,;: r :> ;, 4 -4 r4 4; ,~ 5 6 4'. ;s,;. .5, >..4 ; .1. '4 :.. y '' The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January 29, 1981-Page,5 Ambassador hopes letter won't make Irish angry , 45<4r ' y b~ s 45, . .l *44.44 .' e ' ( ;( "':5 .4 . 442 Sk ,f4 .4 :,:::54N f . 44 rt j,. r 5 0.0 45~454 44F From UPI and AP DUBLIN, Ireland-U.S. Ambassador William Shannon said yesterday he hopes the famous Irish sense of hunor will prevent a fury over an American diplomat's undiplomatic description of Ireland as a dull, dreary country that was "small potatoes" in world affairs. Robin Berrington, the U.S. Embassy's cultural affairs and press officer, made the critical statements in a private letter to a friend. But the letter ended up in the hands of The Irish Times because it was put in a packet of press releases about President Reagan instead of being mailed. "IRELAND HAS food and climate well matched for each other-dull," he wrote. "The one bright spot is the people, but after two and a half years, they remain unpredictable and enigmatic despite their easy approachability and charm." The letter also described Ireland as "pretty small potatoes compared to the other countries of Europe." No great issues burn up the wires between Dublin and Washington-"the hot- test item now seems to be the question whether or not Ronald Reagan's ancestors really do come from County Tipperary." The letter also mentions "the high society Anglo-Irish set who speak as though they had marbles in their mouths" and "wild-eyed" Irish nationalists "who can see no wrong in Ireland and no right in the United Kingdom or us." Berrington said "the high cost of goods, their unavailability, the dreary landscapes, the constant strikes; and the long, dark and damp winters combine to gnaw away at one's enthusiasm for being here." A GOVERNMENT source described Irish Prime Minister' Charles Haughey as "disappointed and concerned." A headline in one evening newspaper read " 'Dull Irish' Starts Diplomatic Row." And the National Tourism Council and the; Irish Hotels Federation issued statements critical of the let ter. Berrington, of Cleveland, is wrapping up a 21/2-year tour here and heading for a post in Japan. He confirmed he wrote the letter but would not comment on it other than say its release was "a mistake-it should never have got out.' Ambassador Shannon said, " "I like everything about Ireland, especially including the weather, but I cannot guarartee the opinions and emotions of all my colleagues." r. "The Irish are famous for their sense of humor and I think I shall have to rely upon it in this instance," Shannon said. The newspaper published the letter yesterday, three days. after Ireland hosted the returning American hostages during a refuelling stop. Look familiar? AP Photo Winter finally arrived at South Lake Tahoe yesterday and so did dead batteries, stalled and stuck autos, and "fender ben- lers." Eighteen inches to four feet of heavy, wet snow was dumped on the Tahoe Basin with predictions of more on the way. a I Fanfare greets .hostages upon return home $1.6 million awarded in suit against Ford ANIMATION NIGHT Back by popular-demand: short favoritesand classic cartoons from the past to the present. POPEYE MEETS ALIBABA & THE 40 THIEVES, PAX DE DEUX by Norman McLaren, Susan Pitt's ASPARAGUS, an Otto Fischinger dancing cigarette commercial, plus RUBBER CEMENT by Robert Breer, Frank Morris' FRANK FILM: BEAT ME DADDY, and BIRTHDAY by Mary Cybulski and John Tintori and many, many more. 7:00 & 9:05 at LORCH Friday: Pier Paolo Paso]ini's DECAMERON (7:00 & 9:00) Saturday: THE' EXORCIST at the Michigan, and SAINT JACK at Lorch Hall CINEMA GUILD From AP and UPI The freed U.S. hostages started returning to their hometowns yester- day; to the friendliness of small-town America and to the people they grew up with. There were miles of yellow rib- bons, hundreds of "Welcome" signs and even some,.apple pie from neigh- bors. "If it helped anyone at all to realize what freedom means, I think it was worth it," former hostage Michael Metrinko, 34, of Olyphant, Pa., told a cheering crowd in front of the Lackawanna County Court House. THE PICTURE of life for the' 52 Americans during 14112 months in Iran became clearer, meanwhile, as some of them gave details of their treat- ment-treatment that apparently varied widely and included beatings for some. Metrinko was greeted at the Scranton airport by Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. William Scranton III who said: "A native sorb has returned home to us, to the people who love himA most." A high school band played "God Bless America" s Metrinko stepped from the plane onto a 15-foot-long red carpet. Frederick Lee Kupke, 34, of Fran- cesville, Ind., got a key to the city when he landed in Indianapolis. Deputy Mayor Tom Henry said Kupke has long had "the key to our hearts." Kupke also was made a Sagamore of the Wabash-Indiana's equivalent to a Kentucky colonel. "THANK YOU very much, from the bottom of my heart," he said. Detroit held an airport reception for returning Army Staff Sgt. Joseph Subic Jr., 24, and the city transportation department offered discount fares-$1 round trip-to the airport for anyone wanting to greet the formerhostage. MICHIGAN'S other. ex-hostage, Charles Jones Jr. of Detroit, was not expected to return yesterday. The city of Detroit planned to fete both Jones and Subic with a reception sometime next week at Ford Auditorium. Both Jones and Subic were among the., 23 ex-hostages who have said they will participate in New York City's ticker tape parade on Friday. GRAND RAPIDS (UPI)-A federal jury yesterday awarded $1.6 million in damages to an Indiana man who charged a faulty rear axle in his 1971 Ford Maverick spurred an accident, that caused him permanent leg and head injuries. Kevin Spurgeon, 23, the man injured in the crash, had sought $20 million in damages from the Ford Motor Co. The jury awarded a total of ,$2 million in damages; but the award was reduced by $400,000 through Michigan's com- parative negligence law. The jury found Ford 80 percent negligent in the accident and Spu'rgeon was found 20 percent negligent. An at- torney representing Ford, Donald Souter, declined comment on the ver- dict and said he did not know if the automaker plans to appeal. Spurgeon, of Angola, Ind., was paralyzed from the waist down and con- fined to a wheelchair after the 1978 ac- cident which occurred on I-69 near Coldwater. Another Angola, Ind., man, Jeffery Gurzynski, was killed in the ac- cident. Peru attacks Ecuador, seeks to regain territory LIMA, Peru (AP)--A border conflict erupted yesterday between Peru and Ecuador, with .Ecuador claiming Peruvian aircraft attacked one of its frontier outposts and Peru announcing it was conducting a military operation in the area. 'he Peruvian announcement came from F'oreign Minister Javier Arias Stella after each country accused the other of armed aggression in the region of the Cordillera of the Condor, on the western edge of the Amazon jungle. IN QUITO, the Ecuadorean gover,- nment charged that four Peruvian helicopter gunships supported by two airplanes attacked an Ecuadorean out- post yesterday morning and warned it would defend its territory. The Peruvian announcement, issued last night, said Peru was only seeking to regain Peruvian territory occupied by Ecuador on Jan. 22. On that date, Ecuador claimed an Ecuadorean pilot stationed in Paquislha was critically wounded by 50-caliber bullets fired from a Peruvian helicopter that had "invaded" Ecuador's territory. 4 *Technicality may cut ties to hostage treaty Join The Daily WASHINGTON (AP)-A legal technicality may free President Reagan of any obligation under the hostage agreement to release U.S. military equipment Iran has paid for, a State Department official suggested yesterday., Acting Assistant Secretary Peter Constable said the Reagan ad- ministration may take a position on the military gear in the next few days. "THERE IS no obligation stated in the agreement at any place to return any specific military equipment," Con- stable told reporters. He said the United States is required to-unfreeze Iranian assets, but said the military goods still are subject to U.S. -law that requires federal licenses for their shipment to Iran. "The question of the manner of un- freezing those assets and satisfying the commitment to return those assets to Iran is under very active review, par- ticularly as .it relates to military spares," Constable said. HE SAID THE agreement specifies that release of the assets is subject to U.S. laws, including one that requires federal licenses for all military exports. "This question is under very active review and there perhaps will be a definitive position on this in the next few days," Constable said. He made the comments after giving the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee a closed-door briefing on the agreement that freed 52 Americans last week after 14 months of Iranian cap- tivity. IN A NEWS conference yesterday af- ternoon, Secretary of State Alexander Haig said that because the military equipment was not specifically discussed in the agreement, Iran could be compensated in cash for the U.S. weapons it has already paid for. Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio), a member of the committee, said all licenses Iran had for shipments of U.S. military equipment have now expired, so they would have to be renewed. Glenn said there is "a technical dif- ference" over whether the military equipment must be considered assets the United States agreed to release automatically or can "be held up under our other licensing procedures." SEN. S.I. HAYAKAWA (R-Calif.), told reporters they should be prepared for "a big surprise" when Reagan an- nounces whether he will honor the hostage agreement. But Hayakawa said he has no inside information on what Reagan will an- nounce. "All I know is that the basic tem- perament of people like Ronald Reagan and (Secretary of State) Alexander Haig is to find some parts of the agreement, well, unacceptable to them. "I mean that's the kind of people they are," Hayakawa said. "In other words I'm saying that they are likely to see this whole thing as rewarding Iran for its defiance of international law." 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