The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 16, 1981-P age 7 Senate committee Plc advises AWACS veto * WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate tka te ropsed sal eof AWACs radar pjaeies to Saudi Arabia be vetoed, but Senate Republican Leader Howard Bakier said he is more confident than e'ver the sale will go through. ISaker offered his assessment prior to the Foreign Relations Committee's 9-8 Vote against the sale, a lineup that the GDP leader had anticipated. " THE COMMITTEE vote came despite Baker's plea that "not a single issue has more far reaching con- sequences for the ultimate security of this country." ,And Sen. Jessee Helms, R-N.C., had told his colleagues, "If the Senate rejects this sale, I predict that every senator who votes against it will regret it." 1n Philadelphia, President Reagan ected by saying, "Frankly, I'm gr'atified that it was that close. Of cour- se, I wish they'd gone the other way." THE PRESIDENT said that with the domhmittee vote that close, he's still confident the sale will be approved on the Senate floor. The Foreign Relations panel action came a few hours after the Armed Ser- vice Committee endorsed the sale 10-5, enhance the potential of U.S. militar forces to protect U.S. interests in the Persian Gulf region." The House rejected the $8.5 billion sale Wednesday by a 301-111 margin, but the deal goes through unless it also is rejected by the Senate, where the administration has been concentrating its lobbyn efforts. A SENATE VOTE, originally scheduled next Wednesday, has been postponed until week after next. Meanwhile, in Cairo yesterday U.S. officials said the AWACS were sent to Egypt to demonstrate confidence in newly-elected President Hosni Mubarak and will remain under the control of 50 Americans assigned to fly and maintain them. Defense Minister Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala said an agreement reached af- ter former President Anwar Sadat's assassination Oct: 6 was "that two AWACS be stationed here to watch over the northern, western and southern borders. We have not bought them.. .they are here for the joint exer- cises of U.S., Egyptian, Sudanese and unspecified Persian Gulf states' troops that begin in November." Break-in on Packard Police apprehended a 32-year-old Detroit man at midnight Wednesday on the 1100 block of Packard Road. The suspect appeared to be leaving a building he had just broken into through an open window. The police were aler- ted to the scene by a resident of the building who heard noises and called the station. McKinley apartment burglarized An apartment on the 800 block of McKinley was broken into between 6:45 and 11:00 p.m. Wednesday, police said. The thief gained entry through a second-story window and took a small amount of change. 375 N MAPL E 79-1300 : - 5 2 T0 6 00 PM ROBERT DE NIRO R OBE RT DUVAL L 1:15-3:20 7:40-9 50R Two brothers trapped Midnite by a murder.-- Fri. & Sat. One hid behind his vows. T'he other behind his badge. Mon .-Tue.-Thur.-Fri 7:00-9: 15 Sat-Sun-Wedi 100-3005:00 pP 1 . ~~~CCIiforni PO"~ 1~,0yre 00i~~ (OCS / 'I/Ip.1. Union U-Cellar lease negotiations continue (Continued from Page 1) "inflationary considerations" to the rent rate before the store moves to its new location scheduled to be oni the other side of the Michigan Union He futher agreed to guarantee the U- Cellar use of the Union ballroom during book rush at the beginning of fall and winter terms, a point he'previously had hesitated to concede. eADDITIONALLY, Cianciola may still develop a formula for future rental rate increases, said U-Cellar board president Mary Ann Caballero. . "We are willing to meet some of his terms if he is willing to meet some of our terms," Caballero said yesterday. *The U-Cellar board has empowered its negotiating team to make on-the- spot decisions regarding the lease's provisions during a meeting with Cian- ciola scheduled for this afternoon. Cianciola said he considers. the proposed rent hike to' be reasonable in lht of the area's rental spc mdaket.t the lease to the Cellar is to be on a com- *petitive basis in light of the current market situation and that there is to be no-subsidy' of any kind," Cianciola said. "In order to make the building a finan- cially sound operation and to provide acceptable services to students, the Union cannot accept a lesser rental Caballero said a higher rent($9.27') paid for the Cellars' North Campus store was balanced with expenses for the No. 1 Union -based branch so North Campus students would not be charged unfairly high prices at that store. The Cellar maintains a monopoly on North Campust sand may sell "insignia" items aThe lease as currently writteni prohibits the Michigan Union bookstore from selling Michigan "insignia" items such as T-shirts and other memorabilia sold by the Union Store currently located on the first floor of the Michigan Union. Negotiators for the bookstore said the profit made from sales of these items would be enough to keep the U-Cellar operation solvent even with the ad- ditional expenses, under the proposed lease. The Cellar has been operating on a month-to-month lease with the Univer- sity since the expiration of its original lease several years ago. Negotiations fr ra new agreement began last sum- In 1979, Britain increased its cham- pagne intake by 12.4 percent, beating the Italians as the top per-capita cham- pagne consumers. The British had been the leaders for two cernturies before the Italians oyer took them in 1974. Bargain Hours--No $1 Tuesday -Two hours of non-stop thrills. -Rex Reed 1:4 LOST ARKx 9:3 5 0 011 DAILY 1:15 5$30 7:4A WILUAM HURT KATHLEEN TURNER BOdnit I1111 ~""'~ . ~ -~ '1 ' GO~ '5 * ** ~ ~ ?~'~ 0~~GW% tA~i~O~GO 9:50 Fri.:& Sat. CA RBON George Segal Jack Warden JilS. Jon -IFRT~ COPY (G 130-3 20-5 10 7:000 Fri. & Sat. in~in.m rmlvvuAu ml m1 - mu ~VMmNiUm1mkY~ in~WIm1 m~Jm1~