ALl ABBAR KHAN In Concert, Rackham Aud., April 5, 8:00 p.m. "Without in any way dimipishing the stature of the better known Ravi Shanker, Ali Abbar Khan stands part toda a 1one of tlt ,Vo% powerful, roving, and technically accomplished musicians in either the "An absolute genius. .. the greatest musician in the world."-Yehudi Menuhin "Khan's sarod always astounds ... Khan himself is the most sensitive, intuitively masterful musician of the age."-San Francisco Chronicle Accompanied by Zaker Hussain on tablas (drums) has ap- peared with George Harrison, The Grateful Dead, Van Mor- rison, The New Orleans Symphony, The London String Quar- tet, John McLanghlin and Ravi Shanker. TICKETS: $6.50, $5.00, $3.50 ALL SEATS RESERVED AVAILABLE THROUGH FRI., APRIL 3. In Ann Arbor-UAC Ticket Central in the Michigan Union, Discount Records, Liberty Music & Hudsons. In Lansing, Detroit, Flint, and Toledo-All Hudson Stores & other CTC Ticket Outlets. Remaining tickets on sale at the door starting 7 p.m. Presented by: THE RUDI FOUNDATION *MP - E Royal Prestige s seeking students to help supplement its Summer Work Force! Earn $200 per week! For Further Information, attend our meeting at: MICHIGAN UNION Ist floor Walker Room on April 6 at 11:00, 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00; April 7 at 10:00, 12,2,4, 6 car necessary. Page 2-Sunday, April 5, 1981-The Michigan Daily Salvado ran refugees return despite dangers IN BRIEF WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. im- migration officials are still sending hundreds of Salvadoran refugees back to their war-torn country despite possible dangers that await them there and a freeze on pending asylum requests. Critics of U.S. immigration policy claim many refugees are pressured in- to signing statements in which they waive their right to seek political asylum and agree to return voluntarily to El Salvador. "IF NOT CERTAIN death, they face persecution of one form or another" upon their return, said Polly Pittman of the liberal Council on Hemispheric Relations. However, immigration officials deny that pressure is applied, saying Salvadorans caught entering the United States illegally are advised of their right to request asylum if they feel they would be endangered by returning. Administration officials also contend that many of the Salvadoran immigran- ts are entering the United States for economic, not political reasons. VERNE JERVIS, spokesman for the Justice Department's Immigration and Naturalization Service, said about 1,000 Salvadorans are being allowed to remain in the United States while their asylum request are pending. In the final days of the Carter ad- ministration, the State Department im- posed a 90-day freeze on processing Salvadoran asylum requests. That move allowed Salvadorans seeking asylum to remain in the United States for at least that period. The freeze is scheduled to expire in mid-April and Reagan administration officials say no decision has been made on whether to begin granting asylum to Salvadorans fleeing their country's bloody civil war, which claimed about 10,000 lives last year. Officials say the administration fears that by granting asylum, the United States could undercut the U.S.-backed Salvadoran government by implying that it cannot protect its own people or that its security forces might actually be carrying out the political repression. Reagan, other victims continue tc (Continued from Page 1) "Who for?" "Anyone who asks them," responded Brady. "What do you do?" "Press secretary at the White House.' WHO IS THE president?" "Ronald Reagan." - "How old is he?" "Seventy-one.'' Reagan is 70, but Dr. Dennis O'Leary, spokesman for George Washington University Hospital, said he would give Brady that year. Noting Brady's serious condition on Monday, O'Leary said, "It's an ex- traordinary case. He's making very, very good progress." AT WASHINGTON Hospital Center, District of Columbia police officer Thomas Delahanty was reported in good condition and "walking around some." Delahanty was removed from intensive care Friday night after emer- gency surgery the previous night to U I . . . . . . . . . . . improve remove a bullet in his neck. Doctors for Secret Service agent Mc- Carthy, who suffered a bullet in his right side, said he remained in good condition. Meanwhile, psychiatrists have begun testing John Hinckley, Jr. to learn if he is sane and competent to stand trial on charges of attempting to assassinate Reagan, a Justice Department spokesman said yesterday. la yoral hopefuls (Continued from Pagel) human services. Faber says he is ',not interested in saving money.by reduc- tion of the quality of life." WITH THE LOSS of federal and state funds, Faber says the city must main- tain programs for housing rent and repair, legal aid, health and child care, and aid for the elderly. If elected, Faber plans to establish emergency committees to deal with the loss of funds from Lansing and Washington, D.C. These committees would be made up of citizens with ex- pertise in areas where program cuts could be made and seek alternate fun- ding for those which could not. At issue between the two is the mayor's appointment powers. Faber charges that Belcher only appoints his conservative Republican "cronies" to the city's boards and commissions. BELCHER refutes this accusation, saying that of 731 appointments he has made as mayor, 360 were independents, Democrats, or unknowns. Faber sees his duty as mayor as "servant of the community," and says he would work to improve citizen in- volvement in city affairs. Belcher, on the other hand, says city government is already open to all who wish to participate and cites numerous vacancies on city boards and com- missions. A self-described individualist, Belcher was offered a low-level position in the Reagan administration as assistant secretary of commerce for administration. "It didn't appeal to me at all," Belcher said. "I'm too used to being from a small city, having a small company, and being my own boss," he explained. Belcher says he does not have the "insatiable drive you really need to make it in (statewide) politics," and that the position of mayor will probably be his last elected job. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Prisoner allegedly shoots guard, drowns warden HUNTSVILLE, Texas-A prisoner described as "high on marijuana" ap- parently seized a gun, fatally shot a guard, and drowned the state prison warden yesterday, a justice of the peace said. The Huntsville Item reported that warden Wallace Pack, 54, and Maj. Billy Max Moore, a prison guard at the Ellis Unit of the Texas Department of Corrections, which houses death row inmates, were killed by an inmate who was being taken back to the unit from a farming area known as "the bot- tom." The unidentified inmate was recaptured yesterday afternoon. Earlier, a Montgomery County Sheriff's Department dispatcher described the situation as "out of control" as sheriff's deputies, prison guards, and Huntsville police converged on the farm site, which is about 75 miles north of Houston. The incident comes three months after U.S. District Judge William Justice ruled that the Texas prison system was vastly overcrowded and ordered sweeping changes in health care, housing, and inmate protection. Striking miner charged in shooting of non-union miner A striking United Mine Workers coal miner has been charged in the shooting death of a non-union mine worker in the first fatality apparently related to the 160,000-member union's walkout, officials said yesterday. The fatal shooting, in Pennington Gap, Va., occured Friday night following an apparent argument in a bar, said Charles Janeway, a Lee County Sheriff's Department investigator. The victim, Roy Manness, 25, had just completed work at the T&T Darby Coal Co. mine and had gone to a local tavern, Janeway said. Raymond Lester, 41, was arrested at the scene and charged with murder and malicious wounding. Bondwas set at $50,000 in cash and $100,000 in property, Janeway said. Janeway indicated the shooting was strike-related, but refused to say so specifically. Haig, Weinberger travel, warn allies of Soviet threat President Reagan's key foreign policy coordinators, Secretary of State Alexander Haig and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, began their first official trips abroad yesterday on separate missions warning of Soviet threats in Poland and the Middle East. Haig yesterday told his Egyptian hosts that he might have to end his Mideast tour abruptly and return to Washington because of increased ten- sion in Poland, Egyptian and Western sources said. Arriving in Cairo on the first leg of his Middle East mission, Haig mean- while met some resistance from the Egyptians to his proposed Persian Gulf "strategic consensus" stretching from Pakistan to Egypt. Weinberger, arriving in Britain at the start of a week-long trip to meet with Washington's NATO allies in Europe, warned that an extension of War- saw Pact military maneuvers around Poland "was consistent" with a Soviet invasion of Poland. But he said there was no sign invasion was imminent. Dayan enters Israeli prime minister race TEL AVIV, Israel-Moshe Dayan entered Israel's election race yester- day, making an exciting three-way contest out of what had looked like a straightforward battle between Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Labor Party leader Shimon Peres. If the 65-year-old soldier-statesman succeeds, it will be the third comeback in his stormy, drama-filled career. An opinion poll predicted 11 seats for Dayan's newly-launched party in the Knesset, or Parliament, 46 for the Labor Party and 33 for Begin's Likud bloc in the elections June 30. Such an outcome would give Dayan a commanding position from which to dictate terms for joining a coalition government. Space shuttle countdown to begin tonight CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.-Ground crews working around the clock are aiming toward the start of a revised countdown late tonight for the momen- tous flight debut of the space shuttle Columbia next Friday. "It looks like we still have a good shot at picking up the countdown on Sun= day," director George Page said after a status review yesterday. If all goes well, astronauts John Young and Robert Crippen will ride the Columbia into space, orbit Earth 36 times, and land the ship 541/2 hours late like an airliner on the dry desert lake bed at Edward's Air Force Base in California. The flight will herald a new space transportation era, different from anything that's been done before. For the first time, in either the American or Soviet programs, a spacecraft can be used more than once. The first mission of the Columbia is to test whether it can perform as it's supposed to. S a S s k i i4 ' 4..:::.'..: ,1 , {t~?4"" l Vol. XCI, No. 151 Sunday, April 5, 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. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription 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. The Michigan Daily 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) 764-0552, 76-DAILY: Sports desk, 764-0562; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising, 764-0554; Billing 764-0550; PR mmmmw m Editor-in-Chief .................. SARA ANSPACH Manaaging 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 DREW SHARP BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ..............RANDI CIGELNIK Sales Manager ................... BARB FORSLUND Operations Manager ...............SUSANNE KELLY Display Manager............ MARY ANN MISIEWICZ Assistant Display Manager...........NANCY JOSLIN Classified Monagoer ............. DENISE SULLIVAN Finance Manager ................ GREGG HADDAD Nationals Manager.................KATHY BAER Sales Coordinator ............ E. ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Bob Abrahams, Meg Armbruster, Joe Broda, Maureen DeLave, Judy Feinberg, Karen Friedman, Debra Garofalo, Peter Gottfredson, Pamn.nla nil Kathryn Hendrick. Anthony Interrante, IZODĀ® LACOSTE@ MENSWEAR: CUED TO OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES. 1AI.n ra - r t I r 4 4 t -2 1- orlm nt n r"o on mn nr k_avinx that fnfarlc intn ite One Performance Only April6 1981 8 p.m. L r