The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 22, 1993 - 7 - S The BEST PRICES In To! The BEST PRICES In Ton The BEST PRICES in Town! Yeltsin resists hard-liners by " disbanding Russian parliament MOSCOW (AP) - President Boris Yeltsin moved to seize control of the Russian state in a coup against his enemies yesterday, ousting the hard-line congress and announcing December elections for a new parlia- ment. The opposition called Yeltsin's action a "coup d'etat" and threatened to impeach him. Lawmakers said they would name Vice PresidentAlexander Rutskoi acting president. Yeltsin warned that any attempt to stand in his way would be "punished by law." In a national TV address, Yeltsin claimed he was amending the constitution by decree, but his action' effectively suspended the charter. In Washington, the Clinton admin- istration held out support to Yeltsin and President Clinton said he would try to call the Russian president. Yeltsin's main opponents, Rutskoi and parliament speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, were inside the Russian White House. Bymidnight, several hundred anti- Yeltsin protesters gathered outside the building, many waving, red Soviet hammer and sickle flags and erecting makeshift barricades as police stood nearby. If Yeltsin succeeds in dissolving the parliament and conducting Dec. 11-12 elections, the vote could give him a Congress more in tune with his reformist policies. Yeltsin's action to break his longstanding stalemate with lawmak- ers will need the strong backing of the military and security services. Thirty-five military trucks loaded with soldiers and policemen were parked near Russia's Central Bank late Taesday. Khasbulatov urged the police and military to ignore orders from the 'The only way to overcome the paralysis of state power is to fundamentally renovate it on the basis of the rule of the people and constitutionality.' - Russian President Boris Yeltsin president and appealed for a nation- wide general strike. "Do not fulfill any illegal decrees coming from the president," Khasbulatov said. "These decrees are considered invalid.". Russia's top jurist, Constitutional Court Chair Valery Zorkin, joined Khasbulatov at the White House and offered his support. Khasbulatov said he was organizing the defense of the building. Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin told reporters theCabi- net supports Yeltsin. He also said there were no unusual troop movements and that there would be no attempt to storm the White House. "All troops remain in their garri- sons," Chernomyrdin said. "Of course, they are ready for any- thing, but God save us from doing that." The constitution does not specifi- cally give the president authority to dissolve parliament or call elections. "Being the guarantorof security of the state, I must offer a way out of the stalemate, and to break this disas- trous, vicious circle," the president said in a rambling, 20-minute address on national television. The Interfax news agency said Yeltsin was spending the night at his country dacha just outside Moscow. During his address, Yeltsin was scornful of his opponents in parlia- ment, whom he accused of "trying to push Russia into an abyss." Yeltsin has said the first task of a new parliament will be to replace Russia's Soviet-era constitution. . "The only way to overcome the paralysis of state power is to funda- mentally renovate it on the basis of the rule of the people and constitutional- ity," Yeltsin said. "The current Constitution doesn't allow that - neither does it allow for the passage of a new Constitution." Yeltsin said his action was forced by deputies' intransigence. Yeltsin issued adecreeplacing leg- islative agencies and theCentral Bank under his control. He also gave him- self the right to replace Russia's main prosecutor, who has increasingly sided with Yeltsin's opponents. Yeltsin announced that elections to a new parliament, to be called the Federal Assembly, would be Dec. 11- 12 and that new presidential elections would be held later. Parliament's current term expires in 1995; Yeltsin's term expires in 1996. "In accordance with a presidential decree already signed, beginning to- day the legislative, executive and con- trol functions of the Congress and the Supreme Soviet are stopped," Yeltsin said. "There will be no more sessions of the Congress. The authority of the people's deputies is considered void." "It has stopped to be a body repre- senting the rule of the people," he said. "It has been seized by a group of individuals who have turned it into headquarters of a diehard opposition." FREE Pencils (While Supplies Let..) C4 C a RECORDS WE ARE A .CKET srIIS 1140 South University (Abcse Good-Thus Chadhy's) Am Arbr, N M48104 Pit 5.3-5.- Rest Ma-ui.-l"I a-lipM. FrL-SL 9Sat-11iOa >fm1.1ie-p. IIAT e' BLIND MELON Blind Melon y Stop In and check out a world of music on our MUZEl It's a computer that will search out the hardest to fnd music...and our special orders now take only two days in most casesl ..It's In the House! CO. W C12 O le ... O O COO) W C.0) cc CL W m O I MOTHER EARTH IC C ENTER TO WIN! A Mountain Bike or a Book Back Pack PICK UP A FREE BOOK M(ARK! Have You Checked Out Our CD Listening 'Center Yet? Oh, Come On, it's The Best Way To Expose Yourself To New Music! USA GERMANO Ha"ppnes You MMa /MeYan 1ier ream S f~pwM"Ergp' RECORDS 0.0itt in6ro diecala'o U ul S3318d JS38 all tUMo1 ul S3318d 1538 841 iumol Ul S3318d 1538 8415 , VON --w %PNOW"AlIko oww"%iM - am a - - IND - a %PlMMWwMM m Mrwmm am a r For et teclever hea lie. Apple Macintosb Color Classic" 4/80, Built-in 10" Color Monitor and Apple Kyboard II The Macintosh®'Color Classic'It offers a bright, sharp Sony Tinitronf display. It's compact enough to fit on any desk. And right now, this already special financing with the Apple Computer Loan*-to make owning one even easier. Visit your Apple Campus Reseller today. For the, A& I i