The Michigan Daily-Sunday, December 7, 1980-Page 7 B YRD PROMISES 'INTENSE' SCRUTINY OF HAIG Cabinet naming this week WASHINGTON (AP) - When President-elect Ronald Reagan returns to the nation's capital this week, he'll find a political city eager to have him and a frantic - and often confused - game of guess-the- Cabinet. Chances are good he'll shed some light on the makeup of his new administration. As Reagan relaxed and pondered his choices in California, aides on both coasts indicated announ- cement of at least several Cabinet appointees can be expected during his week-long trip to New York and Washington.f BUT AT LEAST two of Reagan's reported choices for top jobs - retired Gen. Alexander Haig at the State Department and New York banker Walter Wriston at Treasury - apparently were still up in the air over the weekend. Haig's past connections --with former President Richard Nixon and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger were drawing fire from some quarters. Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd declared yesterday that Senate scrutiny of any Haig nomination "will be intense." "It would be irresponsible of the Senate not to take a very close look at his Watergate role" in confir- mation hearings, Byrd said, adding that he would op- pose a Haig nomination. HAIG CAME to the White House as assistant to Kissinger, who is unpopular among "new right" con- servative Republicans. Haig took over as Nixon's chief of staff in fthe turbulent Watergate weeks leading to the former president's resignation. Wriston, reportedly Reagan's top choice to head Treasury, is chairman of Citicorp, the nation's second-largest bank. However, a subsidiary, Citibank,. is involved with claims against Iranian assets and with loan guarantees for New York City, raising possible conflict-of-interest problems because those issues are before the Treasury Department. Wriston also reportedly faces complex questions about what to do with his substantial banking holdings if he shouls take the Cabinet post. Sources said other possible candidates for the job include Donald Regan, chairman of Merrill, Lynch and Co., the nation's largest brokerage firm, and Charles Walker, a deputy Treasury secretary in the Nixon administration. SOME OTHER top appointments - such as Caspar Weinberger at Defense and William Casey at the CIA - were considered more settled. But those, too, could still be shuffled if Haig or Wriston are not named, leaving their slots open, several sources said. NEVERTHELESS, the surest bets by the weekend seemed to be: * Weinberger, budget director and secretary of health, education, and welfare in the Nixon ad- ministration. Considered a certain Reagan selection, probably as secretary of defense. " :William French Smith, Reagan's personal lawyer, as attorney general in charge of the Justice Department. Casey, Reagan's campaign manager and a former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Com- mission, as director of the CIA. " Sen. Richard Schweiker of Pennsylvania, Reagan's running mate in his unsuccessful 1976 bit for the GOP presidential nomination, as secretary of health and human services. " Drew Lewis, Pennsylvania businessman and deputy chairman of the Republican National Com- mittee, as transportation secretary. Dohrn's surrender ends terrorist group Dailv Photo by JOHN HAG EN Ceamcs laterCrowd watching Ceramics, leather works, weavings, and paintings are just a sampling of the displays at the University Artists and Craftsmen Guild's Christmas Art Fair. The fair, open from 10 a.m: until 5 p.m. today (with no admission charge,) also offers live entertainment, food, and a children's area. It is located at the Coliseum on the corner of Hill and Fifth streets. Soviet Press: West' plots' against Poland (Continued from Page 1) forces of the Warsaw Pact states, whose backbone is the Soviet army. "TH1EREFORE, the strengthening of the alliance with the fraternal land of the Soviets remains the main guarantee of Poland's independence, security and successful development," the newspaper said. The Soviet army newspaper Red Star and the Soviet Communist Party newspaper Pravda said in dispatches from Washington that the AFL-CIO was accelerating what they called "inter- ference," and was acting as a "provocateur" in Poland by sending tens of thousands of dollars to indepen- dent Polish trade unionists.. "The entire Polish people are aware of the fact that friendship and alliance with the Soviet Union are a guarantee of our national independence, of the country's peaceful future, and in- dispensable condition for the successful development in all fields," the Soviet dispatch from Washington said. THE STORY ALSO said the giant American labor federation puts out a Polish-language news sheet for distribution in Poland. "In close connection with the CIA, the AFL-CIO has carried on active'sub- versive activity for years against the progressive international workers' movement," the article said. AFL-CIO spokesman Alan Zack yesterday disputed the charges of inter- ference, saying the Polish government in the late 1950s signed a Freedom of Association Declaration of the Inter- national Labor Organization-a United Nations group-permitting such con- tacts. In an interview with reporters in Washington, he said the AFL-CIO established a fund that has raised $150,000 so far to pay for office equip- ment being sent to the Polish union Solidarity. The Polish union, which claims 10 million members, was in the vanguard of the August strikes that led to the unprecedented recognition of in- dependent unions by a Soviet bloc coun- try. By United Press International Former members of the radical Weather Underground say last week's surrender by Bernadine Dohrn and William Ayers in Chicago means the end of the group. Since its founding in 1969, Dohrn was the most important member of a group that apparently grew smaller as the 1970s progressed. She was at the forefront of a factional fight in 1977, an apparent last gasp to keep the group alive, two former members say. "JUST LOOK AT the list of people," said one former member, who dropped out of the Underground in 1977. "'There's nobody left. How do you have an underground when there's, nobody underground? People have moved on, given up. They (former Weather Underground members) are doing positive things in their com- munities. The ideas haven't died, just the whole underground thing," said the former member, who spoke on the con- dition there be no identification. The FBI, which spent more than $1 million hunting Dohrn, disagreed with the former member's analysis. "THE UNDERGROUND worked and it still works," said Tom Locke, former head of the FBI's New York Fugitive squad. He added, however, that the FBI has given up intense searches for radicals. "We can assume there are still people underground that are just waiting for a cause," Locke said. And when Ayers refused to answer questions in Chicago last week he said he did so because "the survival of others depends on our silence." But the former member said there were only a handful of members in 1977 and even fewer now. "They*(Dorhn and Ayers) could have stayed under forever and it wouldn't have made any difference. The movement as it was in 1970 is dead," the source said. "The conditions of oppression still exist, of course, but it's time to concen- trate on the positive. All the interest in these radical 'super-stars is just nostalgia. The Weather Underground is a dead issue." Counseling Services and the Center for Continuing Education for Women are co-sponsoring a workshop about: THE SUPERWOMAN:THE STRESS OF MANAGING MULTIPLE ROLES ruesday, December 9; 12-3:00 p.m. sMichigan Union: Conference Rooms 4 £ 5 This workshop is for Women Graduate and Pre-Professional Students who are feeling the pressure not only to do it all but to do it all perfectly. If this sounds like you, join us in a supportive and open setting to explore such issues as support systems and networking, role overload, setting priorities, combining career and family and mental health concerns. This is a particularly useful forum for women who arecurrently in a multiplicity of roles-student, partner, parent, employee, daughter, etc.. Please pre-register by calling Anne at Counseling Services. 74-4312 Local 'Messiah'a success (Continued from Page 50 declamatory to mock fugal, they are perhaps the most well-known works for chorus in the world. The "Since by man came death," chorus is possibly the most powerful with its dramatic use of dynamic contrast, which was done beautifully here. Some of the sopranos' embellishments in "For unto us a Child 4 born," were a little rough, but other- wise was a jubilant work. Of course, the familiar "Allelujah" chorus was the high spot of the evening, at least as far as the audience is concerned. The per- formance of this chorus with audience may not have been note-perfect on the part of many, but it certainly was hear- tfelt and triumphant in its execution. A 3 Credit Hour Course Psychology for Black Survival and Empowerment Minority Counseling and Information in conjunction with the Psychology de- partment will be offering this 300 level course for the first time Winter Semester 1981. The course is designed to assist Black students in enhancing their survival at the University of Michigan and beyond. The students will be given the opportunity to learn attitudinal and behavioral skills which are prerequisites to utilizing basic study skills. TOPICS TO BE COVERED INCLUDE: " Race and I.Q. * Approaches to Mental Health and Emotional Development " Procrastination and Self-discipline * Self-image issues relating to Academic Success The History and Problems of Blacks on all white campuses - For information or SIGN-UP SHEET, contact: COUNSELING SERVICES-764-8312 rA rr~ ~ fe~ f 0 o [ o 0 A Representative of Rrsndeis University's Hodrsftel Program a masters degree program in preparation for social work in Jewish Organizations 9 West, S.R.O., Buskins, Dexter, Capezio, Old Maine Trotter ...from heels for the high-life to knock-about casuals, you'll find a fine selection styles at great savings in of shoes in current our SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE IN OUR MISS J SHOE SHOP