The Shutterbug \ Get 2 Sets of Prints j 1 Your Choice - 3x5 or 4x6 from your 135-24 color film 005319 Exposure $3.99 36 Exposure $7.99 Offtr not good with one hour film sorviot or ony oth#r offori. Coupon txpirts 2/15/99 Quality Film Service U of O Campus • 890 E. 13th St • 342-3456 10% Off Package Prices "Prices Good Through January 18th ROCK SOFT FUTON Eugene's Best Futons 1231 Alder St. • 686-5069 M-S 11-6 Sun. 12-5 Opening arguments commence in Senate By David Espo The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Bracing for opening arguments in his im peachment trial, President Clin ton said Wednesday he will tend studiously to “the business of the people” while his fate is settled in historic Senate proceedings. House prosecutors said Monica Lewinsky had recently rejected their request for a voluntary inter view. With the first formal presenta tion of evidence set for Thursday, Judiciary Committee Republicans said they had sought permission earlier in the week to talk with the woman at the center of the sex-and-cover-up scandal. Her at torneys “declined to make her available,” said a committee spokesman, Paul J. McNulty. Legal sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, dis closed that a similar request was made to at least one other poten tial witness, Kathleen Willey. Apart from Clinton’s remarks Wednesday, his legal team dis patched a formal trial brief to the Senate arguing that neither “fact or law” warranted his removal from office. “The vote the American people rendered ... is hanging in the bal ance,” the brief said in a refer ence to Clinton’s election. “They have their job to do in the Senate, and I have mine,” the president told reporters in his first public utterance in three weeks on an issue that has tar nished his presidency for posteri ty. “I trust that the right thing will be done.” Clinton stands accused of per jury and obstruction of justice in the first presidential impeach ment trial since Andrew Johnson was acquitted in 1868. A two tliirds vote of the Senate is re quired to convict him and re move him from office. The trial is to resume at 10 a.m. PST, with Chief Justice William Rehnquist presiding and the House impeachment team — Re publican lawmakers all — start ing to present their case. The House does not yet have permission from the Senate to call witnesses in the trial. Spokesman McNulty explained the overture to Lewinsky by say ing the committee was ‘‘duty bound to gather all relevant evi dence and be thoroughly pre pared for the trial. Implicit in the House’s right to request witness es is the responsibility to deter mine who the House will call.” One of Lewinsky’s attorneys, Plato Cacheris, declined to re spond to McNulty’s comments. McNulty declined to confirm the approach to Willey. She al leged Clinton made an uninvited sexual pass in the White House, but the incident is not cited in ei ther of the two articles of im peachment approved by the House. Separately, officials said De mocrats had suggested canceling next Tuesday’s scheduled trial session to avoid an awkward ap pearance on the day of Clinton’s scheduled State of the Union ad dress. Republicans discussed the issue at a closed-door meeting during the day. Most were op posed, according to sources fa miliar with the discussion, since Clinton had declined to resched ule his speech, but no final deci sion was made. Clinton’s legal team argued otherwise in their long legal brief filed with the Senate. The allegations “do not begin to satisfy the stringent showing required by our Founding Fathers to remove a duly elected presi dent from office, either as a mat ter of fact or law,” they wrote. They even “fall far short of what a prudent prosecutor would re quire before presenting a case to a judge or jury," the brief said. Tired of your Roommate? Cooking? Cleaning? Commuting? Spaces are available on campus. For more information, stop by University Housing or call. 346-4277 MLK Celebration January 14 & 15 • EMU - Ben Linder Room • All day long • Display featuring portraits, various art work, civil rights memorabilia and a continuous video January 15 • EMU Outside Amphitheater • 6:00 til 6:45 p.m. • uanaie light vigil and musical performance by members of the choir January 16 • EMU Ballroom • Dance 10:00p.m. til 1:00a.m. • Sponsored by Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity and BSU •$3 at the door