The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, February 20, 1990 - Page 3 Kohl defines NATO role for united Germany BONN, West Germany (AP) - Chancel. for Helmut Kohl made peace between his de- fense and foreign ministers yesterday on the NATO role in a united Germany, while Germans exiled from areas now in Poland de- manded their homelands back. Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher and the defense minister, Gerhard Stoltenberg, issued a statement at Kohl's re- quest saying neither soldiers from the al- liance nor West German troops should be stationed in what now is East Germany. * Stoltenberg suggested on Friday' that NATO defenses be applied to a "whole Ger- =many." Genscher said the defense minister was "causing unnecessary irritation where a subtle touch was needed." In East Berlin yesterday, most partici- 'pants in weekly talks between the govern- ment and opposition spoke against NATO membership for a united Germany and said it should be demilitarized. As a precondition for reunification, they said, East and West Germany should issue a joint statement guaranteeing Poland's bor- ders and giving security assurances to other European countries. About 50,000 East Germans who favor a rapid union participated in the weekly rally yesterday at Leipzig, a center of the pro- democracy movement. Hans Modrow, East Germany's Commu- nist premier, told opposition leaders he would not go "on his knees" for interim aid from West Germany. At meetings with Kohl and other West German officials last week in East Berlin, Modrow asked for 15 billion marks ($9 bil- lion) in "solidarity aid" to tide his govern- ment over until the nation's free elections on March 18. Bonn refused on grounds that East Ger- many would not disclose its financial condi- tion or accept an offer to make the West German mark the currency of both countries. West Germany did provide the equivalent of about $3.5 billion in aid for projects over which East Germany will have little control. Negotiations on economic and currency union begin today in East Berlin, although Modrow's government has made clear such a step cannot be approved before the elections. Dieter Vogel, government spokesperson in Bonn, told reporters Kohl summoned Stoltenberg and Genscher to the chancellery yesterday. Their statement repeated assur- ances Kohl made during talks in Moscow with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, who favors a united Germany must be neu- tral. Genscher and Stoltenberg, who represent different parties in the governing coalition, said no NATO units or facilities would be extended into what is now East Germany. They said that included West German troops under NATO command and those not directly assigned the alliance, such as territo- rial defense units. Last month, Genscher suggested what now is West German territory remain partpf NATO and the area east of the Elbe River, now East Germany, be militarily neutral. Stoltenberg's signature on the joint statement with Genscher effectively reversed the position the defense minister took Fri- day, that NATO troops defend all of united Germany. "The security policy of the area now comprising East Germany in all its aspects is to be determined with the freely elected government of East Germany as well as with the four powers responsible for Germany' since World War II, it said. Ann Arbor Rep. 'discusses bills with students Japanese support their ruling party Despite scandals, Liberal Democrats maintain control x by Elisabeth Weinstein State House Representative Mar- garet O'Connor, (R-Ann Arbor), spoke last night to about forty stu- dents at a meeting of the College Republicans to get feed back from students about pertinent issues fac- ing the University community. Rather than give a lecture, O'Connor explained the contents of several bills, and asked the students to vote whether they approved of each one. She then stated her posi- tion on the bills. The bills she discussed included a "no corporal punishment in public schools" bill. This bill defined ver- bal threats and physical abuse as corporal punishment. O'Connor told the audience she voted against the bill because "as of now each school district determines permissible pun- ishments, and no district presently allows physical abuse. Therefore there is no need for such a law." Another bill discussed was the controversial abortion bill recently passed by the Michigan Senate. The bill requires pregnant women under the age of 18 to receive permission from at least one parent before hav- ing an abortion. Under the bill, if a teenager fears talking to her parents, she may con- sult a probate judge who will decide if she is mature enough to make such a decision on her own. O'Connor supported the bill and explained, "abortion is a major oper- ation and parental permission is re- quired for other operations such as getting an appendix out and even getting pierced ears." O'Connor voted against a bill , I H SM0LLtfua ly Margert 0'Conner (R-Ann Arbor) spoke last night about competition between private businesses and universities. that would allow individual school were in favor of it. Another reason districts to take drivers licences away O'Connor voted against it was be- from teenagers who quit school be- cause it does not attack the reasons fore the age of 18. students drop out of school. The bill would permit exceptions O'Connor has proposed a new to be made for students who must bill that would prohibit universities support a family or care for a sick from competing with private busi- family member. O'Connor said this nesses by selling products for sub- bill would not apply to all students, stantially lower prices than their just those whose school districts competitors. TOKYO (AP) - Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu said yesterday the vot- ers gave his party a vote of confi- dence in its time of greatest crisis by keeping the Liberal Democrats in control of Parliament. Some Japanese who voted Sun- day. said they were angry with the Liberal Democrats because of politi- cal scandal and an unpopular sales tax but still were not ready to entrust the government to the opposition Socialists. Business leaders called the result a vote for the economic policies that have brought unprecedented prosper- ity to Japan. Liberal Democrats implicated in the Recruit influence-buying scandal were re-elected, including former prime ministers Yasuhiro Nakasone and Noboru Takeshita. Nakasone ran as an independent. Kaifu said they were "absolved" by the voters but added: "We must proceed with political reforms" in the party that has governed Japan since its founding in 1955. "We started when the party was said to be in the greatest crisis since it was formed," he told reporters: "The result of the election is a vote of confidence of the people under the constitution, and our government has passed it." Socialist Party leader Takako Doi also claimed a victory, on grounds that "our purpose was to reduce the Liberal Democrats' strength as much as possible." Her party campaigned on opposi= tion to the three percent sales tax in- troduced last year and reminded vot- ers of the scandal, in which the Re- cruit Co. information and publishing conglomerate made large contribu- tions to politicians and sold them stock at insider prices. Ms. Doi said Nakasone, Takeshita and others touched by the scandal won re-election to Parlia- ment because of their powerful polit- ical machines. The Liberal Democrats got 275 seats in Parliament's powerful lower house, a 512-seat body that chooses the prime minister and sets the bud- get. Fourteen more candidates who ran as independents are expected to join them. Before the election, the party had 295 seats. Azerbaijanis storm out of Kremlin session MOSCOW (AP)- The entire Azerbaijani delegation to the national legislature stormed out of a session yesterday after the Soviet defense minister refused to accept blame for deaths in a military crackdown on the uprising in the 'Southern republic, sources said. The dramatic walkout by the approximately 15-member delegation occurred in a closed-door ;Kremlin session of the Supreme Soviet called to ,discuss the Azerbaijani-Armenian dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh and ethnic clashes resulting from it. Although reporters were barred from the seven-hour session and it was not televised as most sessions are, two participants - Vitautas Statulyavicus of Lithuania and Arkady Murashev of Moscow - gave details in telephone interviews. Deputies decided to close the session, chaired by President Mikhail Gorbachev, to reporters because of the sensitive nature of the topic, debate on which has sparked clashes in the past. Murashev said the Azerbaijanis walked out after Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov "insulted the Azerbaijani delegation." According to the deputy, Yazov said that when the Azerbaijani delegates discussed victims of the nationalist uprising, they blamed the army. Yazov contended Azerbaijani extremists were to blame. Soviet troops stormed into Baku, the Azerbaijani capital, on Jan. 20, a week after Azerbaijanis attacked ethnic Armenian residents. Official reports say 139 were killed in the city since the troops moved in, including 106 civilians, 28 troops and five policeman. Before they walked out, Azerbaijani delegates demanded that troops be withdrawn and reaffirmed their republic's control over Nagorno-Karabakh. I THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Cosmonauts return Meetings LaGROC - The Lesbian and Gay Males' Rights Organizing Com- mittee meets at 7:30 p.m. in Union 3000; 7 p.m. to set agenda Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry - weekly meeting at 6:30 p.m. in Hillel Women's Club Lacrosse - practice 4-6 p.m. at the Sports Coliseum (5th. and Hill) UM Cycling --- team meeting and rollers riding 6 p.m. in the Sports Coliseum Women's Rugby --- meeting and practice 8 p.m. in the Sports Coloseum Arab-American Anti- discrimination Committee --- meeting at 7 p.m. in the Union (check board for room) Asian American Women's Journal --- meeting at 5 p.m. in South Quad's Afro-American Lounge Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Abortion and Reproductive Rights (A2CDAR2) --- new members meeting at 5:15 p.m., general body meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the Union Women's Issues Commission of MSA --- meeting at 6:30 p.m. in 3909 Union Students Concerned about Animal Rights (SCAR) --- meeting at' 7 p.m., animal rights philosophy discussion at 8 p.m. in 124 E. Quad UM Collegiate Entrepeneurs -- - mass meeting at 7 p.m. in 0215 Business School Indian and Pakistani American Students' Council --- general body meeting at 7 p.m. in the p.m. in the Guild House (802 Monroe, at Oakland) Anthropology Discussion --- Loring Brace speaks about his research at 7 p.m. in 2450 Mason Hall "The Innovation of Ashkenazic Orthodoxy" --- Shlomo Deshen speaks at 5 p.m. in 3058 LS&A Leonard Fein --- author of Where are We? The Inner Life of American Jews will speak at 7:30 p.m. in Hillel's Irwin Green Auditorium Furthermore ECB Peer Writing Tutors -- available for help from 7-11 p.m. at the Angell and 611 Church St. computing centers Safewalk - the night-time safety walking service runs form 8 p.m.- 1:30 a.m. in Rm. 102 UGLi or call 936-1000 Northwalk - the north-campus night-time walking service runs from 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. in Bursley 2333, or call 763-WALK SPARK Revolutionary History Series --- discussion on "Revolution Sweeps China 1925- 27" 7-8 p.m. in B122 MLB Career- Planning and Placement --- preparing for the second interview 4:10-5 p.m. CP&P Conference Room; making a major choice 6:10-7:30 p.m. in the Union Pendleton Room Appalachian Service Trip --- 3rd organizational meeting for those interested in spring break trip at 7 p.m. in St. Mary's Student Chapel (331 Thompson St.) UM Faculty and Staff Blood from space MOSCOW (AP) - Two cosmo- nauts ended a 22-week mission yes- terday that included the first Ameri- can experiment aboard the space sta- tion Mir, floating out of the clear blue sky onto the glistening snow of the Kazakhstan steppe. State run television broadcast a recording of the descent module of a Soyuz TM-8 capsule. Mission commander Alexander Viktorenko and flight engineer Alexander Serebrov touched down near Arkalyk in Kazakhstan republic, 1,080 miles southeast of Moscow, the Tass news agency said. The TV report showed the astro- nauts smiling as they sat covered with blankets in the minus 26-degree Fahrenheit temperatures at the re- mote landing site. They sipped hot drinks as well as champagne on a plane flight later yesterday to Star City, the cosmonaut training center near Moscow. Viktorenko and Serebrov blasted off Sept. 5 on a mission to Mir that featured dozens of scientific experi- ments and the successful testing of a "space motorcycle," a one-person vehicle designed for repairing satel- lites, servicing the Buran space shut- tle and rescuing astronauts in dis- station Mir tress. They tested the motorcycle during two of five spacewalks. A replacement crew, Anatoly Solovyov and Alexander Balandin, flew to the space platform Feb. 11 and will remain aboard for about six months to continue the experiments. Among the 200 pounds of scien- tific cargo Viktorenko and Serebrov brought back were protein crystals exposed to weightlessness in an American experiment created by Pay- load Systems Inc. The company was the first authorized by the U.S. Commerce Dept. to fly experiments aboard the Soviet space station. The crystals, brought to space Dec. 20, will be shipped to the United States and analyzed at the Brookhaven National Laboratory next month, according to Payload of- ficials. Other research completed by the returning cosmonauts included exper- iments in geophysics, astrophysics, medical biology and biotechnology, Tass said. "During their 166-day stay in weightlessness, the crew underwent regular medical checkups, providing new data about man's working abilities and functional state during different stages of the flight," Tass said. KENNETH SMOLLERIDaily" Spreading the word Chair of the Michigan Student Assembly 's communications committee Melissa Burke, LSA junior, speaks with students in the fishbowl as part of the MSA 'Rap with your Rep' day. Burke encouraged all University students to contact a representative with their concerns. Ethnic Albanians demonstrate in Yugoslavia .1 PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (AP) - Tens of thousands of ethnic Albanians demonstrated in Yugoslavia's restive Kosovo province yesterday in renewed unrest that has killed at least 27 peo- ple since Jan. 24. At the same time, rival Serbs called for action against ethnic Albanian "separatists and terror- ists" at a rally in Kosovo Polje, a Pristina sub- urb, Belgrade television reported. It did not say vac, about 25 miles south of the provincial capi- tal of Pristina. "Volleys of gunfire" were heard overnight in Podujevo, a town 20 miles north of Pristina, Tanjug reported early yesterday. Albanians were firing into the air to celebrate the release of prominent dissident Adem Dem? qi, who has spent nearly 29 years in prison for separatist ac- tivity, it said. thousands more were on their way, said local rea porter Sefki Ukai. A human rights group in the Croatian capital of Zagreb said Demaqi was the longest-serving political prisoner on Europe. Yugoslav prisons hold 600 other political prisoners, almost all of them ethnic Albanians, news reports said. Elsewhere yesterday, about 20,000 ethnic Al- banians marched through Decani, about 45 miles