The Michigan Daily -Monday; October 15, 190 - Page 3" Lebanese demand Aoun go on trial BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Lebanon and France quarreled yester- day over the fate of Gen. Michel Aoun, whose 11-month mutiny in he Christian heartland was crushed by a Syrian-led military blitz. Aoun remained inside the French Embassy, where he fled during Sat- urday's attack and was granted asylum. Lebanese officials were insisting that the general remain in the coun- try for possible trial on charges in- cluding the alleged theft of $75 mil- ion from the state treasury. Staccato burst of machine gun fire echoed across the pine woods surrounding the shell shattered presi- dential palace in the Christian sub- urb of Baabda. Helmeted Syrian troops searched the the hills for sup- porters of the defeated general. The final casualty toll from the eight-hour crackdown on Aoun's en- clave Saturday stood at 160 dead and 800 wounded, according to the police count. Syrian and Lebanese troops set up checkpoints on roads leading to the French Embassy in Beirut's Christian suburb of Hazmiyeh. Em- bassy guards mined the walls. Syrian soldiers and troops of President Elias Hrawi's army be- ieged the Embassy Saturday night, ours after Aoun and three senior aides took refuge there. The embassy compound also houses Ambassador Rene Ala's residence. ; There were no soldiers in the em- bassy's immediate vicinity late yesterday. t; A Lebanese neighbor of the com- pound, who identified himself only by his first name, Antoine said Aoun arrived at the embassy entrance in an armored personnel carrier early Saturday, 45 minutes after Syrian warplanes and artillery started bomb- ing the presidential palace. "He was met at the entrance by (Ambassador) Ala. As they ran on foot toward Ala's residence, shells started falling on the embassy com- pound. They nearly got killed." An- toine said. W The embassy's swimming pool was hit by shells, as was the main lobby. A carpet of glass shards and debris blanketed the main entrance. France, the traditional protector of Lebanon's Christians, promptly granted Aoun asylum on Saturday. French Foreign Minister Roland Dumas said: "We were talking with Lebanese and Syrian authorities to allow his departure in good condition." City, 'U' start recycling plan for batteries Pressing Flesh ^JU""a MSU alumnus and Michigan Governor, James Blanchard, shakes hands with Michigan fans before the Michigan-MSU football game. Blanchard is in the midst of his second re-election campaign. Kohl's party projected to win German state elections by Garrick Wang Students and Ann Arbor residents can recycle household batteries start- ing today. "The city had identified household batteries as being the largest compo- nent of hazardous waste based on the findings of the Washtenaw County Solid Waste Management Program," said Nancy Stone., coordinator of Solid Waste Educational Services. According to a news release from city officials, Americans discard bil- lions of household batteries each year with their household solid waste. Batteries contain heavy met- als such as mercury and cadmium which are potentially toxic. "The issue the city is addressing is the potential for future breakdown and leaking of these materials into the landfill," Stone said. "We are not aware of any breakdown at this point or in the near future. This is a pro- active/preventative program." The University started recycling batteries in the fall of 1989, said Gary Monroe, manager of Health and Safety Services. This program was started "to help save the environ- ment." Monroe also said that the Univer- sity's goal was to "get a one hundred percent participation in this pro- gram." The recycling program started at the University Hospital and has slowly expanded to include all de- partments on campus. The Univer- sity has collected approximately ten thousand pounds of batteries since the program's inception. To expand the program, the University has also "made arrange- ments to distribute white buckets to each residence hall," said Jennifer Cotner, recycling education assis- tant. The buckets will be located be- hind the residence hall's front desk. "When those buckets are two thirds full, each residence hall is instructed to call Occupational Safety and En- vironmental Health to pick them up," she said. "We will pick them up and seii them to our hazardous waste contrae, tor," Monroe said. The batteries will then be "sent back to the manufai; turers and distributors for recycling;" Students living in residence hallg have expressed favorable responses to recycling batteries. 'The issue the city is addressing is the potential for future - breakdown and leaking of these materials into the landfill' - Nancy Stone Solid Waste Educational Services Coordinator "I'm in favor of it. I think it's i good thing that they are going 14 separate batteries from the rest of th4 trash," Todd Berg, a West Quad resif dent advisor, said. "It's really important to recycl4 anything and everything because yo' are saving it from the landfills anj saving materials," said Jennifdf Austin, another West Quad RA. Students living in residence ha114 will be receiving information about battery recycling and other recyclin6 programs in a letter from the Recy cling Office. The letter also provide phone numbers which residents catt call to obtain additional information. BERLIN (AP) - Voters in what used to be East Germany chose gov- ernments yesterday for the five states their nation has become and again backed the conservative party of Chancellor Helmut Kohl, projec- tions said. The projected results will add even more momentum to Kohl's al- ready dominant position going into national elections on Dec. 8. In the western state of Bavaria, where elections were also held, the radical right-wing Republican Party won seats for the first time in. the state. The prevailing theme in eastern Germany was again the dominance of the Christian Democrats, although their support was lower than in East Germany's first free elections in March. Wolfgang Thierse, a top Social Democrat in eastern Germany, said the Christian Democrats dominated because they promised a quick pros- perity to the downtrodden eastern Germans. The former Communists who ruled East Germany for 40 years also apparently won seats in state legisla- tures, indicating they still have enough support to grab a place in the united German Parliament in December. Kohl's party easily won the most votes in four of five East German states, Thuringia, Saxony, Saxony- Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Lower Pomerania, according to projections by the German television networks, ARD and ZDF. However, the Christian Democrats were losing the state of Brandenburg to the left-leaning So- cial Democrats, the main opposi- tion. In the March national elec- tions, the Christian Democrats won that state. The early projections solidified the Christian Democrats as the dom- inant party in East German territory, thus giving something of a preview of the united German elections on Dec. 2. Those elections will be the first united German elections in 60 years. Kohl, the politician most responsi- ble for uniting the German states on Oct. 3, is widely favored to win. "The Dec. 2 elections have not been won, the results will come on Dec. 2," Kohl said on television. "But we are in a good starting position." N Student 'guinea pigs' upset by psych. requirement by Meryl Finkelstein Introductory psychology students wanting to study animal behavior are finding themselves becoming "the guinea pigs" in their classes, and some students are upset about it. As part of the Introduction to Psychology coursework, students are required to participate in five hours of "human subject experimentation," volunteering their time outside of the classroom in experiments rang- ing anywhere from self-esteem anal- ysis to studies of social prejudices. Alternate library research assign- ments are available, but few stu- dents, if any, opt for the extra book work. Some students say the "mandatory/voluntary" subject pool unfairly forces students to act as "guinea pigs." First-year LSA student Heather Muench participated in a "deception" experiment in which four students were given a test (thinking this in itself was the experiment), and were then arbitrarily given grades - two passing, two failing. The experi- menters then asked the students a series of questions about a Univer- sity student's intelligence versus that of an Ohio State student to see if their supposed high or low scores af- fected their answers. "They were trying to deceive me, but I knew it was a fake," Muench said, dissatisfied with the system. "I can understand (the department re- quires the testing) because they probably wouldn't have enough sub- jects, but it's somewhat unfair to make them mandatory." But psychology Prof. Drew Westen said the time spent is worthwhile for both the students and the experimenters. "The department has worked hard to keep the experiments from being boring," Westen said. "I hear from most students that they get a kick out of (participating):" LSA sophomore Anthony Wein- ert disagreed, "I didn't learn anything from (the experiment)... it just bene- fitted the people doing the experi- ment while taking up our time." Victor Chen, also an LSA sophomore, felt differently about the experiments. "I thought it would be interesting... I think it's the the only time students get the opportunity to look into the experimental side of psychology... it reinforces what you're learning in the classroom." Although ISR Director and psy-A chology Prof. Robert Zajonc at-: tributes the success of the projects t to the "talented, imaginative, and cre- ative" experimenters, he acknowl- edges that without the 1,700-persog subject pool, the tests would not b$ as accurate. "The population 61 (volunteers) would be self-selected The results would be applicable tS only those who wanted to be tested, Zajonc said. Dirt-eating forestry prof. wins Professor of the Year award s0 DAILY} CLASSIFIEDS by Katherine Kim - Not many professors would eat dirt for their students, but that's just one of the qualities that makes Bur- ton Barnes, the Stephen H. Spurr Pofessor of Forestry, Michigan Pro- fessor of the Year. The Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) selected Barnes from among 24 nom- inees representing 15 different state educational institutions. The CASE Professor of the Year program hon- prs professors who "excel as teachers and influence the lives and careers of their students and former students," according to a press release announc- ing the CASE award. Barnes, who teaches courses For- est Ecology and Woody Plants, has been at the University since the fall of 1964. Modest and soft-spoken, Barnes regards enthusiasm and pre- sentation as the keys to teaching. He feels combining research and teach- ing is an important part of the pro- cess. "I concentrate on presentation, on thinking on how to present things as organized as possible in an entertain- ing way. We try to have a lot of fun; we try to make it interesting," says Barnes. Barnes' students say his enthusi- asm for teaching and knowledge of the subject make him an outstanding professor. Natural Resources senior Chris- tine Housel said his "enthusiasm's the main thing. He loves his sub- ject. He's not afraid to go and eat dirt, step around in the mud, and slosh around in the rain and traipse through the woods." Natural Resources senior Nyu- min Lee added, "I've never seen a professor so dedicated to his subject, who is so excited about his area and so excited about sharing it and teach- ing it to his students." "He's such an amazing professor. He really tries to get you motivated. He gets undergraduate students inter- ested in what you are doing so you want to go on and really learn more, while other professors just teach you the material to get it over with," said Michelle Biggerstaff, a Natural Re- sources junior. Barnes grew up in Charleston, Illinois, spending many summers in camps in northern Minnesota and Canada. His love for the outdoors motivated him to major in the area of Forestry as an undergraduate at the University. Later he received his masters in Silviculture and Ph.D. in Forest Botany, also from the Uni- versity. Besides being a professor, Barnes is also a musician, gardener, author, and world traveler. He played in the Michigan marching band and sym- phony under the direction of William Revelli. "(Revelli) affected my life a great deal. He illiciated performance. You really had to play," Barnes said. Barnes has also played in brass groups and sings in a church choir. STUDENTS: "if your hair isn't becoming to you you should be coming to us." - 6 Stylists-No waiting - DASCOLA STYLISTS opposite Jacobson's 668-9329 Correction Last Friday, a headline for a front page article by the Associated Press should have read "Jews Try to Assert Control of Western Wall." gTHE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today PRELAw DAY Monday October 15, 1990 11:00 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Michigan Union " meet with admissions officers from U.S. law schools k -explore the diversity of law school programs and their emphases Speakers Evening Writers Series --- Joseph Curtin and Elizabeth Moray speak at 8 p.m. in the Guild House, 802 Monroe Street. Meetings ENACT -UM --- meeting focuses on environmental education a artin at 7n m SN R(Dnna Internships in the Canadian House of Commons --- information available from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Graduate Student Lounge, room 6602 Haven Hall. Pre-Law Day --- Career Planning and Placement presentation at 11 a.m. in the Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union, 764-7460. Nnr --- _* n n t 1 a im