Nepali protests *demand freedom KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) - Thousands of rock-throwing demon- strators demanding immediate polit- ical change stormed the grounds of an academy yesterday while opposi- *tion and government leaders dis- cussed reform inside the building. When the prime minister and an opposition leader decided to leave the negotiations at one point, protestors forced them back inside the building and ordered them to continue talking. *Demonstrators then surrounded the Royal Nepal Academy of Arts and Literature, whistling, clapping *Iand chanting for freedom and democracy. Government officials and leaders of the previously outlawed Nepali Cronress Party and the United Left front said they would sleep inside the academy, where talks were held. Police presence at the academy yesterday was light, and a police tieutenant said security forces would toot resort to force. s The crowd stoned and slightly damaged Prime Minister Lokendra Chand's car as he attempted to leave the building. Chand scurried back to (he meeting. .The apparent failure of the talks raised questions about the strength of the fledgling democracy move- ment in this scenic nation of 17 mil- lion people. *Trhe apparent failure of the talks raised !questions about the strength of the fledgling democracy movement in this scenic nation of 17 million people. King Birendra lifted a 29-year- *old ban on opposition parties April , two days after police opened fire on 200,000 people marching on the palace to demand multiparty democ- racy. Witnesses said about 200 peo- ple were killed, but the government said the death toll was 10. Birendra also freed several hun- dred political prisoners and permit- ted several previously banned news- papers to reopen. * But since then, the king has re- fused to meet opposition demands do abolish the National Assembly, or Rashstriya Panchayat, which he dominates, and to establish an in- terim government headed by an op- position leader. Three decades ago, Nepal experimented with multiparty poli- tics for 18 months. The experiment "ended abruptly when Birendra's fa- ther, King Mahendra, dismissed the government and banned political parties, which he accused of corrup- tion and incompetence. Under the system established by his father, Birendra dominates the government. He appoints one-fifth of the National Assembly and has a say in the nomination of candidates for the other elected seats. The con- *stitution gives him control of the ex- ecutive, legislative, and judicial branches of government. The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 16, 1990 - page .3 SSurvey finlvods Mich. drivers want DUT tests' SAMANTHA SANDERS/Daity LANSING (AP) - A majority of Michigan voters believe sobriety check lanes should be used to curb drunken driving, a recent survey said. Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court is mulling over the tactic's legality. The poll, released by Inside Michigan Politics, found 58 percent of those surveyed supported the use of check lanes, while 37 percent op- posed it. Two percent were undecided while 4 percent said "it depends." The fig- ures add up to 101 percent due to rounding. "I was surprised at the overall re- sults, but it indicates to me that the depth of commitment to purging Michigan's roads of drunken drivers is more intensive than I thought," said William Ballenger, a former state lawmaker who now edits the political newsletter. "I really think it shows a decade- long assault on the general populace by a broad cross-section of law en- forcement and other special interest groups, like Mothers Against Drunk Driving, has really done a job in terms of convincing people that the crime of drunken driving is so heinous that the state should be pre- pared to use what once would have been considered draconian measures." The issue first surfaced in Michi- gan in 1986, when Gov. James Blanchard ordered the State Police to set up roadblocks to check all drivers for signs that they'd been drinking. One checkpoint was set up that year, but the practice was stopped when the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Michigan filed a lawsuit on behalf of six lawmakers. That suit challenged the roadblock~s as violating the Fourth Amendment protections agains t unreasonable, search and seizure. In February 1989, The Michigan Supreme Court ruled the checkpoint violated rights to privacy and last month the U.S. Supreme Court be. gan considering the case. The court's, decision is expected by July., Howard Simon, executive director! of the ACLU in Michigan, said tho'" survey, "shows the thirst for effec- tive law enforcement techniques to deal with this terrible problem." However, he said the question, didn't reflect the fact that law en- forcement officers and drunken driv,, ing experts have found other mea- sures, among them more road patrols and beefed up penalties, to be far, more effective. "I don't think enough informa- tion was given in the question. Ev- eryone wants something done, butd people are not being told by the., politicians that sobriety check lanes are absolutely worthless in curbing. drunk driving," he said... "Under those conditions, people would be less likely to answer that in a positive way. We all want something done about drunk driving, and what politicians have sold to the, people are public relations stunts." Marketing Resource Group Inc.-- (MRG) did the survey and MRG President Tom Shields said the re- sults show "this issue has gone from' an inconvenience issue or a rights- issue to a drunken driving issue." Mime show. Sophomore Charisse Edwards is decorated in the Diag for a Christians in Action mime show on Friday. Assisting her are (left) Education junior Lisa Wilhusen and LSA Junior Lori Hile. Tylenol *I: spurs dirl SALINE (AP) - The discovery of children here who were playing with bulk-mailed packages of free samples, including Tylenol, prompted a direct marketing com- pany to change the way it handles such products. "Letters probably will go out Monday that if the product sample is medicinal or ingestible that we re- quire that there be child-resistant packaging for it, said Jeanette Mc- Donald, vice president for communi- cations at Donnelly marketing Co. of Stamford, Conn. Ingestibles are items that are harmful if swallowed. McDonald said she didn't know how many customers would be af- fected by the changes. Also, Donnelly envelopes will soon bear larger print, she said, for neildent in Saline ,ect mailing change such warnings as "Medicinal sample enclosed! Keep this and all drugs out of the reach of children!" Both moves exceed federal Food and Drug Administration require- ments. The mailings at issue in Saline were legal, meeting postal and FDA requirements. The sample packages were bulk- mailed to an apartment complex *whose mailbox openings were too small for the thick envelopes, so the products were left on top of the mailboxes on March 31. Each envelope contained two 500 milligram Tylenol Gelcaps, a sam- ple of Jergens lotion and a variety of coupons. A group of children rang- ing in age from 3 to 8 collected the packages, and one parent told author- ities of seeing youngsters playing with the Tylenol, pretending it was cocaine. Saline police confiscated more Ithan 100 envelopes. As few as four Gelcaps could icause severe liver damage to a 4- year-old child, said officials at Mc- Neil Consumer Products Co., the makers of Tylenol. Saline Police Chief James Dou- glas, who first raised the issue with Donnelly, McNeil and federal offi- cials, said he was pleased with the company's response. M "What we need is a change in postal regulations," he said. "What I'd prefer is a ban on the mailing of unsolicited pharmaceutical products. If not that, then if they can't be put in the (mail) box, then return to sender." China quiet on anniversary of student protests Discord in Prague sets tone for Czechoslovak iau PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) - The euphoria surrounding Vaclav Havel's fairy-tail journey from prison to the presidency is gone and Czechoslovaks are back in the real world, arguing about the economy, politics and the country's name. In January and February, intellec- tuals still exulted over the end of censorship. The playwright president in Prague Castle and his entourage of former dissidents and underground artists introduced a new morality to politics at home and abroad. They were praised from Washington to Moscow. Then domestic worries began to take over. Czechs and Slovaks, whose win- ter revolution was so smooth, split on the question of whether "socialist" should be removed from their republic's formal name. The matter still is not resolved. Government economists, facing a deadline in late April for an agree- ment on drastic reforms, fell out over how quickly to adopt a free market, Political rivals of the movements that led the revolution began cam- paigning for the June 8 elections, the first free vote in four decades. Havel, recovering from a hernia operation, acknowledged in a na- tional radio address April 1 that "the time of elation and happiness, stemming from the fact that .every- one can say what they want, has come to an end." "The time has come when we will really have to do something with that freedom," he declared. Transition from communism to democracy in Czechoslovakia and elsewhere in Eastern Europe has been sudden and makeshift, marked lpol1ics by ethnic problems, sharp decreases in worker output and a political shift to the right. Czechoslovakia is better of than most. Disputes between Czechs and Slovaks have not become violent, as ethnic strife has in Roman ia. The economy, while lagging be- hind countries Czechoslovakia out- stripped 50 years ago, is not bur- dened by heavy debt but hundreds of potential Western investors flocking to Prague still await laws liberaliz- ing capital movement. Unlike Hungary, Czechoslovakia has not even begun establishing such fundamental elements of capi- talism as new banks and a stock market. A senior economist with close ties to the government said reform is hindered by a split between Finance Minister Vaclav Klaus, who wants to go all-out for capitalism, and others, including Havel, who fear the social consequences. BEJING (AP) - Authorities ar- rested a lone protester in Beijing yes- terday, but hundreds of police dis- couraged other shows of dissent on the anniversary of the beginning of last year's student democracy move- ment. Security was only marginally in- creased at the university campuses in northwestern Beijing which were centers of dissent last year. At Beijing Normal University, crowds gathered around recently posted notices announcing the ex- pulsions of movement leaders Wu'er Kaixi and Chai Ling, both of whom have fled to the West. Yesterday marked one year since the death of former Communist Party chief Hu Yaobang, who was popular among students for his rela- tively liberal views. Students took to the streets then to mourn Hu and criticize the com- munist leadership that ousted him from power in 1987 for failing to, stop previous student demonstra- tions. The mar~2es grew into a move- ment demanding democratic reform and an end to corruption that lasted for seven weeks and drew crowds of more than 1 million people. It ended when troops shot their way to stu- dent-occupied Tianamen Square on June 3-4, killing hundreds and per-' haps thousands on the way. Tiananmen Square was open to the public yesterday, unlike on April 1 and 5 when police sealed off the plaza to block protests. Overseas dissidents had urged people to si- lently stroll through the square on those days in honor of those killed in June. The only incident yesterday oc- curred when a man in his 30s began to pin white paper flowers on his sleeve, a traditional sign of mourn-' ing. Streamers from the flowers read "To mourn Hu Yaobang" and} "Heroes who die for democracy and liberty.k THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings UM Taekwondo Club - beginners welcome 7-8:30 p.m. 2275 CCRB UM Shorin-Ryu Karate-do Club -- beginners welcome 7:30- 8:30 p.m. in the CCRB small gym Asian "American Association - general meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trotter House Student Initiative --- meeting to discuss activity on campus at 7 p.m. in the Union Crofoot Room Speakers "Literature- in East Central Europe Today"- a roundtable discussion with George Gomori and Ivan Klima at 3:30 p.m. in the West Conference Room of Rackham "Synthesis and Properties of Zeolites" - Chang Gyoun Kim level science and engineering courses; 7-11 p.m. in..UGLi Rm. 207 and 8-10 p.m. in the Bursley East Lounge and the South Quad Dining Hall. Safewalk - the night-time safety walking service is available from 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. in UGLi Rm. 102 or call 936-1000 Northwalk - the north-campus night-time walking service is available from 8 p.m.- 1:30 a.m. in Bursley 2333 or call 763- WALK ECB Peer Writing Tutors - peer writing tutors available for help on papers 7-11 p.m. in the Angell/Haven and Church St. computing centers Free Tax Help --- tax assistance 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on the 4th Floor of the Union Middle East Perspective --- a chnw nt A-10 n m n n WCTRNI ',uinIV utm' 1 CO B YJU KE the caution horses "The Caution Horses:' Their evocative new album featuring "Sun Comes Up. It's Tuesday Morning:' "Powderfinger" and "'Cause Cheap Is How I Feel." The follow-up to "The Trlinity Session' ~SJLO S -M SIIA on The Silos' l.,t album, "Cuba" dE ON ro, CC lNEh1fl DIRECTORY LONDON INTERNSHIPS DESIGNED BY American Assoclatlon of Overseas Suder SUMMER INTERNSHIPS IN LONDON, EUROPE & ISRAEL FILM - LAW BUSINESS -ARTS COMMUNICATIONS - GOVT TI