HONOR STUDENT COUNCIL MEETING THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15 7:00 P.M. 1017 Angell Hall Page 2-Wednesday, November 14, 1979-The Michigan Daily FIRST LAD Y DECRIES REFUGEE SITUA TIOJ Carter orders e East and Asian affairs. It has not been e determined exactly when the airlift will y take place. HOLBROOKE SAID the money to 0% 1 CELEBRATE the INTERMTIONAL YEOR OF THE CHILD Announcing a lecture by MARION WRIGHT EDELMAN Director of Children's Defense Fund NOVEMBER 14, 1979 4 p.m.-MLB luditoriam 3 Open to the public without charge sA WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter, acting at his wife's behest, or- dered an immediate U.S. airlift of special food for children and other sup- plies to Indochinese refugee camps in Thailand. Roaslynn Carter, who visited the camps last week, announced the presidential action yesterday when she detailed her recommendations for helping thousands of sick and starving refugees. "WE CANNOT lose time," she told a White House gathering of executives from international relief agencies. "The situation is urgent." Mrs. Carter announced that the president also approved these other' recommendations: " An immedaite $2 million grant to UNICEF to buy rice for the refugees, whose food supply was said to be less than 30 days. * An increase in the number of refugees from Thailand to be resettled in the United States. Hereafter, most of the monthly quota of 14,000 refugees allowed into America will be filled from Thai refugee camps rather than from among the boat people in Malaysia and Hong Kong. " $4 million for the care and main- tenance of refugee camps. " A review of the refugee reset- tlement process, which is said to take too long. "ihere w ill be (it leati ote IshimentI (of food) ifftte(iatielvi (t1if w if ie ceEi tore te iill do it. -Riclttrd I olbrooke, A<<. iSttl of [.eeretI(rv ofStlate for Iar Iast ( n(tiA siatiiA ffirs THE AIRLIFT will contain vegetabl oils and other food to -meet th( nutritional needs of the refugees, many of whom suffer from malnutrition. It also will include mobile equipment to provide water for refugee camps and equipment to improve communication between camps and relief agencies in Bangkok, Mrs. Carter said. "There will be at least one shipment immediately and if we need more we will do it," said Richard Holbrooke, assistant secretary of state for Far implement the recommendations comes out of Carter's $69 million pledge to help the refugees, plus other emergen- cy funds. Mrs. Carter also suggested an airlift of equipment such as fork lifts and cranes to Cambodia to help distribute food and medical supplies. Carter has not yet approved that because the Gov 't to check Iran ia d N4 ha. e .a Iairlift Cambodian government will not agree She said U.S. truck deliveries from . Thailand to western Cambodia should be sent only "as a last resort." CAMBODIA HAS rejected the trud deliveries, arguing some of the fodk would to to anti-government guerrillas loyal to ousted Cambodian Premier Pol a.4? Pot. a In addition, Mrs. Carter prodded here husband to appoint quickly a new U.S coordinator for refugee affairs. Amra bassador Dick Clark, who held the.- position, resigned recently to work fia Sen. Edward Kennedy's presidential campaign. Carter, in a brief appearance at thy meeting before his wife's report wa; given, said U.S. proposals to aid Cam, bodian refugees sometimes backfir, and 'may be more effective if made by the United Nations or poor nations. n students' i group, said Iranian students should be deported 'if they "cause trouble." He predicted there would be a growing ten- sion between Iranians and Americans until the problem in Iran has abated. Another member of that group, LSA freshman Andy Sloss said, "I think tf (Iranian) students are on campus, are getting an education, and aren't. causing trouble, they should be allowed to stay." Sloss also said the situation in Iran rs "causing a little bit of resentment,. among students." THE IRANIAN students will be required to produce passports and for ms bearing arrival information as well as evidence that they are properly, enrolled at a college and have paid,.; school fees. They are also forbidden to have jobs. The students will be, photographed, but not fingerprinted. The failure of the students to report to. INS, or the provision of false infor, mation would result in deportation proceedings. ; , I'his story wax weriten Ihy JultĀ« IIgd irecht with ( infora tiogu froni, Leth Ierky, J,fvreyWolff, lnld drvir xerrie reports. (Continued from Page1) that he tends to discount them. He said he has not seen any first-hand inciden- ts, and that he finds the attitude of the Americans on campus toward Iranians to be one of "support and sympathy." Ebnesajjad said Americans realize that the students here are not the ones who are holding the 98 hostages in the i 'Iran leaders drop demand for Shah American embassy in Tehran. The main reason he cited for lack of in- cidents, however, was "simply because there have not been any demon- strations (by Iranians) here." YESTERDAY'S order by the attor- ney general' to check the visas of Iranian students was intended to placate U.S. citizens, according to Justice Department officials. The of- ficials, who asked not to be identified, said the primary purpose of the policy was to forestall any violence by Americans that could threaten the lives of hostages who have been held at the U.S. embassy for the past 10 days. K. Allin Luther, University professor of Persian Studies, said, "I've been told some of them (Iranian students) are worried and afraid. There have been reports of people being threatened. "These students at Michigan are completely innocent of everything. It's really uncivilized for people to hold them responsible for what's happened and to threaten them," he added. BILL FORCHT, engineering sophomore, and member of the Organization for Protest Against Khomeini (OPAK), a small East Quad (Continued from Page 1) tions, Sen. Henry . Jackson, (D- Wash.), said the proposals "will never be accepted." BANI-SADR'S conditions were set out in a letter to U.N. Secretary- General Kurt Waldheim. "The American government should, at least, accept the investigation of the guilt of the former Shah of Iran and its consequences," Tehran Radio quoted him as telling Waldheim. "The American government should return to the Iranian government the wealth and property which the shah, his family and the leaders of the former regime have transferred to the United States." Bani-Sadr went on to ask for a Security Council meeting, saying, "The American government is immersing the world in a climate of war and the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran sees its own peace and the peace of the region and the whole world en- dangered." BANI-SADR said President Carter's boycott of Iranian oil amounted to economic war and predicted that any U.S. military action would bring a Soviet response. He said he thought the Soviet Union would react to any U.S. military action against Iran, despite the abrogation of the 1921 Iranian-Soviet treaty. Meanwhile, Japan said "no," Australia said "maybe" and Britain kept its own counsel yesterday about whether they will join the United States in a boycott of Iranian oil. FOREIGN EXCHANGE dealers, meanwhile, credited what one called President Carter's "guts and aggressiveness" for giving a boost to the dollar, whose value rose against other currencies in morning trading yesterday in London and other markets. In announcing he was cutting off U.S. purchases of 70,000 barrels a day in Iranian oil and oil products, Carter in- dicated Monday he would welcome parallel moves by U.S. allies. But foreign officials said they were unaware of any direct American request for concerted action. Ten per cent of the oil Japan con- sumes comes from Iran. Iranian oil ac- counts for no more than four per cent of U.S. consumption. AUSTRALIAN Foreign Minister An- drew Peacock applauded Carter's; move. In a Canberra news conference, he was asked whether Australia would turn back Iranian oil - less than one per cent of Australia's supplies as an act of solidarity with the United States. "I don't think it is necessary for us to do that at this stage," he replied. "But it may well become a consideration that we will move to." British government officials declined to comment publicly on Carter's decision. But a spokesman for Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said, "You can take it for, granted that we're keeping in close touch vh the United States on the whole situation." Sprenkel chosen as city administrator (Continued from Page 1) OF In other action, council requested the Planning Commission to curtail further action for zoning changes or site plans in multiple family zoning classifications in the city's south area. The planning stoppage in the area Daily Official Bulletin Wednesday, November 14, 1979 Daily Calendar WUOM: World War I: John Bowditch, "Russia, the Choice of Liberal Democratic Reform or Revolution?", 10:05a.m. Center for West European Studies: Dirk Pauls, Consul of the German Federal Republic, "Contem- porary German Political Problems," noon; Giacinto Militello, Int'l Relations, "Worker-Management .Relations in Contemporary Italy," Anderson Rm., Union, 4 p.m. Center for Russian and E. European Studies: J. David Singer, MHRI, "Reflections on the IPSA Congress in Moscow," Lane Commons, noon. CEW: Joyce Kornbluh, League, Rms. 4 & 5, noon. Arch. & Urban Planning: Brian Dunbar, "Ar- cosanti," Art & Arch. Lee. Hall, 12:30 p.m. CRLT: W. J. McKeachie, "Handling Problem Students," 2417 Mason, 3 p.m. Environmental Science & Techn: Karen M. Erst- feid, "Fatty Acis in Recent and Pleistocene Age Spruce Trees," 136 Eng IA, 3:30 p.m. Physicas/Astronomy: L. Rahman, Argonne National Laboratory, "Study of Superonic Conduc- tors by Computer Simulation," 296 Dennison, 4 p.m. Statistics: Clyde Coombs, "An Experimental Study of 'a Model of Risk Assessment and Risk Preference," 451 Mason, 4 p.m. Industrial & Operations Engineering: J. C. Mathes, Kenan Jarbor, "value Oriented Social Decison Analysis: Enhancing Mutual Understanding to Resvole Public Policy Issues," 229 W. Eng., 4:10 p.m. English Composition Board: "Proofreading and Punctuation," 2402 Mason, 7 p.m. bounded by Packard, Stadium, and Stone School Roads will last until the- vacant land there can be reviewed and" zoning changes recommended. Planning Department Director Martin Overhiser said no such projects are presently before the commission. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXX, No.60 - Wednesday, November 14, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Mayna~rd Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters) ; 13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. D0i ythe Daily Edit StaffI Michigan Premiere Midnight Showing This Friday and Saturday!!. 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