The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 24,1992- Page 5 Bush, Clinton trade televised barbs Associated Press A presidential debate planned for next week perished yesterday, a ca- sualty of President Bush's opposi- tion to bipartisan ground rules de- signed to bring him and Bill Clinton together on a televised stage. Bush "promised 30 million jobs in eight years. He's 29 million short," said a Clinton commercial aired in Texas, Bush's adopted home state. A Bush re-election commercial countered that from cable television to beer, Arkansas Gov. Clinton has "raised state taxes, and not just on the rich." The commercials were the cam- paign in microcosm: the Democratic FRAUD Continued from page 1 frauds occur frequently and is concerned about it. "We're not about to disclose how many people rip us off every year," Colin said. "But there are things that we do about it." Colin said that in the interest of preventing future frauds, he could not reveal the company's methods for locating frauds. Residence hall staffs are also on the look out for mail frauds, said South Quad building director Mary Lou Antieau. "All the office managers (in all the residence halls) are aware of the scam and are watchful for it," she said. "We are a post office sub-sta- tion and we're very careful with our handling of the mail." South Quad has included, as part of its training for front desk staff, stressing the importance of meticu- lously examining the names and ad- dresses on all incoming mail before distribution. When Jeff turned himself in last April, he gave the police the names of eight people he thought were in- volved with mail frauds. Three of them, also employees of the South Quad desk staff, admitted to in- volvement and returned their compact discs. "It didn't really seem wrong until after I did it," said an LSA junior who confessed to the police. She said she heard about the scam from Jeff'. "The biggest issue for me was that everybody was doing it. I didn't think I could get caught," she said. "But I'd never done anything like that before and when I realized later what it meant, I was really pretty upset about it. "It's a very serious crime - a - felony. I don't think people really realized that. But we all got a real - slap in the face, a real eye-opener." would-be president depicting Bush as the failed steward of the nation's economy; Bush portraying Clinton as an untrustworthy governor of a small state. In Washington, the Commission on Presidential Debates announced it had pulled the plug on the debate set for Louisville, saying that Bush's aides had refused to come to a meeting to discuss plans for the en- counter. "We regret that a debate for the American public may not take place on Sept. 29," the panel said. " We remain committed to working to en- sure that the American people bene- fit from debates between the candi- dates in this important election." Democratic vice presidential candidate Al Gore said Bush was "running for cover" from the de- bates. The president said, "I want a de- bate.. . will stand on my record and I won't let that Arkansas governor run away from his record, either." He objects to the format proposed by the bipartisan commission that would have a single moderator in hopes of the most freewheeling possible debate. Bush favors a panel of three journalists asking him and Clinton questions. Democrats in Washington staged a media event for the party's 10 women Senate candidates. "Will the president veto a family leave bill if there are more of us in the U.S. Senate'?" asked Dianne Feinstein of California. "I think not." Bush told campaign audiences in North Carolina and Pennsylvania that Clinton sees small business "as the goose that lays the golden eggs," and advocates taxes to cut its profits. The president outlined a series of tax breaks and regulatory relief for small business that he said would help in business expansion. It in- cludes a cut in the lowest corporate tax from 15 percent to 10 percent. White House aides said the tax breaks would be financed by passage of the tax cuts the president has previously outlined. HEATHER LOWMAN/Daily Candyland Ann Arbor resident Charles Doty fills the candy machine in Angell Hall. earc for missing Vietnam veterans continues in Danang Wheels of fortune LSA sophomore Eric Wilcomes (left) gawks at a prototype Ford car near the Dennison courtyard. Employees from the company interviewed students about this car, The Zig, and another car, The Zag (not pictured). The cars are expected to cost under $10,000. DANANG, Vietnam (AP) - A little diplomacy and a lot of digging count for more than derring-do in the joint U.S.-Vietnamese effort to ac- count for Americans missing from the Vietnam War. For four years, with little fanfare, Americans have been regularly con- ducting searches, hacking their way through jungles - real and bureau- cratic - to painstakingly collect ev- idence to help resolve the fates of the 1,658 servicemen unaccounted 'for from a war that ended 17 years ago. Members of the Pentagon's Joint Task Force-Full Accounting unit last week concluded their 19th joint mis- sion with their Vietnamese counter- parts. Fifty-one analysts, anthropol- ogists, mortuary specialists, medics and ordnance experts from the Army, Navy and Air Force took part The task force is the official U.S. body charged with accounting for the 2,266 Americans listed as miss- ing from the Indochina War. Besides those lost in Vietnam, 519 are miss- ing in Laos, 81 in Cambodia and eight in China. a . .S GO BLUE!!! from all of us at DASCOLA STYLISTS .53 Years of Service Opposite Jacobsons 668-9329 g - If you've ever dreamed of being behind the controls of an airplane, this is your chance to find out what it's really like. A Marine Corps pilot is Comning to campus who can take you up for trial flights. We're looking for a few college students who have the brains and skill-as well as the desire-to become Marine pilots. of if you're cut out for it, we'll give you free civilian flight training, maybe even $100 a month cash while youre in school. And someday you could be flying a Harrier, Cobra or F/A-18. Get a taste of what life is like t _ _A at the top. The flight's on us. I