Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 9, 1987 Pravdc MOSCOW (AP) - in an unprecedented public rebuke of a KGB officer, secret police chief Viktor Chebrikov yesterday announced the firing of one of his field commanders for arranging the false arrest of a journalist. , The announcement, shocking for the average Soviet reader in its criticism of the powerful Committee for State Security, was carried on the front page of the IN -"I report Communist Party daily Pravda. It said that in response to earlier Pravda articles, a man identified only as A. Dichenko was fired as head of the KGB in the Ukrainian region of Voroshilovgrad and that KGB chief, Stepan Mukha, was ordered to take disciplinary action against other security officers. THE KGB, one of the three centers of Soviet power along with the party and the military, has always been considered virtually immune to public accountability. Except for changes in its top leadership, KGB personnel shifts and disciplinary action are conducted in secret. There is no known precedent for a KGB field officer being denounced in the official press for misuse of power or illegal activity. Security chiefs have been executed, including Genrykh Yagoda, Lavrenti Beria and Nikolai Yezhov. But they were shot in secret or accused in show trials of shocks readers counter-revolution or spying. The Pravda article also marked an extremely unususal admission that KGB officers violate the law to punish individuals who fight officialdom. Pravda said the reporter, Viktor Berkhin, had been writing critical articles in the newspaper Sovietsky Shakhtyor (Soviet Miner). THE PRAVDA report appeared connected to the publicity campaign being conducted by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, making an example of the Ukrainian KGB officier to convey the impression that no one is exempt from discipline and that the political leadership is in control of the security organs. There has been debate among Western analysts about Gorbachev's relationship with the KGB, especially since the arrest last year of American newsman Nicholas Daniloff touched off a superpower crisis. Gorbachev's policies of "glasnost" (publicity on selected issues) and "perestroika" (reconstruction) have hit ministers and even members of the Politburo. But they hadn't touched the KGB. It wasn't clear if the article signaled an adoption by Chebrikov of Gorbachev's personnel policies, or if the KGB chairman came under pressure to take personal responsibility for cleaning up the Dichenko case. The article also comes at a time when Gorbachev's leadership is rumored to be trying to remove Ukrainian party chief Vladimir Shcherbitzky from the Politburo. But perhaps most striking about the announcement was the open acknowledgement of something most people here have always understood but which was not discusssed publicly - that the KGB can arrest almost any citizen and has used that power with impunity. Read ac4 Ube Dai4j CMa*6i2ie INTERESTED IN AN r ACTUARIAL CAREER ARE INVITED TO ATTEND THE CNA INSURANCE COMPANIES' ON-CAMPUS RECEPTION. MONDAY, JANUARY 12th 4:30 til 6:00 PM MICHIGAN UNION CNA For All the Commitments You Makesb LASC protests National Guard (Continued from Page 1, in training exercise Guard for his permanent 'exercises' Honduras. "It is th in Honduras is just another way of training as in Cam illegally carrying out his war Michigan), only without the consent of Congress or terrain," he said. M the public." the Guard and the THE leaflet also referred to a prohibited from furt] New York Times article reporting by Department that Michigan National Guard directives. troops would be going to Honduras HE said the tra in the next few months. LASC involve "humanita members at the protest said Guard building roads." T troops are being used to aid the artillery exercises, h Contras in Nicaragua. "These are The Michigan N our neighbors who are being sent according to Mathi down to point guns at our sister mission." It is unde city," said Hunter Van of Governor Blanch Valkenburgh.-. is federalized by th The Times article was incorrect, but it uses federal because the only Michigan troops receives federal fund going to Honduras are Army The National Gu Reserve and not National Guard. Ann Arbor is use Guard spokesmen said the Guard's Guardsmen. Accordi activities in Honduras involved "the National Guar neither Nicaragua or El Salvador. weekend soldiers, "That's even stupid to think about. based there. Hoffm We just do not get into that kind of from the Ann Arb involvement in any of the areas we gone to Central Am go into," said Brig. General Baker and Weisbr Mathieu, assistant adjutant general after being process for Army in Lansing. Capt. Harold Rad Mathieu said the Guard engages Arbor Police Dep s when it is in e same kind of p Grayling (in on different athieu said both eReserves are her involvement of Defense ining exercises rian stuff like There are also e said. national Guard, eu, has a "dual er the command hard - unless it he President -- equipment and s. uard Armory in -d for training ing to Hoffman, d are part-time, so none are an said no one or Armory has erica. 'ot were released ed, according to Ly of the Ann t. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS AIDS cases soar in Michigan DETROIT - The number of reported cases of AIDS nearly tripled last year in Michigan, and state health officials predict the deadly illness will continue its rapid spread. Last year, the state Department of Public Health received 151 reports. of people stricken with acquired immune deficiency syndrome, compared with 59 in 1985. "For every case reported, an additional 50 to 100 persons are infected: with the AIDS virus but have not developed symptons," said Randy Pope, chief of the department's Special Office on AIDS Prevention. "Twenty to 30 percent of those people will develop full-blown AIDS: at some time," Pope said Wednesday. The department said it expects 230 to 250 AIDS reports in Michigan: in 1987 and 2,300 to 3,600 over the next five years. Since 1981, 257 AIDS cases and 148 deaths have been reported in Michigan. Senate panel may question foreign officials on Iran offair WASHINGTON - The head of the Senate committee investigating the Iran-Contra affair said his panel may have to question foreign: officials, while independent counsel Lawrence Walsh was reported moving to have a grand jury get into the case. Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) said his select committee may send investigators to Israel, Switzerland, Brunei, and possibly Iran, as part of its quest to get a complete picture of the Reagan administration's arms sales to Iran and financial dealings involving the Nicaraguan rebels. Inouye said yesterday that any such travel would be closely coordinated with the State Department so that normal diplomatic channels would not be circumvented. "Our committee will not deal directly with the state of Israel, for example. We would have to go through the State Department," he said. "And if we are dealing with knowledgeable officials of Iran, we would have to deal with the State Department because that's government-to- government." MSU student faces charges EAST LANSING - An 18-year-old Michigan State University, freshman was freed yesterday on $10,000 bail after being charged with shooting a fellow student during a November snowball fight, authorities said. Brian Webb of Detroit posted $1,000, 10 percent of his bail amount, and was released from Ingham County Jail, where he was held overnight according to the university's Department of Public Safety. Webb was arraigned Wednesday in 54-B District Court on charges of assault with intent to do great bodily harm and felony firearm. Visiting Judge Frederick Lewis read the charges and set the bail, and a preliminary hearing was set for Jan. 14, according to a court spokeswoman. Webb was accused of shooting fellow Hubbard Hall resident Shannon Radgens during a Nov. 20 snowball fight in the courtyard outside the dormitory. Surrogate mom seeks custody HACKENSACK, N.J. - A surrogate mother testified yesterday she realized while giving birth that she could not give up the baby and that handing her daughter over to the couple who hired her made her feel like "somebody was cutting my arm off." As she fought back tears and her soft voice broke, Mary Beth Whitehead said that throughout her pregnancy that she understood she would have to gave her child to William and Elizabeth Stern. But, she said, her feelings changed radically in the delivery room. "It overwhelmed me," she testified. "It's just ... I had no control." After the birth, the 29-year-old housewife said she and her husband, Richard, decided to keep the baby but didn't know how to tell the Sterns. Under a $10,000 contract, Mrs. Whitehead had agreed to be artificially inseminated with Stern's sperm and bear the childless couple a baby. After deciding not to give the couple the child, Mrs. Whitehead fled to Florida with the infant and was returned to New Jersey by authorities. New gene discovery may help doctors predict breast cancer WASHINGTON - Excess numbers of a certain gene in tumor tissue may help doctors predict survival time and chances of a relapse in women with breast cancer, researchers say in a finding that also may point to a new treatment strategy. The new signal flag for breast cancer prognosis is a cancer gene, oncogene, which appears in more than normal numbers in tumor cells from many women who do not respond well to treatment and whose cancers reappear. In a paper to be published today in the journal Science, researchers say the oncogene appears to be a better predictor of breast cancer outcome than almost every other technique presently used. If doctors can tell which women are more likely to have a worse outcome after surgerv and initial theraov. then they can prescribe more aggressive treatments in hopes of warding off future disease. 0heIchi'gan atl Val XVI1-No 71 'UCOLBUBBLES AN) SURPLUS SE iER 2202 STRAND, GALVESTON, TX 77550 Fo:ENGLAND 100% WOOL COMMANDO SWEATOEVR 39.954 NEW. Air Force issue. 100% WOOL NFANT RYM EN'S 4 OVE RCOA T 49.95 Rear belt and vent. Long length. Upper half lined. A really good value. Sizes S-M-L. From: GREAT BRITAIN 100% WOOL CUFFED TROUSERS 27.50 NEW. Air Force officers issue. Lightweight wool flannel. Gray. Adj. waist tabs. 31"-38" waists. I3 :zg= =ffz==iFr Nl-*..V 1.1 From: NIE? STATE 100% WOOL WOMEN'S OVERCOAT 45.00 NEW. Smart gabardine with button-out lining. Green. Epaulets. Sizes 8-18 ___ -_ _ _ __- . :.a . . e AG WE WORK AS LATE AS YOU DO kinkors Whenever you need clear, quality copies, come to Kinko's. We're open early, open late, and open weekends. When you're working late, it's good to know you're not working alone. - m - m The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Sports Editor............................BARB McQUADE ERC ATSNAssociate Sports Editors............DAVE ARETHA Editor in Chief.M..........................KERIC MATTSON Managing Editor.................RACHEL GOTTLIEB MARK BOROWSKY City Editor............................CHRISTY RIEDEL RICK KAPLAN News Editor...........................JERRY MARKON ADAM MARTIN Features Editor .................AMY MINDELL PHIL MUSSEL NEWS STAFF: Francie Allen, Elizabeth Atkins..Eve SPORTS STAFF: JimDowney, Liam Fahrty, Allen Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura A. Bischoff, Steve Gelderloos, Chris Gordillo, Shelly Haselhuhn, Al Blonder, Rebecca Blumenstein, Brian Bonet, Mac Hedblad, Julie Holman, John Husband, Daren Jasey, Carrel, Dov Cohen, Tim Daly, John Dunning, Roo Rob Levine, Jill Marchiano, Christian Martin, Eric Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Katy Gold, Lisa Maxson, Geg McDonald, Scott Miller, Greg Moizon, Green, Stephen Gegory, Jim Hershiser, Mary Chris Jerry Muth, Adam Ochlis, Jeff Rush. Adam Schefter, Jaklevic, Steve Knopper, Philip I. Levy, Michiel Adam Schrager, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Lustig, Kelly McNeil, Andy Mills, Kery Murakami, Volan, Bill Zolla. Eugene Pk, Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp, Susanne Photo Editor .............ANDI SCHREIBER Skubik, Louis Stancato, Naomi Wax. PHOTO STAFF: Leslie BoorstcminJe Kim, Scott Opinion Page Editor...................KAREN KLEIN Lituchy, John Munson, Dean Randazzo, Peter Ross. Associate Opinion Page Editor...........HENRY PARK Business Manager.................MASON FRANKLIN OPINION PAGE STAFF: Rosemary Chnn Tim Sales Manager.....................DIANE BLOOM Huet, Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Mooney. Caleb Finance Manager . REBECCA LAWRENCE Southworth. Classified Manager...........GAYLA BROCKMAN Arts Editor............................NOELLE BROWER Ass't Sales Manager........DEBRA LEDERER Associate Arts Editor...............REBECCA CHUNG Ass't Classified Manager.............GAYLE SHAPIRO, Music.........................BETH FERTIG DISPLAY SALES: Barb Calderon, Irit Elrad, Lisa Film ......... ........KURT SERBUS Gnas, Melissa Hambrick, Alan Heyman, Julie Books ...........SUZANNE MISENCIK Kromholz, Anne Kubek, Wendy Lewis, Jason Liss, ARTS STAFF: Joe Acciaioli, VJ. Beauchamp, Lisa Laura Martin, Scott Metcalf, Renae Morrissey, Carolyn Rerknwitz, Pam Brnugher Rebecca Cox Karin Rands, Jimmy Ringet, Jacqueline Rosenburg Julie U