rmitIU1XF at . Copy ght 1990 Vol. Cl, No.11 Ann Arbor, Michigan --Thursday, September 20,199 The Michsgan Oasy Poland's Vresident to resign early WARSAW, Poland (AP) - 'resident Wojciech Jaruzelski, the only Communist leader to survive politically after democratic revolu- tions swept the East bloc, told Par- liament yesterday he will resign early to help Poland complete its transition to democracy. Jaruzelski's announcement came " amid increased calls for his resigna- ' tion to make way for a popularly chosen head of state. Solidarity chair Lech Walesa has -x already declared his candidacy for president, and Prime Minister AMY FELDMAN/C Tadeusz Mazowiecki, Walesa's The last of the veggies Christine Pudyk of South Lyons sells the last vegetables of the harvest - all grown on her own farm - at the See POLAND, Page 7 Ann Arbor farmer's market Iraq r( more I by the Associated Press eleases Baghdad yesterday began confis- cating all foreign assets from coun- tries imposing sanctions on Iraq, but it allowed another planeload of hun- dreds of American women and chil- dren to fly to freedom. International support grew for a proposed air embargo against Iraq. So did worries about the economic fallout from the Persian Gulf con- flict. "Regrettably, events in the Mid- dle East have introduced new and substantial risks to the outlook," Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan said in testimony before the congressional Joint Economic Committee. "Just the enormous uncertainty about how and when the tensions in the Persian Gulf will be resolved un- doubtedly is affecting the economy ostages in a negative way," Greenspan said in his first comments on the U.S. economy since Iraq's Aug. 2 inva- sion of Kuwait. Still, the economic news wasn't all bad; oil prices dropped about $1 a barrel after futures traders discovered that the United States has a bigger supply of gasoline than they thought. In other developments yesterday: The chair of the KGB offered to give the CIA intelligence about Iraq, where the Soviet government still has about 5,000 specialists. Defense Secretary Dick Ch- eney asked Congress to let the Pen- tagon accept and spend billions of dollars in allied contributions for military operations in the gulf with- See GULF, Page 2 i ... _ _ .Lack of T.A. funds adds up to crowded rooms by Stefanie Vines Not enough money is being spent on teaching assistants' salaries, and as a result, many courses are overcrowded due to the lack of sections, LSA Budgeting Dean Carolyn Copeland said. n Seven million dollars is spent on Teaching Assistant salaries annually, * Copeland said. However, Copeland admitted that more money should be spent on allocating funds to teaching assistants. "What we do is keep track of all courses with teaching assistants. We make allocations in February based on enrollment figures of the previ- ous year. The problem is that we have a set amount of money to spend and not enough teaching assis- tants to meet the growing undergrad- uate demand for more sections," she said. LSA junior Jae Lee, a member of the Planning Committee on the Un- dergraduate Experience that recently released a study on the changes needed in the college of LSA, said there is no practical solution to the problem. "No matter what people would like to think this is a large Univer- sity and certain things will have to take a back seat to make things work," Lee said. "The bottom line is that there is a funding problem and the administration is not going to spend more money." However, some faculty say the issue is more than money. Professor John Shy, associate chair of the History Department, said, "We are limited in CRISP by what the budget will allow. I teach a class right now with 140 students, and I only have space for 125. What it boils down to is that we need more money." Professor Edward Gramlich, chair of the Undergraduate Economics De- partment, said that part of the prob- lem is that LSA is underfunded. "One problem is classroom space. The most popular times are from 10 to 3 and it is impossible to get a room then. Also the freshman classes are in large units, there is no way around that," he said. The problem, however, is not just limited to underclassmen. LSA senior Meredith Holtz had problems fulfilling her graduation requirements because of overcrowded classes. "I signed up for a Political Science class in World Politics be- cause I needed it to graduate. But when I got to the class the professor refused to give me an override be- cause the room was too small. He said it was too dangerous to have all those students together in one room." Professor Arlene Saxonhouse, chair of the Political Science de- partment, said that Holtz's situation was a special circumstance. How- ever, she agreed that there is a prob- lem with the system. "We try to ac- commodate the seniors who need classes to graduate. However, there is no way for a professor to tell how many students are going to drop or add their class. So you can only sign a certain number of overrides." 'What it boils down to is that we need more money - John Shy History Prof. One solution lies in changing the room scheduling system said Stella Theros, administrative assistant in the Room Scheduling Office. "The problem is asking departments to change to smaller rooms. They shouldn't allow too many students to enroll." Theros added that the top priority is in providing classrooms to classes that do not have one. "Sometimes when sprofessors don't have a room they blame us. What they don't real- ize is that we aren't contacted in time to get them rooms." Gramlich saw several solutions. "What we need is more money, more individualized attention, and more lecturers who teach. We need a two- tier system divided between re- searchers and teachers. The problem won't go away until we do some- thing about it." *U.S. to take tougher action i I against Ir SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - President George Bush warned Saddam Hussein yesterday the United States will take tougher action against Iraq if sanctions and diplomacy fail- to work. He said demands for Iraq's withdrawal from Kuwait were non-negotiable. Bush said the United States, joined by other nations, is "standing firm and unyielding in the distant desert sands" against the Iraqi presi- dent. In a prepared speech winding up a 0 two-day campaign trip, the president called anew for Iraq to withdraw its invading army from Kuwait, restore the country's exiled leaders and re- lease all foreign hostages. "If Iraq does not meet these non- negotiable conditions," Bush said, "then its isolation will not end. And -we are, as I've said before, prepared to take additional steps if sanctions and the quest for a political resolu- *6'tion do not work." He did not specify what additional steps are being contemplated, and his warning did not go beyond a single sentence in his prepared remarks. White House aides said the comment was not intended ae a new signal by aq if sanc reinforced earlier statements. With more than 150,000 U.S. combat troops in the Persian Gulf, Bush has refused to rule out the pos- sibility of military action. More- over, contingency plans for waging war against Iraq have been publicly discussed by Gen. Mike Dugan, whose comments were deemed an in- discretion and led to his firing as Air Force chief of staff. Bush's threat against Iraq echoed a warning from the Helsinki summit between the president and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. They agreed that the superpowers "are prepared to consider" additional, unspecified action against Iraq unless it pulled out of Kuwait. However, Gorbachev appeared far more resis- tant than Bush to possible military action. "The unity of outrage across the globe, the depth of support in the gulf and the ferocity of condemna- tion in the United Nations are un- precedented,'; the president said. He said Saddam has been put on notice by "the extraordinary joint declaration" that Bush signed with Gorbachev. "It is an absolutely unparalleled tions fail. message of solidarity, a clarion call for Iraq to comply, immediately and completely, with the five resolutions which had been so urgently ordered by the U.N. Security Council," Bush said. "And it heralds a new era for our world: the Soviet Union and the United States standing together in vigorous condemnation of an outra- geous aggression." He said the gulf crisis had forged a "new partnership for peace, a united world response to Iraq's ag- gressive ambition." Bush's appearance here, and a stop in Los Angeles, were intended to raise between $1.5 million and $2 million for Sen. Pete Wilson, who is locked in a close race for governor with former San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein. Environmental issues have been a major focus of the campaign, and Bush underscored that theme in his speech. Wilson has ardently supported coastal protection, bucking both the Reagan and Bush White Houses, and championed forestry and river protec- tion as well. He has won the back- See BUSH, Page 2 Soviet peace march Banner and flag'carriers from and Soviet and American anti-nuclear groups participate in a segment of their "Peace March" near Karaganda, in the Kazakhstan region of the USSR. Boyd named coach at Cleveland State r- Senate passes 'polluter by Theodore Cox Daily Basketball Writer Yet another member of the 1989 NCAA championship basketball team is departing Michigan. Wolver- ine assistant coach of 11 years, Mike Boyd, was given the head coaching job at Cleveland State University yesterday- Grant, Kirk Taylor, Eric Riley and others to Michigan. Boyd was also in charge of the Wolverine offense. The timing of the announcement comes in the middle of a recruiting period. Coaches are presently al- lowed to talk with recruits through November. LANSING (AP) - Landmark "polluters pay" legislation to beef up Michigan's environmental protection laws was approved overwhelmingly by the Senate yesterday. The bills, most of which have al- ready passed the House, now need only final approval to be sent to Gov. James Blanchard for his signa- ture. Blanchard had made the measures' passage one of his priorities for this month' brief legsliative enin en i tal legislation in years, the bills are designed to strengthen the state's ability to investigate pollution and its power to order cleanup of con- tamination. "This will go a long way to forc- ing polluters to pay for their cleanup," said Sen. Lana Pollack (D- Ann Arbor), who worked on the is- sue for seven years. However her bill was defeated amid bitter partisan squabbling in tha no. :n .inTrine Th.a Una then s pay' bills Dillingham of Fowlerville and Nick Smith of Addison. Voting against the third bill were also Doug Carl, (R-Mount Clemens) and Norman Shinkle, (R-Lam- bertville.) Smith argued that "to rush it through the Legislature ... is a dan- gerous move." And Welborn de- lared: "Frankly, I do not trust the DNR (Department of Natural Re- sources) in their law enforcement." But hrkre rfenued the hills