.;.,. is wly IS T~r - t. t 'CQ i kr U~r'Ni The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 14, 1995 - 14 U.N. Bosnia official vows to renegotiate cease-fire r t/ I. 4: WE HAVE ENOUGH RELATIVES TO BE VOTED BEST PIZZA IN THE ANN ARBOR NEWS POLL FOR THE LAST TEN YEARS. WE CRAM CHEESE AND TOPPINGS ON OUR PIZZA THE WAY PROCRASTINATING HONOR STUDENTS CRAM FOR A FINAL EXAM. WE'RE SO HAPPY TO HAVE JOBS THAT WE GIVE INCREDIBLY GOOD SERVICE, MANY OF OUR DELIVERY DRIVERS ARE UNDER-EMPLOYED PHDS SO THEY CAN OFFER TUTORING FOR TIPS. THE RESIDUAL AROMA OF A COTTAGE INN PIZZA ON A FINAL EXAM PAPER HAS BEEN KNOWN TO MAKE EVEN THE MOST DEMANDING PROFESSOR SMILE. OUR NEW EUROPEAN GOURMET THIN CRUST PIZZA IS SO DELICIOUS THAT A STUDENT GOT AN A IN ITALIAN CULTURE 360 JUST FOR BRINGING ONE TO CLASS. Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - The chief U.N. official in Bosnia vowed yester- day to try renegotiating the expiring cease-fire brokered by former Presi- dentCarter, but acknowledged "it will not be easy." The cease-fire, already rent by battling in Sarajevo and other areas of Bosnia, is due to expire at the end of April. But Yasushi Akashi of Japan, the special representative of U.N. Secre- tary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali for the former Yugoslavia, told anews conference at U.N. headquarters in New York that extending the cease- fire is "a matter of grave concern" to the Security Council. Akashi said he planned to meet with the leaders of the Muslim-led Bosnian government in Sarajevo and the leaders of the Bosnian Serbs in Rich hit with 16% tax hike in 1993 WASHINGTON (AP) - As the April 17 filing deadline looms, miser- able taxpayers can find company among the affluent. Well-to-do Americans' taxes surged 16 percent in 1993, the first year of revisions pressed into law by President Clinton. People who earned $100,000 or more owed the government an addi- tional $31 billion compared with 1992, according to an Associated Press computer-assisted analysis of Internal Revenue Service data. Ev- eryone else together owed about $3 billion more. The tax-law revisions were aimed specifically at reducing the deficit by tapping people with big incomes. When President Clinton proposed raising taxes on high incomes, ex- perts expected the affluent to create shelters and loopholes to blunt the impact, but that does not appear to have happened. The law took effect in August 1993, but the new rules were applied retroactively to January. That took some tax planners by surprise. "We did not see a new surge of tax shelters," said Robert McIntyre of Citizens for Tax Justice, a Washing- ton advocacy group. "It's hard to.do, and it takes time." Clinton had argued that upper- income Americans had paid less than their share of taxes in the years when Republican presidents Reagan and Bush sat in the White House. He said the law asked "the well- off to pay their fair share, requiring that at least 80 percent of the new tax burden fall on those making more than $200,000 a year, and very little on any other Americans, not to punish the successful, but simply to ask some- thing of the very people whose in- comes went up most and whose taxes went down during the 1980s." The bill added two new tax brack- ets - 36 percent for income begin- ning at $115,000 and 39.6 percent beginning at $250,000 - but gener- ally left other tax rates alone. 1 1 PRINTING HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICES S0 their mountain stronghold of Pale next week about the cease-fire but antici- pated great difficulty. "The parties for different reasons are unhappy with the way the agreement was honored - or dishonored - by the different parties," he said. After a dramatic meeting with Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic in Pale almost four months ago, Carter brokered a cease-fire that halted the fighting through the bitter winter months. With the advent of spring, however, the government launched a series of attacks in hopes of regaining some of the ground lost in the heaviest fighting during 1992 and 1993. In retaliation, the Bosnian Serbs resumed the shelling and sniping of Sarajevo and the harassment of U.N. convoys transporting food and medi- cine to besieged towns throughout the country. That has led to some barbed ex- changes between Lt. Gen. Rupert Smith of Britain, commander of the U.N peacekeepers in Bosnia, and Gen. Ratko Mladic, commander of the Bosnian Serb forces. Akashi staunchly defended the peacekeeping mission in Bosnia - often condemned by critics for failing to roll back Serbian aggression. He said the 38,000 peacekeepers in Bosnia, Croatia and Macedonia make up "the largest and most complex peacekeeping operation in the history of the United Nations." "The criticisms and disappoint- ments," Akashi said, "are a function of erroneous appreciation and un- justified expectations. Parties to a conflict always expect much and sometimes too much of the peace- keepers." OURI LI WHETHER' Al W-' COTTAGE INN BREADSTIX : >t ; {. ,. NEW HOT&TANGY AND GARDEN VEGETABLE TE PIZZAS HAVE LESS FAT AND CALORIES YOU EAT THEM STANDING UP OR SITTING DOWN[ WE PURSUE OUR POLITICAL CAUSES WITHOUT FANFARE. ND THE #1 REASON WHY COTTAGE INN IS THE LATE NIGHT FINALS WEEK CHOICE: G4T TITr kS iNAS WEE You're out! APPHOTO National League umpire Joe West speaks to young fans while picketing outside Yankee Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., yesterday. After istakes, hospital loses its accreditation TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The hospi- tal where a man lost the wrong leg and another patient was mistakenly re- moved from a ventilator was stripped yesterday of its accreditation to con- tinue getting millions in federal funds. The Joint Commission on Accredi- tation of Healthcare Organizations took the action 10 days after a surprise in- spection. The panel issued a statement announcing the punishment and would not elaborate on its findings. University Community hospital, one of three major hospitals in the Tampa area, has 20 days to appeal. In the meantime, it will retain the accredita- tion it received two years ago with high marks - a score of 95 out of 100. Without accreditation, the private, not-for-profit hospital cannot qualify for Medicare and Medicaid reimburse- ment. The hospital last year received $52 million from the government pro- grams - about one-third of its pa- tient revenue. "We do not treat these incidents lightly," said Ken Lightfoot, the hospital's board chairman. "However, by singling out UCH, the industry regulators are refusing to accept the fact that all, and I repeat all, hospitals have similar patient incidents." The problems at the 424-bed hospi- tal began Feb. 20, when doctors ampu- tated below the knee the wrong leg of 51-year-old diabetic Willie King. Less than two weeks later, Leo Alfonso, 77, died after a technician mistakenly removed him from a venti- lator, thinking he was another patient. Later investigations revealed other mistakes, including an arthroscopic surgery performed on the wrong knee of a patient in February and a tubal ligation performed without consent that left a woman partially sterilized. The American Medical Associa- tion wants to use the hospital as an example of how a hospital should not operate. It has called on the private accreditation board to release its find- ings and recommendations. "Maybe the situation at the Tampa hospital was unique," said AMA President-elect Lonnie Bristow. Another threat to the hospital's funding looms from the federal Health Care Financing Administration, which controls distribution of Medicare and Medicaid money. It has set an April 20 deadline for a state team to inspect the hospital and determine if it has problems that pose an "immediate and serious" threat to patients. Six days ago, the state banned al' elective surgery at the hospital Florida's Agency for Health Car( Administration shut down th( hospital's operating rooms for all bu emergency cases. ' , . :: :: ; : :x;. h r ,G .vt. *I - ----- A, t it s AL