al Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 27, 1984 Candidates get set for primary in Connecticut IN BRIEF From the Associated Press On the eve of the Connecticut primary, Gary Hart accused Walter Mondale yesterday of advocating a Central American policy that would lead to U.S. bloodshed in the region, while the Rev. Jesse Jackson promised to end poverty in America in three years by diverting funds earmarked for weapons. The three Democratic presidential hopefuls planned last-minute cam- paigning in Connecticut, where 52 delegates are at stake in today's primary balloting. VIRGINIA Democrats, meanwhile, were scheduled last night to complete caucuses that began Saturday. Jackson surprised Democratic leaders in Virginia with his slender lead in the popular vote in the weekend voting, although Mondale held a slight delegate edge. The caucuses determine the allocation of 68 of Virginia's 78 national convention delegates. In Connecticut, polls put Hart in a strong position to win the state and thus make a clean sweep of the New England. THE COLORADO senator once again brought up Mondale's belated call for a withdrawal from Southeast Asia in the 1970s, saying Mondale's view of Central America is "part of a pattern stret- ching back to Vietnam, a willingness to wait for consensus to form and then moving out in front of it." But the former vice president, questioned by college students in Manhattan, said the United States should let the people of Central America make their own choices. "Forces of. all the big powers should get out of-there," Mondale said. "I'm not going to pick sides." CAMPAIGNING in New York yesterday, Hart lumped Mondale's Central American policies with those of President Reagan. "If the Mondale policy or the Reagan policies are followed, not only will this country light a fuse or continue to ignite a fuse leading toward an explosion in that region, I am absolutely convinced in this decade we will see the loss, the rather large loss, of American lives in, that region," Hart said. Later yesterday, Mondale said Hart was getting "frantic" by trying to link him with the Reagan administration because "my policies and Reagan's are two profoundly different things." "I DO NOT want a combat role down there at all for American troops," he said, adding later, "I would dramatically draw down the number of forces in Honduras. References to John Kennedy cropped up again Monday, but this time it was Mondale who invoked the late president's name. Hart has been ac- cused of imitating JFK's style. Mondale said he would follow Ken- nedy's lead in trying to achieve new weapons testing treaties. Ar rnoto Presidential hopeful Sen. Gary Hart (D-Colo.) answers reporters' questions outside the United Nations Building in New York City yesterday. Hart was critical of Walter Mondale for his policy on Central America which Hart said would lead to a "rather large loss of American lives" by the end of the decade. Study says cost of cigarette sm BOSTON (AP) - Middle-aged men who are heavy smokers will suffer an average of $59,000 each in extra medical bills and lost earnings during their lifetimes, according to a study of the hidden costs of cigarettes. Making up this loss for all smokers would require an additional tax of $3 on every pack of cigarettes, the resear- chers concluded. "WE LIKENED every smoker to a gambler," said Gerry Oster, a medical economist. "And we wanted to estimate the likely amount of money that every smoker should expect to lose in the lottery that he or she is playing with his or her life." The study conducted at Policy Analysis Inc., a Brookline, Mass., firm that researches health cost issues, was released yesterday at a meeting of the American College of Cardiology. in Dallas. Cancer ho The estimate is probably low, Oster said, because it- considers only smoking's contribution to lung cancer, heart disease and emphysems. Smokers also face ,higher-than-usual risks of a variety of other diseases, in- cluding cancer of the mouth, throat, bladder and pancreas. FOR A MAN between the ages of 35 and 44 who smokes more than two packs a day, the study said that cigaret- te-related medical bills and lost work will add up to an average of $58,987 over his lifetime. The cost for a woman in this category is $20,152. The difference is largely due to women's lower projected earnings. The cost of smoking-related medical bills is high, but this is far outweighed by the wages smokers lose if they die or are bedridden. THE COSTS go down as peopleget older. The smoking costs of younger 'It literally pays to quit.' - Gerry Oster medical economist men arehighest because they have more years to get sick, and their poten- tial loss of earnings is greatest. For a heavy-smoking man between 55 and 64, for instance, the smoking cost is $15,945, and for a woman it is $11,717. The figures are averages for all' smokers, riot just those who get sick. "These cost estimates do not imply that every smoker will get lung cancer, coronary heart disease or em- physema," Oster said. "This takes the costs for those smokers who do develop the diseases and spreads them across all smokers."- spital code NEW YORK (AP) - Ajletter code on Fabey, commenting through Suzanne a blackboard tells doctors at one of the Rauffenbart, hospital public affiars nation's top cancer treatment centers director, said the letters are a shor- whether or not a particular patient thand for complex treatment plans that should be given heroic life-saving are detailed fully on the patients' char- measures, raising new debate about ts. hospital procedures for hopelessly ill But doctors understand that patients patients. marked A or B receive a level of care A coded DNR order - "do not that includes life-saving resuscitation resuscitate" - is posted on the basis of while C's and D's are not to be verbal directions from the attending resusciatated if they suffer cardiac physician to the hospital resident and arrest, he said. no written record of that decision is THE CLASSIFICATION is not part of made, Dr. Thomas Febey, the deputy the patient's record and after a patient physician-in-charge of Memorial Sloan- dies the blackboard notation is erased. Kettering Cancer Center, said yester- But Fabey said no DNRs are issued day. for terminally ill patients at Sloan- THE BLACKBOARDS in private doc- Kettering without prior consent of tors' lounges at Sloan-Kettering list patients or their families. patients' names with the letters A, B, C Fabey denied that DNR orders were or D next to them. not put in writing for fear of a lawsuit Linguistics to continue as (Continued from Page 1) questioned over a patient's death, but the city's hospital association said the law is un- clear enough to give a hospital pause about keeping such records. "DNR orders should be written, dated and signed and not be partial or verbal. I think it leaves things wide open for suits if order aren't written," said Bill Read, executive director of a research and education arm of the American Hospital Assocation. NOT NECESSARILY, countered Stephanie Steele, communications director of the Greater New York Hosp- ital Assocation. "I've sat at many meetings with hospital attorneys where I've heard some of them say that writing DNRs is what the hospital must do to protect it- self, and an equal number say all you're doing then is documenting a malprac- tice case against yourself," she said. department tments, such as romance languages, and there is a sense of separation for these people. If linguistics were inter- departmental everyone would belong in a sense," she said. Counseling for graduate students has also improved since linguistics was changed into a department, Naylor said. "The counselling for gradaute students in linguistics is not as good when it is a program - and this I know from my personal experience." okin hih SMOKERS who actually get lung cancer, for instance, may have costs far higher than the averages, especially if they are young. The medical expense of treating a man's lung cancer averages $18,373. But a man who gets the disease bet- ween ages 45 and 49 will lost an average of $286,047 in earnings, so his total smoking-related costs are figured to be $304,420. People can reduce their risk of smokers' disease if they quit cigarettes, and their costs fall dramatically if tey do so. A MAN be.tween the .age of 35 aind 44. who gives up a habit ofsoking mole than two packs a day will save society $37,401, the study found, and a woman in this bracket will save $13,029. "It literally pays to quit," Oster said. According to federal statistics, 38 percent of men and 29 percent of women in the United States smoke cigarettes. The American Cancer Society estimates that smoking accoun- ts for about 30 percent of all cancer. The study was directed by Oster and conducted with Graham Colditz of Har- vard Medical School and Nancy Kelly of Policy Analysis. It was financed by Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals and will be published next week as a book called "The Economic Costs of Smoking and Benefits of Quitting." Police A I Students suspect in S. Quad fire Two students were apprehended by campus security officials early Sunday morning after a bulletin board caught fire on the seventh floor of South Quad, said Sgt. Harold Tinsey. The two, who were not residents of the dorm, were in- terviewed by police and released pen- ding further investigation, Tinsey said. Cash Stolen Cash, clothes, and stereo equipmen- t valued at less than $900 were stolen last Wednesday afternoon from an apartment in the 100 block of South State, according to Ann Arbor police of- ficials. The thief forced the apartment door open to get inside, said Sgt. Harold Tinsey. -Randi Harris Stanley H. Kaplan The Smart MOVE! ® p Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reportA French call for Beirut cease-fire BEIRUT, Lebanon - Rival Moslem and Christian militias agreed yester- day to refrain from grabbing territory vacated by departing French peace- keepers, and France was reported ready to deploy ceasefire observers in' Beirut. State-run Beirut Radio said French Ambassador Fernand Wibaux met with representatives of the country's main warring parties and restated his country's willingness to send observers to monitor a cease-fire in Beirut. The independent International News Agency quoted diplomatic sources: saying 40 observers would be in position in Beirut Wednesday. But despite signs of progress, new fighting broke out along the Green Line dividing Christian East Beirut from the Moslem west. In another development, a caller claiming to represent the Islamic Jihad (Holy War) organization said the group threatened to "liquidate" Druze Moslem leader Walid Jumblatt. Nuclear plant decision postponed WASHINGTON - The Nuclear Regulatroy Commission postponed yesterday a decision on whether to allow a California utility to start up the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant after nearly a decade of problems and delays. The commission took the action after Isa Yin, an NRC inspector from Chicago, said quality control problems with hundreds of miles of piping within the plant may be much worse than officials had thought. Yin said his preliminary investigation has found at least 47 possible violations of NRC regulations by the plants owner, Pacific Gas & Electric Co. A multi-million dollar quality control program over the past two years failed to pick what could be critical problems with the design of large pipes in the plant at San Luis Obispo, Calif., Yin said. "The corrective effort may not be working at all," he told a startled commission and an audience filled-with PG&E officials. Harold Denton, director of nuclear reactor regulations and the commission's top safety expert, said he still believes that the plant should be allowed to "go critical," - begin fissioning the uranium atoms in its fuel rods - and operate at up to 5 percent of its capacity. Gang-rapists sentenced to prison FALL RIVER, Mass. - Four men convicted of gang-raping a woman on a barroom pool table were sentenced to prison terms ranging from 6 to 12 years yesterday by a judge who said they "brutalized a defenseless young woman and sought to degrade and destroy her human, individual dignity." The lawyer for the victim said afterward that the 22-year-old mother of two feared for her safety and had moved permanently from the area. "There were five sentences in this case - one of them exile," said her lawyer, Scott Charnas. Superior Court Judge William Young imposed terms of 9 to 12 years upon Daniel Silva, 27, Victor Raposo, 23, and John Cordeiro, 24. Young also sentenced Joseph Vieira, 28, to a term of 6 to 8 years. Bristol County District Attorney Ronald Pina asked for a more lenient sentence for, Vieira, noting that he had no prior record. Also, the woman's testimony that, he was directly involved in the rape was not corroborated by other witnesses. Army declared curfew in Chile SANTIAGO, Chile - The government decreed two nights of curfew in the capital yesterday on the eve of protests against military rule. And the Roman Catholic archbishop of Santiago urged both sides to negotiate their differences to avoid "a spiral of violence." Army Gen. Rene Vidal, commander of the Santiago military garrison, ordered curfews yesterday and today under special powers assumed by the armed. forces under a state of emergency;imposed Saturday. The emergency enables regional military commanders, to declare curfews, censor publications and ban meetings Vidal announced the curfew after four pre-dawn bomb explosions. damaged rail lines in the Santiago subway during the morning rush hour. For the first time since last August, troops have been ordered to back riot, police during the monthly "Day of National Protest" demonstrations called by labor and political leaders who are demanding President Augusto Pinochet's resignation after a decade of authoritarian rule. On Sunday, Monsignor Juan Francisco Fresno, archbishop of Santiago called in a homily at the Metropolitan Cathedral for a renewal of talks that had broken down last September after Pinochet refused to commit himself, to a timetable for restoring democracy. U.S diplomat shot in France STRASBOURG, France - A gunman on a motorcycle shot and slightly' wounded the U.S. consul general yesterday as the diplomat was driving to work. A Lebanese group claimed responsibility and said the consul worked for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Robert Homme, 43, suffered superficial wounds in the face, neck and chest from three of the five small-caliber bullets fired through the windows of his car, a spokesperson at the Haute Pierre hospital said. He was alone in the car at the time of the attack. No surgery was needed, and Homme was being held only for observation, the hospital spokesperson said. Homme was visited in the hospital by his wife and three children. Philip Brown, a spokesperson at the U.S. Embassy in Paris, said the group's claim that Homme was linked to the CIA was 'absurd.' '.'We never comment on allegations of intelligence activities, no matter how absurd - and this one is certainly absurd," Brown said. 4 6 6 6 10 10 Tbe 3tcbxigmin iiI * categorized as either departments or programs, or " become an inter-department program. Carolyn Copeland, an assistant dean in LSA, said considering the change was part of standard University procedures. "This happens in the normal cycle of replacing chairman, where the depar- tment as a whole is looked at," she said. "This is an occasion to do this and it is a continuing review that happens in all departments." NAYLOR, attended the University as. an undergraduate and received her masters and doctorate from the University in the early 1960s before the linguistics department was changed, from a program, to a department. Naylor said maintaining the depar- tment would ,help keep faculty mem- bers unified. "As the department now stands, many linguistics are in other depar- Tuesday, March 27, 1984 Vol. XCIV-No. 140 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY; Sports desk, 763-0376; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0557; Display Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 6 t THERE ARE, TWO SIDES T BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY And they're both repre- sented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Editor-in-Chief .. .... .... BILL SPINDLE Managing Editor BARBARA MISLE News Editor ..... ........ JIM SPARKS Student Affairs Editor .CHERYl BAACKE Opinion Page Editors ......... JAMES BOYD JACKIE YOUNG Arts/Magazine Editor .... MARE HODGES Associate Arts Editor ....... STEVEN SUSSER Chief Photographer ..... DOUG MCMAHON Sports Editor.................MIKE MCGRAW Associate Sports Editors..........JEFF BERGIDA KATIE BLACKWELL PAUL HELGREN DOUGLAS B. LEVY SPORTS STAFF: Randy Berger, Sue Broser, Joe Bower, Dan Coven, Jim Davis, Scott Dimetrosky, Tom Keaney, Ted Lerner, Tim Makinen, Aaam Martin. Scott McKiniay, Barb McQuade, Brad Morgan, Phil Nussel, Sandy Pincus, Rob Pollard, Mike Redstone, Scott Salowich, Paula Schipper, Randy Schwartz, Susan Warner, Rich Weides, Andrea Wolf. Business ManagerT...................VE BLOOM Sales Manager .. DEBBIE DIOGUARDI Operations Manager...............ELLY DOLAN Classified Manager........MARGARET PALMER Display Manager................. PETER I IPSON Finance Manager................ LINDA KAFTAN