Page 2-The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 29, 1991 Calvin and Hobbes JUMAP,., JSMP, JUMP.,. Bil WanBush defends U.S. military T Witt! ,' OUTWAMANS MFETTION O~THIS GAME . tm SPlr i S STILL UNA©IsIAEt. .,a4 LOT CN, E-~ involvement in Persian Gulf Nuts and Bolts = LDONt4 rNOI,V'J.4LOST FED P VPWIIN P+ -n&. 0Lk",' YOU'RE m JUST il-IN K "THELL.u-WIH W*MEN. .2' * :(~: >+' 'I wIK ..-... a5i R /, N, -1) by Judd Winick IFytbu'RE .JtcrNGZT' Nor FtuNNY. IF Yp gE 1ROUS. ITS NOTF N-(. * *ANNA YANT, WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Bush, in an impassioned de- fense of the Persian Gulf conflict, said Monday it is "a just war" with a noble aim. Acknowledging that innocent people will be killed, he said, "That is war's greatest tragedy." He said the sole purpose is to free Kuwait, not to destroy Iraq as some critics contend. Bush said U.S.-led allies were making "every effort possible" to spare civilian casualties in nonstop bombing attacks. By contrast, he said Iraq's Sad- dam Hussein had ordered "wanton, barbaric bombing of civilian ar- eas" in Israel and Saudi Arabia. "War is never without the loss of innocent life," Bush said. "And that is war's greatest tragedy. But when a war must be fought for the greater good, it is our gravest obli- gation to conduct a war in propor- tion to the threat." He discussed the morality of the war in a speech before a con- vention of religious broadcasters, who loudly applauded predictions that the allies will prevail over Iraq. Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander Bessmertnykh, during a meeting with Bush, took note of the president's pledge not to de- stroy Iraq. Bessmertnykh said that "was always the policy of the pres- ident, so we are satisfied with that, absolutely." Bessmertnykh and Secretary of State James Baker announced that Bush's planned summit witd So- viet President -Mikhail Gorbachev in Moscow was being delayed from Feb. 11-13 to an uncertain date in the first half of the year. Baker said the summit would be inappropriate with the war going on; he also said differences re- mained in nuclear arms talks. Bush spent much of his day working on his State of the Union address, which he will deliver be- fore a joint session of Congress 9 p.m. EST Tuesday. White House press secretary Fitzwater called the speech a sta- tus report on the war, reflecting "the president's thinking on the conflict, what it means for the country, what it means for the economy and our domestic agenda." The administration estimate that the war will cost $60 billion id- the first three months of this year. Fitzwater said U.S. allies will ab- sorb $45 billion of the cost, leav- ing it to American taxpayers to come up with $15 billion. Emphasizing that no new taxes will be proposed by the administra- tion, Fitzwater said the costs were "not so astronomical that they're, forcing any extraordinary meaO sures." The Pentagon said more than 80 Iraqi aircraft have flown to neighboring Iran, removing them- selves from harm's way. Pentagon spokesman Pete Williams said Iran has impounded the planes and promised not to let them leave. "We have to take the Iranians at face value," he said. Bush cited the writings o Greek and Roman philosophers and of Christian theologians. "The war in the gulf is not a Christian war, a Jewish war or a Muslim war," Bush said. "Our cause could not be more noble." "The first principle of a just war is that it supports a just cause," Bush said. Latvian police support Soviets RIGA, U.S.S.R. - Hundreds of pro-Kremlin Latvian police officers jeered the republic's president yes- terday, reflecting the deep division in local law enforcement ranks over the issue of independence. In the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius, about 1,000 of the repub- lic's television workers rallied to demand their jobs back. The workers have been locked out of work because of the Jan. 13 Soviet military takeover of the republic's TV facility that killed 14 people. The 500-800 Latvian police of- ficers jammed an auditorium at the University of Latvia for a four-hour meeting with the Baltic republic's leaders, including their boss, Lat- vian Interior Minister Alois Vaz- nis, as well as well as President Anatolijs Gorbunovs and Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis. The police whistled and hooted when Vaznis said he had tried to depoliticize the police force, which is part of the Interior Min- istry, and they called for his resig- nation. Gorbunovs said a "political bat- tle" was taking place in Latvia be- tween the pro-independence Popu- lar Front, which supports him, and the Communist Party. The recent shootings, he said, show "this bat- tle is not being fought not only with political means, but also with violence." He called for all political groups in Latvia to renounce vio- lence and sit down at a negotiating table. Among grievances raised by po- lice were understaffing, low pay, lack of housing and a recent law requiring officers to learn the Lat- vian language. They also voiced anger over an order by Vaznis prohibiting police from engaging in Communist Party activity during working hours. Vaznis suggested that much of the dissatisfaction stemmed from his decision to forbid police from moonlighting as guards. The policemen cheered when a leader of the pro-Moscow faction, police Col. Nikolai Goncharenko, called for the immediate replace- ment of Vaznis. Godmanis defended Vaznis as a "professional." He invited anyone seeking the post of interior minis- ter to apply in writing, but he did not appear serious about replacing Vaznis. m AFF. ACTION Continued from page 1 large, he feels he is fulfilling a so- cial responsibility. "If affirmative action programs were removed, it would set us back- wards," Shaw said. "We have a re- sponsibility to undo the ills of the past." Like Shaw, Vice Provost for Mi- nority Affairs Charles Moody agreed that minorities must be paid back for past discrimination. "Institutions have to act affirma- tively to make sure past discrimina- tion is not perpetuated," he said. Moody, unlike Shaw, spoke about affirmative action with the passion of an African-American who himself has been the victim of discrimination. Moody emotionally described how he accepted a job in a laboratory handling feces because he was ex- cluded from a higher position he said he deserved. Had there been affirma- tive action, Moody said, he would not have had to suffer this humiliation. "People who are hysterical about affirmative action don't understand U.S .-SOVIET Continued from page 1 Bush-Gorbachev meeting "was a mutual decision so there is no dis- appointment," Bessmertnykh em- phasized. Standing together in a White House driveway, Bessmertnykh first in Russian and then Baker in English, read their joint statement. The statement said: "The gulf war makes it inappropriate for President Bush to be away from Washington. In addition, work on the START treaty will require some additional time. Both presi- dents look forward to setting an exact summit date as soon as it becomes feasible to do so." Bush and senior administration officials have been hinting for weeks that he would forgo the Feb. 11-13 trip to fegister displeasure with the military crackdown on the independence movement in Latvia and Lithuania. Asked whether that issue was involved in the decision. Baker .said "the statement speaks for it- self." However, he said "we have made our substantial concerns known" to the Soviets over the Baltics issue. There was no elaboration on why it would be "inappropriate" for Bush to be away from Wash- ington during the Persian gulf war. On the arms control front, Baker said some technical issues were still standing in the way of completing the treaty to cut U.S. and Soviet long-range nuclear mis- siles, bombers and submarines by about 30 percent. He cited ways of monitoring U.S. and Soviet missile plants to guard against cheating. Other unresolved problems in- clude how much data from missile flight tests will be exchanged and Soviet demands to inspect U.S. bombers. Earlier, White House spokesperson Marlin Fitzwater of- fered reasons both for going and for staying home. They included an apparent reversal on how to deal with the Baltics question. Origi- nally cited by officials as a strong incentive for scrubbing Bush's trip, Fitzwater suggested the issue might best be handled in a summit. "It would be good for the president to talk to Gorbachev about the Baltic situation," he said. Bessmertnykh said Soviet troops recently sent to the Baltic region had been withdrawn, with only the initial force remaining. PRO -WAR Continued from page 1 Hilter's continued aggression after he invaded Czechoslovakia. Jong Han, a first-year student at the University, said action'is the only way to stop Sad- dam Hussein. "I would love to go home (watch television) and see it all over with, but I am being real- istic," she added. Nikki Neustadt, a first-year stu- dent in the School of Natural Re- sources, said Saddam is an irra- tional man. She added that a dead- line for action -was in the best in- terests of the United States. Person-to-person combat in a few years would be worse than person-to-person combat today, she said, because waiting would only give Saddam the chance to pro- duce more chemical weapons. Yet other students believe oil is the history of it," he explained. "They think things were as they are now. It's hard for them to see the need for something because they haven't seen the conditions which created those needs." Despite what Moody sees as nar- rowmindedness on the part of stu- dents who oppose affirmative action, he still has great hopes for its success. "I want people to be able to un- derstand that everybody brings some- thing to the table," he said. "This University is great because of diver- sity, not in spite of it." only a secondary factor. Green said Kuwait is strategically important and that possession of the country will characterize the national order. Chaos will result if very power- ful leaders in isolated regions dom- inate the economy, Green added. As many people in favor of U.S. intervention, Neustadt wants to make it known that people have a right to protest and to be anti-war, but they should support the troops. Late Saturday, U.S. Air Force F-111 bombers unleashed "smart bombs" on key onshore pipeline junctions in Kuwait in hopes of stemming the oil flow out to the terminal. "It appears that we have stopped the flow of oil ," Stevens said yesterday. "But we continue to seek positive confirmation of that fact." The Baghdad government claimed U.S. air strikes on tankers@ and oil facilities had spilled oil and touched off fires. The U.S. command acknowledges that a nearby clash at sea ignited a fire at the Sea Island terminal, but it rejects the charge that its forces caused the major spill. The Sea Island fire was "getting smaller and smaller" Monday, a sign that the flow from shore may have been cut off, said a Saudi military spokesperson. Yet other students believe oil is GULF Continued from page 1 Stevens said war planners nonetheless would keep a close eye on the aircraft in Iran, since they could pose a threat to Navy ships in the gulf and other Desert Storm units. The Iraqis reported that cap- tured pilots have been injured in air attacks staged by their Desert Storm comrades on "populated and civilian targets in Iraq." The terse Baghdad radio report, which gave no further details, was an ominous follow-up to Iraq's ear- lier threat to turn POWs into "human shields." The Iraqis, who say they hold more than 20 American and other prisoners, announced Jan. 21 they were sending them out to potential targets to deter air attack. The Baghdad government says more than 320 civilians have been killed in Desert Storm air raids. Refugees fleeing Iraq said war- planes of the anti-Iraq coalition had bombed civilian convoys on the desert highway west from Baghdad to Jordan. The U.S. command said its pin- point air strike on Kuwaiti oil junc- tions may have turned off the source of the vast spill that is dev- astating the Persian Gulf. Out in the gulf's blackened wa- ters, the mammoth crude-oil slick that began pouring from Iraqi-held Kuwait early last week now totals some 460 million gallons, Saudi officials reported. The U.S. command said the spill began when the Iraqis opened valves and pumped crude directly into the sea from Kuwait's main offshore loading terminal, Sea Island. cc Jonathan Uy, medical school rep- will attempt to regain party control resentative, claimed the party was over the assembly's executive po- Continued from page 1 not holding a meeting, but was sitions. Action party member Jen- Campus (SCC)." playing a poker game. nifer Van Valey defeated Williams Green, Cosnowski, and The candidate selected by CC in last winter term's elections. The Michigan Daily Find put what it has' in store for you! The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates via U.S. mail for fall and winter $39 for two terms, $22 for one term. Campus delivery $28.00 for two terms. Prorated rates: Starting March 1, 1991, $11 for balance of term to 4/24/91. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the College Press Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. PHONE NUMBERS: News (313) 764-0552, Opinion 747-2814, Arts 763-0379, Sports 747-3336, Circulation 764-0558, Classified advertising 764-0557, Display advertising 764-0554, Billing 764-0550 a.) Comprehensive science, reasoning, reading and writing review for the New MCAT b.) Test-taking strategies to fit the new format c.) Live classroom prep with the experts d.) Personal attention e.) Practice tests which review hundreds of questions and explanations on self-paced audio tapes " f.) Individual review 7 days a week g.) New home study materials h.) 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