Page 8-Friday, Janua y 18, 1980-The Michigan Daily Tito won BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - Doctors want to amputate the lower part of Josip Tito's left leg, but the 87- year-old president will not permit it, Yugoslav sources reported yesterday. An operation last weekend to correct a circulation problem in the leg was un- successful. -Thesreports, unconfirmed by of- ficials, came after days of speculation about an amputation as a means of avoiding the dangers of continued blocked circulation. :OFFICIALS, including Tito's team of eight doctors, said only that Tito's leg was "in gradual deterioration" after the weekend surgery. =The panel has provided brief daily bulletins since then, none hinting at what the next move might be. The Wool t permit am operation itself followed an unsuc- cessful week-long effort to treat the condition with medicine alone. Tito's illiness added to tension in Yugoslavia over the Soviet military in- tervention in Afghanistan strongly op- posed by the Tito government. ONE YUGOSLAV official com- plained privately that Western speculation about a. similar move against Yugoslavia after Tito dies"only irritates the Russians in a situation when they are already irritated. "" Students in the Croatian capital of Zagreb staged a demonstration earlier in the week to protest the Soviet move into Afghanistan. Party and government leaders have been directing a campaign calling for increased vigilance in the wake of the putation I FUNDS SOUGHT FOR FIVE PROJECTS April ballot may feature bonds4 intrusion into Afghanistan. Tito broke from the Kremlin in 1949 and many Yugoslavs fear a Soviet attempt to bring their country back in once Tito dies. TITO'S ILLNESS has kept him from personally directing the Yugoslav diplomatic campaign. His health is also being discussed at local party meetings originally intended only to deal with party policy on Afghanistan, defense and other matters. The local meetings are the first of their kind since 1968, when they were called after the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia. Participants in the current meetings, however, say these lack the crisis atmosphere of 1968. 7 % "' ' :, r By JOHN GOYER City Council is considering a capital improvements plan for Ann Arbor, in- cluding five projects to be funded through bond issues. in 1980. The bond issues, totalling $5 million, would have to be approved by voters in the April city elections. The plan, which has been called a "wish list" by City Hall staffers, is made up of two parts: a list of projects to be funded in 1980, and a much larger group of projects that the city would like to build over the next six years. THE LIST OF projects includes im- provements to the city's park system, the sanitary sewer and storm sewer system, the transportation system (in- cluding road improvements), the water system, and the city's buildings. BY THE TERMS of the Headlee Tax Limitation Amendment, voters must approve such bond issues. The five bonding proposals which council might put before the voters in April would support a storm sewer to relieve flooding in the Sister Lakes neighborhood on the city's west side, with $575,000 in bonds, and four major road improvements: " On South Industrial Highway bet- ween Stadium Boulevard and Eisenhower Parkway (with $300,000 in bond revenues); " Widening the intersection of Packard St. and Stadium Blvd. ($120,000); " Adding a center turn lane to State St. between Eisenhower Parkway and Stimson St. ($2,750,000); " And finally, $750,000 in bonds . to support the city's on-going street resur- facing program for the coming year. The five projects are only partially funded through bond revenues and the balance is expected to be made up with state and federal monies. CITY COUNCIL members, who looked at the capital plan at a working session Wednesday evening, said they were unsure as to whether they would support putting all five bonding proposals before the voters in April. "I just don't see how you can talk about cutting back on taxes on the one hand, and putting all these proposals on the ballot on the other hand. I think there's a contradiction there," Coun- cilmember Edward Hood (R-Fourth Ward) commented last night. Hood said he would not support voting to put bonding proposals before the voters unless he approved of the projec- ts himself, because voters might simply rubber-stamp the projects. "I THINK most voters assume that council is screening these projects and that we're 100 per cent behind them," Hood said. Councilmember David Fisher (14 Fourth Ward) echoed Hood's objection to placing the proposals on the ballot just on the principle of "letting the voters decide." Fisher said he had learned a lesson when voters approved the purchase of a city solid waste shredder for the city, on the basis of claims that a shredder would increase the life of the city's lan- dfill. The shredder, he claimed, has- since proven to be financially un-, feasible, and he said voters approve* the shredder even without the infor- mation to judge its worth. The list includes projects to be built over the next six years at a total expen-I se of $93 million - many of which will. never be built, according to council: members. The city's share of the project's cost would total some $54.5: million. GRADUAT ING ENGINEERS. Have-you considered these factors in determining where you will work?' 1. Will the job offer challenge and responsibility? 2. Will your future employer en- courage job mobility? 3. Will your future employer en- courage, support and reward continued professiornal educa- tion? 4. How much choice will you have in selecting your work assign- ment? 5. Big starting salaries are nice - but what is the salary growth and promotion potential in the job? 6. Can you afford the cost-of- living in the area? At the Naval Weapons Center we have given these things a lot of consideration 'and believe we have the answers for you. Arrange through your placement office to interview with our repre- sentative Dan Brown on January 22 and 23 We think you will like what you hear. Soviet Union s70 sdefense spending 30 per cent higher than United States WASHINGTON (AP) - The Central Intelligence Agency said yesterday that the Soviet Union spent almost 30 per cent more on defense than the United States in the decade that ended last month. The CIA estimated Soviet defense spending increased during the decade at an average annual rate of three per cent. Meanwhile, U.S. spending, ad- justed for inflation, fell slightly bet- ween 1970-1976 and rose slightly during the rest of the decade. THE CONCLUSIONS were published in a CIA report comparing the defense spending patterns of the two super- powers. The U.S. foreign intelligence agency, saying the Russian spending pattern showed "continuous growth throughout the decade," predicted a similar growth rate for the 1980s. After years of being outspent by the Americans, the CIA said, the Soviet Union caught up with U.S. defense spending in 1971 and then exceeded the Americanoutlays each year by an ever- increasing margin. In 1979, according to the CIA, the Soviets spent the equivalent of about $165 billion, com- pared to $108 for the United States. BY 1979, ACCORDING to the reportw the Soviets had 4.3 million people is uniform, about twice the U.S. total. Meanwhile, U.S. naval strength in the Indian Ocean region has increased temporarily to 25 ships, including three aircraft carriers, the Pentagon said yesterday. If you cannot fit an interview into your schedule, write or call: ATO7 4 A O C. KAREN ALTIERI Professional Employment Coordinator NAVAL WEAPONS CENTER (CODE 09201) China Lake, CA 93555 * (714) 939-3371 CULS marks ten years of 'U'service An Equal Opportunity Employer. These are Career Civil Service Positions. (Continued from Page 3) that 10 to 15 per cent of students using CULS services are non-minorities. "Even though our historg is with minorities, and we have a commitment to serve minority students, we welcome majority students," Russ said. "Under U.S. Citizenship Required No _F 1 N The Intel Notebook, HEW rulings, and under the law of the land, we can't practice reverse discrimination." Both Russ and Barham expressed satisfaction with CULS programming, but cited the effects of budgetary con- straints on services. "WE CERTAINLY have to compete SAVE UP TO50%S MIDWEST NATURAL FOOD WAREHOUSE SALE vitamins, teas, books, personal care products, foods. ONE DAY ONLY- Sunday,January 20 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 170 April Dr. (left off Jackson Rd. oa Curt Terova Cadillac, 'a mile west of Weber's). with other (LSA) units for funds," Barham said. "The limitations are hard to describe. They probably have to do with the limited services a part-time staff can provide. I'm satisfied with the breadth of our coverage, but the depth would be better if we had more professional staff." One University student, LSA fresh- woman Victoria Lim, attended the open house yesterday. "I came here to fipe out what CULS is," Lim said. "The first time I heard about it was in September at an orientation for Asian- Americans." Cynthia Wiggins, a sophomore in the School of Nursing, said she has used some CULS services. "The only service I've really used is the English writing skills workshop,'' she said. "I'm more likely to go to a nursing program counselor. They know, more about the requirements, an that's the reason." Careers and Technology at Intel The Microelectronics Revolution- and how you can be part of it. See us on campus January 28 & 29. Take notes with class .. } Think for a minute about what microelectronics technology has already achieved. Yet we are still in the infancy of the microelectronics revolution. And no company is doing more tor speed it than Intel. CHOOSE YOUR AREA OF INVOLVEMENT. We're an acknowledged leader in four major product areas: semiconductor memories and microprocessors, and microcomputer systems and memory systems. Plus, we're extending our leadership into data-base management. Our success has created a wide variety of career opportunities in technical marketing, finance, and production planning- management. FOUR GREAT LOCATIONS. We've built our facilities where the quality of life is high, because only in such places can we attract the highly skilled, highly motivated people we need. That's why we can offer you California's San Francisco Peninsula; Portland, Oregon; Phoenix, Arizona; or Austin, Texas, each with its own intriguing lifestyle. SIGN UP NOW. talk with you. Stop by the Business School to sign up for interviews during our visit. Or if you'll be unable to see us on campus, write to any of our locations: California Intel College Relations 3065 Bowers Avenue Santa Clara, CA 95051 Oregon Intel College Relations 3585 S.W.198th Avenue Aloha, OR 97005 Arizona Intel College Relations 6401 W. Williams Field Road Chandler, AZ 85224 Texas Intel MRI/College Relations 12675 Research Boulevard Austin, TX 78759 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H. O * f I ... with a MONTBLANC. Long known as Europe's leading pen, the MONTBLANC has- superb craftsmanship, remarkably smooth writing action and perfect balance. S, If you're about to receive an MBA (and for /4/pl So, don't just take notes - come in, pick out a I i II I I 1