0 NO PREFERENCE FOR PRESIDENT? You say you don't have a Preference for President ... You don't see much difference between the candidates ... . THEN... Let Your Feelings Be Known!! Page 2-Tuesday, September 9, 1980-The Michigan Daily Former CIA membrsesUS IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports 10 (Actual Size) Bumper Strip 34 x 15 21/4 Diameter ------------------- ----- - ------- -- ---- -- TRENTON, N.S. (AP)-A Cuban defector sent to her homeland by the CIA to spy on her husband is suing the United States for $1 million, claiming that inadequate training led to her, being captured and jailed for nine years. Carmen Mackowski charged in a federal suit filed in Trenton that proper training by thehCentral Intelligence Agency would have enabled her to avoid "detection, arrest, imprisonment and subsequent illness." THE FORMER MARIA del Carmen y Ruiz was instructed in espionage for a month before she returned to Cuba in the 1960s to spy on her husband, Alredo Ruiz, then director of Cuba's "Depar- tment Against Spies," said her attor- ney, Robert Greenberg. Mackowski, 44, spent nine years in a Cuban jail. She was sentenced to 20 years in prison, Greenberg said, after her arrest one night in mid-1968 by two Cuban agents while she tried to relay a message to the United States from a park in Havana. The U.S. Attorney's office in Newark will seek to have the suit dismissed Oct. 6 by U.S. District Judge Dickinson Debovoise, a federal spokesperson said, adding a formal response to the suit would be filed two weeks before that date. Yes, I want to let my feelings be known! 1 Please send me . No Preference Campaign Kit(s)@ $5.00 _ (quantity) "Kit Includes - Button, Bumper Strip & Brochure No Preference Byimper Strips @ $2.50 ((quantiy) ' I Total Enclosed _ 1 i E 1 f t i 1 1 t I t i t Make checks or money orders payable to: IMAGS P.O. DRAWER 341232 CORAL GABLES, FL 33114 INAME. ADDRESS IHE FIRST7 UESDAY LUNCH-DISCUSSION at the INTERNATIONAL CENTER TUESDAY, September 9-12 Noon "THE GIANT AWAKES: PROBLEMS & PROSPECTS FOR NIGERIA IN THE 1980's" Speaker: LOIS AROIAN, Lecturer in History, University of Ilorin, Nigeria g $1.00 Sponsored by: The Ecumenical Campus Center The International Center Church Women United in Ann Arbor I CITY State Zip j- -- - - - - - -- - i IIt's More For Your Morning! Tisch appeals to higher court to get proposal on ballot LANSING-Tax cut crusader Robert Tisch took his battle for ballot recognition to the state's highest courts yesterday and was joined by Attor- ney General Frank Kelley. Attorneys for the Shiawassee County drain commissioner filed in the Michigan Court of Appeals early yesterday seeking to overturn an Ingham} County circuit court ruling barring the controversial 50 per cent property tax cut proposal from the ballot. They also asked the Michigan Supreme Court to bypass the appeals panel and give the matter its immediate consideration. China 'leaps westward' WASHINGTON-One administration official yesterday described the changes in China's policies and leadership as "a great leap westward"-a shift that is both important and risky. Doak Barnett, a China expert with the Brookings Institution, described the change as "consolidating the important changes begun in 1978, when the Chinese made the decision to move to market socialism." According to several experts interviewed by United Press International following the resignations of Premier Hua Guofeng and seven vice premiers, the changes represent a consolidation of the Chinese decision to reject the Soviet style of communism and move toward a pragmatic kind of socialism. Plane hijacked to Cuba TAMPA, Fla.-A Spanish-speaking man threatening to explode a Molotov cocktail yesterday forced a New York-to-Florida Eastern Airlines jetlienr to fly him to Cuba. The plane, a Boeing 727 carrying 82 passengers and six crew members, landed safely at Havana's Jose Marti Airport yesterday morning. It was scheduled to complete its scheduled flight to Tampa later in the day. It was the 11th hijacking of a U.S. passenger plane to Cuba this year and the third suffered by Eastern Airlines in less than a month. No one has been injured in any of the hijackings. Smaller cars to cost more DETROIT-The word from U.S. automakers now is unanimous-the smaller they are, the more they cost. Ford Motor Co. completed the industry's small car pricing revolution yesterday by setting a base sticker price of $5,158 for its fuel-efficient new 1981 Escort subcompact. General Motors Corp. recently raised base stickers on some 1981 models of its popular subcompact Chevette by $481 to $5,233 for a two-door hatch- back. By contrast, the increase on a new full-sized Pontiac Bonneville was $178. Chrysler Corp. said last month introductory prices for its new front- wheel drive compact "K-cars" will begin at $6,056, about $400 above loi- priced models of the Volare and Aspen compacts they replace. Three gunmen release hostages, end 18-hour seige 01 0I 01 PORTLAND, Ore. -Two armed men holed up in a suburban restaurant, freed their last two hostages and gave themselves up yesterday, ending a nearly 18-hour standoff with police. The number of hostages, once 12, had, dwindled to two after police shut off electricity to the building. Two women, were released about 5:20 p.m. about 10 minutes before the two men gave themselves up to sheriff's deputies and FBI agents. A third gunman surrendered and was arrested about 2:30 p.m. The incident began shortly before midnight Sunday, as the Ringside East was setting ready to close for the night, said Marilyn Stafford, 41, of Gresham, a customer. She said the men burst in waving guns. "They said, 'Hit the floor or we are going to shoot you,"' she said. "I was shaking real bad." Libyan, Syrian leaders hold unity talks TRIPOLI, Libya-President Hafez Assad of Syria and Col. Moammar Khadafy of Libya, speaking yesterday to huge crowds of Libyans chanting "unity, unity," called for merger of Syria and Libya to revew the fight against Israeli Assad arrived to the cheers of thousands of Libyans who lined the streets of Tripoli to hail the two leaders with shouts of "Libya, Syria, one country." In speeches broadcast by the state radio, both leaders accused President Anwar Sadat of Egypt of betraying the Arab cause in making peace with' Israel. Khadafy said Libyan-Syrian unity was "directed against Zionism and imperialism" and that merger of the two countries "is the biggest challenge faced by the enemies of the Arabs." [^. 0 I E Mirb43au 1 atu Volume XCI, No.5 Tuesday, September 9, 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and manageu 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. 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. 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