eather night: Mostly clear, low ound 47. morrow: Mostly sunny, gh around 73' 'Elan ti One hundredfve years of editorialfreedom Tuesday October 10, 1996 Vol .u n ic0 b i 2ia al I 9 Machen File t a special meeting scheduled for 6 .m, the Board of- egents will vote n whether to onfirm J. ernanrd Machen s provost. '. ean of the School of Dentistry since 1989. eld teaching and administrative posts at the dental school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill from 1975-89. iso.taught at University of Maryland, George Washington University, the University of Iowa, and the Medical University of South Carolina. .D.S. degree from St. Louis University, 1968; Ph.D. University of Iowa, 1974.. Machn tapedas provost N Regents to vote tonight on Duderstadt recommendation By Josh White Daily Staff Reporter The University Board of Regents may officially name interim Provost J. Bernard Machen as pro- vost and executive vice president for academic affairs at a special meeting this evening. President James J. Duderstadt's recommenda- tion of Machen for the appointment comes on the heels of a faculty advisory committee's cancella- tion of its seven-month provost search. If approved, Machen - who has served as in- terim provost since September - will begin a two- year contract that would expire in September 1997. The search committee had narrowed its choices to five external candidates, yet cancelled its search in the wake of Duderstadt's announcement that he will retire next June. "This is really a one-year extension to the one year that I had agreed to work as interim provost in the first place," Machen said yesterday. "No one feels that the University can hire a permanent provost until we hire a permanent president. I will be provost for two years so that there will be time to both complete a president search and then a provost search. "I will step aside whenever the new president finds a provost, and then I will return to the Dental School as dean." Machen has recommended that William Kotowicz, acting dean of the School of Dentistry, remain in that position until the searches end. Kotowicz was out of town and could not be reached for comment. In a statement yesterday, Duderstadt cited the need to keep stability at the University as the key reason behind choosing Machen for the position. "After careful consideration, the executive of- ficers and I agree with the search advisory com- mittee that it would be best to end the provost search at this time," Duderstadt said. "After con- sulting with the deans and executive officers of the University, I have asked Interim Provost Ber- nard Machen if he would be willing to accept a two-year appointment as Provost in order to pro- vide continuity during the transition period be- tween presidents." Associate Vice President for University Rela- tions Lisa Baker said choosing Machen is the best course of action for the University. "Bernard Machen has quite rapidly come into his job as interim provost and has assumed his duties and done a good job," Baker said. "He quickly became a part of the leadership team. He is respected and deeply committed to doing what he can as provost. "While there is a great deal of change going on, he will be able to provide stability in the office of the provost," she said. School of Public Health Prof. Kenneth Warner, who chaired the search committee, said he and other committee members were not pleased to put an end to their search. "I am very disappointed that we had to end at this See PROVOST, Page 2 Bosnia delays ease-fire Serb shelling and NATO airstrikes continue while government tries to restore utilities in Sarajevo SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Already ed by shelling that killed 16 people over two days, the west hopes for a break in Bosnia's bloody cycle of war red yesterday in a jumble of tangled wires and cables. The cease-fire scheduled to take effect early Tuesday rning at one minute after midnight (7:01 p.m. Ann Arbor e yesterday) was delayed because the government and snian Serbs could not finish restoring electricity and tural gas service to Sarajevo, said Hasan Muratovic, the snian government's minister in charge of relations with United Nations. Muratovic appeared on Bosnian television at the end of a day nctuated by Serb shelling and retaliatory NATO airstrikes. "It will not happen because the conditions have not been t yet," Muratovic said. Electric service was only partially restored, and there was 11 no natural gas service. Muratovic blamed much of the s problem on Russia, where the supplies originate, for ling to order the valves opened on the pipeline running ough Hungary to Bosnia. oth sides pledged to honor the truce when it does take ect, but fighting continued in Bosnia's northwestern and thern regions. ATO planes attacked Serb targets in northeastern Bosnia yesterday after Serb shelling of government territory led a Norwegian peacekeeper and claimed dozens of ilian casualties. AMliance spokesman Capt. Mark Van Dyke said six U.S. rplanes attacked a Bosnian Serb command and control nker with 10 laser-guided bombs and four rockets south- ,t of the government-held city of Tuzla. He said the bunker arently was destroyed. he airstrikes were NATO's first since Oct. 4, when three ssiles were fired at Bosnian Serb radar that locked onto iance jets. espite the sharp increase in shelling and fighting that has ned dozens of other truces during 3 1/2 years of war, the lities problem - a key provision of the truce accord kered last week by the United States - was the main son for delaying the latest cease-fire. fter a meeting of the warring sides yesterday evening at rajevo's airport, the U.N. civilian chief in Bosnia, Antonio aye Gonzales, said the parties "have cooperated fully" in ing to meet the cease-fire conditions. MSA to consider mandatory health care for students By Michelle Lee Thompson Daily Staff Reporter Most students would be required to enroll in a "mandatory-with-waiver" health insurance plan under a proposal to be presented to the Michigan Student Assembly tonight. Stephen L. Beckley, the director of a private consulting firm, will present the proposal he has developed over the last three years. Beckley was hired by the University in 1992 to assess the community's health-care needs. Beckley's proposal would require all University students to purchase a Uni- versity-administered health-care plan unless they could prove that they were adequately covered by another insur- ance carrier. MSA President Flint Wainess, who has worked with Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford and Beckley to research the issue, said he endorses the plan. "This entire plan would open up so many new choices for students," Wainess said. Beckley said that besides having too many uninsured people, the University community is plagued by high deductibles, no coverage of pre-exist- ing conditions or prescriptions, and a lack of continuity. Although MSA sponsors a student health insurance plan, Wainess said it leaves students under-insured because it fails the above tests, and it only pro- vides $250,000 in catastrophic cover- age. The proposed plan would provide a maximum of $500,000. Hartford said tonight's meeting would be the first indicator of student response to a such a policy. "There are several positive effects from moving in this direction, includ- ing guaranteeing affordable coverage for all students and covering things that are of special concern for college stu- dents," Hartford said. The proposal includes a boost in fund- ing to Counseling Services, which would expand significantly if the plan is implemented. Wainess said the plan provides for "world-class counseling services," add- ing that the University has consistently ranked last in the Big Ten for its coun- seling resources. The proposal is a point-of-service plan, which means that enrollees could visit physicians outside the plan's net- work by paying 20 percent of the phy- sicians' fees. The network would in- clude the entire University Medical Center and may be administered by Insurance Plan The consulting firm that formulated a new proposal estimates 70'percent of University students would partcipate in a mandatory health care plan. The plan has a provision allowing students with coverage to opt out.. All foreign students are expected to partcipate in the plan. The estimate of how many students from the United States.would participate: Graduate students Undergraduate students How the proposed $250-$350 per student annual feewould be spent under the plan. S% 30% 38% 16% 4% Cjnew counseling 0~miscellaneous center services benefits Q University , out-of-network Health Services care p retention p managed care source: StephenLBecker & Associates RAY WRIGHT/Daily MCare, the University's faculty health care plan. "The University Hospital is an MCare site, and you can't get any better than the University Hospital," Wainess said. Wainess asserted that the mandatory nature of the plan was not very different from the current situation. Beckley said students pay $96.50 per term for Uni- versity Health Services, which would become a provider under the proposed plan. Wainess said students who choose not to be insured would lose that choice under the proposal, but he added that he feels health care "is a community prob- lem." The plan includes a co-pay for pre- scriptions and a $200 annual deduct- ible. Beckley's 150-page proposal also reports on the status of graduate stu- dents, who are not insured by the Uni- versity when they accept fellowships and sometimes take less prestigious teaching assistant positions to earn health care benefits. Beckley's firm has done similar work for The Ohio State University, the Uni- versity of Illinois and the University of Minnesota, Wainess said. None of those schools has yet adopted a plan, Beckley said. Testing the waters LSA student Ami Shah collects a water sample to test for bacterial counts in the Huron River with her Microbiology 206 class. Maureen Sirhal ly Staff Reporter e race forthe Ann Arbor City Coun- on the southeast side of town, includ- many of the Greek houses east of shtenaw Avenue, is the city's most wded contest. andidates competing for the council ancy left by retiring incumbent Re-. lican Peter Fink include Democrat bara Bach, Republican David Kwan, ependent candidate Douglas Friedman Libertarian Donald Kenney. ach is taking another run a the 2nd rd seat after sqauring off against cur- t Councilmember Jane Lumm 2 1/2 a half years ago, when city elections ntrak wre boteurs lea YDER, Ariz. (AP) - Saboteurs ing themselves "Sons of Gestapo" led 29 spikes from a stretch of rail- d track, sending an Amtrak train hur- g over a bridge into a dry stream bed terday, authorities said. One person Znd Ward field ready to talk taxes were held in the spring. Bach considers the budget to be one of her biggest issues. "Because of Pro- posal A, there are 2 now caps on (prop- o1ncil erty) assessments. If necessary, we need - to consider a 1-per- cent cut across the board," Bach said. Kwan proposed EleCtions concentrating less 4 on the tax dollars from residents as a means of funding the budget."People in Ann Arbor are taxed to death," he said. Kenney, an education professor at Concordia College, is focusing his cam- paign less on the specific budgets issues and more on city-University relations. Friedman, a University doctoral stu- dent and second-time council candidate, says the city should privatize some pub- lic housing and rely less on money from parking enforcement. Each candidate proposed a different way to solve the city's parking dilemma. Bach said there isn't much the city can do to amend the problem simply because of a lack of space. Friedman maintains the basic prob- lems relate to lack of student parking. "Enforcement levels need to be more realistic," Friedman said. "It just seems that they are targeting students." Kwan agreed with Bach that there is little the city can do for student parking. "The issue should be more of getting the University to do something," he said. Both Friedman and Kenney said the city should get more involved with the University. "I think we could look at combining services from both the city and the Univer- sity," Kenney stressed. "Ann Arbor has in its midst one of the top research universi- ties in the country. Why can't we use it?" Both Kwan and Bach said the University should somehow pay the city since Univer- sity land is exempt from property taxes. ck kIs1; ive manifesto with three coming to rest on their sides on the sandy bottom of the desert wash. Passengers, jolted awake, made their way through jumbled belongings and crawled out the windows. "I heard babies screaming, and their Nunn becomes 8th Senate Democrat to retire this year The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.), the Democrats' most power- ful voice on defense policy and a leader of the party's once mighty southern flank, announced recapturing control of the Senate and in their prospects for reversing Republican gains in the South. He is the eighth Senate Democrat to announce retirement fornext year, the fourth from the South. Nunn's decision also comes as a blow _ !. I 1