Purge Eight Thursdays February 10, 1977 I HE MICHIUAN UAILY J'age Eight tIE MlCHl(~AN IJAILY Thursday, February 10, 1977 Castro seeks meeting with Carter NUBS students plug away I By AP and Reuter NEW YORK - Cuban leader Fidel Castro spoke warmly of President Carter in a television interview broadcast last night and said it would be a pleasure to talk to him - if Carter want- ed a meeting. Castro said he had read Car- ter's autobiography and was interested in his moral convic- tions and religious feelings. "I THINK that a man like Carter may abide by a policy of international principles, not, the r-Marxist principles nor the capitalist's principles, but rath- er universally accepted princip- les in the relationships among the people," the' Cuban leader told Bill Moyers on the CBS Evening News. Moyers, who was President Lyndon Johnson's press secre- tary, said they were discussing the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion when word came that Secretary of State Cyrus Vance had told a Washington 'press conference that the United States may be ready to improve relations with Cuba. Moyers said Castro, speaking through an interpreter, then turned the discussion into a two-hour conversation on the history of the troubled relations between the two countries and; the prospects for detente. Only a segment was shown tonight. MOYERS ASKED Castro if he would like to meet Carter one day. "I don't think this can be said unilaterally," the Cuban leader said. "I think that if one day this is to happen and he so wishes I will with pleasure talk to him." Castro said, "We are not go- ing to draw the conclusion that two neighbor countries have to live constantly as enemies. "BUT WE WERE not the ones to declare war on the United States. It was the U.S.A. that declared war to us. Had the U.S.A., if the U.S.A. continues their policy of peace and friend- ship with Cuba, we will be re- ceptive to that policy of peace and friendship toward Cuba." Castro said both countries would benefit economically from trade but for the U.S. there would be a moral problem too. ". .Because what is the rea- son for (the U.S.) excluding Cu- ba from trade and trading with many other socialist countries? "WE ARE SUGAR producers, important sugar producers, and you are important sugar con- sumers. We are close to you. In only a few hours any of our ships could take sugar to 'the U.S. We are important nickel producers. We have great re- serves of nickel and nickel is a very important raw material for the devolopment of the mo- tor industry." Moyers tonight summed up the interview by describing Cas- tro as being "clearly in a con- ciliatory mood." He had said Cuba wanted American busi- nessmen, goods and tourists and )Moyers quoted him as say- ing: "I personally want to see our Cuba baseball team play your New York Yankees." In Washington, observers saw Castro's remarks as a response not only to Vance but to recent overtures by the State Depart- ment that the Carter Adminis- tration would like to improve U.S. relations with Havana. THE DEPARTMENT said last week that the United States would like .to move towards talks to preserve the 1973 anti- hijacking agreement between the two ouintries. It is due to expire on April 15. Cuba announced last fall it wanted to end the pact after the crash of a Cuban airliner. The department last week al- so said that Cuba had given indications that it would like to open talks on the impending U.S. law to set a 200-mile fish- ing zone. The two countries are as close as 90 miles at one point. The State Department has not said with face whether it prefers to meet the Cubans on a face-to- basis or to negotiate through intermediaries. The United States and Cuba broke ties in 1961 after the con- fiscation of U.S. banks, indus- tries and landholdings. Later that year, Cuban exiles, led by the Central Intelligence Agency, mounted the Bay of Pigs inva- sion in an attempt to overthrow the Castro government. Hove a flair fo Ifyou are iterest- ed in reviewing poetry, and music. or writing feature' stories about the drama, dance, film arts: contact Arts Michigan Daily. (Continued from Page 1) COMPUTER students count in their cozy rooms at home, the their terminal time in terms of University's computer students money; beginners are often al- pamper their addiction to hum- lotted $5.00 of time for a certain ming machines and endless project, with a single print-out print-outs in this stark, white ha- sheet consuming about 35 cents. ven of terminals. One early nighter claps his It's a logical world of "infin- hands in exultation over she ite loops" that their parents good news he sees in his stack never knew. Drawn like lem- of cards. mings to the god-like , MTS "Done," he shouts, "with 65 (Michigan Terminal System), cents left!" they feed their master with all manner of computer problems - HE HAS finished early, but elementary and complex - in not all are so lucky. On qis way hopes of gaining expertise in the out, he leaves those still puzzling surreal sanctuary of NUBS. over incomplete programs and At 10 p.m., the students sit i passes, the late nighters as they alone or in pairs at tables, drift in for their own computer- struggling with computer syntax ized flings. , or simplifying their logic. Some NUBS is open very late, and move from the small key-punch the wee hours of the morning room, where batches of cards lure a special breed of die-hat3s. are prepared, to the input coun- These are the ones who seem to ter, where their data is fed into feel a special affection, (wor- wires that run to the actual ship, perhaps), for the behemoth home of MTS - the University system before them. computing center on North Cam- Indeed, MTS seems nearly hu- pus. man It even s eaks. B dial- ' r EVERYTHING YOU NEVER EXPECTED FROM AN APPLIANCE STORE. 3,as ny Licln Cn Ottm i I b ~ i ~ i EARLY ONE evening, junior' Tom Hilton stands patiently in line for a brief shot at the "ex- press terminal." Over the soft rumble of the new, gray ma- chines, he explains that NUBS is only moderately crowded to- night. "If people did it right the first time," he says, "this place would be empty. It's not a sci- ence yet; it's just an art." A few artists exchange greet- ings, but most just hurry through. Their eyes are riveted on the print-out sheets, for each character is full of a meaning unknown to the innocent ob- server. 141. 1 pv~a . y 111 ing a special telephone number. one can hear an eerie, android voice straight out. of Stanlev Ku- brick's 2001 intoning the words, "Good eve-uh-ning. This i.3 the University of Michigan terminal system." Only NUBS-ites know how to respond, but the greeting alone is astonishing. AFTER announcing his plans to stay until closing at 4 a.m., Bill Passman, settles back to "hack away at it." Passman be- comes a late-night person anout eight times a month, and says that people "pretty much knw each other" at NUBS. "We had a pizza party here a few weeks ago," he says be- tween sips of pop. r Put the DAILY While a "dating service" pro- gram - a course problem which matches mates through the com- puter - occupies most of the students, senior Don Wells and junior Pam Hunt ponder a tougher problem. They displav their vexations with long sighs and blank stares. The terminals seldom forgive human error or ignorance. THE STUDENTS, particuariy beginners, live in constant fear of making a seemingly tr'vial error which will send the com- puter reeling off in a dread "in- finite loop" - an endless jour- iey that uses up all of a stu- dent's computer time. Even the tiniest error of punctuatio can derail a program and leave its author bewildered and without hope. At 1:20 a.m., a small group gathers in front of the output window across the room frcm the terminals to help a per- plexed friend., "Did you spell NUBS corect- ly?" one student kids after an exhaustive search for the con- founding error has proved fruit- less. AFTER AN hour of twitchng pencils, glazed looks, and care- ful pecking at the terminals, two bored students send rubberbands flying thick and fast' at a tired friend caught in a stare-down with Terminal Number One. Ter- minals Number Two through Eight don't even notice. Gene Won attributes his rela- tively alert appearance to day- time sleep. The doctoral candi- date comes in every night until 4 a.m. to correlate statistics for his dissertation because the computer rates are lower and the lines shorter. Won calls it a fairly quiet night, but the vet- eran predicts that "later in .he term it'll be nuts" due to the rush to solve big problems as classes move into their final weeks. At 3:40 a.m., Don Wells de- cides to "burn some money" in an effort to learn some new pro- grams. The system doesn't charge students if they use the computer for course work, but the monetary value of computer time is recorded on the read-out sheets that are spewed from the terminals. ONLY A dozen computer jocks are left to resurface and join the real world at 4 a.m., after meet- ing with varying degrees f suc- cess. Bill would be back the next night, Pam hasn't made the breakthrough she had hoped for, and Don has another problem on the docket. But then, as the University's own "Research News" puts it, "Computing science is a rela- tively unbending discipline, a stern taskmaster." Genesis (Continued from Page 5) leads to happiness? "WOT GORILLA?", a short, perky, instrumental, gives some breezy relief from the somber tones of the rest of the mater- ial. "Unquiet slumbers for the sleepers . . . in that quiet earth" starts out slowly, builds in mo- mentum, and eventually sekues into "Afterglow". Both t u n e s show magnificent instrumental invention. It might be interesting to spe- culate as to the reasons for the themes of Wind and Wutheng. Perhaps the sudden departure of leader Peter Gabrel t w o years ago left them feeling di- rectionless. If so, they've r, o reason to worry. A Trick of The Tail was a glorious album, and this one is as directed as any record could possibly be. Wind and Wuthering is a unique and deeply moving album - all SO minutes of it - and well worth any music lover's attention. PA i I I I A NEW CHEF and a NEW MENU Combine to Bring You a New Dining Experience! FEATURING SUCH EXCITING DISHES AS... VEAL CONTINENTAL Our milkfed Veal medalions prepared with Mozarella cheese and the chef's anchovy & wine sauce. $7.25 STEAK & SEAFOOD 'CONNECTION'- Choice Top Sirloin with your selection from the sea: Fried Ipswich Clams, Broiled Scallops, Broiled Shrimp. $6.95 VICTOR'S SPECI Beef Tenderloin, King Crabmeat, Fresh Mushrooms & Green Peppers skewered and flomed at your table! $7.95 RUM CAKE ALTY - j 4f - II I HAD CANCER AND I LIVED Homemade! Four layers laced with rum & brandy-with three exotic fillings, topped with Fresh Whipped Cream. $1.50 AND... Don't forget our Daily Specials such as "Polynesian Feast," "Steak Tournedos," and "Bouillabaisse." t y~- ';. r ,, r VICTOR'S - Huron at State, in the Campus Inn. Featuring BOB WILSON at the keyboard weeknights. Friday & Saturday dancing with the CARL ALEXIUS TRIO (No Cover) m vw mWvW W -w -a --- -_m- - -w- I p I I