Page 6 • Monday, June 28, 1999 Nation The law of the land Here is a sample of unusual or significant laws going into effect this summer. Washington outlaws lying by politicians in campaign ads. It also calls for creation of a registry of insurance claims that should be payable to Holocaust victims or Idaho rescinds $1,000 limit on awards for charity rubber duck races. Vermont allows needle exchange programs for the first time. their relatives. Utah protects Good Samaritans from being sued for T \ MiF damages done while they use a defibrillator to jump start heart attack victims. Also raises marriage age to 16 and legalizes domesticated elk hunting, with some restrictions. New Mexico New Hampshire becomes last state to grant Martin Luther King Jr. a permanent holiday and also allows homosexuals to adopt children. \ A. •' f -- aVv; South Carolina officially legalizes interracial * — marriages. It also comes up with an official state question: "Red or Green?" The query is to determine which type of chili sauce diners prefer. Tennessee and Indiana require parental consent for body piercing of young people. outlaws the sale of urine and declares the spotted salamander the official state creature. Florida Louisiana makes it law for children in kindergarten through fifth grade to address their teachers with a courtesy title such as “sir” or “ma'am.” Georgia allows breast feeding a baby in public, provided the mother “acts in a discreet and modest way.” allows sheriffs to sell stray livestock to nearest auction to recoup cost of capturing it. July 1 to usher in new lat Additions cover subjects from chili sauce to classroom com. AP AP — You can hula till you drop in Hawaii, but you will need Mom and Dad’s permission to have your navel pierced in Tennessee. And do not talk back to your teachers in Louisiana or you may be breaking the law. New laws passed in states around the country — many of which take effect with the new fis cal year July 1 — regulate every thing from chili sauce to rubber duck races. A spate of new ordi nances focuses on reining in teen agers. Teens caught smoking in South Dakota starting Thursday can be fined once for every cigarette they light up, as can the merchant who sold them the pack. Louisiana passed a law that makes students in kindergarten through fifth grade address teachers with a courtesy ti tle such as “sir” or “ma’am.” In Utah, the marriage age was raised to 16 from 14, and in Flori da, a new law calls for teen-age girls to wait up to 48 hours for an abortion to allow doctors time to notify their parents. Indiana and Tennessee enacted legislation that requires Consent for body piercing. “Looking at it on a broader scale, I think there is an issue of protecting kids from them selves and keeping parents in con trol,” Stephanie Wilson, who mon itors state laws at the National Con ference of State Legislatures, said. She said that in the wake of shoot ings at Columbine I think there is an issue of protecting kids from themselves and keeping parents in control. nationwide trend toward closer monitoring of teens will continue. “Columbine was a huge shock to everyone,” she said. “I think par ents really do feel a loss of control. ” Many states have taken steps to try to protect chil dren in school. In Alabama, teachers with un supervised access to students must now be finger printed and under go background checks. A new law allows school dis tricts in Nevada to hire a chief of school police. In Maryland, stu dents who plant bombs or make bomb threats can — Stephanie Wilson National Conference of State Legislatures High School and other schools, a lose their drivers licenses. Of course, not all| involve children, raised penalties for and for driving ur ence, and some ran “sin taxes" on cigaien hoi. Several passedli ping awards given New Hampshire allowing homosexn children and also state in the country civil rights leader .V King Jr. with a perma:. South Carolina pa? tion officially legalize marriage. A state ban enforced for decades In Idaho, lawmake a $1,000 limit onpriit can be awarded inct duck races. The ra dumping rubber duck; and seeing which one finish line First t Officials criticize Clinton drug plan WASHINGTON (AP) — At “very little” cost to taxpayers, all 39 mil lion Americans covered by Medicare could get prescription drug benefits without bankrupting the program, administration officials said Sunday in previewing President Clinton’s re form package. But even before he announces details tomorrow, lawmakers from both parties said the plan was too ambitious, and they urged limiting the new drug cov erage to the work ing poor. The elderly and disabled in the Medicare pro gram who want the prescription coverage will have to pay for it, cunton said Donna Sha- lala, secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. The poor would get help buying medi cine. “This isn’t about just adding some new, lush benefit,” Shalala said on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” not ing that half the people in rural ar eas do not have drug coverage. “This is critical to health care. ” Gene Sperling, chair of the Na tional Economic Council, said in CNN’s “Late Edition” that the ex panded prescription coverage would “cost very little” because of pro posed savings through streamlining and strengthened competition. The president, Sperling said, “is going to show a bit of political guts in coming forward with such a de tailed plan.” But on Capitol Hill, there was skepticism Clinton could save Medicare from bankruptcy and in troduce a significant new benefit program. Sen. Phil Gramm, chair of the Senate Banking Committee, said two-thirds of Medicare recipients already have prescription coverage, either through the Medicaid pro gram for the poor or through pri vate Medigap policies. That leaves about 15 million beneficiaries with no coverage. “I don’t understand why we would want to drive those private programs out and substitute a gov ernment program for it,” Gramm, R- Texas, said on CBS. It is “the working poor, the poor est of the poor not on Medicaid, who don’t have it, and we ought to work that out some way,” Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Republican leaders generally have supported the idea of provid ing government-subsidized drug benefits only for those near the poverty level. The administration argues many Medigap policies are a major finan cial burden for the elderly, averaging about $90 a month and including a $250 deductible. Clinton’s plan would require smaller premiums and might pay about half the cost of prescriptions, up to perhaps $3,000 to $5,000 a year. Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., whose state’s senior population strongly supports cheaper drug prices, said on CBS that this could be accom plished by making Medicare more efficient and by cutting fraud and waste, which he said still accounts for about 10 percent of Medicare spending. Other Democrats were less op timistic. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., said the way to save Medicare from insolvency in the next decade “is not to load it up with another big costly benefit that nobody pays for even though everybody wants it.” Medical experts predict future blood shortage WASHINGTON (AP) — Ameri cans take for granted they will get a blood transfusion when they need one, but soon, that may not be the case: Blood donations are dropping so low that serious, na tionwide shortages could hit as ear ly as next year. The government is so con cerned that Surgeon General David Satcher has a committee hunting ways to get more people to donate blood more often, studying such incentives as giving donors time away from work or small rewards like T-shirts. And some blood banks have started creative programs to lure donors — one in Iowa even gives puppet shows and science demon strations to school students, grooming them to donate as soon as they turn 17. “We operate on a very thin mar gin of safety for the blood supply, and if that trend continues, it would put us in a year-round shortage in a few years,” Dr. Arthur Caplan of the University of Penn sylvania, who heads a federal com mittee on blood issues, said The National Blood Data Re source Center is more pessimistic: Its studies predict next year, Ameri cans will donate just under 11.7 mil lion units of blood — but that hos pitals will need 11.9 million units. Blood donations are decreasing about 1 percent a year. Demand for blood is increasing 1 percent a year. Already, some cities routinely experience temporary blood short ages during holidays like the Fourth of July weekend and the summer, when regular blood donors go on vacation. “When you need surgery, when you need cancer treatment, when a woman gives birth — we all as sume the blood will be there,” Ca plan said. “You can’t make that as sumption anymore. ” Blood banks say younger gen erations have never shown the en thusiasm of post-World War II donors. About 60 percent of Amer icans are estimated to be eligible donors, but only 5 percent donatee. T’ time Cleim toiulai ansitio ent resi Sue I ence ec eing di< isplace raluall all. Le> hr lall, is a •ccipied ' major iH Scl CODY WAGEST Rap artist Ice T performs Saturday in Houston as part of this year’s Vans Warped Tour. The tour, which began in San Antonio, will trave ; the United States this summer. It is the nation’s largest travelling music tour, combining music with extreme sports such as skateboard^ Peace efforts, aftermath costing billio Reconstruction, troop deployment test military budget WASHINGTON (AP) — Waging war with $2 million missiles can run up quite a tab. So can preserving peace. NATO’s 78-day air campaign against Yu goslavia cost the United States as much as $4 billion, according to private and congression al estimates. Annual peacekeeping and reconstruction expenses are expected to run nearly as high — and that assumes the United States will honor President Clinton’s pledge that “not a penny” will go to rebuild Serbia’s roads and bridges while Yugoslavia President Slobodan Milosevic remains in power. The U.S. military contributed to the NATO force more than 725 aircraft, a variety of ar tillery, multiple-launch rocket systems and about 5,500 supporting Army troops. Clinton called up about 5,000 reservists. U.S. aircraft flew 2,300 missions in the 11 weeks of airstrikes. U.S. Navy ships fired about 450 Tomahawk cruise missiles, at a price of about $1 million a missile. U.S. Air Force B-52 bombers launched 90 air-launched cruise missiles, which cost about $2 million apiece. The Pentagon has not put a price on these deployments or on replacing the munitions they consumed. An independent research or ganization has: $2.3 billion to $4 billion, ac cording to the Center for Strategic and Bud getary Assessments. The costs are difficult to estimate because the Pentagon has not given details on how many munitions other than cruise missiles were used. Further, the Pentagon plans to upgrade, rather than replace, some of the cruise missiles and other munitions while also increasing stockpiles, center analyst Elizabeth Heeter said. In late May, President Clinton signed an emergency spending bill that set aside about $5 billion for the airstrikes through Sept. 30, if necessary. With the fighting over and warplanes head ed home, the administration hopes to use as much of the remaining money as possible — about $2 billion by some estimates — to pay for peacekeeping in Kosovo, a province of Yu goslavia’s dominant republic Serbia. Tending to the peace in Kosovo is expect ed to run $2 billion to $3.5 billion annually, not including reconstruction costs, the center says. The international force of 50,000 peace keepers includes 7,000 U.S. troops to help re settle and protect ethnic Albanian refugees. White House Chief of Staff John Podesta said U.S. peacekeepers will be needed indefi nitely. U.S. peacekeepers in a second Balkans hot spot, Bosnia, have cost more than $9 billion. About 6,700 U.S. troops remain in Bosnia, down from a peak of more than 22,000. They are helping to implement the 1995 U.S.-bro kered Dayton peace agreement that ended three years of fighting by the country’s Serbs, Muslims and Croats. For Kosovo, the administration and con gressional leaders insist the bulk of Western reconstruction aid must come from Europe. Without waiting for the administration to request a U.S. share, the Senate Appropria tions Committee voted to provide $535 mil lion for postwar Balkan reconstruction. Koso vo would receive $150 million, but the rest of Serbia would get nothing. Lawmakers want the United States to pro vide about 20 percent of total costs, said Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., chair of the Appro priations subcommittee on foreign operations and author of the reconstruction plan. The Senate could take up the measure this week. The European Commission, administrative arm of the 15-nation EuropeamUnion, has es timated the cost of rebuilding Kosovo at $7 bil lion for the first three years. It plans to spend up to $722 million on reconstruction during each of the next three years. The cost of war According to private and congressional estimates, NATO’s 78-day air campaic against Yugoslavia costtlie United States as muchasJ billion. Here is a look at the: of U.S. contingency opera! since 1991. Bosnia 1 $9.43 billion Iraq 1 $7.08 Kosovo $4.00 Somalia $1.52 Haiti $1.04 Other $2.03 Studer 'tonId b ?xas A& Jntrol ergcant ersity Pc ■rwurin^ ‘Includes funding for operations in only two parts of the former Yugoslavia. ported- ** Does not include funding for Deserve sprim f|d Cri Source: Center for Strategic and 1 p| Fh irinatzir\/ A ccaccmanto