The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 25, 1992 - Page 3 M*+ S *I Shell strikes U.N. food shipment MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) - A shell struck a U.N. chartered ship laden with food for the starving as it approached Mogadishu's port yes- terday, sending the vessel back out to sea with its precious cargo. No casualties were reported aboard the ship, but the incident was the latest setback in an international effort to save an estimated two mil- lion famished Somalis. Relief officials thought they had successfully negotiated Monday with two warlords controlling Mogadishu for four ships waiting offshore to unload desperately needed supplies. The Red Cross on Sunday cut from two to one the number of meals it was serving to a half-million peo- ple in Mogadishu and reduced the calories of each meal from 1,200 to 600. The arrival of the relief ships would have changed that. "We could have immediately brought the rations up to 100 percent and begun feeding them two meals a day again," said Horst Hamborg, a spokesperson for the Red Cross in Mogadishu. The U.N. estimates that 300,000 Somalis have already died of the twin effects of war and famine. The Seek the truth Demonstrators shout slogans in Tokyo yesterday vowing they will get to the truth behind the scandal that disgraced politician Shin Kanemaru when he received bribes from a trucking firm and distributed money and gifts to other politicians. Lawyer: Assisted suicide is not a crime DETROIT (AP) - An attorney for Dr. Jack Kevorkian said yesterday the so-called suicide octor hopes to call an undertaker instead of police after he assists in his next suicide. "The hospital doesn't call the po- lice when somebody dies from a rou- tine medical procedure," said Kevorkian attorney Michael Schwartz. Chris DeWitt, a spokesperson for Attorney General Frank Kelley, said yesterday he didn't know whether Michigan had a law against failing to notify police of an assisted suicide. Michigan has no law prohibiting assisted suicide.. Kevorkian attorney Michael Schwartz said he is re- searching whether Kevorkian can legally stop notifying police of sui- 'The hospital doesn't call the police when somebody dies from a routine medical procedure.' - Michael Schwartz attormey cides he assists. Kevorkian watched Monday while Catherine Andreyev committed suicide in an Oakland County home by inhaling carbon monoxide through a face mask. As in the previous five suicides he has helped, the police were called just after death. None of the seven people who witnessed the Andreyev death were detained. Schwartz said Kevorkian wants assisted suicide to become an ac- cepted medical procedure. "If we determine Dr. Kevorkian doesn't have to call police, then he'll just call the family undertaker," Schwartz said. "As it stands right now, it's not a matter for the police. There's no crime. It's not a criminal act." Oakland County Prosecutor Richard Thompson tried unsuccess- fully to prosecute Kevorkian, a re- tired pathologist, for the first three deaths in which he was involved. Judges ruled that Kevorkian couldn't be charged with murder because Michigan doesn't prohibit assisted suicide. Thompson refused to comment on whether it would be illegal to fail to report an assisted suicide to po- lice. But police must be called when someone discovers a suicide com- mitted alone, he said. "What concerns me is that this would be an even greater opportu- nity for abuse," Thompson said Tuesday. "This would be an easy way to hide homicides and actions that are fraught with abuse." Andreyev, 45, suffered from can- cer that had spread throughout her body. She was driven to Michigan from her home in Pennsylvania, where assisted suicide is a felony punishable by 10 years in prison and a $25,000 fine. Kevorkian relief effort has been hampered for months by clan warfare, disputes among warlords and looting by their militias and free-lance bandits. Capt. Carsten Hall Weibrecht of Denmark, port commander for the World Food Program, said the Milos L was "only 500 yards away when it got hit." The shell struck about a yard be- low the bridge near the crew's cab- ins, he said, "but there were no in- juries, and the ship swung around and took off. There was smoke, but I saw no fire." The Milos L was chartered by the World Food Program, the Rome- based U.N. agency that gathers and distributes food from member na- tions. It approached port with its. cargo of 9,741 metric tons of grain after U.N. officials thought they had an agreement with two warlords, Ali Mahdi Mohammed and Gen. Mohammed Farrah Aidid. Ali Mahdi and Aidid have agreed to share equally a portion of all the food unloaded from ships at the port, but little food has reached Ali Mahdi's half of the city in about a month. U.N. truck convoys carrying food to Ali Mahdi in northern Mogadishu have been routinely hijacked or looted. Students give 'gifts' to kids at Safehouse by Liz Vogel Two U-M students have an early start on the holiday season. LSA senior Simon Goldberg and Kinesiology senior Glenn Hill have worked all semester to give the gift of new opportunities to children at Safehouse, a shelter for battered women and children. "You might as well do something good for people to make yourself feel good," Goldberg said. Goldberg is taking his own advice, and along with Hill, targeted Safehouse children for a community actionhproject as a part of their English 329 class. "(We) both wanted to work with kids," Hill said. After the students became familiar with Safehouse, they found a lack of educational and entertainment activities for the children. "They need someone to do this, and if nobody does it, the kids are going to be miserable," Goldberg said. The students began their project by asking local businesses for money, but Goldberg called the initial results "discouraging." "Most places pretended to help us out, but they didn't make "a commitment," he said. However, Benita Kaimowit, publicity coordinator for Borders Bookstore, said she was interested in helping. With her assistance, Borders donated "two huge boxes full bf beautiful children's books,' Goldberg said. Some of the books were given to the children as gift$ and the others were used to begin a children's library at Safehouse. "Simon is really helpful," said Vickie Frederick, children's program coordinator at Safehouse. "(His effort) reinforces that reading is important and this may be the first time that someone has stressed to the children that education is important." Goldberg and Hill also worked to find entertainment activities for the children. Hill convinced the U-M Athletic Department to donate eight football tickets to the children for the Michigan-Iowa football game. "I really think they enjoyed it," Hill said. "These kids probably would never have seen a football game. It's kind of neat that we couldl get them together and bring them to a game." Both students plan to Lontinue Storms cause extensive damage throughout U.S. Associated Press A powerful snow storm blew out of the Rockies and pummeled the Southern Plains yesterday, closing hundreds of miles of high- ways, while Southern tornado victims working in heavy rain faced a grim Thanksgiving. In Amarillo, Texas, 200 vehicles were in- volved in an early-morning pileup on snow- covered Interstate 40, with no reports of deaths, police said. Two motorists were killed in weather-re- lated traffic accidents yesterday elsewhere in the Texas Panhandle. The storm also was blamed for the death of an 11-year-old girl in a Colorado sledding accident. Since Saturday, violent weather accounted for the deaths of 25 people in the South and Midwest. Interstate 40 was closed for 175 miles in fexas from the Oklahoma to the New Mexico lines. The Postal Service suspended residential deliveries; flights were delayed at Amarillo Inernational Airport. At midmorning, at least 9 inches of snow was reported at Hereford; and a 50-mile stretch ;of U.S. 60 from Hereford to Clovis, N.M., was losed because of zero visibility. In the Oklahoma Panhandle, the National Weather Service warned motorists of the "life- threatening situation if your car or truck be- comes stranded" because of the combination of drifting snow and sub-zero wind chill readings. "It's kind of hard to tell just how much snow we have had, the wind is blowing so hard," said Sheriff Arnold Peoples of Texas County, Okla. "I would venture to say we've had 5 to 6 inches. We have lots of vehicles off in ditches. We're working the highways, trying to get everybody up and into town." Colorado was busy digging out of the storm that left up to a foot of snow Monday; many schools remained closed. At Denver's Stapleton International Airport, the average flight delay improved to a half-hour to 1 1/2 hours, compared with 1 1/2 to two hours Monday. The northern edge of the storm brought heavy snow and freezing drizzle that closed schools in western Nebraska. In Cheyenne, Wyo., state employees re- turned to work, but all schools were closed for the second straight day. In the South, state and federal damage as- sessment teams fanned out through the region to help determine whether federal assistance will be available. Is anybody home?ERIK AGERMEIEDai U-M employees Earl McTaggart and Larry Nevarre check a sewer yesterday after a flood. .. ;........ ..:.:..:.: Comics prepare to jab at Clinton presidency student groups U Social Group for Lesbians, Gay Men, and Bisexuals, meeting, East Quad, check room at front desk, 9 p.m. U Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, practice, CCRB, Martial Arts Room, 9:15-10:15 p.m. Students Concerned About Animal Rights, meeting, Dominick's, 7:30 p.m. Q TaeKwonDoClub, regularwork- meeting, East Quad, room 122, 7 p.m. Q U-MNinjitsu Club,practice,I.M. Building, Wrestling Room G21, 7:30-9 p.m. Events Q "Focus on Michigan," photog- raphy contest, City of Ann Ar- bor Parks and Recreation Department, accepting entries until December 1, contact Irene Student services Q Northwalk Safety Walking Ser- vice, Bursley Hall, lobby, 763- WALK, 8 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. Q Psychology Undergraduate Peer Advising, Department of Psychology, West Quad, room K210,10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Q Safewalk Safety Walking Ser- . NEW YORK (AP) - Lame duck George Bush can look forward to getting the last laugh. "There's a whole new cast of characters," Jay Leno said. "When Republicans are in office, it's all greed. With Democrats, the vices are sex and alcohol. It'll be fun." Whether the Clinton administra- tion will prove to be such a comedic windfall as the Perot-Stockdale Friday's "Tonight Show," Leno an- nounced that the 25 cents Clinton had given to a homeless man during a walking tour of Washington "doesn't seem like much, but then you realize it's more than double the aid the homeless got. during the Reagan-Bush years." None of the shows could resist Clinton's visit with Bush last week. In a "Saturday Night Live"