said he suffered a fractured shoulder , multiple abrasions and lost te eth . Riverside police reported Monday that they confiscated not only the 9-mm h andgun alleged used in the shooting , but also found a backpack containing two o ther guns and a hunting rifle in Bess ' car which was parked nearby . ( Optional Add End ) By Monday afternoon , Muhammad had gotten out of his hospital bed and was walking around his room , according to Nation of Islam security guards who declined to identify themselves . `` He is fine . His spirits are fine , '' said a woman who identified herself as Muhammad 's sister at Riverside Community Hos pital Monday afternoon . `` He 's just tired . Doing his father 's work makes hi m tired , '' said the woman who would not give her name but was sitting in a roo m beside Muhammad 's 9-year-old son in the hospital 's intensive care wing . One knowledgeable source told the Los Angeles Times that Bess was suspended about t hree years ago from his post as minister of a mosque in Seattle by a former Nati on of Islam minister and official , Wazir Muhammad . A resident of Los Angeles , Wazir Muhammad was said to be with Khallid Muhammad during the speech but not a t his side when the shooting took place . In ROSTY-TIMES ( Tumulty-Times ) sub for 3rd graf ( recasting first sentence ) xxx night : His remarks came on the eve of Tuesday 's deadline by the government to accept or reject its plea-bargain . `` That is a far more attractive arrange ment option than pleading guilty to crimes that I did not commit , '' Rostenkows ki said . PICK UP 4TH GRAF : The decision xxx WASHINGTON House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski , D-Ill. , said Monday that he has chosen to fight charges of fraud and abuse of his public office , rather than making a deal with federal prosecutors to plead guilty to lesser offenses . `` I have always fought for what I believe in . I strongly bel ieve that I am not guilty of these charges , and will fight to regain my reputat ion in court , '' Rostenkowski said in a statement issued Monday night . His rem arks came on the eve of Tuesday 's deadline by the government to accept or rejec t its plea-bargain offer . `` That is a far more attractive option than pleading guilty to crimes that I did not commit , '' Rostenkowski said . PICKUP 4TH GRAF : The decision xxx The Security Council issued an appeal to North Korea Monday night to allow the international nuclear agency to monitor the discharge of fuel from a reactor . T he non-binding statement , which had the crucial support of China , did not incl ude any explicit threat of sanctions against North Korea for violating nuclear s afeguards . But diplomats said the measure would likely be the last the Security Council will take before considering sanctions , if North Korea continues to un load fuel from the Yongbyon reactor without oversight by the International Atomi c Energy Agency . IAEA Director General Hans Blix reported Friday that North Kor ea had accelerated the unsupervised discharge of fuel and was only days away fro m making it impossible for the IAEA to determine whether fuel from the reactor h ad been diverted secretly in the past , perhaps for weapons . If North Korea doe s not halt the fuel discharge , it will spell the failure of more than a year of efforts by the Clinton administration to use dialogue to bring the Communist re gime in Pyongyang back into line with nuclear safeguards . `` We are perilously close to the precipice , '' a U.S. official said . The statement `` strongly urg es '' North Korea to continue unloading thousands of spent fuel rods `` in a man ner which preserves the technical possibility '' of measuring nuclear materials according to IAEA procedures . It calls for new talks between Pyongyang and the IAEA and asks the agency to leave two inspectors in the country . An IAEA offici al left North Korea on Friday after talks on inspections failed . The United Sta tes opted for a `` last-minute appeal rather than a warning , '' a U.S. official said , to secure the cooperation of China before the council is forced to debat e punitive sanctions . Beijing has been opposed to sanctions and will probably a bstain on any resolution . North Korea has said it would view sanctions as an ac t of war . The IAEA has said that so far North Korea did not appear to be divert Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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