4V 0 Page 2-Tuesday, October 6, 1981-The Michigan Daily ANN ARBOR GOLD AND SILVER EXCHANGE 216 S. Fourth Ave. I&1495 - ANU cGOLD Any Item Marked 10 k - 14 kt - 18k1 WAHES DENTAL GOLD FOREIGN GOLD GOLD METALS CLASS RINGS WEDDING BANDS EYEGLASS FRAMES GOLD COINS GOLD PINS GOLD CUFF LINKS BROKEN JEWELRY DIAMONDS GOLD WATCHESCi* SILVER We purchase any y shape GOLD CHAINS Sterling Flatware We an c t ysto !Tea ets, "Jewelry * Industrial any coloregone We pay y weight Hours: Mon. thru Sat.94:00 AM" 5:00 PM te certified scales CIA infiltration of U.S. groups may be allowed I fir, A - f *?*fi- WASHINGTON (AP)-- A draft presidential order would allow the CIA to infiltrate domestic groups and, with the attorney general's approval, secretly influence their activities, government sources said yesterday. The document is the third draft of a revised executive order which the Reagan administration has sent to Capitol Hill. It would replace guidelines issued by President Carter in January 1978 to govern the conduct of U.S. intelligence agencies. SOURCES INSIDE and outside the government said the order also would: g Remove prohibitions against the CIA's conducting "special activities," or convert actions, inside the United States, if they are not intended to in- fluence U.S. policies or politics. - Strike the requirement that in- telligence agents reasonably believe that U.S. citizens and corporations abroad are agents of a foreign power or involved in terrorism or drug traffic before they can be put under physical surveillance. s Retainbans on assassinations, on CIA electronic surveillance in the United States and on CIA break-ins in this country. * Assert that restrictions on the FBI's conducting electronic surveillance or warrantless break-ins on U.S. citizens and corporations are not meant to limit the constitutional powers of the president. The CIA refused comment on the proposed order, which President Reagan could implement on his own authortiy. Consultation with Congress on such a question is largely advisory. The draft also says it does not authorize any violations of existing laws, but some sources said that in cer- tain areas, particularlyinvolving Four- th Amendment protections against unreasonable searches, there is little or no existing law other than the Carter executive order. ONE REPUBLICAN source said "there is no burning desire to get the CIA involved in domestic activity." Another source added that some sec- tions of the order may have been mistakenly drafted more broadly than the administration actually intended. Several sources said the impact of the order will depend on how some of the language is interpreted and what im- plementing procedures agency chiefs establish, pending approval by the at- torney general. Sen. Harrison Schmitt, (R.- N.M.) chairman of the Senate Intelligence subcommitee on rights of Americans, said the Justice Department refused yesterday to give on-the-record testimony on the interpretation of the draft order at a closed hearing. The subcommittee, in turn, refused to accept off-the-record testimony and the hearing broke up. 2 for 1 LOng Neck Beer NIGHT HAWKS * * .A A - -A-.-, A TUESDAYLUNCH-DISCUSSION OCTOBER 6-12 NOON "UGANDA AND ITS PREDICAMENT" Speaker: OMARI KOKOLE Q At the INTERNAi7ONAL CENTER' 603 E. Madison Street Lunch $1.00 For additional information please call 662-5529 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports 1981 auto sales drop DETROIT- U.S. automakers closed the books on another disaster yester- day, reporting 1981 model year sales of 6,590,017 cars were off 2.6 percent from a severely depressed 6,787,495 in the 1980 model year. Both of those figures are slightly above the depths of the last recession reached in 1975, when sales dropped to 6.58 million. But that previous down- turn year was sandwiched between stronger performances of 8.1 million in 1974 and 8.5 million in 1976. By contrast, 1981 model year sales were down 34 percent from the robust 1973 model year total of 10 million. Domestic automakers said they sold 518,522 cars in September, up only 6.7 percent from the same month last year despite heavy price discounting. Iranians execute leftists; new president elected BEIRUT, Lebanon- Government firing squads executed 129 leftists yesterday and Iran's fundamentalist Moslem regime proclaimed Hojatoleslam Ali Khamenei president by a record vote, Tehran's official media reported. Firing squads at Tehran's Evin Prison executed 61 urban guerrillas at daybreak yesterday and 68 other leftists were put to death elsewhere across the country, according to a prison spokesman and the state-run Kayhan newspaper. The prison spokesman, who refused to give his name, said the prisoners were convicted of street violence and armed insurgence against the Islamic republic. The Tehran newspaper said the other leftists were executed on similar charges. Meanwhile, the government trumpeted Khamenei's victory as the biggest landslide in the Islamic republic's 32-month history. Haig, Reagan seek support for AWACS deal WASHINGTON- In a furious attempt to salvage an $8.5 billion arms deal to Saudi Arabia, Secretary of State Alexander Haig charged opponents with "illusions . . . irresponsible in the extreme" yesterday while President Reagan unveiled support from six previous administrations. Haig, in testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, personally assailed Democrat John Glenn of Ohio for what he termed the "imaginary" claim that a compromise could be worked out calling for joint U.S.-Saudi manning of the five AWACS radar planes at the heart of the sale. The president, meanwhile, assembled 16 defense and foreign policy of- ficials from Washington's past for a White House display of bipartisan sup- port. The officials included former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who served presidents Nixon and Ford, and Zbigniew Brzezinski, the national securityadviser to President Carter. Reagan urges return to volunteer work WASHINGTON- President Reagan, calling for a rejuvenation of "America's deep spirit of generosity,"' said yesterday the nation should turn more toward v6lunteer work and private initiative to help cure its social ills. "With the same energy that Franklin Roosevelt sought government solutions to problems, we will seek private solutions," the president said in a speech before the National Alliance of Business. The National Alliance of Business is a voluntary organization of business leaders whose aim is to reduce unemployment among the poor. Noting efforts by corporations and individuals around the country to help the poor and homeless, Reagan said, "Volunteer cuts would be much more disruptive to the nation than federal budget cuts. "Because they are so important, this administration seeks to elevate voluntary action and private initiative to the recognition they deserve. We seek to increase their influence on our daily lives and their roles in meeting our social needs," the president said. Vol. XCII, No. 23 Tuesday, October 6, 1981 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. Sub- scription 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 Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (313) 764.0552, 76-DAILY, Sports desk, 764-0562, Circulation. 764-0558. Classified advertising 0 Court to examine Congress 'spending WASHINGTON (AP) - The supreme Court, opening a new term with one of its busiest days in history, said yester- day it will decide the constitutinality of how Congress does much of its spen- ding. With Justice Sandra Day O'Connor making her public debut as a working member, the court issued some 1,000 orders and began hearing arguments in cases already accepted for study. The justices said they will decide the validity of the "one-house veto,"under which either house of Congress may set aside decisions of the president or government agencies. A Federal appeals court said the much-used legislative procedure - an element in more than 20 laws dictating the spending of billions of dollars-is un- constitutional. The Justice Department and lawyers for the Senate and House now must try to convince the nation's highest court that the appeals court was wrong., Who will be first with the electronics of the future? 0 It could be you and Hughes. And that's no idle statement. Be- cause the string of Hughes firsts is legendary, from firsts in submicronics to firsts that span interplanetary dis- tances. And you'll find Hughes a perfect career choice at almost every level of expertise. You'll find a wide variety of locations spanning Southern California and Tucson, with environments to ac- comodate every lifestyle. You'll have all the advantages of a major, internation- ally recognized company, coupled with the personal responsibility and visibil- ity possible in Hughes' smaller de- centralized groups. But most of all, you'll be part of a company that puts you at the threshold of virtually every state-of-the-art tech- nology - on the ground, on the seas, in the air, in deep space. Who will be first with the electronics of the future? With 1,500 projects, a $6 billion back- log and opportunities like these, it could be you and Hughes. At Hughes Aircraft, we'll introduce you to people, ideas and jobs that could change your world. And maybe ours. Our current opportunities are for grad- uates in: " Electrical Engineering " Physics * Computer Science We also have some opportunities in: " Mechanical Engineering " Manufacturing/Industrial Engineering " Material & Processes " Mathematics " Aeronautical Engineering The following Hughes groups will be on campus: October 13 (see your placement office for an appointment) ELECTRO-OPTICAL & DATA SYSTEMS GROUND SYSTEMS INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS MISSILE SYSTEMS RADAR SYSTEMS SPACE & COMMUNICATIONS .- ------------- 1 It could be you and Hughes 764-0557' Display advertising. 764-0554, Billing 764-0550. Editor in chief....................SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor..............JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor.................LORENZO BENET News Editor ........................DAVID MEYER Opinion Page Editors...............KEVIN TOTTIS CHARLES THOMSON Sports Editor.................MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors............ GREG DeGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE DREW SHARP Chief Photographer..............PAUL ENGSTROM ARTISTS: Robert Lence. Norm Christiansen. Jonathan Stewart. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim Hill, Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas, Brian Mosck. MAGAZINE/ARTS STAFF: Jane Carl, Mark Dighton, Adam Knee, Pam Kramer, Gail Negbour, Howard Witt. NEWS STAFF: John Adam. Beth Allen. Doug Brice, CrolChaltron, Andrew Chapman, Liso Crumrine, Debi Davis, Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger. Maureen Fleming. Denise Franklin, Joyce Frieden, Mork Gin- din, Julie Hinds, Steve Hook, Kathy Hoover. Jennifer Miller. Don Oberrotman, Janet Rae. David Spok, Fan. nie Weinstein, Barry Witt. SPORTS STAFF SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Randy Berger, Mark Borowdki, Joe Chapelle, Martha Crall, Jim Dworman. John Fitzpatrick, Larry Freed, Chuck Hartwig, Chuck Jaffe, John Kere, Larry Mishkin, Dan Newman, Ron Pollack. Jeff Quicksilver, Steve Schaumberger, Sarah Sherber, James Thompson, Kent Walley, Chris Wilson, Bob Wonowski. BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager..............RANDI CIGELNIK Sales Manager...................BARS FORSLUND Operations Manager...............SUSANNE KELLY Display Manager............ MARY ANN MISIEWICZ Classifieds Manager............. DENISE SULLIVAN Finance Manager...............MICHAEL YORICK Assistant Disolov Manager...........NANCY JOSLIN Nationals Manager............. SUSAN RABUSHKA Circulation Manager................KIM WOODS Sales Coordinator ........... E. ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Liz Altman, Hope Barron, Lindsay Bray, Joe Brodo, AlexanderDPI1is, AidaEisenstadt, Susan Epps, Wendy Fox, Sandy Frcka, Pamela Gould, Kathryn Hendrick, Anthony Interrante, Indre Luitkus, Beth Kovinsky. Barbara Miner, Caryn Notisse, Felice Oper, Jodi Pollock, Michael Savitt, Michael Seltzer, Karen Silverstein, Sam Slaughter, Adrienne Strambl, Nancy Thompson, Jeffrey Voigt. 0 PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1981 SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER S M T W T F S S M T W T F S S M,. T W T F S S Ml T W T F S .---4-1523 1 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 6 10 11 12 4 6 7 8 9 10 8 10 It 12 13,14 6 B 9t1 12 13! 15 16 17 18 19 11 1314 15 16 17 15 17718 192021 20 22 2324 2526 18 20 21 22 23 24 22 24 25 a26-ah9a0 1" 27 29 30 25 6 27 28 29 30 31 No1as 1982 JANUARY FERUARY MARCH APRIL C .-. wFEBc....rUARYt c cc cur Iz:__ 1t1tD1 A - = - Ar A rI