The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 24, 1993 - 7 -Clinton develops new approach to North Korea U President discusses solutions with South Korean leader, nbut keeps details secret; officials say new international *-. ".*.. 77 policy will insist on limited inspection of nuclear arms S....sites WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton said Monday his administration has developed a "new approach" to resolving a dispute with North Korea over its nuclear program. Clinton said he would discuss the new strategy yesterday in a White House meeting with South Korean President Kim Young Sam, whose country has been locked in a tense standoff with the North since the end of the Korean war 40 years ago. "Our administration has been working on anew approach to deal with this issue," Clinton said at a White House news conference. He offered no details. He said he intended to announce the new policy after the Kim meet- ing yesterday. Administration officials speaking on con- ditin of anonymity said Monday the main change in the U.S. approach was to offer to engage North Korea in a broader range of discussions if it, in turn, agreed to permit outside inspections of its nuclear program. North Korea is mainly interested in U.S. diplomatic recognition and winning access to Western trade and investment capital. It in- sists that its nuclear program is strictly for peaceful purposes. The United States also apparently will insist, initially, on only a limited inspection of AP PHOTO North Korea's nuclear facilities by the Inter- national Atomic Energy Agency. It eventu- ally would press for a fuller monitoring sys- tem. The administration also apparently will agree to suspend plans for holding the U.S.- South Korean military excercise known as Team Spirit in 1994 if North Korea accepts the limited nuclear inspections and agrees to hold talks with South Korea. The Team Spirit exercise would be dropped, with the understanding that it could be revived at short notice if North Korea does not live up to other parts of the U.S. deal, officials said. Selig Harrison, an Asia specialist at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said Monday it remains unclear whether the South Korean president will go along with the softened U.S. approach. He said Kim may be willing to forgo a Team Spirit exercise in 1994, but he may "try to put the brakes on" the Clinton administration's drive to offer other incentives to the North. In a speech Monday at American Univer- sity, Kim called on the North to "immediately accept all nuclear inspections" by the Interna- tional Atomic Energy Agency "and also come to the table of dialogue with the South in good faith." Kim made no mention of the possibility of imposing U.N. economic sanctions against North Korea in the event it continues resisting the inspections. President Clinton and South Korean leader Kim Young Sam pause during a White House East Room press conference yesterday. *Business, education leaders criticize LANSING. (AP) - A bipartisan school finance plan levies unfair taxes and hurts Detroit schools' chances of getting specialized services, business and education leaders told lawmakers Tuesday. A minimum $5,000 per pupilgrant partly funded by a raise in business property taxes would reduce Michigan's-economic growth with no guaranteed school improvements, business representatives told the House Taxation Committee. "We are taxing manufacturing *Regulation of banking needs fix, Clinton says WASHINGTON (AP) - The Clinton administration proposed a nmajor overhaul yesterday of banking regulation it said harms the economy. Supervisory duties of four agencies would be folded into a single Federal Banking Commission. : The current system "was designed for another time," Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen told reporters. "It just makes no sense to have four separate agencies, overlapping, often in con- flict, in charge of our financial insti- tutions. "It is a drag on the economy, a headache for our financial services industry and source of friction within our government." The plan would weave into an independent five-member commis- sion the bank regulatory duties of the Federal Reserve Board, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision. The heads of the two Treasury agencies that would be abolished - the 0CC, now responsible for na- tional banks, and the OTS, which regulates the savings and loan indus- try - applauded the move. The proposed change received a decidedly negative response from the Federal Reserve, which has fiercely defended its independence and fought eff attempts to diminish its power over monetary policy or the nation's banking system. heavily. In a global market you can't do it and maintain an economic base," said Gary Wolfram, a consultant to the Michigan Manufacturing Asso- ciation. "It means a loss of jobs." Since October, legislative propos- als for a minimum per pupil grant increased from $4,300 to $5,000, said Richard Studley, vice president of government relations for Michigan Chamber of Commerce. He submit- ted written testimony to the commit- tee. "This alarming trend suggests that tax policy is being driven by the de- sire to throw more money at the prob- lem," Studley wrote. "The Chamber is opposed to any increase in the Single Business Tax that is not linked to meaningful progress, on both education quality and school cost containment." The bipartisan plan released last week would guarantee each school district at least $5,000 per pupil, but keep districts now spending between $5,000 to $6,000 at their current lev- els, plus a 3 percent increase. Dis- tricts spending more than $6,500 would be allowed to levy local prop- school-finance program erty taxes to match their current lev- a 20-mill levy and the SBT, the state's els. main business tax, would go from To fund schools, voters would 2.35 percent to 2.95 percent. choose between two tax plans that Or they could choose to raise the include an income tax increase and a sales tax to 6 percent from 4 percent, partial roll back of last summer's $7 have a 5.3 percent income tax, a prop- billion property tax cut. Residents erty tax on homes of 9 mills and no could lessen the impact of both if they SBT increase. The ballot vote on the vote to increase the sales tax to 6 proposed sales tax increase would be percent from 4 percent. scheduled in February or March. Residents would decide if they House leaders hoped to move bills want the income tax increase to go through committee this week and be- from 4.6 percent to 6 percent and thugh cmme wek andbe- have a 16-mill property tax on their fore the full chamber when members homes. Other properties would have return after Thanksgiving weekend. 21 killed in bus collision SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - Two buses collided head-on in the fog ona highway next to the sea in northern Chile, killing 21, police reported. Police said 70 people were in- jured, some seriously. The crash oc- curred near Los Vi los, 145miles north of Santiago. The injured, including several chil- dren, were taken to area hospitals. Some victims had to be carried in the luggage compartments of other buses because of the lack of ambulances. MSU feminists take stand against sexism EAST LANSING, (AP) -Mem- bers of a women's group at Michigan State University have made their pres- ence felt off campus with protests at a beauty pageant, topless bar and a doctor's office. "I do this because I'd like to see women have a better place to live in society," said Nicole Newton, presi- dent of the Michigan State University Women's Council. The group bills its members as "radical, militant, by-any-means-nec- essary feminists." "We deserve enormous amounts of respect for what we've had to put up with in the past," Newton told the Lansing State Journal for a story yes- terday. The council's latest protest took place Sunday at the Miss East Lan- sing Teen of the Nation and Ms. East Lansing American Woman contest at the Civic Arena in Lansing. About 50 students, mostly women, marched outside the arena chanting "Objects never, women forever." One woman carried a plate of raw pork chops. Three women stormed the stage holding a banner that read "Pageants Hurt All Women" as contestants pa- raded past in one-piece bathing suits to the song "I'm Too Sexy For My- self." Newton, a junior, said she origiK nally intended to protest the pageant: as a contestant but changed her mind.: She said pageant organizers inter- viewed her in her dormitory room in mid-September. Newton said the in- terview focused on the financial obli- gation ofcontestants and scholarships awarded to winners. "There were no tangible require- ments to get into the pageant," New- ton said. "They breezed over a few questions like what issue I would feel most comfortable talking about with the judges.... The little public service platform they have is just crap." Pageant co-host Diana Priebe de- fended the event. She said contestants entered of their own free will. "It's women choosing to do some- thing," said Priebe, last year's Mrs. Michigan-America. "These women are up here using their communica- tion skills. The two winners will be helping charitable organizations, do- ing a lot more beneficial things. "They're not hurting anybody. I don't think the protestors have the first clue as to what goes on. Police made no arrests. In April, however, Lansing police arrested 13 women protesters on disorderly con- duct charges for blocking the en- trances of Omar's Show Bar, which features topless dancers. AP PHOTO Norwegian medical personnel prepare lunch on an open fire at the Yugoslav-Bosnian border town of Mali Zvornik. Serbia blocks U.N.caid to Bosnia SARAJEVO, Bosnia- Herzegovina (AP)-Serb-dominated Yugoslavia blocked all U.N. aid con- voys into eastern Bosnia on Monday, while U.N. officials reported starva- tion in the battle-scarred, southwest- ern city of Mostar. In Sarajevo, a mortar shell ex- ploded near children sledding on snow near a U.N. peacekeeper base. Doc- tors at Kosevo Hospital said five were wounded, two seriously. Lyndall Sachs, a U.N. spokesper- son in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, said Yugoslav officials had begun demand- ing special authorization for aid con- voys tocross into Bosnia. They cited a law passed by Yugoslavia last year requiring such permission for the pas- sage of goods. "They have chosen to implement it today," she said. "This has created a bureaucratic nightmare for us." As a result, U.N. convoys headed for the Bosnian cities of Tuzla, Srebrenica and Sarajevo had to return to Belgrade Monday as U.N. officials haggled with Yugoslav authorities. U.N. attempts to resupply its own operations in Bosnia also foundered. A 46-truck convoy carrying sup- plies for the Nordic peacekeeper bat- talion in Tuzla stayed in Yugoslavia after Bosnian Serb soldiers threat- ened to shoot, said. Bill Aikman, the U.N.'s military spokesperson. William E. 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