Page 2-Sunday, April 13, 1980-The Michigan Daily Blackout leaves Puerto Rico powerless; From UPI and AP SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Most of OFFIC Puerto Rico's 3.5 million inhabitants time in 2 were without power yesterday in an had exp island-wide blackout that Gov. Carlos Some loo Romero Barcelo said may have been but the I Scaused by sabotage. could haw By mid-day, power had been restored The Sp to most outlying areas but most of San WKAQ qi Juan and other main population centers as sayi were still without electricity and, in named in many cases water, 15 hours after an who was explosion rocked a generating plant, strike in triggering an island-wide blackout. blackout A RADIO station said a previously Authority unknown organization, associating it- hours be: self with an electrical workers strike in engineer 1978, had claimed responsibility for the where the blackout. hair was However, Executive Director Albetto shaven b Bruno Vega and other officials of the med. Puerto Rico Power Authority, said the Bruno cause of the blackout that began at 8:30 Vazquez p.m. (7:30 p.m. EST) Friday had not Authority been determined and it was not known skirts of whether sabotage had been involved, between Bruno Vega also said there was nothing Accord to tie, the blackout to current union caller ac negotiations. "violatin Barcelo declared a state of emergen- cy, placing the island's 7,000-member A Dail police force on alert shortly after theA ailr lights went out. The Puerto Rico Union ne National Guard also put its 2,000- that mo member force on standby alert. renovati( E11 I.J IA1 4 y eri tinl sla ve b pan uotf ho kil 19 sabotage suspected LS SAID it was the first agreement," but did not specify how. workers over a new con years that the entire island The caller added, the station said, that acknowledge that "' enced a power blackout. the blackout and the kidnapping of sabotage" had occurr( g and arrests were reported Vazquez Santiago were in honor of Saul union contract expired nd's police chief said, "It Rodriguez Estrella, who police claim THE PUERTO R een a lot worse." was killed while trying to sabotage a Workers Union disavo' ish-language radio station transmission tower in the 1978 strike. tion with the blackout a ed a male anonymous caller The union denied the police claim at the "We are complete that "Grupo Estrella," time, member of the union i, mor of an electrical worker Bruno Vega said there was nothing to supposed "Grupo E lled during power workers' link the blackout and the kidnapping to Gilberto Rios Mulero, 78, was responsible for the current negotiations with electrical for the union. ntract. But he did several acts of ed since the last last Dec. 31. ico Electrical wed any connec- nd kidnapping. ly sure that no s involved in this strella'," said chief spokesman Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports and the kidnapping of a Power chief engineer about three fore the power went off. The was released later in a field e worker was killed in 1978. His cut and his eyebrows were but he was otherwise unhar- Vega said that Manuel Santiago, chief engineer at the y's -Palo Seco plant on the out- San Juan, had been kidnapped 5 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Friday. ing to WKAQ, the anonymous cused the Power Authority of ng the collective bargaining - Correction y story yesterday concerning novations did not make it clear rey allocated for structural ons has not yet been spent. Daily Official Bulletin SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 1980 SUMMER JOBS CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: CAMP TANUGA, Kalkaska, MI. All types of camp positions. Sign up now for interviews on April 11. CAMP SEQUOIA, Adrian, MI. Needs counselors with the following skills: arts and crafts, WSI, western riding, archery and riflery, nature lore. Also needs a cook. Sign up beginning April 8 fokr interviews on April 16. CAMP TAMARACK, Ortonville & Brighton, MI. All types of camp positions. Sign up beginning April 8 for interviews on April 17. MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH. Needs student assistants for inspection of agricultural labor camps. Completion of sophomore year and biology or environmental helath coursework required. Sign up beginning April 8 for interviews on April 17. SIGN UP PROCEDURES: On Tuesdays, you may come to Room 3259 SAB and sign up in person to interview with organizations scheduled to visit during the following week. Beginning on Wednesdays and continuing throughout the week you may sign up in person or by phone. Call 764-7456. For more details about these organizations and others offering summer employment, check the information in the Summer Jobs section of Career Planning and Placement, 3200 SAB. MONDAY, APRIL 14, 1980 Daily Calendar: MHRI: James Grier Miller, "Living Systems Theoryand Its Application," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 p.m. Applied Mechanics: Richard C. Diprima, "In- stabilities in Transitions in Flow Between Concentric Rotating Cylinders," 219 W. Eng., 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: M. Grisaru, Brandeis-U., "Introduction to Supersymmetry," 2038 Randall, 4 p.m. 200 stage protest march in racially-tense cit WRIGHTSVILLE, Ga.-Nearly 200 persons, mostly blacks, staged a protest march to a downtown area occupied by a few robed Klansmen and about 200 whites, as riot-equipped state troopers stood by. The march was called following a melee between blacks and whites Tuesday in which at least nine persons were hurt. It started from a church on the outskirts of town and followed a four-mile route leading to the Johnson County Courthouse. Up to 15 riot-equipped state patrolmen were available for immediate duty in the area, as Klansmen distributed white supremacy literature in the downtown area most of the day. Census shows Sun Belt to become biggest voter bloc WASHINGTON-The Southern and Western states have seen faster growth than other parts of the country and those areas now contain 51 per cent of Americans old enough to vote, the Census Bureau reported yester- day. Despite the shift in population trends, the South and West Won't get a; greater clout in this November's elections. The number of votes a state gets depends on its congressional makeup, and the Census Bureau's current count won't affect this fall's general elections. 7ichanenia I I 4 U.N., Lebanese forces clash BEIRUT, Lebanon-United Nations peacekeeping troops in south Lebanon yesterday repelled Lebanese Christian militia forces attempting to take over a village after Israeli tanks and troops pulled out of the frontier' buffer zone, Western diplomatic sources said. The peacekeeping forces used U.S.-made Tow missiles for the first time to repel an assault by Israeli-supported Lebanese rightist militia on a M strategic frontier village, a U.N. spokesperson said. The wire-guided, 40-pound missiles blew up one tank, killing at least one Lebanese militiaman and wounding two or three others, the spokesman said. I Israel expected to accept offer of. procedural change TEL AVIV, Israel-According to foreign diplomatic sources, Prime Minister Menachem Begin will probably agree to let a separate committee consider Israel's security concerns so negotiations about other aspects of Palestinian autonomy can proceed. Reports that Israel decided to go along with the procedural change came as Begin prepared for a two-day meeting in Washington with President Car- ter starting Tuesday. Carter summoned Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to Washington in an effort to keep the talks going beyond the May 26 target date for an agreement. He met with Sadat last week. Homemade bombs defused BELVEDERE, S.C.-Three homemade bombs planted in a controver- sial bingo parlor were defused by firefighters yesterday morning just before a timing unit-later found to be defective-was set to trigger the explosions. The devices were found after volunteer firefighters were called to a minor fire in a storage area of the building about 6 a.m. They left after put- ting out the fire in a pile of trash, but were called back-when the explosives were found just a few feet away. The bombs were connected to a primary fuse which ran to a timing device similar to ones used to turn small appliances on and off. The timer, which authorities said did not work properly, was set for 8:15 a.m., and the firefighters defused the bombs seconds before that deadline. Newspaper blames cattle deaths on U.S. agents A Tehran newspaper yesterday blamed the deaths of 85 cows on opponents of the Iranian revolution and "U.S. agents." The Moslem daily Jomhori Islami said water used by a cattle company near Tehran had been poisoned and in addition to the dead cows, 178 others were sick and "waiting for death." The newspaper quoted the guard as saying he was not surprised that the water was poisoned because Iran needs meat badly and "anti-revolutionary elements and U.S. agents have decided to strike a blow to our revolution by such acts." S Ie IfIidtian Uui g (USPS 344-904) Volume XC, No. 154 Sunday, April 13, 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. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and Field Newspaper yndicate. News room: (313) 764.0552, 76-DAILY: Sports desk: 764-0542: Circulation: 764.0558: Classified advertising: 764-0557; Display advertising: 764.0554; Billing: 764.0550: Composing Room: 761-0556. Pick Up Your 1980 Michiganensian at: Student Publications Building 420 Maynard (A limited number of extra copies Editor-in-Chief .................... MARK PARRENT Managing Editor.................. MITCH CANTOR City Editor ...............,...... PATRICIA HAGEN University Editor...................TOMAS MIRGA Editorial Page Editors..............JOSHUA PECK HOWARD Win-T Magazine Editors...............ELISA ISAACSON R.J. SMITH Arts Editors....................MARK COLEMAN DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor ...................... ALAN FANGER Executive Sports Editors ................ 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