REGISTRATION See editorial page Niely 'Years of Editorial Freedom I tig AERODYNAMIC See Today for details Vol. XC, No. 1 22 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, February 27, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages L"oyaus s arrest nsurgent Moslems. in Kabul, NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Forces Sal to Afghanistan's beleaguered arxist government swept through Kabul yesterday and arrested large numbers of Shiite Moslems for their suspected r.ole in violent anti-Soviet riots last week, according to reports reaching here frdm reliable sources in the Afghan capital. But official Radio Kabul broadcasts promising shopkeepers protection if they returned to work and urging vernment workers to go back to their s suggested both strikes against the government were continuing. THE GOVERNMENT radio said babies went without milk and families without food because of the shopkeepers' strike, though it insisted, without explanation of the apparent contradiction, that most shopkeepers had returned to work. In Washington, a Carter ad- ministration official said President Carter had pledged U.S. willingness "to n in a guarantee of true neutrality and non-interference in Afghanistan's internal affairs" once the estimated 70,000 Soviet troops withdraw from the Central Asian nation. The official refused to say the president's comments, contained in a letter, represented a reply to Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev. But Brezhnev said last week, "Let the U.S. together with the neighbors of fghanistan guarantee non- terference and then the needs of Soviet military assistance will cease to exist." THE OFFICIAL Soviet news agency Tass published statements by the nation's top propagandist, Leonid Zamyatin, challenging Carter to "command" an end to alleged U.S. in- terference in Afghanistan "if the United States wanted peace in the region." His comments were printed just as Be thrust of Carter's comments con- tained in a letter to Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito were made public. In what was perhaps his last diplomatic See LOYALISTS, Page 10 Reagan, Carter win s in New By MICHAELARKUSH and KEITH RICHBURG Special to The Daily CONCORD - President Carter defeated Sen. Edward Kennedy in New Hampshire's presidential primary election yesterday. New Hampshire voters, once again showing a penchant for upsetting the presidential aspirations of front runners, buried Republican George Bush in a landslide vote for Ronald Reagan. Carter's victory was sweetened by the fact that New Hampshire is next door to Kennedy's home state of Reagan fires campaign manager. See story, Page 2 Massachusetts. At press time, Carter was outdistancing Kennedy by 32,823 votes to 24,054. Reagan, the former. California governor, was beating Bush up and. down New Hampshire, from the upper lakes region to the southernmost city of Manchester. At press time, Reagan led Bush 45,952 votes to 19,084. SENATOR HOWARD Baker, Ten- nessee Republican, was a distant third. Representative John Anderson of Hampshire Illinois was running a close fourth Hampshire indicated thee behind Baker. Reagan's support here. Onl "This is the first, and it sure is the towns of Hanover, and two pr best," Reagan said of his victory. "This Lebanon, did Bush lead Rea is the way I want to continue cam- that was attributed to the D paigning, to meet the people, that will College student population be the type of campaign it is. We'll be cities. back in the general election, because In Hanover, home of Da we're going all the way." Bush ran first with 591 votes w Carter's victory marked the third son a close second with 474 time he has dealt Kennedy defeat in as Manchester, Reagan bea many contests, leaving the challenger decisively in 11 our of 12I who once looked so formidable with no reporting. place to go but home with the BUSH CONCEDED defeat1 Massachusetts primary one week an hour after the polls away. congratulating Reagan on hi "THE PEOPLE of New Hampshire and thanking his supporters. have sent to Washington a very impor- the way I look at it," Bush s tant message," Kennedy said, won two (Iowa and Puerto R acknowledging his loss. "They care lost one. I'm disappointed tor about the old, they care about the I'm absolutely convinced I'm working people, they care about the win this nomination." young. Our party won't be silent on Bush tried to take some sol those issues. , devastating defeat saying, "E: "The issues raised here," he con- it's boiling down after New H tinued, "the issues of concern and com- to a two-man race, and that w passion, are going to be the- dominant our goals." Referring to the issues in the states of New York, Pen- Saturday night's debate fias nsylvania and Michigan. We will con- campaign, Bush said, "That': tinue this campaign, we will bring it Our campaign was-an honora back to New Hampshire." paign." The voting patterns across New Since Carter whipped Kenn depth of y in the vcincts in gan, and artmouth in those rtmouth, ith Ander- votes. In at Bush precincts less than closed, s victory "Here's aid, "We Rico) and night, but going to ace in his ssentially ampshire ias one of effect of co on his s politics. able cam- nedy by a AP Photo FORMER CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR Ronald Reagan campaigns in New Hampshire earlier this month, paving the way for his landslide victory in the state's Republican primary yesterday. !U' keeps A By STEVE HOOK Within five minutes after the West Engineering Building supervisor called the Ann Arbor Fire Depar- tment last Thursday night, five fully equipped trucks were steaming toward the old building. Trucks surrounded the red-brick structure at the ' corner of South and East University Streets as a team of five firefighters rushed inside to find the cause of the alarm.1 AFTER PINPOINTING the source of smoke in an elevator shaft the firefighters diagnosed the problem as an overheated transformer. One of the men radioed to the squads waiting outside that they could return to their respective stations. University security officer Terry Seames watched the scene and said, "This sort of thing happens all the time." As of Monday, the AAFD had responded to 451 calls since January, approximately 20 per cent of these calls came from the University. Last year over 600 of the city's 3,457 calls came from the University, most fire fighters busy of those from residence hall alarms. ACCORDING TO AAFD officials the call to West Engineering last week cost $1000 dollars, ap- proximately $200 per truck for the five trucks respon- ding. The University, through the state, helps to sub- sidize the fire department's operations, providing 18 per cent of its budget. The University will provide $300,000 of the AAFD's $16 million budget this year. "The state will reimburse cities for protection of state property," explained University Fire Marshall Russ Downing, "and the University is state proper- ty." ALTHOUGH THE vast majority, of these calls are either false alarms or minor fires such as "trash can" or bulletin board fires, the AAFD responds in full force to every call. "It doesn't matter to us whether it's a waste basket fire or a real one," said Deputy Fire Marshall Ben Zahn in an interview yesterday. "We don't take the chance of sending too little equipment," said AAFD Fire Marslall Nolan Lee. "It's not a waste of money to put out a.fire, however small, before it gets out of hand." "Whenever there's a multiple-story building in- volved, they'll run everything to it," said University Marshall Downing, "because they don't know." "Nobody likes to see them called out for false alarms, or even trash can fires," Downing continued, "but small fires often become big fires, and you really can't afford not to call the fire department." Downing referred to a series of five alarms at East Quad last weekend. A full force of fire trucks respon- ded to the calls, each of which turned out to be inten- tionally set minor blazes. As fire investigators for the AAFD both Lee and Zahn spend much 'of their time searching for ar- sonists who abuse the AAFD's response facilities. "We're bound to determine what caused every fire we respond to, and who caused it," Lee said. two-to-one margin in the Iowa caucuses- last month, the president has stuck to his Rose Garden strategy, while the Massachusetts senator has continued to attack him on both foreign and domestic affairs. IN A NEWS conference two weeks ago, Carter said he prefers campaigning but must stay in the White House to "solve the foreign -crisis." Instead, he once again dispatched an army of surrogates to convey his record to New Hampshire. voters. Vice President Walter Mondale, First Lady Rosayln Carter, and other members of the Carter entourage have criss- crossed the state in recent days in an attempt to knock Kennedy out of the race. And as Robert Strauss, the President's national campaign manager, has often promised, the Rose Garden strategy will stick as long as the Carter machine rolls smoothly onto the Democratica Convention in New York in August. . ............................. - , -...... 'U' prof Robert, Hayden dies Monday Robert Hayden, award-winning poet and University English professor, died Monday night at University Hospital of apparent heart failure. HAYDEN, 66, was among several American poets recently recognized at the White House by President and Mrs. Carter. A University professor since 1969, Hayden was the first black to hold the position of Con- sultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress in 1976-77. Last Sunday the poet was honored at a reception sponsored by the University Center for Afro- American and African Studies. Reportedly ill with the flue, Hayden did not attend the event which featured tributes by a number of famous American poets and novelists. The author of six volumes of poetry, Hayden won the grand prize for poetry at the First World Festival of Negro Arts in Dakar, Student GOP candidate Burton challenges incumbent Dem Greene in 2nd Ward race this ward," said Greene. "She'll be lucky to get 20 per cent of the vote." GREENE CLAIMED his represen- tation of the student-dominated ward as a whole and his stress on the issues have given him the support of students and non-students. "We've always got- ten a large number of student votes," he said. "But the notion that you need a student to represent students is entirely manufactured." Hyden I 914-1980 Senegal, in 1976 and the Russell Loines Award of the National In- stitute of Arts and Letters in 1970. Hayden completed his graduate studies at the University after ear- ning his bachelor's degree in Spanish from Wayne State Univer- sity. He was a professor at Fisk University before joining the University faculty. A private burial service will be held today with a Bah'ai memorial service to be held at a later date. Hayden is survived by his wife, Erma, a daughter, Maia Hayden Tedla; and one grandson. city election '80 "I THINK I have a chance if we can get out there and tell people there's a new candidate," the twenty-year-old Burton said. But running as a Republican in the Second Ward could hurt Burton's chances. The ward is 85 per cent students, and includes the hill dorms and a large number of apar- tments. Greene, the 43-year-old incumbent bidding for a third council term doesn't take the Burton threat seriously - because Burton is a Republican. "Republicans don't do anything in As a Republican, Burton thinks she could get more done for the ward since the party holds seven of the eleven council seats. She asserted that if elected, she would work on ward issues with the other council member from the Second Ward, Democrat Leslie Morris. Morris is not known for her ability to com- promise with the Republican majority on council. A NATIVE of Birmingham who said she considers Ann Arbor a "second home," Burton claimed she had "been B u rion, ...the Republican challenger brought up as a Republican and I've been a Republican all my life. I believe in free enterprise." Speaking on issues and on the cam- paign in a recent interview, it was evident that Burton had done her homework on city government. She said she had gotten her information by talking with city Republicans and councilmembers. Gret e ... theincumbent Democrat Burton singled out Greene's record as his weak point, as did Stacey Stephanopoulos, a student whom Greene narrowly defeated in a Second Ward Democratic primary last week. BURTON ALSO contended students would benefit if a student were elected to council. Burton said, for example, that while See STUDENT, Page 10 wmmwxmmj __I I project? A game of spud in the Graduate Library reference Check your Records Remember chicken-fights, the adolescent jousting matches fought between splashing, screaming youngsters in the neighborhood pool? This week's University Record weekly calendar announces a revival of the chicken fight-in which combattants wrestle while riding atop another person's shoulders-on Friday night in the Angell Hall foyer. "All-campus Chicken Fight," reads the calendar. "Men's 7 p.m.; mixed 8 p.m." Nostalgic would-be gladiators will be disappointed to hear that the announcement is a hoax. "We thought the fover, with all its project? A game of spud in the Graduate Library reference room. Bring your own ball. IL Udder recklessness Several farmers in Topeka, Kansas seem to be letting off a lot of hot air over local balloon travelers. The balloons, most of which are equipped with gas burners, are disturbing and injuring cows in the region, farmers claim. "I have a neighbor who had to sell three cows because they damaged their udders running from low-flying balloons," said Marvin Smith, a farmer in the region. While members of the Kansas legislature are discussing a law to force l C 1 J1 1 1 run, in the past, similar layouts on the Big Ten, Pac Ten, and Ivy League. Meanwhile, Baylor University President Abner McCall Monday demanded that the 30-person staff of the Lariat, Baylor's student newspaper, resign unless it follows his guidelines regarding editorial criticism of his anti-Playboy policy. McCall said the newspaper is owned by the university and therefore he has publisher's rights to control editorial comment. Playboy's director of soliciting, Dave Salyers, said yesterday that such reactons don't discourage the magazine's staff. When told of these two developments, Salyers responded, "That's hysteri- i PEOpp- I I