2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 12, 1995 I f t S divers, observer ed in plane crash SHACKLEFORDS, Va. (AP) - Gina Arbogast had climbed aboard the plane ready to make her first formation jump with her skydiving friends. They, like her, lived to plunge thousands of feet toward Earth. But something went terribly wrong Sunday shortly after the twin-engine Beechcraft made its way into the sky in a gathering dusk. The plane banked, then dived into a house in a dense pine forest, killing all 11 people on board and a man who was sitting on his back porch, watching his son play. Arbogast, a 28-year-old nurse from Virginia Beach, had recently completed training with the Peninsula Skydivers, a club based at the West Point Airport, where the plane took off. Everyone on board but the pilot was a club member. "She loved the beach, and she loved skydiving," said Arbogast's mother, Cathy Arbogast of Charlottesville. "It was a passion." The skydivers club had leased the plane since June, said club treasurer Carol Clay. The plane had no record of crashes or safety problems, according to Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) records. Federal authorities were checking into witness reports that the plane appeared to lose power in one engine. Investiga- tors from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) arrived yester- day to pick through the charred wreck- age along a country road about 40 miles east of Richmond. Clay and other club members said the plane had made 18 skydiving flights over the weekend without a problem. The Beechcraft Queen Air BE-65 made nearly a straight dive into the home of Vincent Harris, who had been sitting on his porch. None of the tall trees near the house had been clipped by the plane. NATIONAL REPORT De lls dispute Gingric's Medicare math: WASHINGTON-Republican changes in Medicare would be farmore painfl for senior citizens than the $7-a-month premium increase that House Speaker Newt Gingrich is talking about, Dem6cratic leaders contended yesterday. The elderly will wind up paying almost $20 a month extra by 2002 and more than $1,300 each over the next seven years, the Democrats argued. Republicans challenged their opponents' math and accused them ofignoring the $270 billion in savings the GOP is seeking. But they also conceded that the Medicare Part B premium may be as much as $10 higher in 2002 under their plan than under President Clinton's budget -not $7 as Gingrich said Sunday. With the Republicans holding off releasing details on their proposal until week's end, Democrats were quick to offer their own grim calculations. Rep. Sam Gibbons of Florida, the top Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, predicted the GOP would have to "cut the dickens out of the benefit package in order to hold the increase to $7." "We think they vastly underestimated the impact on benefits," said White House press secretary Mike McCurry, traveling with the President in Carbondale, Ill. But Tony Blankley, Gingrich's press secretary, said, "The Democrats' mistake is not calculating the containment of the costs of the program over seven years under our reform." AP PHOTO Smoke rises after a NATO air strike on the Bosnian Serb stronghold of Pale, £0 miles east of Sarajevo. NATO continues offensi ve agaist Serbs Tuesdays? Live Jazz! 338 S. State 996-9191 SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP)-Cruise missiles badly damaged Bosnian Serb air defenses, NATO said yesterday, vowing to keep up its attacks until the skies over Bosnia are safe for Western warplanes. The Serbs were defiant, warning that the attacks could endanger the peace process. The 13 Tomahawkmissiles fired from the USS Normandy late Sunday caused "severe damage" to Serb anti-aircraft systems, Group Capt. Trevor Murray said in Naples, Italy. But he said the defenses were not en- tirely destroyed, and attacks would con- tinue - possibly with more of the $1.3 million Tomahawks - until they are. Murray said NATO had no indica- tion that the missiles killed or wounded civilians, as the Serbs claimed. With the Serbs reeling from NATO's bombs, the Bosnian government took advantage of their weakness to capture a strategic village and gain control of a route linking government holdings in northern and central Bosnia. Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic said the attacks showed that NATO was working together with the government army, and warned that they threatened to derail a diplomatic break- through last week that set the stage for possible peace talks. "It is clear that the most powerful military alliance on earth is openly tak- ing the side of our enemies," Karadzic wrote in a letterto Western leaders. "The entire peace process could be wrecked." The cruise missiles, used in Bosnia for the first time, were fired at radar, anti-aircraft missile sites and commu- nications stations near the northern Serb stronghold of Banja Luka. Murray, the NATO spokesman, re- fused to say what the missiles hit. Al- though they damaged Serb facilities, he said, the air defenses were still working. "If suitable, we may well use (Toma- hawks) again, as we will use other types of weapons," Murray said. Every Tuesday Evening! POSTNER SALK Today thru Friday Ground Floor Michigan Union 10 am - S pm --; 0111 1 %O S Oy CLO /e 0% ELS - pCat E t"sgo LoogCORg~f 1000 S OF CHOICES!! MOiES! BANDS! ART? Sponsored by Michigan Union Arts & Programming Looking for Business Experience? Join The Michigan Daily Finance Staff " Be responsible for daily billing, figuring commissions, tearsheets, assisting with payroll and accounts payable and the reconciliation of the phone bills. " 10 hrs./week, flexible around your schedule! " Contact Heather Rooney at 763-3246 between 8 a.m.-5 p.m. to set up an interview great scores... Law School Business School Dental School Graduate School Medical School great teachers... Kaplan helps you focus your test rep study where you need it most. e ur teachers wil [show you the proven skills and test-taking techniques to help you get a higher score. get a higher scoreW KAPLAN Simpson rosecution bes s reu; de ense doesn't rest LOS ANGELES - Worried about a stressed-outjury,theO.J. Simpsonjudge ordered reluctant prosecutors to begin their rebuttal yesterday even through the defense refused to rest its case. The jury, which last heard testimony a five days earlier, was then shown pho- tographs of Simpson wearing gloves similar to those found by police inves- tigating the murders of his ex-wife and her friend. It was the first time the jury saw photos of Simpson wearing the gloves. In refusing to rest, Simpson's law- yers sought time to appeal the judge's rulings regarding Detective Mark 1 Fuhrman and promised a secret witness still to come. "At this point, the court is mindful first and foremost oftheburdensplacedon our jury," Judge Lance Ito said of the panel, which has been guarded since January. "These are extraordinary issues," he said of the defense's concerns. In a rare but not unprecedented solution, he said SAROUND THE W Women's conference turns to sex ed BEIJING - Like worried parents everywhere, delegates to the U.N. women's conference struggled with questions about teen-agers and sex. Does access to contraception and sex education encourage promiscuity? Do parents' responsibilities outweigh teen- agers' right to privacy? In a carefully crafted compromise, they decided last night that the needs of both must be taken into account. The four-day debate pitted countries favoring total parental control against those that wanted no parental rights. But the final agreement drew not a single objection. The agreement on parental responsi- bility, and on other hotly disputed is- sues including sexual freedom andabor- tion, brought predictions that the Fourth World Conference on Women will end Friday with an ambitious plan to achieve women's equality. "I have every reason to be very opti- mistic," said conference secretary-gen- eral Gertrude Mongella. "I am quite confident the conference is going to end very successfully." Delegates from 189 states were still working night and day to reach agree- ment on other issues, including dis- crimination against lesbians, inherit- he wouldn't force the defense torestbut ordered prosecutors to begin calling rebuttal witnesses. Prosecutor Marcia Clark objected thaf this would put her at a disadvantage because the defense could return with witnesses while rebuttal is under way. Betty Crocker going ethnic in makeover GOLDEN VALLEY, Minn. -Betty Crocker, the white-bread-and-mayori- naise symbol of middle America, is getting a multi-ethnic makeover. General Mills Inc. said yesterday it will select photos of 75 women --o . celebrate the Betty Crocker company's 75th birthday - and digitally "morph" them into a new Betty. Chances are, she won't be the fair= skinned, blue-eyed homemaker whose image has appeared on and off over the years on cookbooks, cake and brownie mixes and Hamburger Helper. "I guess they want to put some fire under her tail," said Lehman Brothers analyst Caroline Levy. "I think it's a great idea to revitalize the brand." rORLD ance rights for girls, and funding for programs emerging from the meet- ing. Mourners gather for Canaan aboii activist's fune TORONTO - Hundreds of mourn- ers from throughout Canada and parts of the United States gathered at an aban- doned military base near Lake Huron yesterday for the funeral of a Canadian aboriginal activist shot to death in a. confrontation with police over disputed park land. Ontario Provincial Police, who shot Anthony (Dudley) George just outside Ipperwash Provincial Park last Wednes- day night, pulled back from the imme- diate area and native police maintained security at the ceremony. Journalists were kept away by aborigi- nal activists. No incidents were reported. George, 38, was buried on the grounds of a military installation that he and' about 100 other activists claimed last July just before it was scheduled to be " turned over by the Army to local Chippewa Indians. Efforts to negotiate an end to the standoff have stalled, but the Ontario government yesterday dropped plans to seek a court injunction forcing the aboriginals out ofthe park, located about 130 miles west of Toronto. -From Daily wire services University of Wisconsin - Plat teviIle "If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost. That is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them." -Henry David Thoreau The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the tall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September.via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY: Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 7640550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.lettersfumich.edu EDITORIAL STAFF Michael Rosenberg Editor In Chief NEWS Nate Hudey, Managing Editor EDITORS:Jonathan Berdt. Lisa dines, Andrew Taylor, Scot Woods. STAFF: Cathy Boguslaski, Kiran Chaudhri. Jodi Cohen. Sam Dudek, Jennifer Fried. Ronnie Glassberg, Jennifer Harvey. Amy Klein, Stephanie Jo Klein. Tali Kravitz, Gail Mongkolpradit. Tinm O'Connell. Lisa Poris, Zachary M. Raii. Megan Schimpf. Maureen Sirhal, Matthew Smart. Michelle Lee Thompson. Josh White. CALENDAR EDITOR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James Nash, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Adrienne Janney, Joel F. Knutson. STAFF: Bobby Angel. Patience Atkin. James R. Cho. Zach Gelber. Ephraim R. Gerstein. Judith Kafka, Chris Kaye. Jeff Keating. Jim Lasser, Ann Markey. Brent McIntosh, Partha Mukhopadhyay. Scott Pence. Jean Twenge. Matt Wimsatt. SPORTS Antoine Pitts, Managing Editor EDITORS: Darren Everson, Brent Meintosh. Barry Sollenberger. Ryan White. STAFF: Paul Barger, Scott Burton. Dorothy Chambers. Nicholas J. Cotsonihra. Susan Dann. Sarah DeMar, Alan Goldenbach. James Goldstein, Chaim Hyman, Julie Keening. John Lefoi, Marc Lightdale, Chris Murphy, Monica Polakov, Jed Rosenthal. Danielle Rumore, Brian Sklar. Tim Smith. Dan Stillman. Doug Stevens. ARTS Heather Phares, Alexandra Twin, Editors EDITORS: Melissa Rose Bemardo (Theater), Emily Lambert (Fine Arts). Brian Gnatt (Music). Joshua Rich (Film), Jennifer Buckley (Weekend)x. Kar Jones (Weekend). STAFF: Sangita Baxi. Matt Benz. Eugene Bowen, Mark Carlson. David Cook. Thomas Crowley. Ella de Leon. Ben Ewy. Brian Al l Learn Your Way Around The World " Study abroad in Seville, Spain, or London, England, for a summer, for a semester or for a full academic year " Courses in liberal arts and international business