Page 8-Saturday, March 7, 1981-The Michigan Daily Poland rounds up anti-socialists WARSAW, Poland (AP)-Polish authorities cracked down sharply on dissidents yesterday in a move apparently aimed at demonstrating Poland's will to crush the "anti-socialist forces" , often at- tacked by its Soviet-bloc allies. Before the latest spate of anti-dissident actions, the leaders set the meeting to map a reaction to the five- hour detention Thursday of dissident leader Jack Kuron on charges he slandered the state. IN WROCLAW EARLY yesterday, authorities tried to serve a summons to dissident Adam Michnik, but he refused and union leaders put him under the protection of "worker guards," a spokesman said. The official news agency PAP then announced that Robert Moczulski, 51, and three members of the ex- treme nationalist Confederation of Independent Poland, of KPN, were indicted on charges of ac- tivities aimed against "basic political interests of Poland." A Solidarity spokesman in Wroclaw said the dissident Michnik, there for a meeting with students, refused the summons to appear before a prosecutor Monday. THE SOLIDARITY statement on Michnik did not give the reason for the summons. Michnik and Kuron belong to the dissident Committee for Social Self- Defense, KOR, which has been advising Solidarity. Other indicted KPN members include Romuald Szeremitiewow, 36, Tadeusz Stanski, 33, and Tadeusz Jandiziszak, 39, PAP said. After nearly two weeks of relative calm in Poland's labor crisis, tensions began to build here after a Moscow meeting between Soviet and Polish leaders that ended with a declaration in which the Soviets ex- pressed the conviction that Polish communists could "reverse the course of events" and solve Poland's problems. UNCONFIRMED rumors circulated here that Solidarity leader Lech Walesa would meet before the Saturday session with Premier Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, who in his inaugural address Feb. 11 called for a 90-day respite from the labor unrest that has swept Poland since last July. In the United States, fears of Soviet intervention in Poland resurfaced with Western reports of Polish troop movement over the past two days, movements that coincided with the Kremlin's harshest declaration yet on Poland's problems. Western observers in Warsaw said they detected troop movements that suggested joint Polish-Soviet maneuvers could begin soon. Observers here say such maneuvers are normal at this time of year, but the action raised concern at the State Department. Workers in the central industrial city of Lodz, on strike alert since Wednesday over the firing of union members, said they would make no further decision until after a Saturday leadership meeting of the in- dependent labor movement Solidarity. The strike alert in Lodz, and the urgent meeting of the Solidarity leadership, were the first since major strikes ended here Feb. 20 with the settlement of a farmers' protest in southeastern Poland. S Salvador guerrillas massacre peasants SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Military sources said yesterday that left-wing guerrillas massacred "hun- dreds" of peasants they accused of cooperating with gover- nment troops during an operation in and around San Lorenzo. An army spokesman and the military sources also reported troops had driven anti-government guerrillas out of two provincial cities in fighting that left at least 65 people dead. OFFICIALS HAD reported guerrilla bands in San Lorenzo, 45 miles northeast of San Salvador, were "wiped out" in a campaign last week, but the sources said there was renewed fighting there yesterday and other guerrillas had killed hun- dreds of peasants for supporting the troops in the earlier operation. They gave no details of the alleged massacre. The army spokesman reported at least 30 guerrillas slain in a 24-hour battle for Jutiapa, 30 miles east of San Salvador, and he said guerrilla activity appeared to be decreasing around the country. The military sources reported another battle, however, at San Antonio de Los Ranchos, 50 miles north of the capital, and said 35 people, including an unspecified number of soldiers, were killed in the fight that ended yesterday with the army recapturing the city. IN WASHINGTON, President Reagan described U.S. goals in aiding the civilian military junta as "an attempt to try to halt infiltration into the Americas by terrorists." He told a news conference that none of the 54 advisers being sent to El Salvador would be going into combat, but acknowledged that "we can't, I'm sorry to say, make it risk free." In Moscow, the Soviet news agency Tass yesterday ac- cused Washington of making "malicious inventions" about Soviet and Cuban involvement in El Salvador to mask its own interference in the Central American country. Tass charged that the U.S. government was trying to sup- press El Salvador's national liberation movement "by force of arms" while simultaneously trying to turn it "into a sub- ject of East-West confrontation." In another development, Sen. Edward Zorinsky (D-Neb.) claimed in an interview with the Omaha World-Herald that the FBI and the Salvador government know the identities of those who last December killed four Americans in El Salvador - three nuns and a lay religious worker. H-a Hqackrs o Pakstan Purr-fect warning AP Photo "Charlie", one of the Siberian tigers housed at Great Adventure in Jackson, N.J., contentedly soothes an itch on a park warning sign. Charlie's unusual environment was created by a major snow storm that dumped ten inches on the tiger's home turf as well as much of the east coast. ENGINEERING GRADUATES We're the HOWMET TURBINE COMPONENTS CORPORA- TION, the world's foremost manufacturer of investment cast superalloy components for aircraft gas turbine and power generating and pumping markets. Our ranking in this field, as well as our involvement in many others, has kept us growing, thereby creating a need for these dynamic professionals. METALLURGICAL ENGINEERS MECHANICAL ENGINEERS We will beon campus Tuesday, March 10, to interview graduating seniors with majors in the above areas. Our needs. are in our Whitehall, Michigan facilities for engineering grad- uates in the following areas of employment; Research and Development, Production, and Training Programs. We can offer you a superb working environment where your career can grow in many ways, allowing you to keep sight of your professional needs and goals. 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THE AFGHAN broadcast said the LSAT GRE GMAT Test Preparation How do you prepare for these important tests? Get the facts no cost or obligation hostage new deadline was 3 p.m. Saturday, 5:30 a.m. EST. The Afghan radio also reported an American hostage aboard the plane, said some passengers were becoming ill, and urged a speedy settlement of the crisis. Six Americans were reported among the hostages held by three hijackers demanding release of political prisoners in Pakistan. The Kabul broadcast monitored here gave no details of events leading up the fatal shooting except to say that it oc- curred while one of the hijackers was speaking on the cockpit radio with the chief Pakistani negotiator at the air- port control tower. ACCORDING TO freed hostages evacuated to Pakistan Tuesday, the hijackers had a list of four hostages to be executed one at a time if their demands were not met. They also threatened to blow up the plane. The slaying and Pakistani accusation of Afghan complicity further clouded negotiations already difficult because of strained relations caused by the presence of Soviet troops in the coun- try. The Soviets moved into Afghanistan in December 1979. Soviet Embassy personnel were reported by a reliable source in Kabul to be involved in the negotiations and Soviet troops were said to be alerted at the airport. The shooting victim, identified as Tariq Rahim assigned to the Pakistani Embassy in Tehran, Iran, was taken to a nearby hospital after a hijacker on the plane notified Afghan authorities by cockpit radio to remove a body, the broadcast said. He died 2% hours later. U.S. will sell aircraft parts to Saudi Arabia WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan administration, despite Israeli objec- tions, announced yesterday the sale of sophisticated military equipment for Saudi Arabian jet fighters to counter "a serious deterioration" of U.S. security interests in the Middle East. State Department spokesman William Dyess said the administration will sell the Saudis extra-large fuel tanks and Sidewinder air-to-air missiles that will increase the range and the firepower of the 62 F-15 inter- ceptor aircraft the Saudis have or- dered. DYESS ALSO said the United States will provide the F-15s with a refueling capability and that bomb racks may be supplied for defense against an in- vasion of Saudi territory. Aerial sur- veillance aircraft will be sold to the Saudis, subject to a study of their requirements. The announcement touched off vocal opposition from both Israeli officials and pro-Israeli members of Congress. Israeli ambassador Ephraim Evron, in a conversation yesterday with Un- dersecretary of State James Buckley, expressed "great concern and disap- pointment," Israeli sources said. SEN. JOSEPH BIDEN (D-Del.) said he would introduce a resolution aimed at blocking the sale and that there is a 50-50 chance Congress will approve it. Both houses of Congress would have to vote against the sale to block it. The Carter administration won 4p- proval of the F-15 sale to Saudi Arabia in 1978 as part of a package deal under which Israel and Egypt also received sophisticated jet fighters. At the times some members of Congress expressed concern the sale could invite a pre- emptive military strike by Saudi Arabia against Israel. The sale was approved after the Car- ter administration offered assurances the Saudis would not receive the ac- cessories. But Dyess said yesterday that since 1978, there has been a "serious deterioration in security con- ditions in the Middle East-Persian Gulf region. "THE SOVIET invasion ofW Afghanistan, the turnioil of the Iranian revolution, the Iran-Iraq war and the Soviet presence in South Yemen and Ethiopia underscore the instability in the region and the dangers of Soviet penetration and exploitation." U.S. officials said the administration is attempting to respond to Israel's concerns in several ways. They said deliveries of F-15 and F-16 jet fighters to Israel may be ac-O celerated and the administration plans to increase by $300 million in both 1983 and 1984 the level of military credit sales for Israel. Axton , Eduatonal 32466 Olde Franklin Farmington Hills, MI 4801;1 (313) 851-2969 (call collect) Please send me your "What Are The Facts" brochure - Name Address Phone Test: LSAT 2 GMAT 0 GRE [0 /II/ \\ :k Lk~,,~&b~tc~ra ~ .t. T ONIGHT! THE EVENT MICHIGRAS '81 0 8 p.m. Union IN t 1Ze pa- THE Fooc $ No o Q0 0 s p r es ac, e P arArA d n-C - - rA 1-3 i nrink -c,- G F1 NI I I ,a LrI I 1 \ 0 I tA