Section B ยท Page 8 The University Daily Kansan Tuesday, September 15, 1998 Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 HOURS Mon.-Thurs. 11:00 am - 2:30 am Thurs. - Sat. 11:00 am - 3:30 am Sunday 11:00 am - 2:00 am VISA 1445 W.23rd Personal Checks Nation/World Welcome Back We offer treatment for all conditions of the skin, hair and nails including: - Acne - Tattoo Removal - Laser Hair Removal - Mole & Wart Removal - Glycolic Acid Peels for Acne or Pigmentation Problems - Spider Vein & Collagen Injection Dermatology Center of Lawrence Since 1970 Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D. 920 Iowa St. N.W. Highest Professional Building Lemuria, KS 69044 (785) 642-7001 Wednesday Evening Appointments Available Look for our ad on page 161,in your Southwestern Bell Yellow Pages. LSAT GMAT GRE MCAT CPA TOEFL Life isn't that hard. It's just those damn tests that make it so difficult. CALL 1-800 KAP-TEST When it comes to your future, those nasty tests can really get in your way. Call Kaplan, the test prep experts, and learn how to ace your tests without breaking a sweat. With 60 years of proven success getting students into the schools of their choice, we're the #1 name in test prep. Classes are filling up fast, so call today. www.kaplan.com World Leader in Test Prep "ROAD TRIPPING CASH!" Discipline options open for Congress Censure could be Clinton's punishment The Associated Press WASHINGTON โ€” The House of Representatives concluded its 1996 ethics investigation of Speaker Newt Gingrich with a reprimand and a $200,000 penalty. Now, a fine or some form of rebuke short of impeachment is among the options being considered for President Clinton. "There's going to be some sort of sanction," said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-R Utah, Sunday. "The question is, what from peach to censure to rebuke to condemnation, or what?" Hatch said. In impeachment a majority of the House Censure is a formal condemnation of behavior, but it carries no legal penalty and requires only a majority vote. "Rebuke," "con- demination or "reprimand" are interchangeable terms; a method to convey displeasure without any legal consequence. would have to vote to impeach him, then two-thirds of the Senate would have to convict. In Gingrich's case, the reprimand carried a fine, after he admitted supplying the House Ethics Committee with inaccurate statements about using tax-exempt organizations to advance his political goals. Clinton: Reprimand is likely. Congress has impeached a president once, Andrew Johnson in 1868. He was acquitted by one vote in the Senate and served out his term. President Nixon resigned in 1974 rather than face almost certain impeachment for the Watergate scandal. The House has conducted censure proceedings 36 times, the last three for allegations of sexual misconduct. Rep. Dan Crane, R-II., and former Rep. Gerry Studds, D-Mass., were censured in 1983, and Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., was reprimanded in 1990 after a censure resolution failed. The Senate has conducted censure proceedings nine times, most recently in 1990 when Sen. David Durenberger, R-Minn., was denounced for financial misconduct. Congress is known for shaming members into resigning. The House did in 1989, when then-Speaker Jim Wright resigned after ethics problems, and in 1996, when Sen. Robert Packwood quit amid allegations he sexually harassed women. Wallace remembered for racism, politics The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Ala. โ€” George C. Wallace walked with a bounce and flashed a smile bordering on a smirk when he was a noisy presidential candidate and archemy of civil rights crusaders. By the time the former Alabama governor died Sunday, he had been humbled by the pain and paralysis of a 1972 assassination attempt and politically transformed. He had recanted his racist stand and hoped for a different place in history. He wanted to be seen as a Democrat who helped bring on the modern conservative movement, not just for his segregation battle and attempts to keep blacks out of all-white public schools. "I think he should be remembered for more than race," said biographer Stephan Lesher. "But he'll always be stained by race." wanace, 79, died at a hospital of cardiac arrest, after appearing to recover from a blood infection. George Wallace was born Aug. 25, 1919, in Clio, Ala. He lost his first race for governor in 1958 when his views on race were moderate compared to his rival, John Patterson. Wallace: Alabama governor passed on Sunday. When he won four years later, Wallace was a segregationist who would stand outside the all-white University of Alabama to block the enrollment of two African Americans. It launched him into the national spotlight and, in 1964, Wallace ran for President in a handful of primaries against President Lyndon Johnson. He launched a full-scale bid in 1968 under the American Independent Party. He won five Southern states and 46 electoral votes. Wallace drew a visceral reaction from supporters and rowdy protests from student foes. He dismissed them and said he was standing up for state's rights. He said his fight was against federal government intruders, not African Americans. In 1972, Wallace was the early leader in the Democratic presidential primaries. At a shopping center in Laurel, Md., on May 15, 1972, Wallace plunged into a crowd of well-wishers to shake hands. Suddenly, a blond man in dark glasses lunged forward with a gun. "The next thing I knew, I heard five firecracker-sounding pops," Wallace recalled later. "I felt no shots, but I felt myself falling. I attempted to move my legs, and I knew immediately I was paralyzed." He was hit five times. One bullet jammed against his spine. Arthur Bremer, former busby from Milwaukee, was convicted in the assassination attempt. The day after he was shot, Wallace carried Maryland and Michigan, but his presidential campaign ended, and so did his old political stand and style. Wallace lost his final presidential race in 1976 to Jimmy Carter. FBI counterintelligence nabs 10 Cuban spies Surveillance dating back to 1995 indicates all 10 members operated with code names and had escape plans and arrest alibis, according to an FBI affidavit filed as eight men and two women made their initial court appearances. The Associated Press MIAMI โ€” Ten people were charged with spying for the Cuban government by trying to penetrate U.S. military bases, disrupt anti-Castro groups and manipulate U.S. media and political groups, federal investigators said yesterday. The Cuban spy cell targeted the U.S. Southern Command, which runs U.S. military operations in Latin America and the Caribbean, MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa and the Boca Chica Naval Air Station in Key West, the FBI said. Gonzalez has been linked more recently to Ramon Saul Sanchez's Democracy Movement, which sails flottillas in the Florida Straits to protest Cuban government actions. Jose Cardenas, spokesman for the Cuban American National Foundation in Washington, said the accused spies had infiltrated Cuban exile groups, including Congressional sources said the arrests, made without incident Saturday, were timed to avert an operation planned by the suspects, but provided no details. Among those accused is Rene Gonzalez, formerly affiliated with the Miami-based Cuban exile group Brothers to the Rescue, which files mercy flights between Florida and Cuba. The group uses small U.S. registered aircraft to search for rafters fleeing Cuba. Brothers. The 10 were to make their first court appearances later in the afternoon, facing charges of espionage, conspiracy and acting as unregistered agents of the Cuban government. CANF, an exile group based in Miami, did not immediately return two calls seeking comment. Brothers founder Jose Basulto had left for court and could not be reached Four men, including three Americans, were killed in February 1996 when they were shot down by a Cuban MIG fighter jet over international waters. The men were aboard two Brothers planes, and soon afterward federal officials looked into whether spies played a part in the shooting. Juan Pablo Roque, a former Cuban air force pilot and double agent, infiltrated the Brothers group before returning to Cuba. He said he passed information about Brothers to the Cuban government. FBI director Louis Freeh called U.S. Rep. Ileana Roa-Lehtinen at her home on Saturday to inform her of the arrests, said her spokesman Juan Cortinas. Ros-Lehtinen, a Cuban-born Miami Republican, wrote the FBI in June requesting a briefing by the agency's counterintelligence section on two types of activities by Cuban officials in the United States. She said she was concerned about a significant increase in travel by Cuban officials to Florida and New York for private meetings and an "inordinate number of meetings that Cuban government officials have been holding with major U.S. corporations and industry giants." TIMOTHY G. RILING Attorney at Law 5020 W. 15th Street, Suite B (755) 865-1600 Over 10 years of experience in representation of alcohol and traffic related offenses University Christian Fellowship Tuesdays, 7:00pm Ecumenical Christian Ministries 1204 Oread (block north of the Kansas Union) http://www.ukans.edu/~rcbsu/ 841-316 943 Massachusetts (785) 842-1414 REVOLUTIONARY MEXICAN CUISINE (SEVEN DAYS A WEEK) 2 for 1 MARGARITAS FRIDAYS & SUNDAYS world class dance party fridays & saturdays DANCE CONTESTS THIS FRIDAY got rugby? 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