. 3m The annual Holocaust conference is being held this week, and it is a valuable reflection on the World War II tragedy - lest we forget the lessons of our past. Director Michael Apted's movie subjects are no longer seven years old. They're all grown up in his latest documentary, 35 Up, a film which was 28 years in the making. The Wolverines' men's basketball team improved its standing for the NCAA tournament with a 68-60 win over the Indiana Hoosiers yesterday. Oh, and Bobby Knight wasn't thrilled about it. Today Mild, chanceof rain; High: 55, Low: 46 . Tomorrow More of the same; High 57, Low 35 WE t Yi One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vo. I u o.8 An ror ichga -Moda, Mrc,1992 © 992eTh* MichgnDily All week, the Dgaily will be publishing candidate position statements in this space, as, outlined in their public statements andposition papers. The depth of our information is limited by the. information furnished us by the various campaigns. With the recession bearing down more heavily on Americans and the cost of health care skyrocketing, the national presidential candidates have made health care reform a central issue in the campaign. Listed below are the health care lansof all of the major candidates, with the exception of Republicans Pat Buchanan and David Duke who have not made any specific health care proposals. Jerry Brown: The former California governor sponsors a plan that would totally revamp the way health care is provided in the United States. Similar to the Canadian system, all Americans would be fully insured under a government health plan, and there would be no involvement by private insurance companies. The plan's funding would be provided by the revenue from his proposed 13 percent flat income tax and 13 percent value-added consumption tax. Costs would be cut by eliminating waste that he says currently pervades the health care industry. George Biuish:u The president has submitted a health care plan.to Congress that relies on private insurance companies to regulate health care. In addition, it provides targeted tax credits designed to help low- income families buy health insurance. ill1 Clinton:; The Arkansas governor has sponsored what has been dubbed :.a °play-or-pay" health careplan. Under such aplan, employers coudeither play,by providing comprehensive health insurance by a private insurer, or pay into as government fund. The revenue from thatfund and other health care revenue would pay for a government health insurance plan that would cover the unemployed and people not covered under an employer's policy. Tom Harkin: Sen. Harkin's proposal states that all Americans would first be Iguaranteed affordable, quality health care by the doctr oftheir. choice. Long-term health care costs would be cut by diverting resources into prevention and into research to find cures for major diseases such as cancer, AIDS, andAlzheimer's disease. Also, increased regulation of air and water, and stricter controls over workplace safety would be implemented. Doctors and nurses would also be offered incentives to work in under-served rural areas through the National Health Service Corps. Paul Tsongas: Under the former Massachusetts senator's plan, employers will be required to provide a choice of/ family health insurance plans for all full-time employees. A system of state buyer agencies will be set up to negotiate insurance plans and rates on behalf of small businesses. Businesses that do not provide care for their employees will be forced to pay a 6 to 8 percent payroll tax on all eiployees'no tcovered. These. employees, and all others not covered by a company plan, will be able to choose from plans offered by the state buyer agencies. The federal government Harkin to P I pull out o narrowing Dem. field WASHINGTON (AP) - The Democratic field was expected to narrow by one as Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin decided to call it quits. Harkin scheduled news confer- ences today in Washington and Des Moines after a series of disappoint- ing finishes, including a 6 percent showing in South Carolina Saturday. Furthermore, President Bush and Democrat Bill Clinton headed to- ward delegate-rich "Super Tuesday" races claiming big boosts from weekend victories. Two Iowa Democratic Party of- ficials said Harkin told he would an- nounce his withdrawal from the race today. Nevada Democrats, meanwhile, held party caucuses yesterday to begin the delegate selection process. Republican challenger Patrick Buchanan remained winless but vowed to take his insurgent candi- dacy all the way to the GOP conven- tion in Houston in August. "This campaign...is about more than piling up delegates," Buchanan said in a TV interview. However, Buchanan strategists are now looking beyond Super Tuesday - where they are not op- timistic of scoring wins - to the March 17 showdown in Michigan as a make-or-break state for the con- servative TV commentator. Bush's 67 percent win over two conservative GOP challengers and Clinton's 63 percent dominance of the Democratic field in South Carolina's primary on Saturday are likely to spill over into this week's Super Tuesday. See RACE, Page 2 'U' will house 24-hour study center at UGLji by Jennifer Silverberg Daily MSA Reporter University students will have a 24-hour library at which to study in time for finals. The seven-day study facility - which will be located in the UGLi - should be effective in approxi- mately two weeks, Michigan Student Assembly President James Green said after talking to administrators Friday. Green said Gilbert Whitaker, provost and vice president for Aca- demic Affairs said the only obstacle which remains is to arrange a staffing for the facility. "Students were asking for a safe study area that had access to re- source materials," said Vice Presi- dent for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford. "It seemed if there was anything we could do to facilitate extended hours it was something we should do." Green said Hartford was the driv- ing force behind the implementation of this new study area. "We've been discussing it a lot, and she really made it a priority. And she's really the one who made it happen. I only take credit for putting it on the agenda," Green said. The study facility will not techni- cally operate for 24 hours each day because library staff will need time See LIBRARY, Page 2 Third party to vie for assembly spring elections by Jennifer Silverberg presidential candidate," said for Daily MSA Reporter Conservative Coalition (CC) m rmer em- A third party - comprised of predominantly engineering students - will be running in the Michigan Student Assembly March election but the presidential and vice presi- dential candidates have not been an- nounced yet. "I will say there will be a third party running in the MSA election but I will not declare myself as a ber and Engineering junior Bill Cos- nowski who said he is "a concerned student who believes that MSA needs to be changed." Engineering sophomore Jennifer Starrman said she will decide today if she plans to run as a vice presi- dential candidate. "The reason I would choose to See PARTY, Page 2 DOUG KANTER/Daily Grace and glory Lisa Irvin, a 14-year-old alternate for the Olympics, skated at Yost Ice Arena Friday night as part of Skate '92, an amatueur skating exhibition. Student interest in city politics faded since '70s by Erin Einhorn Daily City Reporter Today is the last day to register to vote for April 6 City Council elec- tions. But few people involved with Ann Arbor politics said they are re- DAILY NEWS ANALYSIS motely surprised most students have no interest in registration, or in any- thing that goes on beyond the Uni- versity and their daily lives. To some, who said the student community is commonly subjected to unilateral City Council decisions and needs to maintain a voice, this fact is discouraging. Others said lack of student inter- est makes sense. "Why should they give a damn?" asked David Cahill, a legislative assistant to Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) who was involved with City Council as a University student. "Most students (today) don't relate to the issues." But Cahill said he remembers when students did care - when University students not only regis- tered en masse to vote in Ann Arbor, but harnessed enough power to nominate and elect student candi- dates to the Council. Nancy Wechsler and Jerry De- Grieck, both students elected in 1972, each served a two-year term representing a third party - the Human Rights Party (HRP) - which heralded itself as a far-left liberal party and which forwarded student concerns. Another student was elected in 1973, and the party retained strength in the city until 1977 when interest began to fade. Cahill worked for the party as a "behind the scenes activist" and served on several council commis- sions, representing HRP. "In Ann Arbor it was almost ex- clusively student based," Cahill said of the state-wide party. "A lot of students who weren't affiliated with either of the major po- litical parties felt really upset with the (Vietnam) war and with their landlords," Cahill said. He said they seemed to agree that the student- dominated party best represented their needs. Samuel Eldersveld, a University political science professor who fol- lowed city politics closely in the early '70s, said while in power, the HRP completely redirected City Council's agenda. While parking, zone changes and the interests of property owners and merchants had dominated City See CITY, Page 2 Armenia, Azerbaijan clash in land dispute BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) - Armenians and Azerbaijanis battled yesterday for a third day over Askeran, a town in the disputed en- clave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Dozens of people were reported killed in fighting in the region. Both former Soviet republics again charged that troops controlled by the Commonwealth a of Independent States helped the other side, accusations repeatedly denied by the Defense Ministry in Moscow. Armenia's military commis- sioner, meanwhile, denied a Russian television report that his republic had ordered a general mobilization for military service of all eligible men up to age 50. The twogrepublics have been fighting since 1988 over Nagorno- Karabakh, an area inside Muslim Azerbaijan populated mostly by ('hri innArmtvnanc irc Inhtintr intin-. fought their way into the outskirts of the town. The Interfax news agency said Azerbaijani forces fired dozens of rockets into Askeran yesterday. "There were numerous casualties and many buildings were destroyed," Interfax said, without providing a casualty count. The ITAR-Tass news agency said- two other Armenian villages, Kar- miravan and Shaumyanovsk, were attacked Saturday night and Sunday morning. It also said an Azerbaijani tank was destroyed near Askeran. At least 42 people had been killed in Nagorno-Karabakh since Friday, Armenian press reports said. Farkhat Mekhtiev, a spokesper- son for the Azer-baijani presidential press office, said paratroopers under orders from Moscow were deployed near Stepanakert, the enclave's capi- Food for thought Robert Grady (D-3rd ward)and Mayor Liz Brater respond to students' questions last night in East Quad about city issues and Council elections on April 6. Today is the last day to register to vote. Students faculty upset over cuts In storv olitical scen credit r