Anyone interested in working for the KENNEDY forPRESIDENT committee, 2nd distrit contact MARC ABRAMS: 764-2014 STEVE FOLEY: 764-8900 KEN JAKABOWSKI: 764-3007 Paid for by Marc AbromsKenl Jakabowski, Steve Foley. Authorized by Kennedy for President Committee. Wash, D.C. Page 2--Wednesday, January 23, 1980-The Michigan Daily Kennedy, Reagan direct efforts to New Hampshire 'c? a ,.,..- WANT TO- gain or lose weight? *learn about vegetarianism? * decrease your cholesterol intake? Health Service Nutrition Clinic will recommend a diet that suits your individual needs. Our nutrition in- formation will put you on the road to good eating AND good health. (Continued from Page 1) pshire, Vermont, Connecticut, and New York, gave Reagan only 23 delegate votes to former President Ford's 204. This year, Reagan is concentrating on building a northeastern organization, and broadening his appeal beyond his traditional South and Southwestern bases of support. TO THAT END, Reagan has already enlisted the support of 60 of New York's 123 Republican delegates, well over two month's before the state's March 25 primary. Reagan's New Plans for a European economic federation of France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg were drafted by the six countries in 1952. As a result, the European Economic Community-also known as the Common Market or Inner Six-came into being on Jan. 1, 1958. By the end of 1961, six other countries, members of the Outer Sever or Eur- pean Free Trade Assocition, had ap- plied for membership. Hampshire organization, left largely intact after 1976, is also believed superior even to Bush's. So despite his loss in Iowa, Reagan still must be consideredthe frontrunner since the primary fight moves to the region he has been courting since 1976. Bush, who has proven he knows how to organize a state for a caucus vote, has yet to be tested in a primary election, which is more a popularity contest bet- ween candidates. Bush, savoring his Monday night vic- tory, yesterday said his momentum from Iowa-"Big MO," as he calls it-will set his Republican competitors "howling and yowling at my heels." But he raised his expectations dangerously by practically predicting he would win in New Hampshire, and calling himself the new leading conten- der. THE IOWA Republican caucus results called into question Reagan's strategy of remaining aloof and above the fray, refusing to confront his op- ponents in debate and campaigning as if he already had the nomination in his hip pocket. Reagan has consistently said he was concerned 'that Republican debates lead to divisiveness and disrupted party unity. Yesterday, however, he hinted at the possibility of a change, saying, "I can't be the only one concerned about party unity. No one else is. I will have to think of self-survival." Like the Republicans, the Democrats also move to the Northeast for the next showdown for delegate votes. And there, Kennedy, like Reagan, will have to win-and win big-in order to keep his inter-party challenge alive. KENNEDY IS New' England's favorite son, and New Hampshirites are particularly peeved at Jimmy Car- ter for his decision to decontrol the price of natural gas, and for predictions of shortages of home heating oil. Kennedy will campaign almost exlusively in New England for the next five weeks, before the delegates hunt moves into Carter's native South. The list of other candidates claimin victories of sorts from Monday night's voting includes Calif. Gov. Edmund "Jerry" Brown, on the Democratic side, and Republican Howard Baker, the Senate majority leader. Brown said Kennedy's overwhelming defeat left him as the only viable Democratic alternative to Jimmy Car- ter. Brown, who withdrew from the Iowa race, did not win any of the state's' projected delegates. He will no doubt claim that at least some of the five un- committed delegates are Brown sup- porters. Baker's Iowa organization was vir- tually non-existent compared to Bush's statewide network of supporters. Baker hoped to make up for this deficit with his favorable name recognition and high standing among polls of Republicans. He finished third with 12,908 votes, or about 14 per cent. Treadway's resignation accepted Health Service Nutrition Clinic call 763-0224 for information im-- AskThem h Ask a Peace Corps volunteer why she works as a hospital lab technician in Botswana, Africa. Ask a VISTA volunteer why he works in Minnesota helping low-income senior citizens start a non-profit pharmacy. They'll probably say they want to help people, want to use their skills, travel, maybe learn a new language and live in another culture. Ask BY JOHN GOYER City Council late Monday night ac- cepted the resignation of Robert Treadway, who was suspended from his City Hall job last week, despite charges from at least two council members that Treadway had been "railroaded." But Mayor Louis Belcher replied that he was protecting Treadway from the embarrassment of a public review of the resignation. COUNCIL ACCEPTED Treadway's resignation on a 6-4 vote, with the four Democrats on council opposing. Treadway headed the city's Person- nel/HumanRightsaDepartment. He was in charge of advising City Hall bureaucrats on hiring and firing, as well as enforcing the city's human rights ordinance. Belcher and former Acting City Ad- ministrator Godfrey Collins have said they did not consider Treadway an ef- fective leader. TREADWAY ACCEPTED another job in the city's personnel department and resigned as the department's direc- tor as part of a settlement with the city's administration. He was suspen-' ded Jan. 14 only after he refused to resign and he said initially he would sue the city if he were fired permanently. Councilman Earl Greene (D-Second Ward) charged Monday night that Treadway was "railroaded.") "I don't think the acceptance of the resignation is in order until Council is fully infor- med of the events leading up to this," Greene said. Belcher, however, claimed that such a public airing of Treadway's suspen- sion would do more harm than good to Treadway, to City Hallbureaucrats, and to Council members. "THE BEST thing I think that we can do in this situation is to see that Mr. Treadway has a job comparable to that which he left (in order to come to Ann Arbor)," Belcher said. Councilwoman Leslie Morris (D- Second Ward) said Treadway's depar- tment, Personnel/Human Rights, "has had disgracefully low priority" in the city budget. Two years ago, the Per- sonnel and Human Rights departments were combined and funding was cut. "Gradually, Personnel/Human Rights were almost destroyed, and when they could not function properly, somebody had to take the blame," and that person was Treadway, Morris charged. Earlier Monday night, Janice Cald- well, 'representing the citizen's ad- visory panel on human rights, asked Council to table the resolution to accept Treadway's resignation. A tabling motion was later defeated. I Soviet physicist Sakharov. eXiled for 'subsersive Work' Pakistan calls for more extensive aid (Continued from Page 1) XINHUA SAID Afghan government troops at outposts near the Pakistani frontier southeast of Kandahar were being replaced by Soviet soldiers. Chinese Foreign Minister Huang Hua said the United States, Europe and Japan have not realized the seriousness of the Soviet-Afghan crisis. He repeated China's claim that the Soviets plan a later thrust to the Persian Gulf or Gulf of Oman that would give them control of Arab oil shipments and cripple Western economies. Huang made no mention of Chinese, aid to Pakistan, but called for a united approach to make Afghanistan "the vanguard of the struggle against Soviet designs," with the conflict not carried beyond Afghanistan. them: SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH JANUARY 24, 1930 INTERVIEWS 226-7928 IN DETROIT. PEARPS ZIA'S FOREIGN policy adviser, Aga Shahi, told reporters the amount of future Chinese aid had not even been discussed in talks with Huang. "The Chinese ability to supply arms to Pakistan is limited," Shahi said. In the negotiations with Washington, he said, Pakistan is seeking "credible U.S. military and economic assistance which should be durable and serve to strengthen its security vis-a-vis the threat developing on its western fron- tier." Shahi also said, however, that the Soviets had indicated a readiness for dialogue with Pakistan. He did not elaborate. In another development, a former commander of the presidential palace in Kabul, the Afghan capital, said in a Kabul radio broadcast that Afghan revolutionary leader Nur Mohammed Taraki was strangled by 'three army men last Oct. 8 on the order of Hafizullah Amin and in his presence.. Amin had ousted Taraki from power just a few days earlier. 1111:111 IN:T: (Continued from Page 1) THere was no official Soviet confir- mation that Sakharov had been banished to Gorky. The brilliant 58- year-old nuclear physicist-turned- human rights activist, sometimes called the father of Russia's hydrogen bomb, is its best-known internal critic. The report on his exile came at the. end of a day rife with rumors, that Sakharov would be expelled to the West as was another Soviet human rights dissident and Nobel laureate, Alexan- der Solzhenitsyn, who won the 1970 prize for literature. Solzhenitsyn was stripped of his citizenship and expelled, in 1974, and now lives in Vermont. The Soviet action drew worldwide condemnation and some observers ex- pressed the'belief it reflected a tougher climate against dissidents and a power struggle within the Kremlin. In Washington, State Department spokesman Hodding Carter said Sakharov's well-being was of "grave concern" to the United States. Britishi' Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher told the House of Commons in London she was considering an official protest to the Soviet Union. The London-based human-rights group Amnesty Inter- national was harshly critical of the move. Alexeyeva said that after noon, as he does every Tuesday, Sakharov left for the Academy of Sciences to attend a seminar. At 2 p.m. local time, she said, Sakharov called home to say that his car had been stopped and he was taken in another to see a prosecutor. cO** An arts page review of Sunday's Les Grands Ballets Canadiens in yester- day's Daily included the sentence "lan- ding in a pile on full pointe." The sen- tence should have read "landing in a plie on full pointe." The Daily regrets the error. Alexeyeva, 'quoting Sakharov, said the prosecutor read him the official or- der to return the certificates of his awards and' he refused. Then the prosecutor told Sakharov he was being: sent to GIorky. Normally, internal exile is assigned to Soviet citizens for specific periods of time following trial for violations of law. The official Soviet news agency Tass announced he was being stripped of a, number of state medals, including the titles Hero of Socialist Labor, laureate of the U.S.S.R. and a coveted Order of Lenin. It did not say he was expelled' from the prestigious Soviet Academy of Sciences. The report of Sakharov's arrest- followed the detentions or arrests of'. several other prominent dissidents.. Daily Official Bulletin WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1980 Daily Calendar: Computing Center: "Structure and Basic Use of MTS Files," 1o11 NUBS. 12:10 p.m.: Forrest Har- tman, "The Ontel Terminal, 2 MLB, 4Fp.m. Engineering/Humanities: Gorman Beauchamp,* "Alternative Futures: The First Two Years:" Stephen S. Stanton: The Tennessee Williams Newsletter: The First Year," 1047 E Eng .3 10p m Physics/Astronomy: L. Sulak, "Proton Lifetime, Experiment." 296 Dennison, 4 p.m. Industrial/Operations Engineering: Alvin W. Drake, Massachusetts institute of Technology, "At- titudes and Decisions with Regard to Blood Donation,- 229 W. Eng., 4: 10p. m. isTA ----IL. a U - HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1980-81 ACADEMIC YEAR Available Starting January 17, 1980 THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume XC, No. 92 Wednesday, January 23,1980 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn in gs during the University year at 42O Maynard 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. In Ms. Charlene Coady's Office, 1500 SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: Resident Director, Assistant Resident Director, Resident Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident Fellow, Minority Peer Advisors and Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1980 Winter Term for the Resident Fellows in Residential College, Resident Advisor and Minority Peer Advisor positions; Graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U. of M. student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1980 Winter Term. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in resi- dence halls at University level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average in the school or college in which they are enrolled. Graduate applicants must be in good academic standing at the end of the 1979.Fall term in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (5) Preference is given to applicants who do not intend to carry heavy academic schedules and who do not have rigorous outside commitments. (6) Applicants with children will not be considered. (7) Proof of these qualifications may be required. M.1 Solve YOU'r Summer Job Worries Now! SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM * IN JEWISH COMMUNAL SERVICE JUNE 9, thorough AUGUST 8, 1980 Snonsored by the Jewish Federation of Metrooolitan Chicago, 1.