Page 6 The Battalion Wednesday, July 3,1991 SALE DURLEY'S)^.—-11 |ARGOBA]f SALE mm JULY 4TH WEEKEND KEG SPECIAL MILWAUKEE'S BEST $37 9 ° Keystone Sc Keystone Light Suitcase $g99 4501 Wellborn • 846-1816 Coors Light Suitcase $ j j 99 BRITISH MARSHALL SCHOLARSHIPS FOR GRADUATE STUDIES IN THE UNITED KINGDOM LEADING TO THE AWARD OF A BRITISH UNIVERSITY DEGREE COMPETITION NOW OPEN!!! Wednesday, July 3 INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS: 3:30 - 4:30 p.m. 251 Bizzell Hall West STUDY ABROAD OFFICE, 161 WEST BIZZELL HALL, 845-0544 JR. FGLBRIGHT Grants for Graduate Research Abroad COMPETITION NOW OPEN!!! Wednesday, July 3 INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS: 3:30 - 4:30 p.m. 251 Bizzell Hall West STUDY ABROAD OFFICE, 161 WEST BIZZELL HALL, 845-0544 LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE Test Your Best! Classes Forming Now. g STANLEY H. KAPLAN JL Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances Classes forming now. 696-3196 or stop by 707 Texas Ave. Ste. 106E for class schedule. Soviets MOSCOW (AP) — At first the Soviets denied it. Then they ad mitted a small problem might ex ist. And on Monday, more than 60 years after Stalin decreed that joblessness had ceased to exist, unemployment offices opened across the Russian Federation. The Kremlin has plans for sim ilar centers nationwide to help workers find jobs and survive in a central economy bordering on collapse. The Russian legislature has set up "Labor Exchanges" for the 140 million residents of their vast republic, the largest and richest in the Soviet Union. Workers in Russia will be eligi ble to receive jobless compensa tion of 160 rubles a month com- Shevardnadze urges unity, democracy in platform MOSCOW (AP) — Former Foreign Minister Eduard A. She vardnadze and other prominent reformers on Tuesday urged pro-democracy forces to unite and wipe out the "threat of dicta torship." "The main task that we are fac ing is to save democracy," She vardnadze told a news confer ence where reformers released a platform for a nationwide politi cal organization they hope to form in September. Shevardnadze's group of nine Communists and ex-Commu- nists hopes to force the Commu nist Party to expel hard-liners who want to return to one-party rule, said group member Arkady Volsky. The showdown between re formers and hard-liners will come at a Communist Party Cen tral Committee meeting this month, said Volsky, an ally and one-time aide to President Mik hail S. Gorbachev. He did not indicate whether the meeting would be before or after Gorbachev meets in Lon don on July 17 with leaders of the Group of Seven industri alized nations. "The opposition is very strong," Volsky said. If the meet ing ends with a Communist Party committed to democracy, it could then affiliate with or merge into Shevardnadze's pro democracy coalition, Volsky said. Shevardnadze had said earlier that he saw a need to "create a democratic party that would act parallel with" the Communist Party. "There can be no state of law without a solid, serious, con structive opposition," he said last month. Another key member of the group, former Politburo member Alexander Yakovlev, on Tues day urged the coalition to "ab sorb everyone who takes as his goal the real renewal of society ... on the rails of democracy." admit unemployment pared to the average monthly salary of about 350 rubles a month, the state news agency Tass reported. Private jobless offices have been operating in the capital for months. But none run by the re publics or the national govern ment has existed until now in a nation where the unemployed can still be arrested as "parasi tes." In the era of reform introduced by President Mikhail S. Gorba chev, unemployment figures fi nally have been revealed for some parts of the Soviet econ omy. The Soviet State Statistics. Committee disclosed in January that nearly 25 million people were out of work in all of 1990 in the country of 289 million. Figures released by the United Nations were much lower. A U.N. report said that at the end of last year almost 1.4 percent of the Soviet labor force, or 2 mil lion people, were unemployed. That unemployment is ac knowledged at all is a change. Dictator Josef Stalin declared in October 1930 that unemploy ment was a symptom of capital ism and no longer existed in the Soviet Union. He abolished the Labor Com missariat and shuttered labor ex changes set up under the Bolshe viks. They were replaced by job placement offices that assigned people jobs. Unemployment was made a crime and jobless people ar rested for "parasitism." The government denied there was any unemployment and guaranteed a job for everybody, enshrining the promise in its 1977 constitution. The law led to bloated staffs, low pay and vir tually no layoffs or firings. Western experts had esti mated a low Soviet unemploy ment rate during the 1970s and 80s but a larger problem of over employment: factories and busi nesses had more workers than needed. Under Gorbachev, offi cials admitted the problems and let businesses lay off workers in order to become self-sustaining. After 22 years of selling home-grown watermelons on from his business next year. Ben sets up his truck on the roadsides of College Station, Ben said he will retire Highway 6 at the entrance of Easterwood Airport. Prisoner swap Arab-Israeli trade may spur releases of other hostages JERUSALEM (AP) — An Is raeli-sponsored Lebanese militia said Monday it was ready to swap hundreds of Arab prison ers for Israelis missing in Leb anon, a move that could spur the release of Western hostages. The offer by Gen. Antoine Lahd, commander of the South Lebanon Army militia, came af ter a weekend of renewed diplo matic efforts by the United States to end the hostage crisis. Shiite Muslim leaders have de manded freedom for Lebanese Shiites and Palestinians held by the SLA in exchange for Western hostages. Israel says an ex change also must involve its seven troops missing in Lebanon since 1982. Israel army radio quoted Lahd as saying he was "ready to trade the hundreds of Palestinians and Shiite prisoners." An estimated 300 to 400 inmates are held by his militia at the A1 Khiam prison in southern Lebanon. Reached by telephone, Lahd told The Associated Press: "Yes, it's true what they reported on the radio." But he declined to elaborate. The radio did not mention the Western hostages, but said Lahd insisted that a swap include all missing Israeli soldiers and his own militiamen held by various groups. The radio also quoted him as saying he had no official request to free prisoners. There are 13 Westerners miss ing in Lebanon, most of them held by Shiite Muslim militants. They are six Americans, four Britons, two Germans and an Italian. The longest held is American Terry Anderson, chief Middle East correspondent for The Associated Press. He was kidnapped March 16, 1985. The reported offer by Lahd came as 6,000 Lebanese army troops backed by tanks moved into south Lebanon and began encircling Palestinian guerrilla bases in a bid to restore govern ment authority to the region. Bush to meet Gorbachev at western economic talks, hopes for Moscow summit KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine (AP) — President Bush said Mon day he would meet Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev in Lon don for lunch during the western economic summit and hoped to stir progress on strategic arms talks. He said a Moscow summit this month with Gorbachev was still possible. Bush said he also was looking forward to the two-hour lunch, to be held on July 17, the final day of the western economic sum mit, to hear Gorbachev's assessment of Soviet economic reforms. The Bush-Gorbachev session will come just before the Soviet leader makes a direct appeal to the United States and its major eco nomic partners for economic aid. Bush rejected the notion that the meeting would be a failure for Gorbachev if he leaves without ma jor commitments. "I'll be resisting it if people say that," Bush said. "We've got an awful lot of consultation before concrete economic programs can be agreed to." The president said the one-on-one meeting did not reduce the urgency of staging a summit with the Soviet leader and said it was still possible that he would travel to Moscow by the end of the month for longer talks. "I think we can't do it in just a luncheon, but my respect for him is such that I find, when we can sit down and talk over a reasona ble period of time, you can get into a lot of subjects," Bush said. The administration has at times wavered over whether having a strategic arms treaty ready for the leaders to sign is a requirement for a summit. A White House official, who asked to remain anonymous, said Monday that an arms agreement was a requirement. "It will first be necessary to resolve the outstanding differences ... so a treaty will be ready for signing in Moscow," the official said. Bush told reporters another goal of any summit meeting with Gorbachev would be an effort to erase lingering mistrust of the United States by hardliners in the Soviet military.