NP W< DIP’PQf Assodaled Press JL. ¥l V* ¥ ¥ CJ ■ -J IZlV KJr Ip Edited by Brandon Loomis Neliraskan Editor Amy Edwards Photo Chief Dave Hansen 472-1766 Night News Editors Jana Pedersen Managing Editor Ryan Steeves Diane Brayton Assoc. News Editors Usa Donovan Art Director Brian Shellito Eric Planner General Manager Dan Shattil Editorial Page Editor Bob Nelson Production Manager Katherine Policky Wire Editor Brandon Loomis Advertising Manager Jon Daehnke Copy Desk Editor Darcle Wiegert Sales Manager Kerry Jeffries Sports Editor Jeff Apel Publications Board Arts & Entertainment Chairman Bill Vobejda Editor Michael Deeds 436-9993 Diversions Editor Mick Dyer Professional Adviser Don Walton Graphics Editor John Bruce 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Ne braska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Pam Hem, 472-2588 Subscription price is $45 for one year Postmaster; Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St.,Lincoln, NE 68588 0448 Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, NE ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1990 DAILY NEBRASKAN Call Us! 475- 7672 611 N. 27th Main Campus Open 11 a.m. for lunch 476- 0787 11th & Cornhusker HarperSchrammSmith Two 10” i Cheese Pizzas j Additional Toppings $.95 i _Expire s3/15/90_I I SPECIAL DRIVERS WANTED II | $5-$7 PER HOUR | -1 Reformers win across Slavic region; Yeltsin wins Russian legislative seat MOSCOW - Candidates who want faster reform won elections across the nation’s Slavic heartland and Boris Yeltsin easily gained a legislative scat in the Russian republic, unofficial returns indicated Monday. Yeltsin has said he will seek the presidency of the republic, which traditionally means a place on the Communist Party’s ruling Politburo. That could return the Communist maverick to the membership he lost in February 1988 fa- advocating speed ier change. Leaders of popular movements in the Ukraine and Byelorussia, an out spoken television commentator in Leningrad and a defiant editor in Moscow also appeared to have won in Sunday’s local and republic elec tions. “We’re so happy! Such success!” said Irina Rozhenko of the Ukrainian pro-democracy movement Narodny Rukh. Byelorussia, the Ukraine and the vast Russian republic account for 80 percent of the Soviet Union and more than two-thirds of its 290 million people. Most of the 1,800 contests for scats in the legislatures of the three repub lics remained undecided, with no candidate getting the required major ity. State TV said fewer than 15 per cent were resolved in the Russian republic. Activists said strong showings in this round nearly guaranteed victo ries in runoff elections for candidates who want to step up the pace of re forms begun by President Mikhail Gorbachev. The runoffs are expected in two weeks. Defeat of old guard local Commu nist leaders probably would help Gorbachev’s liberalization. He has railed against functionaries who hamper reform, and people hoping to exercise new economic freedoms have told of crippling obstacles erected by local party officials. Ukraine party chief Vladimir Ivashko, considered a moderate pro tege of Gorbachev, qualified for a runoff against an opponent backed by the Narodny Rukh pro-democracy group. Vitaly Vorotnikov, president of the Russian republic, defeated a lone opponent in the city of Krasnodar, winning 71.3 percent of the votes cast. Both are members of the Polit buro. Preliminary figures showed Yeltsin, who has said he will challenge Vo rotnikov for the republic presidency, got 72 percent of the vote in his dis trict of Sverdlovsk in the Ural Moun tains. He defeated 11 other candi dates, said Anatoly Moiseyev of the Russian Federation Election Com mission. Narodny Rukh members said the movement’s leader, poet Ivan Drach, was elected in the first round along with several other prominent activ ists. Zyanon Paznyak, leader of the Byelorussian People’s Front, got 59 percent of the vote in his Minsk dis trict, said spokesman Victor Ivashkevich. He said activist candi dates appeared to have carried cities but party “apparatchiks,” including Byelorussian party chief Yefrem Sokolov, won rural districts. In Leningrad, Bella Kurkova, con troversial commentator of the televi sion program “Fifth Wheel,” appeared to be the only first-round winner, said IMA Press, an official youth news agency. “Fifth Wheel" is a public affairs program that includes long segments about politics and such social prob lems as crime and poor living condi tions. Despite Leningrad’s reputation as a conservative bastion, pro-dcmoc racy candidates dominated the elec tions, said Yelena Vclinskaya, editor of IMA Press. She said only two of about 150 candidates supported by the ultra-right nationalist group Pamyat survived the first round. Vladislav Starkov, editor of the country’s most popular newspaper, Arguments and Facts, was reported the winner of a scat to the Russian republic’s parliament. Starkov ignored a strong sugges tion from Gorbachev that he quit Iasi year after the paper, which has a circulation of 33 million, printed re sults of a poll implying human rights activist Andrei Sakharov was more popular than Gorbachev. Unofficial reports said well-known dissident Sergei Kovalyov also won a scat in the Russian parliament. Nearly 150 million voters were registered to vote Sunday and more than 11,000candidates vied for I ,S(K) scats in the three republic legislatures and thousands more places on local governing councils. Official results are expected today. Official reports said 86 percent of the candidates in the Russian elec tions and 80 percent in the Ukraine were members of the Communist Party. Gorbachev, who was not a candi date, described the elections as a battle between reformers and entrenched burcacrats, and added: “I am con vinced that perestroika will win.” Consider College ♦ Independent Study If you are considering changing your schedule, consider UNL College Independent Study. College Independent Study credit is UNL credit. ( redit that can keep you on your academic timetable. Credit that can he the difference betw een graduating and not graduating. Choose from more than 75 credit and 10 noncredit courses Set your own study and exam schedules Complete a course in five weeks or take up to a year Learn from UNL faculty UNL Independent Study Division of Continuing Studies Nebraska Center, Room 269 ^Call 472-1926 for Details East CampuSi 331(1 * Hoidrege ♦ iy*° mimaas Lincoln, NE 68663-0900 Register Now Kohl defends position on border BONN, West Germany - Chancellor Helmut Kohl on Monday defended his demand that a guarantee of Poland’s border be linked to Warsaw’s renunciation of war reparations, saying Poland has been demanding compensation for forced laborers used in the Third Reich. In East Berlin, mean while, Communists and opposition parties agreed to submit a broad social charter to lawmakers in both Gcimanys designed to protect East Germans against so cial hardships once the countries merge under a capitalist system. The charter, adopted at weekly negotiations between the Communists and 15 opposition groups, demands that the right to work and the right to accommodation be enshrined in the constitution of a united Germany. It also calls for guarantees of democratic and humane working conditions, education and health services for all, protection of pen sions, equality of the sexes, and social integra tion for the disabled. Kohl s refusal to give Poland guarantees about its border has led to a widening split with Foreign Minister Hans-Dictrich Gcnscher, and the two met privately Monday to discuss the issue. Results of the meeting were not made public. Genscher has been saying that West Ger many must make clear to its neighbors that a unified Germany would not be a threat. ‘ This not only concerns Poland’s trust, but that of all Europeans,” he told the ZDF televi sion network. Kohl has said he has no designs on land ceded to Poland after the Third Reich’s defeat -- about a third of modern-day Poland. But he has insisted that only the government of a united Germany could have final say on the matter. Kohl faces West German elections in December and is apparently concerned about losing the conservative vote. Polish Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki has called on both Germanys to begin negotia tions on a treaty that would recognize the Oder and Neisse rivers, which currently form the border, as the permanent boundary between Poland and Germany. On Friday, Kohl said such a treaty would have to be tied to Poland’s 1953 renunciation of war reparations and of its pledge last year to protect the ethnic rights of its German minor lty. Kohl’s demands produced astonishment in Warsaw and harsh criticism from politicians al home. The chancellor, trying to justify his de mands, said Monday that since 1987, Poland has been raising the topic of compensation for Poles sent to Nazi labor camps during World War II. Kohl also said he would oppose signing a peace treaty as a means of settling the border -4.4 This not only concerns Poland's trust, but that of all Europeans. Genscher W. German Foreign Minister -f f issue. No World War II peace treaty was ever signed. In East Berlin, opposition minister Gerhard Poppe said the new social charter,once adopted by the East German parliament, should serve as the basis for East Germany’s negotiations with its capitalist neighbor on economic, monctar) and social union. He said the charter also would be presented to the West German Bundestag for discussion. According to the charter, unification should be based on “reforming of both German soc ial security systems, to perfect the positive points of both.” Single parents, large families, pensioners and the disabled should receive special advan tages, the document said. Delegates also urged guarantees to protect East Germans’ personal property and savings. The proposed social charter comes less than two weeks before East Germany’s March 18 elections for a new parliament. East Germans traditionally have viewed their social security network as the paramount achieve ment of more than 40 years of Communist rule, and they are nervous about what might happen to them under a capitalist system. East Germans in general know little about West Germany’s social security network, viewed as one of Western Europe’s most generous. The conservative Alliance for Germany, backed by Kohl’s Christian Democratic Union, appealed to voters not to fear the switch to capitalism.