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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT2287>
<title>
Dec. 27, 1993: "Dear Diary...Delete That"
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Dec. 27, 1993 The New Age of Angels
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE SENATE, Page 26
"Dear Diary...Delete That"
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Amid a call for Packwood to resign, his secretary testifies
that the Senator has tampered with his diaries
</p>
<p>By Andrea Sachs--Reported by Julie Johnson/Washington
</p>
<p> The phone call came for Nancy Kassebaum as soon as the Senator
got back to her office last week from a trip home to Kansas.
It was a fellow Republican--Robert Packwood of Oregon. Were
the wire-service accounts true? Had she really told the Wichita
Eagle that...Yes, he was told. Said a source close to Kassebaum:
"She felt the time had come" for him to resign.
</p>
<p> Kassebaum, the nation's senior female Senator, thus became the
first Republican to ask for the resignation of the embattled
Packwood, who faces charges of sexual harassment from 26 women.
"I believe it will be increasingly difficult, if not impossible,
for Senator Packwood to effectively perform the duties of his
office," Kassebaum declared. She was only the second Senator,
after Robert Byrd, to demand openly that Packwood quit.
</p>
<p> Kassebaum's decision followed testimony of another woman Packwood
had assumed was in his corner. Last week Cathy Wagner Cormack,
his secretary of 24 years, testified that Packwood had altered
portions of his diaries, which she transcribed from audiotape
to paper. The Senate ethics committee subpoenaed the diaries
in October--a move that Packwood has been fighting in court.
Cormack told committee lawyers that something was amiss after
Packwood took the tapes from her this fall. "When they were
brought back to my possession, after he had taken them," she
said, "I just...I sensed that there might have been some
alterations. He basically confirmed that." She added, "As best
I can recall, he said something about the possibility of a subpoena,
and he didn't want me to have anything in my possession if that
were to occur."
</p>
<p> Fearing more tampering, Federal District Judge Thomas Jackson
last week ordered that Packwood's diaries be brought to him
for safekeeping. Packwood's new lawyer, Jacob Stein, acknowledged
that his client had made some alterations. But Stein said the
changes were made only "in discrete instances." Stein conceded
little else. He told Judge Jackson, who will determine the legality
of the subpoena by mid-January, that the Senate's order violates
Packwood's constitutional protection against unreasonable searches
and self-incrimination. Stein complained that the inquiry keeps
expanding "like a balloon." Asked he: "Where is the end of it?"
Not in sight. Already looking into charges of sexual misconduct,
intimidation and influence peddling, the committee now will
ascertain whether Packwood's tampering was an obstruction of
Congress.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>