The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 4, 1992 - Page 3 Oil tanker crashes, . fishing area t{ danger LA CORUNA, Spain (AP) - A tanker crashed onto rocks outside a fog-shrouded harbor entrance yes- terday, breaking apart in heavy seas *a~d spilling millions of gallons of crude oil that threatened the area's riph fishing grounds. Hundreds of people fled their homes after an explosion tore the stern loose and set off an inferno only a few yards offshore five hours after the ship ran aground. All 29 cr ew members were rescued from tlte Greek ship, officials said. Curiosity seekers gathered along th'e rugged coastline of this city of 2.0,000 to watch huge orange flames boiling from the stern sec- tion. Fire licked from oil alongside the tanker and thick, black smoke billowed high over the city, which is o4 Spain's northwestern corner alout 280 miles from Madrid. Authorities said an oil slick up to a ;mile wide stretched 12 miles northeastward up the coast of Galicia, as the region is known. Environmentalists expressed fers for fishing grounds. Fishing is Galicia's most important industry. The tanker, the Aegean Sea, was carrying an estimated 23 million gal- Idns of crude from Britain's main North Sea oil-loading terminal at SpIlom Voe to a refinery in La Coruna when it ran aground. SAntonio Gomis, a spokesperson f~r Spain's Repsol oil company, ,ihich chartered the tanker, said two of three of the ship's nine tanks had riptured. He said each tank held an average of 2.7 million gallons of crude oil. Juan Lopez de Uralde, the Spanish spokesperson for Greenpeace, said the possibilities of keeping the spill from fouling the coast were "practically nil" because it'was so close to shore. State places temporary stop on assIsted suicide LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Legislation de- signed to temporarily ban the controversial practice of assisted suicide in Michigan cleared the state Senate yesterday, going to Gov. John Engler for his signature. On a vote of 24-6, the Senate approved House-passed legislation designed to block the continued activities of Jack Kevorkian, who has overseen the suicides of six women in Michigan over the past two years. "Jack Kevorkian has made Michigan the suicide haven of the nation," said Sen. Jack Welborn (R-Kalamazoo). "I think that's wrong." "It's not the best bill in the world but it's a whole lot better than what we have today that lets Jack Kevorkian run around like Jack the Ripper." Under the bill, which will take effect about next March 31, anyone who helped somebody take their life in Michigan would be liable for criminal penalties of up to four years in prison, a $2,000 fine or both. A study commission, composed of 22 citi-' zens representing various health care providers, the elderly and groups such as the Hemlock Society, would have 15 months to come up with a recommendation on the issue. Kevorkian - a retired Royal Oak pathol- ogist - was not cowed, however. "The battle lines are drawn," he said. "They've fired their last big gun. We have to counterattack. Kevorkian said the new law is unconstitu- tional, but declined to say if he would chal- lenge it in court or continue assisted suicides. Engler is expected to sign the bill quickly, perhaps next week. .JOHNKAVALIAU.S/aly Check it out Aerospace seniors Galen Gornowicz (left) and Ed Piekos inspect a model of General Electric's B-2 Turbo charger. Insurance industry proposes plan for universal coverage Clinton spokesperson calls plan a'brmkthrough'for insurance industry; plan would cut costs and provide beneftpackages NEW YORK (AP) - The insur- ance industry took a big step toward shaping health-care reform yesterday by proposing a sweeping plan for universal coverage that would be fi- nanced partly by taxing Americans with generous benefits. The Health Insurance Association of America said the draft proposal approved by its board will "jump- start health-care reform." A cornerstone of the plan is to cut costs and provide a package of "essential" benefits to all Americans. Those are goals championed by President-elect Clinton. Clinton spokesperson George Stephanopoulos said it was a break- through for the insurance industry trade group to "come around and say that we need a national health-care system." The association's proposal re- flects insurance-industry thinking long before Clinton's victory, as it became clearer that the nation's $800 billion health-care system was out of control. The proposal should give insurers a more influential voice in the reform process. Stephanopoulos said the group has a right to try to influence future legislation. "If there is strong sup- port across the country for national health insurance with real cost con- tainment, and that is causing the in- surance industry to cooperate with us, we want to work with them." Private insurers would agree to provide coverage to every American. People would be covered either through their employers or "their own means." The essential-benefits package would pay for catastrophic illness, as well as primary and preventive care. Showing they are willing to com- promise, insurers would accept peo- ple with pre-existing conditions. Such people typically are rejected for coverage because they are con- sidered expensive risks. The plan also includes cost con- 'If there is strong support across the country for national health insurance with real cost containment, and that is causing the insurance industry to cooperate with us, we want to work with them.' -George Stephanopoulos Clinton spokesperson trols that would discourage exces- sive doctor visits, as well as unnec- essary testing and hospitalizations. Private and public cate that 25 percent to all medical procedures formed are unneeded, Young, director of the New York office. studies indi- 33 percent of and tests per- said Stephen association's continue to receive generous bene- fits, anything beyond the value of the essential benefits package would be taxed as income. "If people want the Cadillac," Young said, "then they have to pay* extra." Those tax revenues would help the government foot the bill to cover the poor. Private insurers and health providers would give people below the poverty line primary and preventive care. "We're trying to provide a fair financing system which would have subsidies for those in the lower in- come brackets," Young said. The insurance industry said the plan also is designed to end an irra- tional system where privately in- sured people are paying for the care of low-income Americans on Medicare and Medicaid. Young said the government pays about $1,000 less than the average hospital bill for a Medicaid patient. The gap is wider for Medicare. "What has been happening de facto is that those with private health insurance have been subjected to bills made higher to subsidize those who are not paying their fair share," he said. The association is circulating the draft proposal for comment and more details must be worked out. Young said the final proposal would7 be presented to the government, health-care organizations and "anyone else who's interested." In the past; insurers have spoken out against proposals, fearing a government-run program of national health insurance would minimize their role. Some experts contend the United States is a leader in medical technol- ogy partly because of the tendency for insurance companies to pay for any treatment without regard to cost. For employed Americans who U-M grad opens wilderness store I, ,4 Friday Q AIDS Benefit, candlelight march, Harlan Hatcher Gradu- ateLibrary, main entrance steps, 7:15 p.m. Q Center for Russian and East European Studies, holiday party, Lane Hall, Commons Room, 4:30-6:30 p.m. Q Creative Arts Orchestra, per- formance, Rackham Building, Auditorium, 8 p.m. Q Drum Circle, Guild House Cam- pus Ministry, 802 Monroe St., 8-10 p.m. Q Galens Medical Society, Galens Tag Days to benefit C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, collecting through Dec. 5. Q Highly IMPROVable, improvi- sational comedy show, North Campus Commons, Leonardo's 8-10 p.m. Hillel, Feminist Shabbat Service, 4:50 p.m.; Discussions, follow- ing dinner, beginning 7-7:30 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill St. Q Korean Campus Crusade for Christ, Christmas Banquet, Christian Fellowship, Mosher Jordan Residence Hall, Multi- purpose Room, 7:30 p.m. E "Main Trends in the History of ' Croatia," lecture, Michigan Union, Art Lounge, 12 p.m. Q "My Beautiful Laundrette," movie, Martin Luther King Film Series, Chrysler Center, Audi- torium, 5 p.m. Q Newman Catholic Student As- sociation, rosary, Saint Mary Student Chapel, 331 Thompson St., 7:30 p.m. j Northwalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, Bursley Hall, lobby, 763-WALK, 8-11:30 p.m. :i Open House, Angell Hall tele- scopes, Astronomy Department, weatherpermitting, Angell Hall, 5th floor, 6-9 p.m. Q Pre-Kwanzaa, principle: NIA/ Purpose, Mary Markley Resi- dence Hall, Angela Davis Lounge, 7 p.m. Psychology, West Quad, Room K210, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Q RC Players, performance, "The American Dream," and "Grandma Duck is Dead," East Quad, RC Auditorium, 8 p.m., showing through Dec. 6. Q Safewalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, UGLi,lobby, 936-1000, 8-11:30 p.m. Q Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, CCRB, Martial Arts Room, 6-7 p.m. Q TaeKwonDo Club, regular workout, CCRB, Room 1200, 7-8:30 p.m. Q Teaching Assistants' Union, rally for a fair contract, Diag,12 p.m. Q UAC Starbound Auditions, Michigan Union, Room 2105, UAC office, Dec. 4: 7-9 p.m.; Dec. 5: 12-6 p.m.; Dec. 6: 12- 6 p.m. Q U-M Bridge Club, duplicate bridge game, Michigan Union, Tap Room, 7:30 p.m. Q U-M Ninjitsu Club, practice, I.M. Building, Wrestling Room G21, 6:30-8 p.m. Saturday Q Blue Sun Quintet and SAFMOD, performance, Michigan Union, University Club, 8p.m. Q "Creativity Painting," Pre- Kwanzaa, Baits, Therme Lounge, 6 p.m. Q Fundraiser/Sale, U-M Ski Team,SportsColiseum,9a.m. - 9 p.m. Q Kids Shopping Extravaganza, U-M Museum, Gift Shop, call 747-0521 for more information. Q Newman Catholic Student As- sociation, Christmas Choir Re- hearsal, 10 a.m.; Into Light Advent Group, 8 a.m.; Mass, 7:30 a.m.; Saint Mary Student Chapel, 331 Thompson St. Q Northwalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, Bursley Hall, lobby, 763-WALK, 8-11:30 p.m. rl tc.uiv. Wltftm af" posium, U-M Law School, Honnigman Hall, 10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Q AIESE , meeting, Business Administration Building, Room 1276,6 p.m. Q Blind Pig Blues Jam and Open Mic Night, Blind Pig, 208 S. First St., 9:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Q Chamber Music Concert, East Quad, RC Auditorium, 4 p.m. Q Contemporary Directions En- semble, performance, Rackham Building, Auditorium, 4 p.m. Q Hillel, Grads and Young Profes- sionals Veggie Potluck, Law Quad, Lawyers' Club, 5:30 p.m. Q League Jazz Night, perfor- mance, Michigan League, check room at front desk, 6 p.m. Q "Legacies of the Encounter," lecture, Rackham Building, Am- phitheater, 1-5 p.m. Q Newman Catholic Student Association, Bible Study, 6:15 p.m.; Peer Ministry, 3p.m.; Rite of Acceptance, 12 p.m.; Saint Mary Student Chapel, 331 Thompson St. Q Northwalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, Bursley Hall, lobby,763-WALK,8p.m. -1:30 a.m. i Phi Sigma Pi, meeting, East Quad, Room 126,6-7 p.m. Q Piano Competition, U-M School of Music, Recital Hall, 1 p.m. Q Safewalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, UGLi, lobby, 936-1000, 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Q Safewalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service - Angell Hall, Angell Hall, Computing Cen- ter, 763-4246, 1:30-3 a.m. Q "The Feast," Pre-Kwanzaa, Mosher Jordan Residence Hall, Jordan Lounge, 5:30 p.m. Q U-M Chess Club, meeting, Michigan League, check room at front desk, 1 p.m. Q U-M Jazz Combos, perfor- mance, North Campus Com- mn n,. Tannarrin ARn nm by Megan Lardner Daily Staff Reporter Many U-M students may wish to follow in the footsteps of two recent college graduates who are playing the game of "Life" - and say they are winning. Robert Wolfe, a 1992 U-M grad- uate, and his partner David Jaffe, a 1992 University of Wisconsin grad- uate, opened the Moosejaw Moun- taineering and Backcountry Travel store Oct. 31 in Keego Harbor - a suburb of Detroit. Neither graduate, one a political science major and the other a history major, said he had ever dreamed of operating his own business just six months after graduation. In fact, they said they both planned to go to law school - but realized their interests lay elsewhere. "We tried to think of a million other things to do instead," Wolfe said. The partners said they decided to build on their interest in camping, and opened the store. Just more than one month later, the 22-year-old business partners said they are still optimistic and pleased with the praise heaped on the store. "No one believed we would ever do it," Wolfe said, recalling his friends from the university who laughed at the idea of opening a business. Wolfe and Jaffe specialize in sell- ing camping equipment, snow gear and winter clothes. They also orga- nize camping trips to areas such as the Georgian Bay in Canada and the Jordan River Valley. "We really don't want to be just another store," Wolfe stated, adding that he and his partner hope to in- corporate more trips and expand the store. Wolfe said local residents have been supportive. "People are into the idea of two young guys going into business to- gether," he said. "Even our competi- tion is psyched." Wolfe and Jaffe said they want to avoid undercutting their competition. They spent a lot of time researching other stores and establishing solid re- lations with other camping outfitters. But not everything is perfect in the business world, as the store's owners are the first to admit. Deal- ing with insurance companies and. landlords was a new experience, they said. "I had never signed a lease in my- life," Wolfe added. Other companies did not appear: to show much respect for the gradub ates and they found it difficult to work witli credit companies without previous credit. But some of the difficulties have been invigorating, Wolfe said. The two are constantly challenged by the events that occur in a private business. "I love all the controversy,, Wolfe stated enthusiastically2 "Something goes wrong almost ev- ery day." Even with the strong success oh the Moosejaw Mountaineering- and Backcountry Travel, the owners are' remaining firmly planted on the, ground, Wolfe said. "It is going great, but I don't want to be overly optimistic," he added. "Retail is really weird. 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