- i Page 2-Sunday, March 15, 1981-The Michigan Daily AiqeieCas Rqu Fer $20 The Michigan Flyers is offerir Y OF mi ,aw r FLYERS AIR "Do 1g El Salvadoran archbishop ends support of left to anyone affiliated with the University of Michigan an introductory, flying lesson for just $20I No matter what you're doing now you could learn to pilot an airplane. For Information call 994-6208 or 769-6367. Tuck Tke Sky 994-6208 Lesbian and Gay Rights and the First Amendment a lecture by PAUL SIEGEL (free admission) Monday, March 16 7:30 p.m. Lawyers Club Lounge Sponsored by Lesbian and Gay Law Students Law School Speakers Committee. £ MSA ELECTIONS Last Call for Candidates!!! General Elections for the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) will be held April 7 and ,.1981. Students will elect the following officers: President, MSA Executive Vice President, MSA And Representatives from the following schools and colleges: School or college No. representatives Architecture and Urban Planning 1 Art 1 Business Administration 2 Dentistry 1 Education 1 Engineering 3 Law 1 Library Science 1 Literature, Science and Arts 12 Medicine 1 - Music1 Natural Resources 1 Nursing 1 Pharmacy 1 Public Health 1 Rackham School of Graduate Studies s 5 Social Work 1 And Representatives to The Board for Student Publications: 1 Undergraduate Representative to a 1-Year Term 1 Undergraduate Representative to a 2-Year Term 1 Graduate Student Representative to a 2-Year Term Prospective candidates must submit an application to the MSA office no later than 5:00 p.m., March 17, 1951. For filing forms and further Information, contact the MSA office, 3909 Michigan Union. phone- 703-3241. MSA ELECTIONS, APRIL 7,8 WOODWORKING WORKSHOPS STUDENTS ALUMNI Basic Woodworking Skills Tuesday: 7-10pm First Class: March 17 Intermediate Woodworking Skills Monday: 7-10 pm First Class: March 16 Class limit: 12-% enrollment reserved for students. Instructor: DAVID FAUMAN FEES: Students-$18; Staff/Faculty-$27; Others-$36 Basic Carving: One Day Only-Sunday March 15-5-9 pm FEES: Students-$4; Staff/Faculty-$8 Alumni Other-$12 To Register: STUDENT ARTS/CRAFTS SHOP, 537 SA Open Sunday-Friday 4-11 pm, Closed SATURDAY For further information call: David Fauman-763-5704, 763-4025 EACH CLASS IS SIX (6) WEEKS IN LENGTH STAFF, FACULTY, ALUMNI AND COMMUNITY PEOPLE: If at 6 m on the first day of classes all of the spaces reserved for students are not filled, you may register for them on a first come first serve basis. From AP and UPI SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - Less than a year after outspoken Arch- bishop Oscar Romero was killed by an assassin's bullet in his cathedral, his successor has halted the church's, moral support for the left and shifted it to the ruling junta. As political violence wracks the coun- try - at least 32 more people, some showing signs of torture, were found shot to death yesterday - acting Arch- bishop Arturo Rivera y Dainas says the Salvadoran people too have shifted their support because of executions by the leftists to gain their ends. "ROMERO'S LINE IS still very much alive for priests, nuns and people of El Salvador," one Jesuit priest said. "But there has been a tremendous change at the institutional and hierar- chical level." But Rivera, the man Romero called "my best friend and adviser," has said he "has trust" in the junta. He has suspended a leftist leaning "popular church" group and threatened to abolish the church's human rights of- fice, charging it does not report leftist atrocities. Rivera also has argued that the junta is a moderate government trapped between the guerrillas and rightist ex- tremists responsible for most of the 14,000 slayings reported in El Salvador in the past 14 months. .MEANWHILE, AT A press conferen- ce Friday, President Jose Duarte said a Salvadoran investigation into the mur- ders of four American women missionaries has turned up "new evidence" which was given to the FBI in Washington. Duarte said a bullet and a tooth were among the evidence found near the common grave of Dorothy Kazel, Jean Donovan, Ita Ford and Maura Clarke, who were all murdered on Dec. 2. In the United States, opposition to U.S. involvement is growing among celebrities from Hollywood and around the country - from Coretta Scott King to Ed Asner. Dr. Benjamin Spock, the famous pediatrician and critic of the Vietnam 'War, has joined those urging the United States to get out of El Salvador. So have writers Kurt Vonnegut, Erica Jong, Carl Sagan, Allen Ginsberg and I.F. Stone. Singers Kris Kristofferson, Harry Belafonte and Mary Travers have also publicly expressed. their op- position. They were among more than 200 signers of a New York Times adver- tisement last month critical of the U.S. stance in El Salvador. The ad, entitiled "Let the people of El Salvador decide," stated: "The recent decision to restore and increase U.S. military aid to El Salvador is a. dangerous step toward the involvement of the United States in the endless morass of another Vietnam." Stress,. alienation cause student suicide (Continued from Page 1) if they seem down is important.." THREE TIMES more women than men attempt suicide, but three times more men than women who attempt it are successful. This is because men choose more lethal means, like guns, than women., Peer counselors at 76-GUIDE receive- many third-party calls from people concerned about, their roommates' behavior, andl they encourage students living in residence halls to contact their resident advisors if they notice changes in behavior. "We (residence hall advisors and directors) have a suicide and depression training seminar at the beginning of each year," said William Tedford, Administrative Assistant at East Quad. "We're provided with a list of (counseling) services, and the staff comes up with a consensus of which ones are best for various conditions." MOST ATTEMPTED suicides are reported to the resident directors or administrativebassistants, Tedford said, and the building director makes constant follow-ups. "When it actually happens the first time, it can really have some effect (on the'RA)," he said. There can also be severe effects on roommates and friends. "Three years ago there was an attempt that had drastic effects on the roommate, who ended up needing more counseling than the student," Tedford said. To help deal with this problem, Rosemond said he would like to begin a ''pick up the pieces" workshop for friends, family and acquaintances of students who have attempted suicide. "THERE ARE feelings of shock, sadness, sometimes a sense of respon- sibility," Rosemond said. "A lot of people don't realize they have the right to be angry . .. and (when there is a successful suicide) they have to be able to deal with things like phone calls and mail that keeps coming for the student." But understanding preventive action is the top priority. "If someone calls and I think there's a suicide risk, I ask them if they are considering killing themselves. I ask if they have a plan, and if they have a weapon nearby. If they do, I tell them to just get rid of it." He said friends should take suicidal threats and actions seriously, be willing to listen, and seek professional help as soon as possible. They should not try to analyze their friend's behavior or say that "things will work out," because that is an unrealistic assumption. Rosemond will be leading a workshop on suicide this afternoon. He will show College Can Be Killing, a film com- paring counseling services offered at University of Wisconsin at Madison-and at Northwestern University, followed} by an informal discussion.4 Don't hang up coffee mu yet NEW YORK (AP) - Despite a study linking coffee to cancer of the pancreas, it's too soon to hang up your coffee mug for good, researchers say. The latest evidence must be misleading, they explain, and three more studies on the disease - whose occurrence has tripled in the past 30 years - are on the way. THE MOST RECENT study, by Dr. Brian MacMahon and colleagues at Harvard, turned up a link between cof- fee drinking and pancreatic cancer, the fourth leading cause of cancer deaths. The Harvard researchers reported Thursday that people who drink as much as two cups of coffee a day nearly °double their chances of the disease, and three-cup-a-day imbibers nearly triple their risk. Two months earlier, a University of Maryland study said drinking decaf- feinated coffee was a risk factor for pancreatic cancer, along with drinking wine and occupational exposure to dry cleaning or gasoline. BUT McMAHON WARNED that his results must be confirmed elsewhere before scientists try to pin down any purported cancer-causing ingredient in coffee. The culprit probably is not caf- feine, sinoe no similar link wad found with tea. And the American Cancer Society said it was "too early for any kind of clear-cut conclusion to be drawn." Studies examining the risk factors of pancreatic cancer are underway at the University of Southern California, the American Health Foundation in New York and Johns Hopkins University. - j,"il IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Nineteen killed in .m Chieago hotel fire CHICAGO-Fire raced through an aging transient hotel in an arson- ravaged neighborhood on the city's North Side before dawn yesterday, killing 19 people and injuring 14 more. Firefighters searched the smoke-blackened stairwells and rooms of the Royal Beach Hotel in Uptown for more victims. By mid-afternoon, fire of- ficials said they expected the death count to remain at 19. Among the 14 per- sons injured were two police officers. Cmdr. Edward Nichols of the police bomb and arson squad refused to speculate whether the fire may have been set. Authorities said many smoke detectors in the building, formerly a hotel, failed to work. Some were without batteries, they said. Extra defense money will be 94 used for readiness, pay hikes WASHINGTON-The Pentagon plans to spend most of the extra $32.6 billion it wants over the next two years on improving the readiness of the armed services with more ships, planes and tanks, and big pay raises. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger outlined the added funding requests, the only substantial spending boost sought by President Reagan in his revised budget, to congressional committees earlier this month. The major partsof both increases will go towards improving readiness and for weapons aquisition and modernization. In 1981, $3 billion will also be spent on inflationary increases in fuel, goods and services, and for wage in- creases for the military on July 1. In 1982, support for the increased pay structure and improved living conditions for the military will account for another $2.8 billion. Bush visits Atlanta as search for child killer continues ATLANTA-Vice President George Bush brought a message of federal compassion yesterday, as hundreds of searchers, their ranks swollen by the addition of yet another name to the grim list of 22 missing and slain black children, returned to the woods in search of clues. The vice president's afternoon stop in Atlanta, which included scheduled meetings at City Hall, came one day after President Reagan decided to give the city $1.5-million in federal funds to aid its inquiry into the unsolved child crimes. Meanwhile, volunteer searchers looked for the two black children still missing. Joseph Bell, 15, was reported missing March 3 and was considered a runaway at the time. But Friday, his case was turned over to the special police task force investigating the child deaths and disappearances. The other missing child being investigated by the task force is 10-year-old Darron Glass, who disappeared Sept. 14, 1980. Philly transit strike set PIiILADE IUP IA,--With no money proposal from Philadelphia transpor- tation officials, a state mediator yesterday was pessimistic about preventing a strike that would shut down all buses' trolleys and subways at 12:01 a.m. today. Representatives of the Tranport Workers Union Local 234 and the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority were ready for face- to-face bargaining, but union officials said there could be no negotiations without a contract proposal from the authority. "We haven't made any forward movement in the afeas necessary to culminate an agreement," said State Mediator Edward Feehan. About 5,000 drivers and other workers were set to walk out ;t 12:01 a.m. today. A strike would force 400,000 daily commuters to find other means of transportation. Reagan visits New York City NEW YORK-President Reagan made a campaign-style visit to an Italian neighborhood in New York City yesterday and then was praised by. the Democratic mayor for agreeing to help the city solve some of it's costly problems. "I'm not here to defend Ronald Reagan . .. but I'll tell you, I like him," said Mayor Edward Koch after meeting with the president. "He's a man of character." Koch, who has welcomed Republican support in his re-election campaign, said Reagan promised to do whatever he can to lift a federal mandate requiring New York to modify its subway system to provide access for the handicapped. Koch said the work would cost the city $1 6 billion in construc- tion costs and $30 million in operating costs. 01 bf1Atdjigan ?Ou1 Vol. XCI, No. 133 Sunday, March 15,1981 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. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. SubscriDtion rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor: $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. i The Michigan Doily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International. Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (313) 76.0552. 76-DAILY: Sports desk. 764-0562Circulafion, 761055 : Classified odvertising 764.0557: Display advertising. 761,055-4; Billing-764-0550: Composing room. 764-0556. S* pi IA S P6 SPM 0 4I 01 A r vv:"::.. i%'"::.:L^}+C":{:::.:: }Y.C":::?::{ :"??::"i::"}:L{ :"i:"}:{{4::{ ab}?: }}i}i}?Y.viY.4i:i?:"r}: }::"ik :"ii}: i:v::'r:{v:"'r:":^: :"ra.: }:' : ;?{.'+,:; tii: i":"'{ i::}}ir? ?>i:;.;:}j E';:;{{ :L?' :i{:. }'r}}::'?::i 'r:' :%'": 5'r:2}' j}}: r}i}'ra }}}i'r}}}i$:; :{::{{::i :'r:;:;:ii:<:: %'">:{<:i:' :::::>}}}]i?:Ci:{:;{:;_;:;{ }:::i}:'{?iv}}: }'r:i"'.:??;i:;:;{XTt ?:{:}}::' :}C .Iy S% t -n Ann Arbor's best Pasta house has become even better. Start with an expanded great atmosphere, add many new items to the menu and you have a one-of-a-kind eating experience, Cottage Inn. TATmD CfnT Tr'~DX ODT T A T C r Editor-in-chief ...... ...........SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor..............JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor................LORENZO BENET Student Affairs Editor.............JOYCE FRIEDEN City Editor.....................ELAINE RIDEOUT Opinion Page Editors ................ DAVID MEYER KEVIN TOTTIS Arts Editor ..-:..ANNE GADON Sports Editor... ... ...MARK MIHANOVIC Executive Sports Editors-----^----GREG DEGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...............RANDI CIGELNIK Soles Manager-----------------BARB FORSLUND Operations Manager . SUSANNE KELLY Display Manager..........MARY ANN MISIEWICZ, Assistant Display Manager...... NANCY JOSLIN. Classified Manager.. . DENISE SULLIVAN Finance Manager...............GREGG HADDAD Nationals Manager. ....- ... ..CATHY BAER Soles Coordinator.......... E ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Bob Abrahams. Meg Armbruster. Joe Brodo. Maureen DeLove. Judy Feinberg. Koren I V r