The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 15, 1990 - Page 5 Urban affairs is I*topic of 0 seminar by Eric Phillips "Revitalizing America's Inner Ci- ties: Strategies for the 1990s," will be the focus of an Institute of Public Policy conference analyzing methods for the revitalization of America's inner cities beginning this afternoon at Rackham Amphitheatre. Experts on urban affairs from around the nation will participate in the seminar, the keynote address will -be from East St. Louis-Illinois, Mayor Carl Officer. Philadelphia Mayor, Wilson Goode was originally scheduled to 1 deliver the keynote speech, but can- celled his appearance last week due to prior commitments. "Mayor Wilson Goode was ex- remely disappointed that he could not attend, but was able to get Offi- cer to replace him," said Kevin White, media contact for the confer- ence. As mayor of East St. Louis, a city notorious for its urban misery, Officer has been widely blamed for the town's woes. His tenure as mayor began in 1979. The city is now 98 percent black, has two-thirds of its 45,000 residents on public as- sistance, and suffers a multi-million dollar debt. "We wanted someone who had managerial experience in a major city, and who has had to face the * problems like drugs, crime, and edu- cation," White said of the keynote speaker. Officer's supporters point to his attempts to develop the city's river- front as one of the many ways he is directing the city on the road to re- covery. His critics, however, cite his failure to apply for grants and re- fusal to collect garbage as examples of his extreme mismanagement. Officer has enraged many ob- servers with his flamboyant style. He explained the city's garbage prob- lem by saying, "Some people are just dirty," in a Nightline interview. The two-day conference, spon- sored by the Neil Staebler Fund, will end tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. with a panel discussion. Soviet reforms k by Elisabeth We sch 3instein While changes rack the Soviet Union's political system, many professors at the University are continually reading in order to keep their classes up to date. a "It makes my course exciting. I read the New York times everyday before going to class, because what was true yesterday may not be true today," said Professor Ronald Inglehart, who teaches an introductory course in comparative politics. "We are living through a historic milestone." Judith Kullberg, a political science graduate student who teaches a course in Soviet politics and government, said, "It's hard to be a Soviet scholar. They're forced to keep up, and they feel like they're always behind." Despite the work, many University professors said they are excited to be teaching about the Soviet Union during a time of such great change. Professor A.F.K. Organski teaches Political Modernization in the Developing World, but because current events are not central to his AP Photo course he said he has not had to Mandela speaks change his syllabus much. He said From his home in Soweto, South Africa, Nelson Mandela yesterday gave he does, however, use current events his first interview to the. media after being freed Sunday. such as the Soviet reforms to Gorbachev asks for more power olars hop illustrate points. new deve Most professors contacted said have notf Gorbachev's announcement last course. " week, giving freedom to non- and polit communist political parties to know the organize, does not necessarily The S destroy previous political theories. changes Inglehart said the changes, "are not a positively shock. They show deep rooted Many trends." governm "Things have been changing for a excuse time," Organski said. weapons. Sociology professor Barbara of the R Anderson, who teaches a course on partly du Soviet and Eastern European defense. Esocieties, agreed with both Inglehart politician and Organski that most political their star theories are still valid. She said the reforms. keep ping lopments in Eastern Europe forced her to reorganize her You can't understand social ical changes if you do not history." oviet experts said the new in the Soviet Union will affect the United States. of the professors said our lent now has less of an to continue building Kullberg said the success epublican Party has been e to their stance on a strong She said American ns will have to reevaluate nces in light to the Soviet RIDE. THE WAVE ... Use and Read 9bit Atbig= ailVClassifieds MOSCOW (AP) - President Mikhail Gorbachev appealed yester- day for legislation backing for a stronger presidency and said it was vital to his reforms, but wary law- makers refused to be stampeded into setting a timetable. Once again, the 542-member Supreme Soviet proved itself a force to be reckoned with in the new So- viet political game, which under Gorbachev has shifted more from closed-door sessions of the Kremlin leadership to elected government bodies. After a two-month break, the fledgling Soviet legislature recon- vened for the third time in its less than one-year history. Lawmakers approved a 22-item agenda to debate bills designed to put flesh on the skeleton of Gorbachev's economic and social reforms, including legal- ization of private property. However, the Kremlin leader- ship's proposal to call an emergency session of the Supreme Soviet's par- ent body, the Congress of People's Deputies, to replace the office now held by Gorbachev with a stronger Western-style presidency met with raucous debate. "Unless democracy is strength- ened and ensured by corresponding mechanisms, democracy will perish and we'll lose," Gorbachev told his critics. Otherwise, he said, the victors will be forces who want to "tighten the screws even tighter than they were earlier." More power for the presidency would strengthen Gorbachev's gov- ernment powers while further weak- ening the Communist Party appara- tus that he is trying to reform. Gorbachev would have two pow- erful instruments to implement his program of "perestroika"- the party apparatus and the reinforced machin- ery of government. Vice President Anatoly Lukyanov, who flanked Gorbachev beneath a gilded globe emblazoned with the hammer and sickle, recom- mended that lawmakers call the Congress into session Feb. 27 to fortify the presidency and make other constitutional changes- including the planned abandonment of the Com- munist Party's legally guaranteed right to govern. 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