100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 25, 1981 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1981-10-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 25, 1981-Page 7

AWACS
veto
looms

WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite
President Reagan's vow to "keep on
fighting" for approval of his arms
package for Saudi Arabia, the transac-
tion appeared headed for a
congressional veto unless the president
can pull off a political miracle of per-
suasion before the Senate vote Wed-
nesday.
Veto of the $8.5 billion arms deal that
includes fib AWACS radar planes
would be an embarrassing defeat for
theRepublican president who, until
now, has shown a remarkable ability to
get his way in tough confrontations with
Congress.
"THIS IS STILL eminently win-
nable," was the assessment of Senate
Republican leader Howad Baker, Jr. of
Tennessee, who is leading the fight to
avert a Senate veto.

But the Senate opponents appear to
have the numbers on their side.
The latest Associated Press survey of
the Senate found 52 opposing the sale, 36
supporting it and nine uncommitted. Of
the three remaining, one senator is
regarded as leaning toward supporting
eh package while two are leaning
against it.
The president plans to plunge back
into the battle with face-to-face
meetings tomorrow with senators. In-
tense lobbying by Reagan during the
past two weks won over some senators.
Just before Reagan left for the
economic summit in Cancun, Mexico, it
was looking as though he would pull out
another victory on Captial Hill. But his
momentum was halted when Senate
Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West
Virginia declared his opposition to the

I

INDIVIDUAL THEATRES
5* A-e *atLb"y7-619700

7

1-I

$150

tir

I

WID.SAT.SUN.
$I t0 o.
6:00 P.M.-

..,

Wonderful Dialogue!
Hilarious Sex ScenesI
Brilliant Acting! i

READ
AND USE
DAILY
CLASSIFIEDS

Doily Photo by KIM HILL
JAZZ ARTIST Bob James directs the Michigan Marching Band in perfor-
ming his composition "Touchdown" during yesterday's football halftime
festivities.
Solzhenitsyn urges

P375 N.MAPLE
6-1300
S* $2 TO 600 PM
ROBERT
DE NIRO
ROBERT
DUVALL
NTEDMIDNITE
SFRI. SAT.
1:15 3:20 5:30 7:40 9:50

RICH and
FAMOUS
(R)
JACQUEUNE BISSET
CANDICE BERGEN
Daily--7:20, 9:40
Sat., Sun.-1:20, 3:40,
7:20, 9:40
"dLORIOUSI""SHINING"
-Gene Shoutt- -ime
"BEAUTIFULI"
VINCENT CANBY
PVO~an(R)
Based on the novel by
JOHN FOWLES
Screen play by
HAROLD PINTER
She was lost
from the moment
she saw him.

caution wi
NEW YORK (AP)-Exiled Soviet
writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn warns
that the United States must not make
the same mistakes in its dealings with
China that it did in its policy toward the
Soviet Union.
In a rare interview to be broadcast by
.NBC, Solzhenitsyn says economic and
even military assistance to China
"might postpone a world denoument"
because China will provide a tem-
poxary "protection against the Soviet
.Uion."
"BUT IF YOU arm China," he war-
=ned, "you will give China the second
half of the earth, the very half where
America is situated, and there nothing
will help you."
Solzhenitsyn, exiled from his
*4omeland in 1974 and now a resident of
Vermont, spoke with Rep. John
LeBoutillier (R-N.Y.) in an interview to
broadcast in two parts on NBC's
- late-night "Tomorrow Coast-to-Coast."
Solzhenitsyn is author of "The Gulag
Archipelago," a book about the Soviet
:network of prison camps, and other
works. LeBoutellier recently wrote an
article suggesting expansion of free
world communication to the Soviet
~Union.
SOLZHENITSYN said economic and
technical assistance from the United

th China
States helped Joseph Stalin solidify his
dominant position in the Soviet Union in
the 1930's.
H "After the end of World War II," he
said, "the American administration,
without any obvious need, gave away to
Stalin all of Eastern Europe and
China."
ThW63-year-old writer said China "is
now comparable to the Soviet Union in
the'30s."
"In 30 or 40 years," he said, "you will
read the Chinese 'Gulag Archipelago,'
and you will be stunned, and you will
say, 'Well, we didn't know.' But you
must know, you must find out, you must
know today what's going on."
The twopart interview will be broad-
cast Monday and Tuesday nights.

Bargain fHours - No $1 Tuesday
Two hours of
non-stop thrills.
-Rex Reed
R~OF TH
PARAMOUNT
DAILY WILLI HURT
1"1 KATHLEEN TURNER '
3:20.B Y
7:40 Midnite
9:50 Fri. & Sat. HEfT1i
CARBON COPY
DAILY
George Segal AIL3 205
Jack Warden 7:009:'00
Susan St. James Midnite
Fri. & Sat.

1:45.
4:15
7:00
9:30

MERYL STREEP

Daily-7:00, 9:25
Sat., Sun.-1:00, 3:25,
7:00, 9:25

(PG
:10

I

BAND.O.RAMA
SATURDAY, Oct. 31
8 p.m. Hill Auditorium
Featuring:
SYMPHONY BAND THE FRIARS
CONCERT BAND JAZZ BAND
MICHIGAN MARCHING BAND
Tickets: $2,:$4, $5 at Hill Box Office
Oct. 26-30-9 a.m.-4 p.m'

theI4ic fhinrn

:fniln

I

L.

I
IST C.3
!ICIA THARI

Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan
U ------------WRITE YOUR AD HERE! -----------
-.-.---. --. ..----- ..LP AND MAIL.TODAY!-..- - --J------ -I
USE THIS HANDY CHART TO-QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST
Words Days
1 2 3 4 5 X add.
0-14 1.85 3.70 5.55 6.75 7.95 1.00
Phease indicate
15-21 2.75 5:55 8.30 10.10 11.90 1.60 where this ad
22-28 3.70 l 7.40 11.10 13.50 15.90 2.20 'fo r""t
29-35 4.60 9.25 13.90 16.90 19.90 2. fi fr sale
help wanted
36-42 5.55 '11.10 16.65 20.25 23.85 3.40 roommates
perconal '
43-49 6.45 12.95 19.40 23.60 27.80 4.00 etc.
Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over five characters count as two words. (this
Icludes telephone numbers). Seven words equal one line.
Advertisement may be removed from publication. For ads which required prepayment, there will be no refunds.
All other ads will be billed according to the original number of days ordered.

1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
U1
I1
I

i

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan