The Michigan Doily-Saturday, June 10, 1978-Page 11 Insurance head cites flaws in no-fault law By MICHAEL ARKUSH The chairman of the state's Insuran- ce Bureau yesterday praised a Michigan Supreme Court ruling that calls for changes in the state's no-fault auto insurance law as "a strong im- petus to get a bill that will be fair to all Michigan consumers." Thomas Jones, the bureau's head, said the court's decision will "make it easier for the legislature to pass a new no-fault insurance plan." THE DECISION, issued Thursday, upheld the constitutionality of the current no-fault insurance law, but said the law has "serious flaws that must be corrected within 18 months." The court attacked the measures which the present law uses to deter- mine premium rates. "These measures are, unfortunately, inadequate to protect individual motorists, who must purchase no-fault insurance from private insurers, from potentially unfair insurance rates, in- surance refusal or cancellation," the court ruled. JONES SAID the court's decision will strongly push the Michigan legislature to adopt a new no-fault law when it reconvenes in September. He explained the House had already set a ceiling on any more bills to be sent from commit- tees to the full House in the next few weeks before the chamber recesses July L The new no-fault bill sits in the In- surance Committee. An aide to com- mittee chairman Rep. Matthew Mc- Neely (D-Detroit) said the committee had previously discussed the legislation but would have to review it con- siderably to accommodate the court's ruling. Jones said the basic provisions of the new law would stipulate that all com- panies would be required to offer no- fault insurance at equal rates for con- sumers in similar situations. 'FOR EXAMPLE, if two customers have the same kind of cars, the com- panies would be obligated to offer the same rates. This would mean they would have to judge objectively to con- sider the rates given to consumers and not subjectively as in the present law," said Jones. Jones said 70 per cent of the state's auto insurance companies oppose any change to the existing law. He said the companies have maintained the new law would violate their freedom in the insurance business. Representatives from Allstate and Travelers, companies which have lob- bied extensively to preserve the current law, refused to comment on the court decision yesterday because they said they had not finished evaluating the court's ruling. . But the Automobile Club of Michigan released a statement yesterday ex- pressing approval of the ruling. "We agree with the court's ruling and urge passage of an essential insuranxce bill," said Clifford Benson, the club's insurance group general manager. The thickness of the earth's crust varies from about four miles in places under the oceans to about 30 miles beneath high mountains. Jones Baker's signature approved NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Sen. Howard Baker was certified for Ten- nessee's Aug. 3 primary ballot yester- day, one day after the state's Democratic-controlled Election Com- mission refused to approve his petition on grounds his signature might have been forged. Baker, the Senate minority leader who is running for his third term, had threatened court action Thursday after the five-member commission refused to approve his qualifying petition. The commission took only 15 minutes to certify the senator's candidaacy yesterday. INFORMED OF the action at his home in Huntsville, Baker said, "Ob- viously I'm pleased that they reversed themselves and certified my petition. "Politics is a tough business, it really is. It's a shame it gets tougher when things like this happen. I guess you have to expect things like this. I hope it's not a harbinger of things to come." The senator declined to comment on whether the publicity surrounding the commission's earlier stand would help or hurt his campaign. THE COMMISSION was furnished with an affidavit, signed by Baker earlier in the day and attested to by Scott County Court Clerk Lloyd Cross. It related Baker's account of how he signed the petition in his Washington of- fice May 25, the day before it was filed in the Tennessee Capitol complex. Commission Chairman Richard Holcomb of Chattanooga, a Democrat, said the commission did not really reverse its position of Thursday, since "no action was taken, one way or the other." Had the commission stood its ground, it would have prevented Baker, a 1980 presidential prospect and the nation's highest-ranking elected Republican of- ficial, from being listed on the ballots for the Aug. 3 primary and the Nov. 3 general elections - barring a judicial reversal THE DEADLINE for filing the petitions passed June 1. Baker could have asked voters to give him the nogtination-and election by writing his ndfte on the ballot, but sIne vting is . dorz yachine the chances. of a sue- for ballot cessful write-in campaign are con- sidered slim. Jack Seaton, one of two Republicans on the five-member commission, was absent Thursday and a motion by the other Republican, Jim Harpster, to cer- tify Baker's petitions died for lack of a second. Seaton said he had not been notified. Fred Thompson, a Nashville lawyer and minority counsel to the old Senate Watergate Committee when Baker was vice chairman, had a lawsuit ready to file in Chancery Court if needed. BAKER SAID four persons watched him sign the petitions in his Washington office on May 25, the day before they were filed with state Election Coor- dinator David Collins, And House Speaker Ned McWherter, a Democrat, said, "I've known Sen. Baker a long time and if he told me he signed his petition, I would say he's qualified." Collins and Democratic commission members conferred yesterday morning in McWherter's office. Collins says the "H", "o" and "d" in "Howard" and the "J" in "Jr." all ap- peared to be different on the qualifying petitions than those on other documents bearing Baker's signature. He said he did not contact Baker before the qualifying deadline because it is up to the commission to decide on a petition's validity. CLARK GABLE in 1934 IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT This film swept the academy awards when released and propelled direc- tor Frank Capra to the top of the heap in Hollywood. CLAUDETTE COL- BERT is the poor little rich girl and GABLE as the wise-cracking reporter trying to cover her story. Vintage screwball comedy. SUN: Keaton's THE GENERAL FREE at 7:30 only CINEMA GUILD. Tonight at 7:30& 9:30 Old Arch. Aud . w . ,-"a .t 1 . r as i "0