Page 2-Sunday, February 10, 1980-The Michigan Daily Soviets may pull troops out of Afghanistan soon (Continued from Page1) Arabia by Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher and President Car- ter's national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and surveyed general developments in Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, and the Middle East. They spoke to a group of reporters Friday evening under ground rules that they not be identified by name, that no direct quotations be used, and that their comments not be made public until yesterday. THE TRIP was the first to the region by a top-level delegation since the start of the Russian occupation of Afghanistan. The mission was designed 2o show support for Pakistan, now a key element in countering any Soviet ad- vance toward the Persian Gulf, a region where President Carter has said the United States hag "vital interests." Karmal told the newspaper Indian Express Daily that the Soviet troops keeping him in power and fighting a Moslem rebellion "are here to con- solidate the gains of our revolution, protect our land and secure the peace in the region." He accused the United States, China and Pakistan of supplying Moslem rebels with arms and asserted that the Soviet invasion "foiled the plot" of the three nations to attack Afghanistan on Jan. 6. "THE DAY the' reactionary Pakistan, chauvinist China, imperialist America and Britain and Zionist Egypt are defeated in their ugly plan to dismember Afghanistan, the Russians will go back... But as long as there are dangers from outside, the Russians will stay," he said. Guerrilla resistance reportedly has shriveled to sporadic sniper fire and small-scale attacks, primarily in the rugged mountains of the northeast, sin- ce the Soviets began pouring troops into its southern neighbor last Christmans. U.S. analysts then estimated it would take the Soviets three to four months to put end to the rebel resistance. In a related development, Radio .Kabul said Afghanistan's No. 2 man, Deputy Prime Minister Sultan Ali Kishtmand, had left for Moscow for a "health checkup." But diplomatic sources in New Delhi said the official's departure for Moscow might reflect the Kremlin's displeasure over Karmal's failure to pacify the Moslem guerrillas fighting to install an Islamic government in Afghanistan and could "signal that a shift is contem- plated." ** ** * *** ***** **** *** Daily Official Bulletin -Sunday, Febraury 10, 1980 Career Planning and Placement 3200 SAB INTERNSHIPS The Oakland Press, Pontiac, MI. Advertising and marketing internships with local newspaper. Must have completed junior year with coursework or experience in advertising or marketing. Sign up now for on-campus intervies on Monday, Feb. 11. Federal Summer Internship Program. Highly competitive internships for graduate students and very highly qualified upperclassmen. includes positions in life sciences, physical sciences, social sciences, business administration, computer science, statistics, mathematics, engineering, urban planning, etc. Come to 3200 SAB for details and application forms. FEDERAL SUMMER JOBS Announcement No. 414. Summer jobs with the federal government in a variety of fields. Highly competitive. Apply early. Come to 3200 SAB for details and application materials. CAMP JOBS Camp Tanuga, Kalkaska, MI. All types of camp positions. On-campus interviews on Monday, Feb. 11. Sign up now. Camp Tamarack, Ortonville and Brighton, MI. All types of camp positions. On-campus interviews on Thursday, Feb. 21. Sign up beginning Tuesday, Feb. 12. Camp Sequoia, Adrian, MI. Needs counselors with one of the following skills: arts and crafts, WSI, western riding, archery and riflery, nature lore, cooking. On-campus interviews on Thursday, Feb. 21. Sign up beginning Tuesday, Feb. 12. Sing up at 3529 SAB or call 764-7456 any day except Tuesday. * * * Monday, February 11, 1980 Daily Calendar . Center for Near Eastern/North African Studies: Rasheed Raji, "Student Activities as an Effective Way of Studying Arabic," Lane Commons, noon. English Language and Literature: Rene Girard, "Comedies of Erros (Plautus, Shakespeare, Moliere)," Rackham Amph., 4p.m. Physics/Astronomy: C. T. Murphy, Fermilab, "Observaton of Direct Prod. in 400 p-N Collisions," 2038 Randall, 4p.m. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports I I I I I -1 I 'I I ~1 I I I I I I I I I Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan r----------WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- I i I I --".----.-----CLIP AND MAIL TODAY!----------M-.. USE TH IS HANDY CH ART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE A T A D COST Wards 1 2 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 Please indicate 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8-.70 10.50 1.50 where this ad is to run: 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 for rent for sale 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 help wanted 36-42 5.10 10.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 **"ommates personal 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 ec Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words--This includes telephone numbers. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I WAKE UP' to -. Vance urges IOC to move games LAKE PLACID-Secretary of State Cyrus Vance was at the Olympic Village yesterday, appealing to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to cancel, postpone or move the summer games in Moscow in protest of Russia's intervention in Afghanistan. "To hold the Olympics in any nation that is warring on another is to lend the Olympic mantle to that nation's actions," Vance told the IOC. He asked them to consider whether the summer games "should be held in a country which is itself committing a serious breach of international peace." "It is our conviction," Vance said, "that to do so would be wholly inconsistent with the meaning of the Olympics." He then called for the creation of permanent homes for the summer and winter Olympics "to avoid such problems in the future."~ Nixon moves to New York LOS ANGELES-Former President Richard Nixon and his wife Pat left California yesterday to take up residence in New York City. The Nixons' first stop was Miami, Fla., for a visit to the Key Biscayne home of Nixon's longtime friend, Bebe Rebozo. They are expected to fly on to New York Thursday to move into their new townhouse on Manhattan's upper east side. Gacy witness questioned CHICAGO-Prosecutors in the John Wayne G.cy trial sought yesterday to pinpoint the final moments in the life of Robert Piest, 15, said to be the last of Gacy's 33 alleged sex-murder victims. Hoping to convict Gacy, 37, on more murder charges than any individual in U.S. history, the prosecutors questioned Kimberly Byers, 19, Piest's co- worker at Nisson's Drug Store in suburban Chicago, where Piest was working just before he disappeared.- IN opening arguments, Assistant State's Attorney Robes t Egan charged that Gacy sexually abused and killed the Piest boy in the bedroom of his home; then, with Piest's body still on the floor, went to sleep. Piest's body, unlike the majority of those linked to Gacy, was later dumped in a river. Twenty-nine of Gacy's alleged victims were buried on\ his home site-27 in the crawl space under his house. Police tear gas mourners JOHANNESBURG-Police threw tear gas into buses carrying mourners to the funeral of a black nationalist guerrilla who was kil d last month in a bank raid, the South African Press said yesterday. Several persons were injured and had to be hospitalized after police hit them with*atons, the agency said, quoting witnesses to the melee in the black township of Soweto. The guerrillas, members of the outlawed African National Congress, were killed in a shootout with police after holding hostages in the bank and making political demands, including the relese of a black political prisoner. Two hostages also died in the shootout. Soweto, about 10 miles southwest of Johannesburg and home to some 1.5 million blacks, was the scene of student uprisings in 1976 that eventually left 700 people dead, most of them black. Court halts secession plan CASSOPOLIS-A citizens group hoping to see Cass County break away from Michigan and become pasrt of Indiana has been dealt a setback in its secession campaign. Cass County Circuit Judge James Hoff says the group cannot circulate petitions to have the secession issue placed before county voters this November because there is no such "initiative power" at the local level. As a "non-charter county"-lacking a specific charter to govern its operations-Hoff said the voters there cannot initiate laws through petition. William LeBre, attorney for the secessionists, said the group had not yet determined what course of action to take next. "I can guarantee you this much," he said, "we're not dead. By no means are we dead." LeBre said his group, which began its secession drive last fall, is confident of local support. "Residents are fed up with Michigan's high taxes and believe their needs are being ignored," he said. "I think it's more of a question of saying Indiana offers much lower taxes and much greater freedom." Energy policy stifled WASHINGTON-In a winter of soaring gasoline and heating oil. prices, Congress is deadlocked over proposals designed to solve the nation's energy problems. While the nation's energy policy grows more worrisome, President Carter's plan is caught in a congressional tug of war that could eventually kill or seriously weaken the three major pieces of legislation he proposed. At issue are proposals for a "windfall" tax on oil revenues, a massive injection of public f funds to develop synthetic fuels and an Energy Mobilization Board designed to speed up the approval process for a wide variety of non-nuclear energy projects. 01 4 01 4 Il 4 1 1 I m+M ~I ~I dil with Check to: Classifieds, The Michigan Dilyi 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, Mi 48109 NAMF ADDRESS CITY PHONE [7 // Texas Instruments For today...and tomorrow. The TI Programmable 58C with plug-in Solid State Software'TM modules and new Constant Memory'" feature. Stores the contents of up to 480 program steps or up to 60 data memories-even when it's.turned off! (USPS 344-900) Volume XC, No. 108 Sunday, February 8, 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at the University. of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September 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 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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