The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 22, 1992- Page 7 Quayle blasts Clinton in Mich. visit MONROE, Mich. (AP) - Vice esident Dan Quayle wrapped up a campaign bus tour through Michigan yesterday, trying to sow seeds of doubt about Democrat Bill Clinton. "If Bill Clinton is elected, taxes will go up. We'll have another re- cession," Quayle told several hun- dred cheering students at Monroe County Community College. "It's in your interest to make sure Bill Clinton never makes it to the ,White House. Your future will be better with George Bush. It'll be worse with Bill Clinton." Comparisons of Clinton to former President Jimmy Carter cropped up often as the vice president rumbled through southern Michigan on a campaign swing that began Tuesday. He left Michigan headed for Ohio yesterday afternoon. Campaign officials said a visit by President Bush to Macomb County, known for its crossover "Reagan Democrats," was likely on Sunday. Bush continued his whistle-stop tour of the.South yesterday. Clinton also reportedly planned a weekend trip to Michigan. Quayle evoked mid-1970s im- 'Believe me, Bill Clinton and Al Gore are bad news for Michigan.' - Dan Quayle ages of high interest rates, soaring inflation and long gasoline rationing lines yesterday at brief stops in Monroe, Hillsdale and Spring Arbor. Voters in all three areas strongly backed Bush in 1988. A Clinton administration "is a recipe for disaster," Quayle said at Spring Arbor College. He urged supporters there to return Bush to the White House, "because we invest in our people, not in our government." "They really want to turn back the clock. It's your choice, folks, if you're going to go back to what Jimmy Carter gave us," Quayle said. "Your're going to pay the bill." In Monroe, Quayle also attacked the Arkansas governor's plan for a national health care system. The vice president said he agreed. that a strategy is needed to help the 34 million Americans who lack health insurance. But he said Clinton's plan would lead to ra- tioning and "a waiting line at the hospital." "Our goal is to make sure every American has made available to them affordable health insurance," Quayle said during a stop at Hillsdale College. Quayle reminded voters of Republican Gov. John Engler's nar- row win in 1990 and cautioned them not' to discount Bush despite his re- cent poor showing in the polls. "Don't believe the experts. If you listened to them, John Engler wouldn't be standing here. He was 14 points down with the election a week away," Quayle said. "I'm going to make the same prediction. It's going to be a tough and competitive election. We're go- ing to take this down to the last hour, the last vote. But we're going to turn the corner and win this election." Quayle's pledge of a leaner gov- ernment and his hits on Clinton's character played well in the Republican strongholds Quayle vis- ited yesterday. Kathy Burns of Spring Arbo; said it sealed her vote for Bush. "He hit on pertinent issues that will make me vote," she said. Beverly Baldwin of Monroe said the character issue was most impor- tant. On that front, she said, the Bush-Quayle ticket won her confidence. "They've got good qualities, good morals. If you think high things, the economy will come, too," she said. "I think President Bush has ideas we need," Betty Guajardo said after watching Quayle's visit to Hillsdale. "Believe me, Bill Clinton and Al Gore are bad news for Michigan," Quayle said. a Vice President Dan Quayle passes one of several footballs into the crowd yesterday during a rally at Jesse Philips Arena at Hillsdale College during a stop on the vice president's bus tour of southern Michigan. Michigan Congress members' mail expenditures have soared WASHINGTON (AP) - All but six of Michigan's 18 members of Congress spent more on taxpayer- funded mail than the average con- gressional challenger spent on their entire election campaigns, a study released yesterday showed. The National Taxpayers Union said the report proves franking privi- leges offer an unfair advantage to in- cumbents. Of the 435 members of the House, 310 spent more on publicly financed mail between January 1991 and Sept. 22, 1992, than the $108,506 average spent by House The only Michigan members who didn't exceed that amount during the 21-month period were Reps. Dale Kildee, D-Flint, who spent $28,476; Carl Pursell, R-Plymouth, $59,675; Paul Henry, R-Grand Rapids, $77,224; Dennis Hertel, D-Harper Woods, $97,909; Howard Wolpe, D- Lansing, $102,970; and Fred Upton, R-St. Joseph, $108,404. The top spenders were Reps. William Ford, D-Ypsilanti, who spent $233,760; John Dingell, D- Trenton, $224,805; Robert Davis, R- Gaylord, $221,526; Barbara-Rose challengers on their 1990 campaigns. Collins, D-Detroit, $218,416; Dave Camp, R-Midland, $216,721; and Guy Vander Jagt, R-Luther, $205,564. "There is no central medium that covers all of them. Newsletters and mailings are the most effective way to tell your constituents what you are doing for them," said Mike Russell, Ford's spokesperson. David Keating, president of the taxpayer group, said the mailings are "self-promoting propaganda." I- .Election.....92 ... he* t...e.e ou w tc e . h..eb.t:...........e.....o.pu.th lever ut fist1 yo needtfts ...o......yo...m a ke..o........................... .....t......yo.a..p........e.p Coming 0 . -toe3 Mir. 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Students view the corpses in mid- dissection, says Palmer, who created the assignment four years ago with the help of John Davis, an associate professor of exercise, health and science. Davis does most of the talking during the visit. Two or three cadavers, draped in green, lie on tables before the students. Davis may peel away the drape or remove a body part for view. He 'It produces awareness and makes people think. I'm not trying to focus on the subject of death as much as I'm trying to help students realize life.' - William Palmer Alma College professor describes the cause of death, the age of the deceased and the general condition of the body. Then, when he senses that the students are at ease, Davis invites them to come in for a closer look. They do not dissect the bodies, but may put on gloves and touch the body, hold a liver or, perhaps, the heart. The assignment requires students to summarize the science professor's presentation. They also must focus on their own views about death and their reactions to the encounter. "That class had a profound effect on me," senior biology major Justin Atkins said. Alan Stone, president of the 1,200-student college in central Michigan, approves of the unusual writing assignment. "No one has ever complained about it to me," he said. "It's not abusive or particularly ghoulish in any way. People who donate their bodies to science probably would say it's all right for them to be used in art and literature as well." But the director of the Michigan State University program that provides the bodies to Alma said she was unaware bodies were being used in a writing class. "If we had been asked, we would have said no," said Kristin Liles. She said she would initiate a review of the college's use of the bodies. Great Harvest Bread Company Bread the way it was meant to be -- No fats, oils, eggs, dairy products or preservatives. 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