STATE/NATIONAL Fieger, Engler *address workers LANSING (AP) - About 8,000 building trades workers gathered at the Capitol yesterday to cheer for IDemocratic gubernatorial candidate Geoffrey Fieger and criticize Gov. John Engler's record on worker safe- ty. Senate Democratic Leader John Cherry of Clio said the number of workers killed on the job is rising as the number of state workplace inspections falls. le cited statistics showing that the number of workers killed on the Ojob increased to 34 in 1997 and that 19 have already died this year. The state's Republican leaders are "tak- ing the state backwards on worker safety,". Cherry said. "It's time to stop this retreat." Engler spokesperson John Truscott, however, said Michigan has one of the largest and most respected workplace inspection programs in the country. It also has one of the . ighest numbers of compliance offi- cers per employer and charges some of the highest fines when violations The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 24, 1998 - 5A Clinton:icrease Pentagon funds WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton asked Congress to give the Pentagon an extra $1 billion next year to cover spare parts shortages and other readiness problems and to bolster long- term budgets to update .weapons and keep top-quality personnel. "We must act now," Clinton wrote in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott that was made available to reporters yesterday. "The security of the nation depends on our military forces' ability to quick- ly, effectively and successfully prose- cute their mission. Ensuring that these forces are trained and ready is a priori- ty upon which we can all agree," Clinton said. "I have asked key officials of my administration to work together over the coming days to develop a fully off- set $1 billion funding package for these readiness probleihs." The president did not say where the savings, or "offset," for the $1 billion might be found. He has insisted that budget surpluses projected for the next fiscal year in the tens of billions of dol- lars be set aside to protect Social Security. Even so, the move got bipartisan applause from Rep. Floyd Spence (R- S.C ), chair of the Ilouse National Security Committee, and his panel's ranking Democrat, Rep. Ike Skelton (D-Mo), "Without additional defense resources to reverse the 14-year pattern of spending decline, the military ser- vices will be unable to stabilize their shrinking force structures, protect qual- ity of life and readiness and modernize rapidly aging equipment," Spence, Skelton and other panel leaders said in a response to Clinton. Clinton also wrote Defense Secretary William Cohen, asking hir and Gen. Henry Shelton, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to work with the White House and Congress on revised budget proposals for both the short and long term. Because of the need to project spend- ing for high-cost weapons programs over lengthy periods, the Pentagon sub- mits budget outlines for five-year peri- ods to Congress when making the annual military budget request. Clinton said he based his decision on a recent meeting at which top military officers and advisers warned that tho nation's forces might not be able to ful- fill its mission of being able to fight or two major fronts at nearly the same time. "I believe we need to examine options with Congress to secure addi tional funds in FY 1999 to address short falls in critical spare parts, Navy manpower, Army training unit activities and related readiness problems," Clinton wrote in his letter to Cohen. "I believe we need to consider addi . tional steps to maintain ... quality and readiness into the next century." Cohen told reporters last week that deficiencies affecting U.S. war, making capability can be addressed and pledged to work with Clinton and Congress "to assure that our armed forces have the resources they need." AP FILE PHOTO Michigan Gubernatorial candidate Geoffrey Feger shakes hands with a supporter yesterday at the State Capital Building in Lansing. Fieger will face Governor John Engler in the November election. are found, he said, "If you have more people work- ing, chances are you'll have more accidents," Truscott said. "Our safety rate is a very good one, and one we'll continue to defend." Many of the electricians, mill- wrights, plumbers, iron workers and others gathered at the Capitol sport- ed black arm bands in memory of five workers killed on the job in the past month, including four who died when a wall collapsed Aug. 24 at a Flushing High School construction site. Cherry said the deaths show the state needs more than 13 inspectors to oversee 42,000 construction pro- jects statewide. not statistics," Cherry said of those killed. Fieger said he would restaff the Michigan Occupational Safety & Health Administration so more work sites could be inspected. le criti- cized Engler and GOP legislators for not passing legislation that would require inspections at school con- "These are real people. They're struction sites. Assisted suicide, managed care odd couple DETROIT (AP) Doctor-assisted suicide and managed health care are a deadly mix, giving doctors financial incentives to steer seriously ill patients *toward an early grave, a medical group leader said yesterday. Dr. David Stevens, leader of a nationwide evangel- ical Christian medical group, took the fight against Michigan's assisted suicide ballot proposal to medical students at Wayne State University. Stevens began by citing a series of Biblical passages on the sanctity of life. But he quickly switched gears to arguments aimed at those with mixed feelings about assisted suicide. Proposal B, on the Nov 3 ballot, would allow assist- "d suicide for those declared to have less than six nonths to live, with approval of two doctors and a psychiatrist's certification that the person is mentally competent. The Netherlands, Stevens said, has had 25 years of experience with officially sanctioned doctor-aided suicide. It has seen the practice spread from the termi- nally ill seeking help in dying to the killing of handi- capped babies and the mentally ill, he said. "That's our laboratory," he told about 100 students. They gobbled pizza and drank pop as they listened to the noontime talk by Stevens, executive director of the Christian Medical & Dental Society. A message was left yesterday seeking comment from Dr. Ed Pierce, a leader of the of the group that petitioned to place Proposal B on the ballot. One key difTerence between the Netherlands and the United States would make assisted suicide even more insidious on this side of the Atlantic, he said. "they have socialized medicine," he said. With the government paying for medical care, Dutch doctors have no financial incentive to help their patients die, he said. Not so in America, Stevens said. "We have a cost-driven medical care system," he told the students. "You will see that when you go into practice." Managed care plans reward doctors who keep treat- ment costs down, and a large share of medical costs come in the last six months of life, Stevens said, le said that means doctors will have a direct incentive to push the terminally ill toward assisted suicide. "Unethical physicians can easily influence a patient's decision," he said. Doctor-aided suicide also gives unscrupulous rela- tives a way to get rid of the elderly and sick and get their hands on money that otherwise would go to med- ical or nursing home care, he said. "Economic forces will make the choice to die very quickly the duty to die," he said. Penicillin for the soul... because Novocaine solves nothing. Campus Chapel Explorations in faith and reason Sunday Service 10:30 a.m. 1236 Washtenaw Ct., just north of Forest and Washtenaw http://www.umich.edu/-crchapel ; Neoglyphics Media Corporation Y- m zvcflI 02zTuho2 "'WCq)PO 0) b &T@ After graduation, I wanted to follow up on the most current thing. At that time the Internet was strange and underground, and I wasn't sure if it would really take off. But then it started to explode. So I came to Neoglyphics and started learning new technologies. I think my title is computer programmer, maybe software developer. Titles are kind of goofy here. Personally, I like Web Slinger or Spiderman. I do a lot of different things, mostly project-related. For example, I spend a lot of time talking with clients about project requirements. Then there's the programming. Writing code from scratch, doing high level design, testing it, deploying it on a machine. What's great about Neoglyphics? To a great extent, the community of people. Everyone seems to get along. We maintain a relatively open, flat hierarchy - you can talk to anyone and share opinions. I've made a lot of personal friends with developers that I'll always keep in touch with. The pay isn't too bad either! The culture encourages individualism, sort of a laid back dress code. We will be on campus the following dates: SWE-TBP Career Fair September 28 Interviews December 1 We are recruiting for the following positions: Software Engineers with experience and interest developing in Java, C++ and/or knowledge of distributed objects using CORBA or Java RMI, web servers, and SQL. Name: Position: Education: Matt Lead Software Engineer B.S. Computer Science, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign M.S.E Computer Science/ Artificial lntelligence, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor I~ I'm the person who started our weekly Social Hour Originally, it wasn't planned. People just gathered on Friday afternoon, but this stopped when we moved to a bigger office. I thought it was important to continue, and Neo agreed to reimburse me if I brought refreshments. Now we vote on beverages and have them delivered. Keeping this tradition seems to have struck a lot of resonance with people here. Social