4 10-Wednesday, January 14, 1981-The Michigan Daily CITRUS, VEGETABLE CROPS THREATENED Record cold wave hits Florida From the Associated Press The "strange" Siberian cold wave punishing the ast stunned Florida yesterday with a record killer eeze from Tallahassee to Miami that hung icicles on range trees and glazed vegetables in their fields. Florida Power & Light Co. was forced to impose )tating 20-minute blackouts on cities along the entire eninsula as the coldest weather since the turn of the entury put a strain on generating plants in many reas. RECORDS FOR THE coldest day ever in January 1ll across the Southeast-seven degrees in 'ilmington, N.C., eight degrees in Tallahassee, Fla., 4 in Savannah, Ga.-while many cities of the Nor- ieast logged new lows below zero. The cold wave that has fishing boats frozen to their ocks in New England and fuel barges ice-bound in hesapeake Bay may have wiped out 20 percent of lorida's bountiful orange crop, the equivalent of 49 iillion gallons of concentrated orange juice, citrus ficials said. Temperatures ranged from 20 to 26 egrees in most of the citrus belt of Central Florida. "It was a grim night for growers," said Earl Wells, a spokesman for Florida Citrus Mutual. "We know there has been crop damage but to what extent and what exactly the loss is we don't know at this time." IN THE NATION'S winter vegetable garden near Homestead, south of Miami, heavy losses also were reported. "It's a disaster," said Betty Tilson, wife of bean farmer Ed Tilson. "Our fields aren't frosted, they're iced over. My husband said every bean field we've got is just black, and thetomato fields next to us are too." Tilson said they used four helicopters to keep the frigid air circulating and 13 giant sprinklers to keep a blanket of warm ground-water on the fields, trying to save their 160 acres of beans, valued at $240,000. ALVIN SAMET OF the National Weather Service said some other Florida freezes over the years have been more damaging because they lasted for several days. "But this isn't over," he said. "We're going to have a brief break, but then it'll be back cold again. It'll probably warm up a bit tomorrow, but who knows what will happen later. It looks like temperatures are going to remain below normal, looking ahead to Jan. 21." Since Christmas, the arctic air has set daily recor- ds in cities throughout the eastern United States. Some cities posting subzero records yesterday in- cluded Atlantic City, N.J., minus six; Concord, N.H., minus 21; Hartford, Conn., minus nine; Scranton, Pa., minus 13; Wilmington, Del., minus two. And almost daily there are new reports of elderly people dying in the cold. On the eastern shore of Chesapeake Bay yesterday, authorities said Franklin Green, 59, was found dead in a room in his apartment where a small stove had gone out and the tem- perature was 30 degrees. The cause of death was listed as hypothermia. In Jacksonville, a 43-year-old man was found dead in a vacant lot Monday. Authorities said he also died of hypothermia-reduced body temperature. Harbors in New England were clogged with ice. The Cape Cod Canal was closed to commercial fishermen, small vessels and most barges, including those with heating oil and gasoline for Boston and northern New England. - q aa aa - -- - - 44 e' y Anal $ , tt s.s4 Zt 94 N~ 36.'+t lfft+.0.4 1 GMN p/«aO' COFK 1 pt £ ftX Z.ttd Ga,.mou ° V FV 1 t 1/x 7, More than 500 dead in fighting in El Salvador 1/..i' _-; SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Sporadic fighting between leftist guerrillas and army troops was repor- ted in El Salvador yesterday, but government sources claimed the inten- sity of the guerrilla attacks diminished by half. A South African photographer died of land-mine wounds. More than 500 persons were reported killed in four days of fighting since lef- tist forces launched a so-called "all-out offensive" to overthrow the ruling civilian-military junta. "THE FINAL offensive of the ex- tremists was a failure. They failed in every place they tried," junta President Jose Napoleon Duarte said in a television interview. A government source said the leftist "attacks have been reduced in intensity by about half. They have nothing more left to do." Ian Mates, 25, a South African cameraman wounded by a land-mine explosion the day before, died in a hospital yesterday morning. Doctors had performed a two-hour brain operation to remove mine-fragments. MATES AND TWO American photographers were in an automobile about nine miles from the capital when the mine blew up their car. It took six hours before he was brought to an operating table. Doctors said his life might have been saved if he had gone into surgery earlier. The other two, John Hoagland, 29, of San Diego, Calif., on assignment for Newsweek magazine, and Susan Meiselas, 33, of New York, on assign- ment for Time magazine, suffered lesser injuries and were to be flown to the United States yesterday. Scattered skirmishes between military patrols and guerrillas were reported in the Santa Ana area, to the northwest, and in Morazan province, in the eastern part of the country. 1 1 1. AT LEAST three army officers deser- ted to the, guerrilla cause in recent days, all followers of Col. Adolfo Ar- noldo Majano, who was forced out as a junta member during an internal power struggle in December. Majano was a leader of the Oct. 15, 1979, coup that overthrew the conser- vative regime of Gen. Carlos Humberto Romero, and one of the two army colonels on the five-man junta. His ouster reduced the junta to four. Majano's whereabouts are unknown, but it is widely rumored here that he may have joined the leftists as well. The Democratic Revolutionary Front, a federation of most of the coun- try's non-guerrilla leftist groups, said it would establish a "revolutionary government" soon and issue the names of persons selected to seek inter- national recognition and support for it. Millersays Chrysler proposal inadequate a0 Not suewihTI is right for you*? We stock the complete line of Texas Instruments calculators. And we understand what we sell, so we can assist you in selecting just what you need. We're competitive. In fact, we'll match any deal or refund your money. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Treasury Secretary G. William Miller told the Chrysler Corp. yesterday its cost- cutting plan needed to win government. approval of $400 million in federal loan guarantees "is not adequate." Miller said he urged officials of Chrysler and the United Auto Workers union during an impromptu meeting at the Treasury Department to "sit down right now" and work out an acceptable plan by today. THE CHRYSLER Loan Guarantee Board, which oversees Chrysler's $1.5 billion in loan guarantees authorized by Congress, is scheduled to meet at 4 p.m. EST today to issue a preliminary ruling on Chrysler's request for $400 million in loan guarantees. Chrysler has already received $800 million of the $1.5 billion fund. "We have no more time," Miller told reporters after the impromptu meeting, called by Miller and UAW President Douglas Fraser because negotiations between the UAW and Chrysler were stalled. "In essence, the general reaction of the loan guarantee board is that the Chrysler plan does have many elemen- ts to solve Chrysler's problems," Miller said. "The board does not feel that the plan presented by Chrysler is adequate. It needs to be tuned up, refined . "THE OVERALL plan is not adequate and is going to have to have additional financial cushions. What we're concerned about is the cost structure. "If we don't have a plan the board can buy, it (the loan guarantee request) will not be approved and it will hang in limbo, over into the next ad- ministration," Miller said. It is believed Chrysler might not be able to remain solvent through such a long delay. Chrysler must cut costs by $1 billion this year to qualify for the $400 million in loan guarantees. The automaker has asked the UAW to make $673 million in contract concessions, including a 21- month wage freeze for Chrysler em- ployees, and requested its creditors to accept $573 million worth of preferred Chrysler stock for its outstanding notes. MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662-3201 FCC to consider proposal to deregulate radio stations {j i ~S Wor ri sac uset.S WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal Communications Commission, at the urging of its outgoing chairman, will consider a controversial proposal today to deregulate the nation's radio stations. Charles Ferris, the Democratic chairman who is sure to be replaced by Ronald Reagan, is trying to fashion a favorable vote in the face of strong op- position by religious and public interest groups. He has also ignored a suggestion by Republican congressmen that the FCC postpone any major votes until Reagan assumes office. BY ANY MEASURE, the radio deregulation proposal fits the bill as a major decision. The commission is con- sidering the repeal of internal licensing standards that limit the number of commercials a station can air each hour, and which specify minimum amounts of news and public affairs program- ming. Also under consideration are the repeal of rules that set out a formal* survey procedure for radio stations to follow in ascertaining the needs and concerns of their communities, and that impose strict program logging requirements. The proposal is considered one of the most sweeping ever issued by the FCC because it would substitute some of the agency's strict regulation of individual stations with more reliance on "marketplace forces" - meaning competition between stations. The proposal is premised on the fact that the radio industry has now become quite large and diverse, with more than 8,900 stations throughout the country. a As a place to live and work, Massachusetts really makes it. With more to see and do than you can imagine. Especially if your field is Computer Science or Electrical Engineering. But see for yourself. See "Make it in Massachusetts". A multi-media trip through some of the most exciting career opportunities in the country. And talk with representatives of the Massachusetts high technology SARMY SURPLUS We stock a fulil line of clothing, boots, camping equipment, ' hunting clothing & winter coats. 201 E. Washington at Fourth Open M-Sat 9-6 994-3572 I L U-_ _ _ _ _