r kiiganail Vol. Cl, No. 59 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, November 28.1990 CopyrhtV 99 Students form anti-war coalition by Nicole James Daily Staff Reporter WApproximately 120 students at- tended the mass meeting of the Anti- Gulf War Coalition yesterday at 7:30 in Hutchins Hall. The coalition which is a part of the Michigan Student Assembly's Peace and Justice Commission. Peace and Justice Commission chair Paula Church said the coalition was formed when someone who had recently returned to the Middle East was concerned about the lack of ac- tivism on campus. "There is an emergency crisis go- ing on that needs to be dealt with," said Church. The Nov. 18 teach-in on the Persian Gulf prompted Jeanette Bradley and Amy Jarvis, first year Residential College students, to at- tend the meeting, which they became aware of through sign-up sheets at the Teach-In. "I'm really concerned that the U.S. is planning on getting into a war and I think we need to do some- thing to stop that," said Bradley. Jarvis went to the meeting to find out how to start being involved in the anti-war activities. Coalition members informed stu- dents of recent events in the Gulf and provided information on anti-war ac- tivities planned by existing groups, including a protest at the Farmer's Market at 10 a.m. on Dec. 8, the day designated for a national anti-war protest. All those who attended voted on a platform and political position for the coalition. The platform is a mod- ification of the statement of princi- * ples of the National Campaign for Peace in the Middle East, a coalition representing more than 100 groups. The new coalition platform calls See COALITION, Page 2 rSwain holds r . first forum with by Jay Garcia Daily Staff Reporter st When someone asked students who had gathered for a University forum on deputization a simple question, she got a simple answer. The student asked who supported the University's decision to depu- tize campus police. No hands were raised. "It's clear to me people in this room do not agree with deputiza- k tion," University Vice President for Student Services Mary Ann Swain said, but added, "I'm in support of the deputization plan. I want to be very clear about that." Swain announced the forum - designed in response to what many /Daily saw as inadequate communication between students and administrators - in a letter received by the Daily last weekend. To support the deputization plan, Swain cited an increase in udents felony crimes on campus and the need for faster response time for crimes. Swain said there were "four incidents of weapons being pulled on central campus since Septem- ber." Response times to crimes will be faster if there is a deputized force in a station on campus, Swain said. Currently Ann Arbor police, in conjunction with non-deputized University security officers, respond to campus crimes. "I'm much more concerned my- self about the felons on campus with guns," Swain added. "A secu- rity officer is only asked to call a deputized officer if they see a crime being committed." Many of those who attended said they were angered by the lack of student input into the University's decision-making process. "There needs to be some way for See FORUM, Page 2 Mary Ann Swain, interim vice president for student services, gets barraged with questions at last night's forum on campus safety issues. The forum, which attracted approximately 70 students, faculty, and staff, addressed deputization of campus security officers. A second forum with Swain will be held Thursday evening in Stockwell dormitory. Major succeeds Thatcher as prime minister LONDON (AP) - John Major, endorsed by Margaret Thatcher as the politician closest to her heart, was elected by the Conservative Party last night to succeed her as prime minister. Major fell two votes short of winning a majority in voting among the 372 Conservative Party members of Parliament, but his two oppo- nents quickly conceded defeat and the party confirmed Major as the winner. Thatcher, ending eleven and a half years in power, intends to submit her resignation to Queen Elizabeth II this morning, and Major will then be called to lead the government. Major, the chancellor of the, ex- chequer, emerged from his official residence at 11 Downing St. Thurs- day night smiling and holding hands with his wife, Norma. He had first accepted congratulations from Thatcher, who stepped in from the prime minister's official residence next door. Major received 185 votes, two short of a majority. Former Defense Secretary Michael Heseltine received 131 and Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd had 56. Hurd and Heseltine conceded within minutes, and party officials declared Major elected. "It is a very exciting thing to be- come leader of the Conservative Party, and particularly exciting, I think, to follow one of the most re- markable leaders the Conservative Party has ever had," Major said. "Our job now, I think, is quite clear. We are going to unite totally and absolutely, and we're going to win the next general election," said Major, 47, who will be the youngest British prime minister in this cen- tury. Thatcher said she resigned to let someone from the Cabinet stand against Heseltine. Major and Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd both joined the race, but before the vote her aides spread the word that she was backing Major. "I am thrilled and delighted John Major is to succeed me as prime minister of this country," said Thatcher in a statement. The son of a circus performer and at one time a welfare recipient, Ma- jor personifies the values of self-re- liance and hard work that Thatcher has preached to the nation. Heseltine, who precipitated Thatcher's downfall, said Major's election "lays the basis for the unity of our party." Hurd said the party needed to unite, and "John Major is the right leader for this task." Opposition leaders derided Ma- jor's election as "Thatcherism with a different face." The Conservatives' main rivals, the socialist Labor Party, demanded a general election. "John Major is a Thatcherette," said Labor Party leader Neil Kin- nock. "It means that the policies that brought the poll tax, recession, heavy mortgages and rising unem- ployment will go on." During his five-day campaign, Major said he would review the "poll tax," an unpopular local tax brought in by Thatcher, but he gave no other hints of differing with her. Major shares Thatcher's opposi- tion to a single European currency and shares her belief in tight restraint on government spending. Gorbachev, Yeltsin .reach compromise U.S., U.S.S.R. set deadline for Iraq MOSCOW (AP) - Mikhail Gorbachev and political rival Boris Yeltsin clashed yesterday over a pro- posed treaty binding the 15 Soviet republics, and emerged with a com- promise that Yeltsin called "a vic- tory for common sense." Gorbachev's Communist Party allies in the Russian republic's Congress of Peoples' Deputies tried to persuade the body to vote on a new union treaty that Gorbachev is pushing to arrest the disintegration of central authority. "There will be no (Soviet) Union without Russia, nor will Russia be able to exist without the union (treaty)," Gorbachev told reporters during a break. "We've got to pass it in one or two months, or it will mean the breakup of the union." Six republics already have said they will not sign the treaty pact. The Soviet president did not speak during yesterday's session, but smiled broadly from an isolated bal- cony in the Grand Kremlin Palace as his allies engaged in a boisterous floor fight. Yeltsin, who quit the Commu- nist Party last July after being elected president of the Russian Fed- eration, hammered out a compromise under which the Congress would de- bate the union treaty but not vote on it. Congress voted 696-199 to allow an "exchange of opinions" on the is- sue. "It wasn't a victory for anybody. It was a victory for common sense," Yeltsin told a reporter. But Yeltsin's supporters were seething at what they viewed as a double cross by Communist deputies, who agreed on Monday not to include the union treaty on the agenda. They feared that the Russian Congress, having agreed to discuss the treaty, might vote to pass a reso- lution endorsing it, and so prejudice the issue before the voters. Associated Press The United States and the Soviet Union have fixed Jan. 15 as a dead- line for Iraq to get out of Kuwait, or face the possibility of a military strike to drive them out, diplomats said yesterday. Three Americans, waving Iraqi flags and criticizing their govern- ment, arrived in Jordan after being freed by Saddam Hussein. The deadline for an Iraqi with- drawal had been the only sticking point in a draft U.N. Security Coun- cil resolution agreed upon by the five permanent members of the council. The measure is expected to be voted on by the full council on tomorrow. In a fresh sign that the Baghdad government is bracing for war, the Pentagon said Iraq is rapidly increas- ing its troop strength in Kuwait and southern Iraq. It said Iraq has 450,000 troops in the region, an in- crease of 20,000 over last week. Sen. Sam Nunn, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Commit- tee, meanwhile, questioned whether it is reallyin the "vital interest" of the United States to use military force to liberate Kuwait, the oil-rich emirate Iraq seized on Aug. 2. "The question is not whether mil- itary action is justified," Nunn said. "The question is whether military ac- tion is wise at this time and in our national interest." The hearings were called in reac- tion to Bush's decision to send an additional 200,000 troops to the gulf to provide an "offensive military Staff. At the United Nations, the stage was set for a Security Council meet- ing tomorrow to consider the strongest measure yet against Iraq. The resolution calls on Iraq to re- lease all foreign hostages, withdraw its troops and restore Kuwait's gov- ernment by the first of the year. Western diplomats speaking on condition of anonymity said Secre- tary of State James Baker and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevard- nadze had settled on Jan. 15 as the deadline for an Iraqi withdrawal. The diplomats said they had reached the agreement in the past 24 hours. The United States had already se- cured the backing of the other per- manent members of the Security Council for the measure. The per- manent members have the power to veto council resolutions. Altogether, nine votes on the 15- member council are needed to ap- prove the resolution. It is supported by at least six of the non-permanent council members: Canada, Finland, Romania, Ivory Coast, Zaire and Ethiopia. Yemen, the council's onlyArab member is believed likely to abstain or vote against it. Malaysia and Columbia's votes are uncertain. Columbian foreign minister Luis Jaramillo said yester- day that Columbia still has not de- cided how to vote, but would prefer a diplomatic solution. Cuban Ambassador Ricardo Alar- con has said his country could not sunnort the resolution. The Soviet Detecto knows While weighing themselves is something most first-year students dread, Jonathan Abramson dares to step on the scale. Abramson is trying to make weightfor intramural wrestling matches last night, today, and tomorrow. .Bush discusses trade with Mexico's pres. MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) - President Bush said yesterday the U.S. economic slowdown could make it harder to obtain a free trade pact with Mexico, but pledged to "write a new page in North American history" with his veto pen if necessary to stop protectionist bills. Bush wrapped up a two-day state agreement. In a key agreement, the pair re- solved a U.S.-Mexican disagreement over the question of whether Mexico's vast oil industry should be open to U.S. or other foreign in- vestment. Salinas has insisted the state-run and subsidized oil industry be exempt from the free-trade talks. Treasury Secretary Nicholas The two presidents also an- nounced that both governments would work toward opening nine new border points-of-entry to ease congestion at crossing stations and to make it easier for both Americans and Mexicans to travel across each other's borders. Roman Popadiuk, a White House spokesperson, said "both the United right one." Salinas said the free trade pact would help Mexicans find jobs in their own country instead of having to cross the border to find work. Bush held a breakfast meeting with a group of Mexican and American business leaders, then met for the second day with Salinas and