i LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 23, 1997 - 5A jDingell proposes 12-ear WASHINGTON (AP) - Michigan Rep. John Dingell, the longest continu- ously serving member of the U.S. House, testified yesterday at a congres- sional hearing that he is for term limits -sort of. Dingell is proposing a 12-year ser- vice limit on House and Senate mem- bers effective immediately. If his pro- posal became law, he would be thrown out of office along with House Speaker *tGingrich, Minority Leader chard Gephardt and about a third of the Michigan congressional delegation. Dingell's resolution, which he rein- troduced this year with Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas) was greeted with skepticism by Republicans favoring term limits. "1 don't consider it legitimate term limits" Tillie Fowler (R-Fla.) told the House Subcommittee on the Constitution. "They (Dingell and rton) are fully aware retroactive leg- Ts ation will never make it"' Dingell's true preference is clear. The Dearborn Democrat says he has always supported the term limits provided in the Constitution - known as elections. Dingell is the dean of the House, having served more than 40 years. "I take no shame in that;' he said at the hearing, because at the end of every two years "I have to go and answer to y people." 'He says he offers his term limit pro- posal as "a chance for the proponents of term limits to display their sinceri- ty."4 4 "If they really believe in it, why should it take 19 years to take effect," he asked after the hearing. How does he get 19? A constitution- al amendment to limit a representative to six two-year terms, for example, ight take as many as seven years to be i tified by three-fourths of state legis- latures. And once it became law, repre- sentatives would have another 12 years in office, Dingell said. In 1995, the Supreme Court ruled that state-imposed limits on federal elected officials was unconstitutional. That leaves amending the Constitution as the only way to impose term limits on members of Congress. Dingell described term limits as *nischievous" and "a fine example of tinkering with the Constitution that benefits no one." Engler names new welfare director LANSING (AP) - The new direc- tor of the Michigan Family Independence Agency is in firm agree- ment with Gov. John Engler that wel- fare recipients should have to work for their benefits. "Without being hardhearted, I'm also not a fool,' Marva Livingston Hammons said yesterday as Engler named her to her new position. "I absolutely believe benefits should be cut off for people who refuse to work." The governor said Hammons comes highly recommended from those who knew her in her last job as New York City's welfare chief. Among her sup- porters was former Michigan Management and Budget Director Patricia Woodworth, now budget diree- tor for the state of New York. "Marva did an outstanding job returning welfare recipients to work in New York City, which helped the state return 250,000 recipients to working the last two years;' Woodworth said. Engler said Hammons' background as a child protection caseworker and wel. fare administrator in New York City and Denver, along with their similar philo- sophical outlooks, won her the job. "She has big-time experience. She's a prime-time player," Engler said during a news conference. AP PHOTO Oakland County Sheriff Lt. Donald McLellan (left) and Sgt. Steven Parker look over the scene yesterday of a Cessna 210 that crashed In Highland Township, Mich. Two executives of a Wisconsin papermaker were killed in the Tuesday night crash. Plae rah kills 2; cau.se steil ne ive St1un er investigation HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) - Investigators were on the scene yesterday trying to determine what caused a small plane crash that killed two executives of a Wisconsin paper company. Killed Tuesday evening were Donald Riviere, vice president of strategic development; and John Snyder, group president of material handling for Menasha Corp., compa- ny vice president James Jarosiek said. Jarosiek said they had been visiting the company's Wolpak Inc. subsidiary purchased a year ago in the Detroit sub- urb of Madison Heights. Their six-seat plane crashed just after takeoff from Oakland County- Troy Airport. Witnesses reported hear- ing signs of engine trouble, and sher- iff's deputies said the plane appeared to clip the tops of trees before going down in a marshy area deep under snow 40 miles northwest of Detroit in Oakland County. The men's bodies were found yes- terday morning in the widely scat- tered wreckage, Oakland County Sheriff's Sgt. James Sutton said. The discovery came about 12 hours after the plane dropped from sight on radar at Detroit Metropolitan Airport, he said. The weather was clear at the time. "People heard the plane going over- head, low, sputtering;" sheriff's Sgt. Ken McLellan said. Ryan Sullivan, of White Lake Township, said he was walking to his mailbox about 6:15 p.m. Tuesday when he heard a plane apparently having engine trouble. "It then restarted and then got real, real loud," Sullivan told The Oakland Press. "I could see the navigation lights, and I could see that they were very low." More than 60 sheriff's deputies, volunteer firefighters and others - some on snowmobiles, others on all- terrain vehicles - searched into the night but were hampered by the dark, deep snow, marshes and freezing rain. An emergency locator beacon, designed to activate on all planes in emergencies, gave no signal, Oakland Troy airport manager Anne Esposito said. Menasha Corp., based in Neenah, Wis., employs 2,220 in Wisconsin. It makes corrugated containers, displays and specialty products made of lami- nated paperboard. LS&A SCHOLARSHIP LS&A Scholarship applications for Spring-Summer 1997 and Fall-Winter 1997-1998 are now available In 1402 Mason Hall To qualify for scholarship consideration, a student must be an LS&A undergraduate and have completed one full term in LS&A. Sophomores must have a U of M grade point of 3.7 or better and Juniors and Seniors must have GPA of at least 3.6. The awards are based on financial need and academic merit. O .w .t ax 1 w f { w } Y} xi: n : }: . ; fit ' '. ?i :F;.::%. :... At yx b' f ,. Ez .. " " r -WINTER- limbeziand N As you know the Van Boven WINTER SALE is quite an event. We have taken further reductions on the finest Clothing, Furnishings and Mens and Womens Footwear N ----- Plan to attend this winter tradition while selections are at their best. :4. I~ 7Z idA C)100* 67 hi _______ I ' UtW lm alp