The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 22, 1992 - Page 3 U.S. will support *israel in peace talks WASHINGTON (AP) - Mideast peace talks resumed yester- day with the Bush administration supporting Israel on a key issue and raising the possibility of a post-elec- tion round of shuttle diplomacy by White House Chief of Staff James Baker. Taking a more vigorous approach toward the negotiations, the State Department told the Palestinians they should defer their demand for an Israeli commitment to withdraw from the West Bank and Gaza. Palestinians hope to build a state a on that land, which the Arabs lost to Israel in the Six-Day War of 1967. The Palestinians have demanded an Israeli commitment to U.N. Security Council resolutions calling for territorial withdrawal in ex- change for peace. Israel has refused. The dispute slowed the pace of ne- gotiations in the last round, which ended Sept. 24. Trying to get the negotiations * moving, the administration told the Palestinians that Security Council resolution 242 did not apply to ne- gotiations over Palestinian auton- omy, a U.S. official told The Associated Press. Instead, the administration told the Palestinians, the matter should be discussed in the final stage of nego- tiations, after Palestinians elect an administrative body and run 'their day-to-day affairs for an interim period. "The Palestinians finally under- stood that, and we've been stressing that we have a unique opportunity with the new government in Israel and the Palestinians and Israelis should define and agree on spheres of authority in the territories," said the official, who spoke on the condi- tion of anonymity. However, Hanan Ashrawi, a spokesperson for the Palestinians, .called the land-for-peace resolutions, adopted in 1967 and 1973, "a basic step, a basic foundation." Israel has proposed holding a May election among the 1.7 million .Palestinians within its borders. Senior U.S. officials also raised with the delegations the possibility of post-election shuttle diplomacy by Baker, instrumental as secretary of state in arranging the peace talks, or :by other top officials. Fighting stalls U.N. relief efforts in Yugoslavia SARAJEVO, Bosnia- Herzegovina (AP) - Fighting yes- terday between Croats and Muslims, nominal allies in Bosnia's civil war, halted relief flights to the besieged capital, U.N. officials said. Bozo Rajic, a senior Croat leader, said at least 22 Croats were killed and as many wounded in the clashes northwest of Sarajevo. No estimates of Muslim casualties were immedi- ately available. A British and a Canadian plane delivered supplies to the capital in the morning. But the fighting, in ter- ritory below the air corridor leading to the airport, prompted the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees to cancel the 12 remaining shipments, said Michael Keats, an agency spokesperson in the Croatian capital, Zagreb. Surrounded by Serb rebels for six months, Sarajevo could suffer tens of thousands of deaths from starva- tion and exposure this winter unless hostilities cease enough for supplies to arrive by plane and truck, aid offi- cials say. A French U.N. soldier was shot through the shoulder and through the head yesterday while escorting a re- lief convoy through the city's Nedzarici district along a front line. He was evacuated to Croatia, the French military information office said. It was not clear what started the fighting that began Tuesday night in the mixed Muslim-Croat towns o f Travnik, Novi Travnik and Vitez, about 35 miles north of Sarajevo. Bosnia's Muslim president, Alija Izetbegovic, blamed radical Croat factions for starting the fighting. "Some radical forces on the Croatian side are trying to provoke a conflict there, some radicals who are Some radical forces on the Croatian side are trying to provoke a conflict there, some radicals who are trying to make a state within a state.' - Alija Izetbegovic Bosnian president trying to make a state within a state," he said in Geneva, where ongoing U.N. and European Community peace talks are being held. Bosnian and Croatian radio re- ports quoted Muslim forces as say- ing Croatian Defense Council troops started the fighting. The defense council is the military arm of the ethnic Croatian administration that controls about 30 percent of Bosnia{ Word of the clashes between Muslims and Croats came after an eight-person U.N. relief crew in Vitez said it was trapped by the fighting and called for help. Waiting in line bytes Mary Beth Bird, an LSA senior, takes a number for a computer at the Angel Hall Computing Center. Employees said the wait for a computer has decreased since the delivery of computers from the Kickoff Sale Tuesday. NWF: Government must publi[sh new pollution rules SOUTHFIELD, Mich. (AP) - An arm of the National Wildlife Federation has gone to court to force the federal government to publish proposed new pollution rules for the Great Lakes. Mark Van Putten, director of the Great Lakes Natural Resource Center in Ann Arbor, yesterday ac- cused the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Office of Management and Budget of missing a June 30, 1991, deadline set by Congress to publish the proposed rules. The initiative was launched in 1989, when the EPA decided Great Lakes states' efforts to lure indus- tries from neighboring states needed regulation. The government agency opted to draw up a set of rules governing in- dustrial pollution in Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. The suit, filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., seeks publication of the draft rules. Van Putten said the wildlife federa- tion is concerned that industries have been lobbying behind the scenes to weaken the anti-pollution proposals. Van Putten produced copies of letters supplied to him by EPA sources . "The National Wildlife Federation has filed a lawsuit to force this procedure back into the public eye," he said. "Every day of toxic pollution means more harm. to the people of the region and the wildlife of the region." Jim Hanlon, deputy director of the EPA office of science and tech- nology, said he believes the June 1991 deadline set by Congress was "optimistic." His 50-member staff has spent thousands of hours putting together the draft rules, he said. It is now in final review, which is scheduled to end Nov. 10. He expects it will be published in early December. "It's doubtful their filing (the lawsuit) is going to affect anything we do between now and Nov. 10," he said. After it is published, about 150 days will be set aside for public comment, he said, adding that the package is extensive. The preamble alone is about 750 pages long, he said. Hanlon expects about 10,000 pages of public comments. That feedback must then be analyzed be- fore a final draft of the rules can be 'issued, he said. "When you do something in the fish-bowl atmosphere in public meetings ... almost by definition it is a much more complex and lengthy process," he said. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) said the Great Lakes states approved a draft of the rules more than a year ago. "This delay is disappointing and demoralizing - particularly since these guidelines are only a proposal for purposes of public comment." Levin said in a written statement. "It is understandable that the Great Lakes community has lost patience and is filing a lawsuit to force fed- eral action. "The administration has not lived up to its responsibilities under the law." GM official denies plans to ou DETROIT (AP) - For the sec- ond time in two weeks, General Motors Corp. was fighting off ru- mors yesterday that outside directors at the giant automaker want to oust Chair Robert Stempel. A Washington Post report that some directors are pressing Stempel to quit is based on rumors and specu- lation, GM Vice President Bruce MacDonald said in a statement yesterday. The outside directors are con- cerned about the financial decline of GM, according to yesterday's Washington Post. Outside directors are those board members who are not GM employees. The Post story quoted unidenti- fied board and management sources as saying the directors have agreed that Stempel must go, but they have not settled on a successor. "There is no substance to those rumors at all," MacDonald said. st Stempel "The frustration ... is that when you have those rumors and there's not place to go and have somebody comment on them, it just does ir- reparable harm to the morale and en- thusiasm of this organization." MacDonald said he had talked with Stempel about the rumors. "His exact words to me were that the story is just not truthful," said MacDonald, who spoke to Stempel by telephone in Cleveland, where the GM chair was addressing a group of minority auto dealers. Stempel was scheduled to speak last night at Convergence '92, the International Congress and Exposition on Transportation Electronics, in Dearborn. GM is expected to report a loss of $845 million for the third quarter. The world's largest corporation has not reported an overall profit since Stempel became chair in August 1990. Correction -In the Stanford Invitational Monday, men's golf team member Anthony Dietz shot a round of 71. This was incorrectly reported in Tuesday's Daily. , - Student groups Q AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power, meeting, EastEngineer- ing Building, Baker-Mandela Center, 7:30 p.m. Q Circle K, club meeting, Michi- ganUnion, Kuenzel Room, 7:30 p.m. I Haiti Solidarity Group, meet- ing, First United Methodist Church, 120 S. State St., Pine Room, 7:30 p.m. Q Hillel Foundation, Sephardim meeting, Hillel, 1429 Hill St., 8 p.m. Q Institute of Electrical and Elec- tronics Engineers, technical luncheon, Electrical Engineer- ing and Computer Science Building, room 1311, 12:30- 1:30 p.m. Q Intervarsity Christian Fellow- ship, meeting,, Natural Re- sources Building, room 1040, 7 p.m. Q Islamic Circle, meeting, Michi- gan League, Henderson Room, 6-7 p.m. Q Korean Student Association, meeting, Michigan Union, Welker Room, 7 p.m. Q Newman Catholic Student As- sociation, Prayer Network Re- flection Evening, Saint Mary StudentChapel, 331 Thompson St., 7 p.m. 9 Pro-Choice fction, meeting, MLB, room B137, 7:30 p.m. Q Undergraduate Math Club, in- formation session for under- graduates interested in math grad work, Angell Hall, room 4008, Anderson Room, 6:30 p.m. Q U-M Sailing Club, meeting, West Engineering Building, room 311, 7:45 p.m. Q U-M Shotokan Karate Club, practice, CCRB, small gym, 8:30-10 p.m. Events Q "Black Comedy," Dexter Com- munity Players, Wylie Middle School, Dexter, performing through October 24,8 p.m.,con- tact Darla Miller 936-8056. Q "Capturing the Spirit: Por- traits of Contemporary Mexi- can Artists," Smithsonian exhibit, Ann Arbor Public Li- brary, 343 S. Fifth Ave., lower level Multi-Purpose Room, 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Q "Cracking the Clam," Brown Bag Lecture Series, Ongoing re- search into Prehistoric diet and subsistence strategies on Kodiak Island, Alaska, Natural Science Museum, roomn2009, 12-1 p.m. Q Diwali Show, Indian American Student Association, Power Center, tickets $7 and $13.50, contact Malini Patel 668-0686, or Ami Patel 764-8879. Q "Focus on Michigan," photog- raphy contest, City of Ann Ar- bor Parks and Recreation Department, accepting entries until December 1, contact Irene Bushaw 994-2780. Q "HowToBe Happy," Orthodox Christian Fellowship, Michigan Union, Crowfoot Room, 7:30- 8:30 p.m. (-1 G~o n l ." nr icfnvur Q John Scofield, performing, The Ark, 6371/2S. Main St., tickets $12.50 at Michigan Union Ticket Office, 8 p.m. Q "Laughing All the Way to Eter- nity: The Other Face of Ag- ing," Town Hall Celebrity Lecture Series, Mendelssohn Theater, tickets $10,10:30 a.m. Q Oktoberfest for Earlybirds, WLLZ's J.J. and the Morning Crew celebrate, Franklin Street Brewing Company, 1560 Franklin St., Rivertown, 6-10 a.m. Q Oscar Hijuelos, reading from his work, Rachkam Building, Amphitheatre, 5 p.m. Q "Polish Prose in the Time of Political Transformation," Polish Studies Program, MLB, 3rd floor Conference Room, 4 p.m. Q Russian Tea and Conversation Practice, Slavic Department, MLB, 3rd floor Conference Room, 4-5 p.m. Q "The Birthday Party," U-M Department of Theater and Drama, performing through Oc- tober 25, Trueblood Theater, tickets 764-0450. Q UAC Homecoming, diag enter- tainment, 12-1 p.m. Student services Q Psychology Undergraduate Peer Advising, Department of Psychology, West Quad, room K210, i0 a.m. - 4 p.m. Q Safewalk 5w.:*y Walking Ser- vice, UGLi, lobby, 936-1000, 8 i