PN 4 Daily writer Ken Sugiura explores the phenomena of dogs eating dogs in this competitive world. After a successful tour with The Cure, The Cranes are making quite a name for themselves. Andy Dolan interviews the band! The Michigan football team looks to rebound from its loss to Notre Dame against the Houston Cougars, Saturday. The Wolverines are accustomed to battling the Cougars in recruiting. Today Mixed clouds and sun; High 76, Low 58 Tomorrow Partly sunny; High 72, Low 52 Jr in Untly One hundred two years of editorial freedom I Vol C11 No 17 nnArbrMihign* Wdnsda, *epemer.2,193 ©99 Te ichga Dil I Clinton signs new national service plan President Clinton walks on the South Lawn of the White House, yesterday, for the signing of the National and Community Service Trust Act. The plan enables college students to earn tuition money with public service. Schroer plas state servceact Nearly 1,000 people witness Rose Garden ceremony; Michigan Stadium had been considered By DAVID SHEPARDSON DAILY STAFF REPORTER WASHINGTON - Echoing his Inaugural address which called all Americans to "a season of service" and recalled his own generation's ben- efits from the Peace Corps, President Clinton signed the historic National and Community Service Trust Act of 1993 at 11:36 a.m. yesterday in front of cheering legislators, educators, volunteers, celebrities and college stu- dents. The act provides about $10,000 in tuition aid for two years of service. It is expected to cost $107.5 million the first year, which is less than one-third of the president's initial request for $350 million. In his remarks before signing the bill, Clinton discussed the many so- cial problems facing the country while lamenting the budget deficit, which he says has prevented further spend- ing. "I realized that there was no way any government program could solve these problems even if we had the money... but the American people would, if organized and directed and challenged and asked, would find a way," Clinton said, notingAmericans' long history of service. The White House ceremony, un- der cloudy skies and threats of rain, was held beneath a hastily constructed tent on the South Lawn. The crowd, which the White House had estimated would be600, swelled tonearly 1,000. About40 members of the college press were invited to attend the ceremony. (See related story on pg. 3) Several youth speakers addressed the importance of community activ- ism and their individual responses to the president's call to service. But If U.S. Rep. William Ford, (D- Ypsilanti) who represents the Univer- sity in Congress, and National Ser- vice Director Eli Segal had their wish, yesterday's bill signing ceremony would have been in front of 25,000 screaming Michigan students cheer- ing the president in Ann Arbor, the same city where President John Kennedy first proposed the Peace Corps. But with the many conflicting schedules of Members of Congress and the Health Care plan looming, the field trip was vetoed by the White House. That the University was that close to hosting such an important national event highlights the University's un- paralleled role in the creation and de- velopment of the service plan. The University was represented by a large contingent yesterday who cheered the plan and the president who had worked hard to see it enacted. University Task Force on Com- munity Service Chair Barry Checkoway, a social work professor, said he thought the ceremony was "historic" and added that he thought See SERVICE, Page 2 By PAUL DeFLORIO FOR THE DAILY As President Clinton signed the NationalandCommunity Service Trust Act into law yesterday, State Rep. Mary Schroer (D-Ann Arbor) intro- duced a bill to help establish the pro- gram in Michigan.. Schroer's bill would create a state commission on service, qualifying Michigan for federal funding. The commission would plan community service projects, provide application forms and handle recruitment and placement of student participants. For the first year, the commission would have a budget of between $125,000 and $750,000 - 75 per- cent of which would be provided by the federal government - to pay for overhead and provide tuition grants. "With the frequent tuition in- creases we've seen and will continue to see, it is time that an option be available for middle class students to allow them access to our higher edu- cation system," Schroer said. "By using community service as a requirement for these education awards, we're able to involve citi- zens in worthwhile, important com- munity programs and introduce them to volunteer opportunities which may enrich their lives as much as the lives of those they volunteer to help." Under Schroer's plan, the gover- nor would appoint a 15-25 member bipartisan committee for a two-year term. Members of the committee would meet or. a quarterly basis and would not receive any kind of pay, except to cover incidental expenses. National Service represents a fed- eral model of a University-based pro- gram - Project SERVE - that has aided University students in securing volunteer work for years. Project SERVE Director Anita Bohn stressed that National Service should not function as a financial aid program. Instead, it should serve to help people who care very much about the community but who don't have the financial ability to continue vol- unteering. "It's all about empowering stu- dents to help the community, and to fix some of this country's countless problems," she said. Although stu- See BILL, Page 2 I Clinton prepares to deliver health care plan RECYCLED FASHION WASHINGTON (AP) - In a run- up to his big speech on health reform, President Clinton courted capital pun- dits and MTV viewers alike yester- day, saying he is anxious for Congress to debate the details and is open to changes "if somebody's got a better idea." "The moment" for health care re- form has arrived, the president said in one in a series of interviews. First Lady Hillary Clinton predicted law- makers would deliver legislation to her husband's desk within a year. A day before formally presenting his plan to Congress, Clinton defended the financial underpinnings of the package yet made it clear that much was open to negotiation. "I want an honest, open discussion on this," he said. Said Mrs. Clinton, chief architect of the plan: "What its exact contours will be and how it will be imple- mented I don't think anybody can predict right now." Democrats have generally been supportive of Clinton's plan, and Re- publicans have expressed support for health care reform, saying they are ready to work with the administra- tion. The AFL-CIO pledged to "support this historic initiative." The American Hospital Association cited "serious concerns" about key elements of the president's plan, including cuts in Medicare and Medicaid. Recalling that universal health coverage has been talked of since the days of Franklin Roosevelt, Clinton declared: "I believe very strongly that this is the moment when it is likely to occur because I think there is a shared consensus that the costs of the sys- tem, the escalating costs ... are greater than the cost of change." Hit from all sides with questions about how he would pay for the new health benefits, Clinton replied: "I'm not trying to sugarcoat it. I have worked harder to get better cost esti- mates on this than anybody ever has." Aides said a final decision was still to be made on at least one conten- tious matter: How to mete out new "sin taxes" on tobacco and perhaps alcohol. Tonight at 9p.m., Clinton delivers what may be the most important speech of his presidency, laying out his vision for a health-care system that would offer affordable coverage to everyone by the end of 1997. Summing up the main goal, he said simply, "You would be able to get health insurance; it would be ad- equate benefits, and you wouldn't lose it." Employers would be required to pay 80 percent of average health-care premiums, with workers paying the rest. Small businesses and low-income workers would get federal subsidies to help them pay their share. Clinton shuttled between inter- views and sold his plan to newspaper columnists over veal and asparagus at an East Wing luncheon. "I'm anxious for this debate to be- gin," Clinton told the columnists. The administration made it clear that much of the plan is open to nego- tiation. Mrs. Clinton, joining her husband for lunch, said that if Congress opted to go more slowly in phasing in uni- versal coverage, that could be accept- able. "These are all things we're open to talk about," she said. Clinton quickly interjected that slowing the timetable would reduce savings. "You will never get the maxi- mum savings envisioned by this plan until you have universal coverage," he said. Clinton was checking and then re- checking the 45-minute address he will deliver to a joint session of Con- gress. He got an early draft from speech writers on Saturday night, and on Sun- See HEALTH CARE, Page 2 Plan promotes preventative m edicine WASHINGTON (AP) - There's more than an ounce of pre- vention built into President Clinton's health care reform pack- age.. For the first time, all Americans would be guaranteed no-cost physi- cal exams and diagnostic screen- ing for such things as breast cancer and cholesterol levels, according to a widely circulated draft of the Clinton plan. All childhood immu- nizations would be covered. These basic benefits are a ma- jor selling point of the plan, since they are not included in most tradi- tional health insurance policies.Yet there are limits to the plan's reach. Some doctors disagree with the rigid schedule set for physical ex- ams, mammograms and Pap smears. Preventive dental care is provided for children but not for adults. The same is true for eye- glasses. And it wouldn't be until 2001 that mental illness would be treated more on par with physical See PLAN, Page 2 REBECCA MARGOLI First-year student Chrissy Rossett looks at clothes at a local rummage sale. n.IS/ Dety i . 1[4 A r nud ,Q d opti. nacP tcnAntV.9 ininil fiinding