12,199frhe Battalion EWORLD & NATION 5 'P Tuesday, June 12,1990 found, iwn Ellk dephone lie about midentifid Shamir approved by parliament Israeli prime minister pledges to seek peace woman otg JERUSALEM (AP) — Prime Minister Yitzhak or, Ero::§ij am i r won narrow parliamentary approval press-Nefc; ^I n( j a y f or one 0 f mos t right-wing govern- hog, thatit§£ nts i n Israel’s 42-year history, gaining 62 votes checked lijjn the 120-seat Knesset. 35 feln presenting his 19-member Cabinet, Shamir , itedged to seek peace but promised expanded ng s swmiijByish settlements — a pledge likely to raise ten- e sun ar:i s j ons w jti 1 Washington and the Arabs. ^ u S H P 1 * 8 t ^ ie ^ irst government fully in control of the > ould Ji! p|ht-wing Likud bloc since 1984. It takes over at a time of new crisis in the Mideast, with Iraqi ves “T he government proposed today is a shaky one, built on many legs of an i a y- lts composition, its guidelines x J are not bringing peace. It has no ability to change, no joy of hope. It is ) respomibitp sa d government for its members nation anci a sorrowful government for k'rime Stof Israel.” “o youcai —Shimon Peres, Labor Party leader President Saddam Hussein issuing threats 'against Israel and Palestinians asking for escala- tion of the insurrection in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. 75-TIPS | The vote came after a six-hour debate. Liberal llawmakers charged that Shamir’s Likud bloc fo isign Red bribery to forge the coalition of nine small t your id/ f ar ' r *ght an< J religious parties, and the rival La- ^ ’Si>r Party said the new government cannot bring [ Shamir replied that the criticisms were “piti- n arresu Crime Sto:j o $1,0 so paysosil elonv cmiiBh • ^ ^ (Scientists ful,” and called on Israelis to take up the task of absorbing the thousands of Soviet Jewish immi grants coming to Israel. “This is the mission, and around this mission I will compose today a national unity govern ment,” he said just before the vote was taken. The vote was 62 for the government, 57 against and one abstention. It installed Israel’s 24th government since the state’s founding in 1948 and gave the 74-year-old Shamir the prime minister’s job for the fourth time. The ultra-Orthodox Shas Party threatened to f mll out over a police investigation of alleged raud by one of its leaders, and four parliament members also warned they would abstain or vote no because they did not get ministerial positions. David Levy, a leading Likud figure and the foreign minister, walked out of a meeting with Shamir because he was only one of two deputy premiers and not Shamir’s undisputed successor. Demonstrators gathered outside the Knesset to demand political reform, shouting slogans about concessions made to bring ultra-Orthodox parties into the government. Amnon Rubinstein of the liberal Shinui Party said the bargaining amounted to bribery by of fering jobs to defectors from Labor. “If you’re proposing for one person to come to another party and you give them a ministry ... it is nothing but bribery,” he said. Former Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin of La bor compared the new Cabinet to Begin’s right- wing government elected in 1981 that started the Lebanon war. “This is a narrow government, narrow in its shoulders and horizons', a government that can not answer the great challenges and decrease the great dangers,” he said. Shamir pledged in his address to the Knesset that he would continue to seek dialogue with Pal estinians and a deeper involvement of Egypt in peace efforts. But he said “the Arab hatred towards us has not expired. ... The problem is the rejection of the very existence of Israel.” As he spoke of his government’s obligation to seek peace, Shamir was interrupted by jeering from an Israeli Arab Knesset member, Abdul Wahab Daroushe. He shouted back at Daroushe, “Shut up and let me speak.” Another Arab parliament member, Tewfik Toubi, said it was “a black day” because Shamir’s government relied for support on a two-member faction called Moledat, or “Homeland,” which seeks to expel all Arabs from Israel-held terri tory. Shamir also got into a shouted exchange with Labor Party leader Shimon Peres, who blamed the prime minister for blocking peace moves and said the new government was unstable and dan gerous for Israel. “The government proposed today is a shaky one, built on many legs of clay,” Peres said. “Its composition, its guidelines are not bringing peace. It has no ability to change, no joy of hope. It is a sad government for its members and a sor rowful government for Israel.” The policy guidelines of Shamir’s new govern ment reject talks with the PLO and the founding of a Palestinian state, and he made clear he had no intention of giving up the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, where Palestinians hope to create their state. “It would be crazy on our part to agree to any concession in the area which is the soft belly of the land of Israel when around us we have a hos tile ring that has an unprecedented military power,” Shamir said. let n win this rom (news on DOd they /vhow bers." :hards, ididafe ieet, discuss [ars landing BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — A inference of scientists meeting Boulder says it’s only a matter ‘ time before the United States aches Mars. More than 250 planetary scien- its, aerospace engineers and eorists from the United States, jrope, the Soviet Union and Ja in met to discuss various propo lis for manned Martian explora- >n. The Bush administration re- ntly called for an American nding on Mars by the year )19, to coincide with the 50th miversary of America landing on the moon. The conference was sponsored the National Aeronautics and pace Administration, Martin arietta and various government (encies. Many of those attending the inference criticized NASA, say- g it has become too cautious in tting a 30-year time frame on project, which would cost }00 billion. “Many of the NASA people to made their mark with the polio program are now dose to tirement and are hesitant to ake waves by supporting bold, w proposals,” said J.R. French, jHCahfornia aerospace consultant. The last unmanned explora- )n of the planet was in 1976, by ie NASA Viking mission that nt back data for more than five tars. The Viking project found a suit arelBanet a quarter of the size of surance 0 arth, with one-third Earth’s ia Kirk as "avity and an atmosphere almost eir law fin itirely of carbon dioxide and ater in a frozen ice cap. Scientists presented several Valiev Oxfl^ssibilities for establishing Mar ti base-colonies as springboards ed its dnrf > r further interplanetary travel. lorningvr: — mce to mail the are very he nt Czechs fear ‘cult of personality’, find fault with leader’s attitude PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) —The symbol of the anti-Communist revolution. President Vaclav Havel has built enormous power and popularity since taking of fice. Much of the public following is genuine venera tion, but critics say a “cult of personality” is growing that Havel does too little to control. After his fairy-tale progression from prison to the presidency last year, Havel has become a national fa ther-figure, particularly for his fellow Czechs, who make up two-thirds of the 15.5 million people in Czechoslovakia. In Prague, a stronghold of the Civic Forum movement Havel founded to lead the revolution, pic tures and buttons of the president are everywhere. Havel himself complained in late April that his popu larity had reached such extremes that he could no longer say, for instance, that he disliked a passing dog. If he did, he said, he would find five people ready to shoot the animal. But some critics, who have observed Havel closely be fore and after he took office, say the president has de veloped a tangible taste for power and does too little to discourage such veneration. “We have a new cult of personality,” said an ex-dissi dent who asked not to be identified because of past loy alty to Havel. “He has always relied on friendly opin ions around him ... There is too little criticism.” After taking office, Havel appointed friends, mostly fellow dissidents, to influential positions in the castle that dominates Prague’s skyline. Fellow dissident Jiri Kanturek took over state tele vision, and another fellow dissident, Petr Uhl, the state news agency CTK. Civic Forum sympathizers control key ministries and institutions such as the state prosecu tor’s office. Nobody suggests that such people are anything but democratic and admirable for their courage in fighting communism. On Sunday, however, TV viewers waiting to watch their World Cup soccer team crush the United States 5- 1 were treated to the third broadcast in four months of the star-studded tribute to Havel when he visited New York. Czechoslovakia’s soccer captain, Ivan Hasek, ded icated the World Cup victory to Civic Forum and to Ha vel personally. Such reverence, and the Czechoslovak media’s reluc tance to criticize Havel, stem in part from the lack of free expression during four decades of Communist rule and the Nazi domination before that. Journalists say they also think twice about writing critical articles because, in the new climate of free mar- was alio#' lal state vet| Icial state ii d entire s6 red bra the laws! Sum Belt shows job increases Texas adds one million jobs by year 2000 i liar ©i9 : ' :m, UEfl? ^ WASHINGTON (AP) — One of every six jobs created through the turn of the century is expected to be in California, reflecting the contin ued shift of economic activity to the . Sun Belt, the government said Mon day. I “California is projected to gain 3.4 million of the 18.9 million new jobs created nationally” from 1988 to 2000, said the forecast by the Com merce Department’s Bureau of Eco nomic Analysis. [; That would give the state 19 mil lion jobs. B “Florida and Texas are projected to have increases of more than 1 mil lion jobs each,” to 8 million and 9.7 million respectively, the department . said. i National employment opportuni ties are expected to rise 14.3 percent to 151.5 million jobs. The study projected that the fast- “T he projected growth in Nevada and Arizona reflects rapid population growth and strength in their economies, in part due to the continued shift in economic activity toward the Sun Belt.” — government study est job growth will be in Nevada, up 31.5 percent to 847,000, and Ari zona, up 26.7 percent to 2.3 million. Those two states also should show the fastest growth rates in total per sonal income and population, the department said. “The projected growth in Nevada and Arizona reflects rapid popula tion growth and strength in their economies, in part due to the contin ued shift in economic activity toward the Sun Belt,” the study said. “Flor ida, Utah, California and Hawaii also are projected to show rapid growth.” California will continue to be the nation’s most populous state, grow ing 17.1 percent to 33.2 million peo ple. It also will be first in total per sonal income, up 33 percent to $568 billion. Personal income will jump 46.2 percent to $21.7 billion in Nevada and 40.6 percent to $59 billion in Arizona. Total U.S. personal income is ex pected to advance 26.2 percent to $4.11 trillion. The income projec tions are adjusted for inflation. Connecticut is projected to con tinue having the highest average per capita income, rising 10.8 percent to $20,503. Mississippi, although gain ing 19.0 percent, is expected still to be last, with $10,631. The national average will be an es timated $15,345, an increase of 15.9 percent. The population in Nevada is pro jected to rise the fastest, 29.8 per cent, to 1.4 million. If the projection proves to be true, Arizona will be next, with its population rising 21.4 percent to 4.2 million. Florida would be third, up 18.2 percent to 14.6 mil lion. MAHENDRA O. THAKRAR, M.D., F.A.C.O.G. Associated Obstetrics-Gynecology-Infertility Tubal Microsurgery Laser Surgery Office Hours By Appointment HEM PROFESSIONAL CENTER 2701-A E. 29th St. Bryan 776-5117 ClNEPLEX ODEON theatres S2.50 Tuesday lias been discontinued. POST OAK THREE CINEMA THREE 1500 llatvcy Road 693-2796 315 College Avc. 693-2796 BIRD ON A WIRE (PG-13) No Passe&No Coupons/VIP Passes at Matinee Only 2:05 4:15 7:05 9:15 FIRE BIRDS (PG-13) No Coupons 2:30 4:30 7:30 9:30 MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON (R) TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES (PG) 2:30 4:30 7:30 9:30 CADILLAC MAN (R) No Coupons 2:20 4:20 T.20 9:20 BACK TO THE FUTURE III (PG) No Passes/No Coupons/VIP Passes at Matinee Orly STUDY ABROAD JR. FULBRIGHT Grants for Graduate Research Abroad Competition Now Open INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS Thursday, June 14, 10:00-11:00 am 251 West Bizzell Hall STUDY ABROAD OFFICE 161 BIZZELL W. 845-0544 ket competition, newspapers must worry about the readership loss that might result. Vladimir Mlynar, a writer for the independent daily Lidove Noviny, said an article he wrote criticizing the practice of closing streets for Havel’s motorcade drew mixed letters. “Some said, ‘Thank God somebody is saying it,’ ” he said. “Others criticized, asking ‘How dare you attack our idol?’ ” The overwhelming victory for Civic Forum and its Slovak ally Public Against Violence was in large mea sure a personal endorsement of Havel. But Havel broke the tradition of a non-partisan president by openly campaigning for his political allies. In other respects, Havel openly evokes the president who molded that non-partisan tradition — Thomas We have a new cult of personality. He has always relied on friendly opinions around him ... There is too little criticism.” —anonymous ex-dissident Garrigue Masaryk, founder of Czechoslovakia in 1918 and president until 1935. Presidential spokesman Michael Zantovsky, asked about Havel’s popularity, said it was to some extent in evitable. “This is a new-found nation which looks for self- confidence,” he said. “Just as something close to a cult of personality was built around Masaryk after indepen dence in 1918, so we see the same kind of thing hap pening.” But Havel also cultivates the comparison. He loves to frequent the country residence built for Masaryk in Lany, 30 miles west of Prague, the town where the Masaryk family is buried. Havel addresses the nation each Sunday by radio in a program called “Conversations From Lany.” A Czech television journalist who has watched Havel closely said the president has yet to succumb to the “cult of personality.” By contrast, he said, those around the president tend to be too uncritical. “If ... he keeps on relying on friendly advice rather than real expertise, he may pay dearly for this,” said the journalist, who like some others spoke on condition of anonymity because he said he feared for his job. FED UP WITH YOUR DEALER? Come to Precision Tune and avoid the dealer waiting game. We offer highly competitive pricing, same day service for most cars, and can complete most repairs in about an hour. ^DiagnosticTune-Up Special | I I 4 Cyl. 54 90 6 Cyl 59 90 8 Cyl 64 90 J I 9 menn « r»« r\r 1 9 04W1 on jfTone’f n Guaranteed for 12 months or 12,000 miles. *Sm center manager for details. 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