East Germans still seek freedom PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) - Hundreds of East Germans ig- nored spreading illness and pouring rain yesterday as they crowded into the West German Embassy com- pound to press their demands to em- irate. "I leave here only to the West or in a coffin," said one woman. Newcomers scaled the fence of the embassy garden, and refugees told reporters that at noon yesterday, about 1,500 were inside the embassy compound. The East German government Tuesday offered them guaranteed em- igration with impunity within six months if they would return home, but only 177 people accepted the of- fer. The situation was expected to worsen after a soccer match last night in the Czechoslovakian city of Ostrava that drew hundreds of East German fans. Many of them were expected to head to the embassy, about 175 miles from Ostrava, rather than go back across the border. At midnight September 10, jungary opened its border to Austria for the East Germans. Since then, more than 20,000 have crossed over en route to West Germany, where : hey are given automatic citizenship. West German Foreign Minister Hans Dietrich Genscher was sched- uled to meet with his East German colleague, Oskar Fischer, at the OUnited Nations in New York yester- day and the refugee situation was ex- pected to be on the agenda. Genscher told the U.N. General Assembly yesterday that reforms in East Germany would open new prospects and encourage people to stay there. Several hundred beds were made available yesterday to accommodate *the swelling crowd in the Prague embassy. Conditions were deteriorat- ing for the East Germans, housed mainly in Red Cross tents. The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 28, 1989- Page 3 Soviets open up launch center to foreign r PLESETSK SPACE CENTER, USSR (AP) - The Soviets ended decades of secrecy yesterday by open- ing the world's busiest spaceport to foreign journalists and revealing one of the worst disasters of the space age: the 1980 explosion of a Vostok rocket during fueling that killed 50 people. Moscow based correspondents were invited to this military facility set among birch forests and lakes 530 miles north of the Soviet capital to observe back-to-back launches of a Soviet Molniya television satellite and an East Bloc research probe de- signed to reveal secrets of the secrets of the ionosphere. The officially sanctioned trip to the spaceport in northwestern Russia - whose existence was acknowl- edged by the Soviets only five years ago - was further proof of the in- creased candor in Soviet society as well as the space establishment's pursuit of foreign clients and funds. "This is a time of openness and we have to make everything known that was hidden before, like how space has been mastered and what scientific results are being obtained," said Army Lt. General Ivan I. Oleinik, the space center's comman- der. He added, "We need to learn how to count money." To help their space program yield bigger commercial dividends, the Soviets are hunting for foreign part- eporters ners in space. In April, the first commercial payload was launched at Plesetsk for the French firm Matra. Last month, a West German consor- tium's experiment to grow protein crystals in orbit was launched. The growing commercialization and resulting welcome given for- eigners at Plesetsk is something new in the history of the base, founded in 1957 as a top-secret launch site for Soviet military missiles that would be relatively near U.S. targets on the other side of the North Pole. In his annual report on the Soviet space program, Nicolas Johnson of Teledyne Brown Engineering said that by 1987, the number of launches into space from Plesetsk had reached 1,1 59 - more than all total U.S., European, Japanese and Chinese space launches combined. Under the Kremlin's openness policy, stunning revelations have been made about failures in the Soviet space program, including the 1960 explosion of an ICBM that killed the head of Soviet missile forces, Field Marshal Mitrofan Nedelin, and 53 others at the famous Soviet space center Baikonutr, home of the country's manned space pro- gram. Also, on March 18, 1980, a two- stage booster rocket exploded while being fueled on the launch pad. Forty-five people were burned to death. DAVID LUBLINERiDAILY Singin' and strummin' Martin Tury performs his own songs for his friend Dianne on State Street. 'U' teachers, Detroi publish inner-city w by Michael Paul Fischer "Who says kids can't write and learn in the Detroit Public Schools?" asks Toby Curry. To prove wrong such defeatist attitudes toward inner-city education, the Detroit teacher helped develop an alternative "whole language" school in the city's beleaguered Cass Corridor. The results of its newest effort, the Dewey Center Community Writing Project, are to be celebrated today at a publication party for a new anthology of stories, poems and essays. Titled Corridors: Stories from Inner-City Detroit, the book will be presented from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight in the auditorium of the Dewey Center, located at 3550 John C. Lodge near the Jeffries Homes in the Cass Corridor. Through the use of desktop computer systems, the book was written, edited and published by 30 Detroit fifth- through seventh-grade students over a three-week period this summer. Working with seven teachers from Detroit schools and the University of Michigan, students like eighth-grader Julia Pointer interviewed long-time area residents, visited local sites, and wrote about their experiences. "What I liked about this project," Pointer said, "was the way everything made me feel like a real knowing my story will be read in a book that lots of people will read." Teacher Dave Schaafsma, a tkids . " ritings University English instructor and Program Co-Director, has worked previously at high schools in Saginaw and rural Rogers City, Mich., helping students to achieve this sense of empowerment through collaborative engagement. "The writing in Corridors," said Schaafsma, "demonstrates what excellent writing kids can do... when teachers can devote the time to take their work seriously." Based on the success of this summer's program - funded by the Michigan . Council for the Humanites, the DeRoy Testamentary Foundation, and various University agencies - its resources are expected to further reach students by expanding into a second site next year. Car hits woman on, State Street corner A white 1985 Mercury Topaz hit a pedestrian at the corner of State and Washington Streets at approximately 4:00 yesterday afternoon. According to eye-witness reports, Rosemary Bathhurst stepped out from between two cars to cross the street, and was struck by Ann Arbor resident Lynn Everett, the driver of the white Topaz. "I looked up and there she was right in front of the car," Everett said. "I almost swerved into the parked car at the curb, but it hap- pened so fast. I just hope that she's alright." E.M.S. arrived on the scene al- most immediately, and after apply- ing a leg splint, put Bathhurst onto a stretcher and rushed her to the University Medical Center. Aaron Levitt, an eye-witness, said that Bathhurst appeared to be coherent and not seriously injured. correction A quote was wrongly attributed to the Michigan Student Assembly's Minority Affairs Committee Chair Delro Harris. The quote should have been attributed to MSA representative Mike Donovan. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Undergraduate Political Science Association - mass meeting; 7 p.m. at the Pendleton Rm. in the Union Campus Crusade for Christ- meets from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Kel- logg Auditorium Rm. 6005, enter in the Dental School Palestine Solidarity Committee - meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Lounge of the International Center of West Quad Women of the University Faculty - Ninfa Springer (School of Nursing) speaks on "The Philippines: Pearl of the Orient"; dinner ($6) will be served at 5:30; lecture at 7:30; at Glacier Hills on 1200 Earhart Rd. Speakers "What We Found Beneath the Ceremonial Plaza at Colka, Belize" - a brown- bag lecture by Richard Lesure; sponsored by the Museum of Anthropology; noon to 1 p.m. in Rm. 2009 of the Ruthven Museums Bldg. "Are the Samurai Descended from the Ainu?" - a brown- bag lecture with C. Loring Brace professor of Anthropology); noon in the Lane Hall Commons Room "Biology, Economics, & Politics-Conflicting Variables in Management Decisions for the Pollock Fisheries, America's and the world's Largest Fishery" - with Mr. Pierre Dawson; 3 p.m. in Rm. 1046 of the Dana Bldg. M L iehler and Tnhn Cinl1air__ Students of Objectivism; 8 p.m. at Angell Hall Aud. A Steve Osmund plays the "stick" and electric guitar - 12:15 p.m. in the Pendleton Rm. Career Planning & Placement programs - Intro. to CP&P from 2:10-2:30, CP&P library; International brown-bag lunch with Dr. Kari Lindstrom; sponsored by the Labor Studies Center; noon to 2 p.m. in Rm. 3026 in the School of Public Health Jamaica Kincaid - the author reads from her work; 5 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater; reception will follow "The World's Smallest Light Source: Optical Microscopy with Atomic Resolution, In-situ Gene Sequencing and Molecular Memories" - with Prof. R. Kopelman (Chem. Dept.); 4 p.m. in Rm. 1640 of the Chem. Bldg. Furthermore China Song: a concert of music, and poetry - the program sup- ports the Chinese People's Movement for Democracy; 7:30 p.m. at the First Unitarian Uni- versalistChurch (1917 Washte- naw); $5 donation Proctor & Gamble pre-inter- view - 6-8 p.m. in 1003 EECS Wig & Mol Triffid - music at the Club Heidelberg (215 N. Main) "Steps toward De-escalating the Military Economy" Wrm.-' Tnn. -atn: Al n i- fr- Michigan Alumni work here: The Wall Street Journal The New York Times The Washington Post The Detroit Free Press The Detroit News NBC Sports Because they worked here. 1101e b M*tbtnian1I _ _ __I UM News in The Daily 764-0552 MICHIGANENSIAN. What is it? Hlair Styling with a Flair 7 Barber Stylists for MEN & WOMEN - NO WAITINGP!! DASCOLA STYLISTS Opposite Jacobson 's 668-9329 CLASSIFIED ADS! Call764-0557,J TIME IS RUNNING OUT! ,4 2 T g Q T/ -.- I .... r.. w . . . ...% .. .... .... .... I