| iday • August 29, 1997 W The Battalion ORLD dir’s crew reactivates key module MOSCOW (AP) -^The crew on the Mir space tion worked to expand their living space to- taking advantage of an increased power sup- ® to reactivate a key module so a U.S. space 1 ittle can dock there next month. I lussians Anatoly Solovyov and Pavel Vino- lovand NASA astronaut Michael Foale have ell j ady switched on the ventilation system in the 7 itall module and were busy reviving other iSt! ipment, said Valery Lyndin, spokesperson Mission Control. et twill take several days to have all the mod- e ' ;systems working, he said. lie 17-ton Kristall, along with other parts of the ion, was cut off from its main power system af- II ispace collision June 25 left Mir at half power, lefore reactivating the module, the crew itthree days running fans and heaters to dry iquipment, which was damp from conden- nduring its two months without power. The itall is one of six separate modules on the Mir. ussian space officials said it was important lave Kristall back in working order to contin- dentific research, which was interrupted by ig string of breakdowns aboard the 11-year- ir. he Kristall, attached to the Mir in 1990, is dipped with a broad array of scientific gear, itly intended for producing super-clean ma- 1s in zero-gravity conditions. It’s also important to have Kristall working in since it’s the sole module equipped with a [king port for visiting U.S. space shuttles,” in said. he shuttle Atlantis is expected to dock with around the end of September, bringing U.S. naut David Wolf to replace Foale and deliv- igsome repair gear. n Friday, Solovyov and Vinogradov traveled the Spektr module, which was depressur- in the collision, and managed to reconnect : *7 " ■ ' iM! Iltij llil ■ll : itlslpPi W FILE PHOTO/Associated Press Anatoly Solovyov and Pavel Vinogradov, left, are shown training to repair a module on a model of the Mir earlier this summer. They practiced underwater for Mir repairs in the 40-foot-deep tank of wa ter to simulate weightlessness. three of its solar panels to Mir’s power system. That should bring Mir up to about 90 percent of its original power. Since Monday, Spektr’s solar batteries have been providing power equivalent to a third of their capacity. The crew now needs to link them to the station’s orientation system, which auto matically keeps all solar panels at the best possi ble angle to the sun. Before doing that, a long series of tests is needed, and space officials have opted not to rush the process so Solovyov and Foale have enough time to prepare for a space walk outside the station. wedish official calls sterilizations barbaric TOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) — forced sterilization of 60,000 ides deemed genetically infe- was "barbaric — we should things by their right name,” l ial Minister Margot Wall- em said Thursday. utWallstroem gave only vague iis about the government’s ef- :sto calm the controversy and ess the cruelty. e government will appoint a ission to investigate the steril- ons conducted from 1935 to 6, but who will be on it or when it begin work has not been decid- $#]ie$aid at a news conference. The commission will consider e j|question of compensation for victims, but Wallstroem de ed to say what she thought j, e i|lildbe an appropriate amount. pked whether the government . s (i mwas prepared to apologize, she Isigit said, “That is also a part of that whole complex of issues. ... I don’t know how this is, how it has been done, how you do that in a good way.” “It was the spirit prevalent in Europe at the time, with a rigid exercise of authority and a political belief in progress that would abolish poverty and destitution.” MARGOT WALLSTROEM SOCIAL MINISTER Sweden has been shaken by in ternational attention in the past week following a series of newspa per articles about the steriliza tions, which were carried out on people judged to have undesirable racial characteristics, or to be con genitally handicapped or other wise "inferior.” Although Sweden’s number of victims was strikingly high — the country had about 7 million people in the 1940s when the practice was at its height — Sweden was just one of many European countries allow ing involuntary sterilization. It was a point Wallstroem re turned to repeatedly under a bar rage of questions. "It was the spirit prevalent in Eu rope at the time, with a rigid exer cise of authority and a political be lief in progress that would abolish poverty and destitution,” she said. Wallstroem said it was essential for the commission to “carry out a broad historical analysis” that could be used as cautionary guidelines for new medical policies in the age of genetic engineering. She said the commission would be directed to put victim compen sation at the top of its priorities. But the commission’s work could last 18 months, she said, and after that the government would have to debate changing laws to make compensa tion possible. The government now considers sterilization compensation on a case-by-case basis under the legal principle known as “ex gratia (from mercy).” In the 1980s and ’90s, there have been 36 applica tions for compensation, 16 of which have been granted. Each of those payments was equal to about $6,400, Wallstroem said. 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