Nation & World News Edwards criticizes Kerry as Washington insider During Sunday’s debate Edwards moved to attack Kerry, shedding his image as the race’s‘nice guy’ By Steven Thomma Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) NEW YORK — Facing a possible 10 state loss that would doom his cam paign, John Edwards shed some of his nice guy persona Sunday and launched his most pointed attack on rival John Kerry in their long competition for the Democratic presidential nomination. Edwards portrayed Kerry as a typical Washington politician, one promising more new government spending than he could pay for. He said that he offered a fresh, outside-the-Beltway voice, a bet ter approach to trade and jobs and brushed aside a question about his own wealth by noting that Kerry is far richer. Kerry, sensing the opportunity to ef fectively clinch the nomination if he can defeat Edwards in all 10 states vot ing Tuesday, returned the rhetorical fire. He all but ridiculed Edwards daim to be an outsider, noting that he has been in the Senate for five years. The hourlong dash between the two senators — Edwards from North Carolina and Kerry from Massachu setts — came three days before voters in 10 states will choose 1,151 dele gates to the Democratic National Convention in July, half the 2,162 needed for the nomination. Edwards insisted that he would re main in the race even if he loses all 10 states. "I'm going to be the nominee," he said. Edwards, however, trails Kerry in every state where public polls were available He trailed by large margins in California and New York, the two biggest states vot ing on litesday. Even more troubling for his campaign, polls showed he re mained behind in Georgia and Mary land, two states where he thought he had the best chance of overtaking Kerry. In Georgia, a poll by independent pollster John Zogby for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and television station WSB showed Edwards losing ground. Kerry led by a margin of 45 percent to 26 percent among likely primary voters, gaining 4 percentage points from Friday to Saturday. Another poll by the nonpartisan American Research Group showed Kerry leading Georgia by 48 percent to 38 percent. The same group's survey in Mary land showed Kerry leading by a mar gin of 46 percent to 34 percent. Reflecting the bare-knuckled politics typical of New York, the debate; co-spon sored by CBS and The New York Times, was marked by frequent interruptions by candidates and questioners alike Kerry and Edwards clashed repeatedly over the value ofWashington experience "Do you believe we're going to change this country out ofWashing ton, D.C.?" Edwards asked Kerry. "Yes," said Kerry, a 19-year veter an of the Senate. "Because that's where the Congress of the United States is and that's where 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is." Kerry added, "Last time I looked ... he's been in the Senate for the last five years. That seems to me to be Washington, D.C." Edwards criticized Kerry for prom ising too much new government spending to be able to fulfill his promise to cut the deficit in half. "It's the same old thing," Edwards said. "He would drive us deeper and deeper into deficit.... This is the same old Washington talk that people have been listening to for decades. They want something different." Kerry said his proposed spending to stimulate the economy shouldn't be counted toward the deficit because it's normally not counted under congres sional rules. And he said the account did n't include his proposed $ 139 billion cut from a recently enacted Medicare bill. "He should do his homework," Ker ry snapped. "I do not spend more." Asked to reconcile his personal wealth with his populist message, Ed wards laughed, remarking that Kerry has "got a lot more than I've got." Both men dismissed a question about whether they're liberals, stem ming from a new study ranking Kerry as the most liberal member of the Senate and Edwards as the fourth most liberal. "It's a laughable characteriza tion, " said Kerry. "I don't think anybody in America cares about what some in side Washington publication says." They reacted differently to a ques tion about President Bush's assertion that God is on the U.S. side in the war on terrorism. "I believe in God, but I don't be lieve the way President Bush does," Kerry said. "We pray God is on our side and we pray hard." Edwards quoted Abraham Lincoln's answer when asked to pray that God was on the U.S. side in the Civil War. "I won't join you in that prayer," Edwards quot ed Lincoln as saying. "But I'll join you in a prayer that we're on God's side" (The American research polls in Georgia and Maryland were conduct ed Feb. 27 and Feb. 28 and each had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. The Zogby poll in Georgia had a margin of error of plus 4.1 percentage points.) (c) 2004, Knight Ridder/Tribune information Services. Iraqi leaders grapple with administrative goals Sunday's negotiations saw continued disagreement regarding Kurdish issues, women and Islam's role By Hannah Allam and Ken Dilanian Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) BAGHDAD, Iraq — After missing the deadline to draft a framework for Iraq's first post-Saddam Hussein gov ernment, the U.S.-appointed Iraqi Governing Council continued to ne gotiate Sunday about religion, the role of women and Kurdish autonomy. At stake is what kind of temporary regime will take over when the U.S.-led coalition relinquishes sovereignty on June 30 and what procedures will be set up for electing a permanent govern ment later. Two American plans for the transition have fallen by the wayside, and officials are now trying to hammer out an agreement on a third option. The failure to produce a constitution on schedule was the latest in a series of missed deadlines as the coalition pre pares to cede authority to Iraqis by June 30. Nevertheless, coalition and U.S. officials continue to insist that the handover will take place on schedule. Instead of American-backed caucuses to pick a transitional govern ment, the new plan will hand power to a revamped version of the unpop ular and unelected Governing Coun cil, Iraqi politicians and analysts said. The council is leaning toward estab lishing a one-person presidency with two vice presidents, all three elected by the other members, officials said. Under that plan, Iraq would con tinue to be governed for the near term by an American-picked body whose stature has diminished in the eyes of Iraqis during the seven months that it has existed. More than 100,000 U.S. troops would re main in the country, and the transi tional government would steer the country toward elections. The original American plan called for elections in December 2005, but Iraq's most influential political voice, Shiite Muslim Ayatollah Ali al Hussei ni al Sistani, has demanded a vote no later than the end of this year. The United Nations has said that elections could occur within eight months if major legal and logistical issues are tackled immediately. A final draft of the transition blue print won't be signed until after an Is lamic holiday on Tuesday, council members said. They added that dis cussions have mellowed considerably since a third of the council walked out of talks Friday, complaining that they were blindsided by a vote on women's rights. Negotiations extended beyond a midnight Saturday deadline agreed on by the U.S.-led coalition and the council. By late afternoon Sunday, council members were still debating the most divisive topics: quotas for women in government, the level of Kurdish autonomy and to what de gree Islamic law, known as Sharia, would shape the new constitution. Sami al Askari, the senior aide to current Governing Council Chairman Mohammad Bahr Ulum, said the name most commonly mentioned as a possible president is Ebrahim Jafari, a leader in the Islamic Dawa Party, a moderate Shiite organization. Jafari, a physician who fled Sad dam's repression in 1980, is the only member of the governing council who consistently gets a favorable rat ing higher than 50 percent in opinion polls, said Munquith Daghir, who runs an independent polling institute that's conducting monthly in-home surveys of Iraqis. The negotiations are playing out against a backdrop of great paradoxes in the country. A January opinion poll in six major cities showed that 45 percent of respon dents believe that "conditions for peace and stability" are improving. Salaries are higher there are more goods in the markets and people are less afraid to walk the streets in most cities. In the same poll, by Daghir's firm, the Independent Institute for Admin istration and Civil Society Studies, 70.7 percent of respondents either somewhat or strongly agreed that "democracy offers Iraq the hope of peace, stability and a better life, while the people attacking coalition forces offer only chaos." However, the U.S.-led occupation and the political vacuum created by almost a year without a sovereign gov ernment, coupled with the continu ing unemployment and gaps in basic public services, has caused wide spread frustration. "Given more than three decades of despotic rule, a ruined economy, a devastated country and the col lapse of state institutions, conditions in Iraq are daunting," said a recent United Nations fact-finding report. "The underlying tensions could fuel the existing potential for civil strife and violence." (c) 2004, Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. The University of Oregon Testing Office is an official ETS computer-based testing site. Testing is available year-round, Monday-Friday, 2 sessions a day. Appointments can be scheduled by calling 541.346.2772 or by visiting the Testing Office. The Testing Office is located on the 2nd floor (Rm. 238) of the University Health and Counseling Center, 1590 E. 13th Ave., Eugene OR. The period of greatest demand is usually Sept, through March, so it makes sense to plan ahead. For more information visit the Testing Office web site at http://www.uoregon.edu/~testing/ you need to take • GMAT • TOEFL* PPST/P Do GRE STOREWIDE SALE! 20-70% OFF Ski Equipment Downhill • Cross Country Snowboards • Clothing Sale Starts Noon Wednesday 13th & Lawrence • 683-1300 • www.bergsskishop.com ;| CAMPUS Monday Art exhibition featuring the work of Jen nifer Fogerty-Gibson, today-March 29, Adell McMillan Gallery, EMU, 7 a.m.-11:30 p.m., opening reception 5 p.m., March 5. Humanities Symposium reception to dis cuss the themes of militancy and martial ism with the texts of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, Browsing Room, Knight Library, today from 9-11:30 a.m. Art exhibition featuring photography by Mal heur Workshop participants, today-March 4, LaVerne Krause Gallery, Lawrence Hall, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Opening reception today from 6-8 p.m. Food for Thought film entitled "‘Race: The Power of an Illusion,' Episode III - The House We Live In," Board Room, EMU, today from noon-l:30 p.m. Pre-registration required. Humanities Symposium lecture by Temple University Islamic studies Professor Mah moud Ayoub entitled “Jihad and Fighting: Peace and War in the Qur’an,” Room 182, Lillis Hall, today at 8 p.m. UO Chamber Ensembles Concert featuring a string quartet, a piano trio and a cello sonata, as well as pieces by Walter Piston and Franz Schubert, Beall Concert Hall, to day at 8 p.m. Campus Recycling says “THANKS FOR RECYCLING! 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