The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 5, 1990 - Page 3 High School students recreate UN More than 300 debate resolutions at University conference by Ian Hoffman Daily Staff Writer More than 300 students from four states traveled to Ann Arbor this weekend to try their collective hand at international politics. Seventeen high schools were represented in the second annual University of Michigan Model United Nations (UMMUN) confer- ence. The event, sponsored by the Michigan International Relations Society (MIRS), was staged in the Law School's Hutchins Hall. "It was absolutely excellent," said Amy Herrup a Residential College junior and the Secretary General of UMMUN. "It was a totally different conference than last year's. The staff was prepared and the background ma- terials were sent out on time." Model United Nations is more accurately a role-playing activity than a debate, Herrup said. Students attempt to pass resolutions consis- tent with their countries' goals. Most delegates agreed the conven- tion was a success. Tim Lane, a sophomore at Troy who represented Iraq, said, "I enjoyed the debate and gained experience for future debates." "There were more key players this year," said Vin Narayanan, a ju- nior at Troy High School, who rep- resented Libya. "Last year we almost eliminated Kampuchea and they weren't even there to defend them- selves." "Essentially, we managed to set up a parliamentary government with no foreign influence," said Narayanan. "It took a lot of convinc- ing of Syria and Israel but we got their support." Not all delegates were as lucky as Narayanan. "We were trying to accomplish peace in outer space and nuclear free zones on earth," said Scott Floyd, a first-year student at Milford High School, who represented Libya. "We didn't accomplish everything." In order to fully recreate the set- ting of the United Nations, many students dressed in suits during the four day conference. In addition to debating political issues, the students got a chance to scout the campus, sample college classes and attend a dance Saturday night in the Michigan Union Ball- room. Herrup said she thought the chance to explore Ann Arbor is one of UMMUN's main attractions. "Pinball Pete's rules!" said Chris Heuy, a sophomore at Milford. David Pugh, an advisor for the Bowsher High School delegation from Toledo, Ohio, said he also en- joyed the trip. "I got a chance to visit Kerrytown and had a pleasant time in the League coffee shop." He explained, however, that not all of his students took advantage of every opportunity UMMUN had to offer. Some participants were too tired after days of heavy debating to attend the dance and opted to go to bed early instead, he said. Rival Christians battle in E. Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Rival Christian forces battled with tanks in burning east Beirut and fought with daggers and bayonets for control of a key coastal town yesterday. Police said 210 people have died in the savage six-day showdown. Gen. Michel Aoun's forces claimed they captured the town of Dbaye, five miles north of Beirut, from Christian warlord Samir Geagea, and Aoun's Channel 5 TV station showed paratroopers occupy- ing what it said was Geagea's Le- banese Forces base there. But Geagea's militia said the de- fenders repulsed 10 tank-supported assaults by the paratroopers and forced them to retreat after hand-to- hand battles with bayonets and dag- gers. Aoun sent artillery, tanks and troops to seize the militia's head- quarters in east Beirut, but the mili- tiamen held off the fierce bid to so- lidify Aoun's control of the devas- tated Christian enclave in this ruined city. Two oil tanks and scores of buildings set ablaze in the fighting burned out of control. Pillars of flame shot skyward and thick clouds of black smoke shrouded the area. Police said 210 people have been killed and 935 wounded, mostly civilians, in the deadly fighting that began Tuesday in the Christian en- clave, where an estimated one mil- lion people live. Both sides ignored appeals by clergymen to end "the senseless, horrific massacre of the innocents." An estimated 500,000 people cowered in basements and bomb shelters as shells - as many as one round each second - rained all night long from Aoun's mountaintop positions east of the city. At dawn, Aoun's tanks advanced through the northern Dora industrial district and the northeastern Rum- maneh quarter, police said. The offensive was an apparent make-or-break attempt to crush Geagea's Lebanese Forces and be- come the undisputed leader of the Christian enclave north of Beirut. In the cold, dank underground shelters, food, water and powdered milk supplies ran out, radio stations said. Electricity has been cut off for nearly a week. A friend indeed Lyda Ness, a Residential College sophomore, shovels the walkway of hers friend's house on South Division.- Blanchard to ask lawmakers for raise in 1991 state budget LANSING (AP) - Gov. James Blan- chard plans to ask lawmakers to increase state spending in 1991, but one of his top critics says new spending should wait until after the November election. Shelby Solomon, director of the Office of Management and Budget, said the budget Blanchard will submit on Thursday reflects 'a slightly improved economy for the year beginning Oct. 1. The governor seeks a three to four percent state spending in- crease. "We're looking at 1991 as a slightly }stronger year overall in terms of the state of the economy. We don't see the current slowdown as something that will extend into 1991," he said. The budget will lay out how Blanchard proposes to pay for the programs he sug- gested in his annual address to lawmakers in January, including a program of health care coverage for the children of working poor families who lack private health care coverage and are ineligible for Medicaid. But Blanchard's likely opponent in the November gubernatorial race, Senate Ma- jority Leader John Engler, said he'll push to delay starting the new programs until after Jan. 1, 1991. "That allows the public to have a refer- endum on them," Engler (R-Mount Pleas- ant) said. "I think it's a very fair way of approach- ing the budget. New programs shouldn't be used for political gain in October. Let them defend them in the campaign." Projections of a 3 or 4 percent increase in spending over this year's $7.3 billion budget may be misleading, he said. "They've not given us honest budgets in the past," he said, noting spending was pro- jected to increase just 3 percent in 1989 but actually went up 5.9 percent once supple- mental requests were submitted. While Solomon said Blanchard's spend- ing priorities will be in the areas of educa- tion, anti-crime measures and environmen- tal protection, Engler said Senate Republi- cans will focus on adding more spending for schools. In a budget proposal Senate Republicans released in January, they proposed a 5 per- cent increase in the education budget and forecast a total budget of about $7.5 bil- lion, up about 4.6 percent from the current year. a i Y 1 9 i 2 i 1 5 {' Y I _ .. { e { t a R } L F ... i d } i . t pP i jyj y9 f£ #j f e F CORRECTIONS The city of Ann Arbor allocates funds to cover only administrative expenses of shelters for the homeless. They do not allocate funds towards such necessities as soap and toothpaste. This information was incorrectly reported in last Wednesday's Daily. T'HE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings UM Taekwondo ' Club --- beginners welcome 7-8:30 p.m. 2275 CCRB Student Initiative --- mass meeting to organize group to impact local issues 7 p.m. in the Anderson Room of the Union Accuracy in Academia-- meeting at 7:30 p.m. Pond Room of the Union Anthropology Club --- meeting 5 p.m. at Dominick's UM Shorin-Ryu Karate-do Club ---.beginners welcome 7:30- 8:30 p.m. in the CCRB small gym Ottoman History Workshop -- Sukru Hanioglu speaks on an "Introduction to the Archives of the Ottoman Empire" at 7 p.m. Room 4050 LS&A Bldg. Leukemia Support Group --- adult support group meeting for patients 7-8:30 p.m. 19022 W. Ten Mile Rd. in Southfield Speakers "The Scripturalization of the Cult in the Second Temple Period: the Case of the Purification (hata't) Offering" --- Gary Anderson speaks at 4 "Israel's Culture & Politics as Reflected in its Popular Music" --- Avi Hadari speaks at 7:30 p.m. at Hillel Furthermore Free tutoring - for all 100/200 level math, science and engineer- ing courses; 8-10 p.m. in UGLi Rm. 307 Safewalk - the night-time safety walking service is available from 8pm-1:30am in UGLi Rm. 102 or call 936-1000 Northwalk - the north-campus night-time walking service is available from 8pm-1:30am in Bursley 2333 or call 763-WALK Fresh Start Quit Smoking Program - 5:30-6:30 p.m. at the American Cancer Society (2500 Packard, Suite 108) Campus Chamber Orchestra - music of Haydn, Beethoven, and Mendelssohn performed 8 p.m. at Hill Auditorium Composer Forum --- composition students premiere works at 8 p.m. in the School of Music Recital Hall (1100 Baits) Chicano Art Exhibit --- William East German Communists change name WEST BERLIN (AP) - East Germany's Communist Party changed its name yesterday and promised to hand over $600 million in assets to the government in an apparent attempt to improve its image ahead of coming elections. Also yesterday, West Germany's foreign minister promised to seek immediate financial aid to stabilize East Germany's economy while it adopts democratic reforms that could lead to reunification. Hans-Dietrich Genscher, who was born near Halle in what is now East Germany, also told a political rally in East Berlin that European neighbors have nothing to fear from a united Germany. In pursuit of unification, Bonn appears willing to swear off future claims to ethnic German regions that are now part of Poland, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union. Leaders of East Germany's disgraced Communist Party met and formally changed its name to the Party of Democratic Socialism. It previously had been known as the Socialist Unity Party of Germany. The party also said it will hand over $600 million from its private reserves to government coffers because the "country's economic situation requires such support," the government news agency ADN reported. ADN said the money came from party dues and party-owned businesses such as printing operations. It did not say what the party's total reserves are. The moves were the latest attempt by the Communists to shore up their image of the March18 elections. The first free balloting in the nation's 40-year history was made possible by a pro-democracy revolution last year that ousted hard-line Communists Party chief Erich Honecker on Oct.18. The Communists, who dominate the current interim Bargain hunting Shoppers on a quest for bargains browse through Treasure Mart, an Ann Arbor antique shop. Slovenian party breaks from Yugoslavian national party LJUBLJANA, Yugoslavia (AP) - Slove- nia's liberal Communists broke away yesterday from the national Communist Party and de- clared that they no longer recognize the institu- tion that has ruled Yugoslavia since World War II. The move followed disputes over the pace of democratic reform and a virtual trade war be- tween the relatively affluent republic of Slove- nia and archrival Serbia, the largest and most populous of Yugoslavia's six republics. The break from the national party by the Slovenian party was the first formal party schism since the Communists took power in 1945. In Sunday's emergency meeting, the Slove- nian party also changed its name and called for the release of all political prisoners; an end to all political trials and immediate talks between Yugoslav Communists and leaders of newly formed opposition parties. Slovenia's Communist Party president, Ciril Ribicic, said the new party was not seek- ing secession from Yugoslavia, but the estab- lishment of a Yugoslav confederation that re- stricts central authority. "This is the end of the League of Commu- nists of Yugoslavia, in which Slovenian Communists had the status of an unequal mi- nority," said Ribicic, using the formal name .r t~ Lti.. -nf~ The national party "doesn't exist any more for us," said Petar Bekes, another Slovenian party leader. Slovenian Communists have moved quickly in the past three years to create a plu- ralistic political system in the republic. Their reforms have been criticized harshly in Serbia, where the ruling Communist hard-liners de- mand continued national Communist Party dominance. Slovenian Communists stormed out of a national party congress last month after Ser- bian-led hard-liners rejected reforms. The national party said the congress was in- definitely adjourned, but Slovenian leaders said yesterday they are not returning. "We do not want to be a part of an old- style dogmatic organization such as Yu- goslavia's League of Communists," Bekes told reporters. He said, however, that the Slovenian Communists "will remain open for cooperation with all democratic-orientated forces" in other Yugoslav republics. He said Slovenia from now on will have no representatives in the national Communist leadership, but is open to form a coalition with the federal leadership on the national level. Slovenian Communists have expressed in- creasing frustration at resistance to reform by the national party as Slovenia prepares for