Page 2-Tuesday, October 14, 1980--The Michigan Daily Argentine activist wins Peace Prize Six Iranians hijack OSLO, Norway (AP)-The 1980 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded yesterday to Adolfo Perez Esquivel, an Argentine human rights activist who boldly challenged his country's military government and paid for it with more, than a year in prison. The 48-year old sculptor and architect was honored for having "shone a light in the darkness" of Argentina during a period of leftist terrorism and right- wing government repression the Nor- wegian Nobel Committee said. Perez Esquivel, who heads an organization called Peace and Justice Service, was chosen over 70 other nominees, including President Carter, Pope John Paul II, and two of the negotiators of the Rhodesian peace, British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington and Zimbabwe Prime Minister Robert Muga be. THE PRIZE carries a stipend of 880,000 Swedish kronor, equivalent to $212,000. The winner told reporters in Buenos Aires, Argentina, that the prize "does not belong to one person" but to all in his Latin American rights movement. He said it would stimulate him to con- tinue working in search of a "change in society that will allow man to live with more dignity." It was the third time in six years that an individual or group devoted to human rights work won the peace prize, one of five annual awards established by the will of the Swedish inventor of dynamite, Alfred Nobel. The others were Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov in 1975 and the prisoners-rights organization Amnesty International in 1977. LAST YEAR'S peace prize went to Ronan Catholic missionary Mother Teresa of Calcutta, India. The Argentine was nominated by the 1976 peace prize winners Mairead Corrigan and Betty Williams of the Peace People movement in Northern Ireland. I Turkish Al From UPI and AP ANKARA, Turkey-Six Iranians demanding to be flown to Iran hijacked a Turkish Airlines jet with 155 people aboard yesterday, but later began releasing passengers at an airport in eastern Turkey. Forty women, six children and seven elderly men were freed a few hours af- ter the plane landed at Diyarbakir in eastern Turkey, Turkish radio said. ONE OF THE released women said one of the hijackers stood up in the aisle of the plane at one point and shouted, "From now on the Moslem religious law is in force on this plane." The Boeing 727 landed in Diyarbakir after the pilot refused the hijackers' demands to go to Tehran, saying he did not have enough fuel to make the flight. rlines jet I The flight, which originated in Muich, West Germany, was en route to Ankara from a stopover in Istanbul where the hijackers boarded. Turkish Airlines officials said there were 148 passengers and seven crew members aboard the plane when it was hijacked near Ankara at about 6:30 p.m. (11:30 a.m. EDT). At least two of the hijackers were believed to be armed, airline officials said. The Diyarbakir police chief said the hijackers were Iranians and were believed to be medical students at Istanbul University. Meanwhile in Paris, police took custody of a young man who fired blank cartridges at the heavily guarded residence of former Iranian Prime Minister Bakhtiar last night. Tisch proposal warning given byA2 official A FREE UAC MINI COURSE ON: F, SIGN LANGUAGE ' Tues. & Thurs. evenings 6:30-8:00pm Oct. 16th --Nov. 4th Register now for "SIGN LANGUAGE" at Ticket Central, 1 st floor Union For more info, call UAC 763-1107 MATH -SCIENCE ~ ~k. Ask a Peace Corps volunteer why she teaches math and general science to high school students in Liberia, West Africa ... Ask another volunteer why he teaches biology and physics in the Pacific Islands. They'll probably say they want to help people, want to use their skills, travel, learn a new language or experience another culture. Ask them: Oct. 14,15,16 Career Planning and Placement Interviews/Information (313) 226-7928 ~9~RPS (Continued from Page 1) property per year, the city would be without $962,000 in forseeable revenues and AATA would lose an additional $193,000, Kenney explained. The Milliken proposal would exempt $7,100 of the state equalized valuation for resident homesteads from all operating millge. The state legislature would reimburse local governments for the cost of the exemption by increasing the sales and use tax rates from four per cent to 5.5 per cent. Kenney said that by the mid-1980's the increase in sales tax revenues will be insufficient to fully reimburse localities for the lost property taxes. "That would result in approximately a 2 per cent reduction in local gover- nment revenue reimbursemen- ts-amounting to somewhere around $300,000 or more," Kenney said. THE SMITH/BULLARD Proposal, on the other hand, mainly effects school financing. It would reduce the local property tax for general K-12, to seven extra-voted miils and provide for a state-wide property tax of up to 30.5 mils on business, industrial and other non-homestead properties. Kenney said the city would have faced a potential loss of revenue amounting to $298,000 last year under the Smith/Bullard proposal. Mayor Louis Belcher said, "I would recommend that all three proposals be defeated at the polls." Proposals A and C "are simply the state's answer to the Tisch plan," he added. At a recent Michigan Municipal League conference, Belcher said, "I issued a challenge to the mayors of Michigan to present a fair tax proposal, one that could be implemented when passed, and would not leave a lot of con- jecture to the legislature." Proposals A and C "put the power of reallocation back with the state gover- nment." CONTACT LENSES Contact Lens Special $178.50 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. *includes a second pair of hard lenses Dr. Paul C. Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointment All frames 20% off with this ad OFFER EXPIRES FRI., Oct. 31 HAVE DINNER WITH Charley THIS WEEK A bowl of chili, a slice of corn- bread & house beverage for $1.50 - Special Is from 6- pm,M-F Good Time Charley's 1140 South University-66-8411 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Begin asks European Jews to immigrate to Israel JERUSALEM-Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin yesterday called on the Jews of Europe to defend themselves against the awakening "savage animal" of anti-Semitism and to immigrate to Israel. Begin's strong speech opening the winter session of the Knesset (Israeli parliament) came amid growing concern over a wave of anti-Semitic at- tacks in France, including the bombing of a Paris synagogue ten days ago that killed four people. The bombing focused attention on neo-Nazism in Europe, and French citizens jammed the Champs Elysee last week to demand ation from President Valery Giscard d'Estaing's government. U.S.-China grain deal near PEKING-China and the United States reported yesterday they were near agreement on one of the biggest grain deals in history. The sales of up to nine million tons of grain per year could be worth up to $1 billion annually to American farmers, according toagricultural experts. The Carter administration had tried to keep the impending deal secret, apparently hoping to make an announcement in Washington at a politically opportune moment, but word of the deal eventually leaked out. The deal would be one of the largest in history, rivaling a five-year con- tract between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. That pact has provided up to eight million tons of grain annually. Quake aftershocks hit Algeria AL ASNAM, Algeria-Several sharp aftershocks from last Friday's earthquake rumbled through northwest Algeria yesterday as rescue teams pressed on in their search for possible survivors buried beneath the rubble of the city of Al Asnam. Officials from the Red Crescent, the Algerian equivalent of the Red Cross, estimated that 60,000 people had been injured in the quake and the af- tershocks, some of which registered as high as 5.8 on the Richter scale. They also revised upward their count of homeless to 200,000, and renewed urgent appeals for more tents, prefabricated housing, and blankets to shleter them. Kelley discusses plans for reducing prison crowding LANSING-Attorney General Frank Kelley said yesterday holding some inmates in county lockups and releasing others to halfway houses are among the possible steps for complying with a court mandate to reduce prison crowding. But Kelley said releasing prisoners "outright" is a step he strongly op- poses and said he might appeal if the court orders it. Last week, ruling in a four-year-old suit by activist attorney Zolton Ferency, Ingham County Circuit Judge Ray Hotchkiss said state prisons are overcrowded and ordered plans to ease the problem to be presented today. Officials say the system is about 1,500 to 2,000 inmates over capacity. Jenrette to Vie f or re-ejection despite Abscam conviction . COLUMBIA, S.C.-Rep. John Jenrette (D-S.C.) announced in an emotion-choked voice yesterday that he will remain in the running for re election. Jenrette, who could face up to 35 years in prison and fines of thousands of dollars in the Abscam case, was convicted in Washington last week of accep- ting a $50,000 bribe from undercover FBI agents posing as representatives of an oil-rick sheik. Jenrette faces Republican newcomer John Napier in the Nov. 4 election. He refused to answer any questions. AMA group spends $1 million on TV ads for candidates NEW YORK-Dr. Michael Levis, chairman of the American Medical Association's Political Action Committee, said in a recent interview that his group plans to spend $1.6 million supporting candidates in 32 House races and 24 Senate races. Political Action Committees such as the AMA's have been around for years, but grew in numbers and importance after the Watergate scandal. Post-Watergate federal election laws limited the amount of money in- dividuals could contribute to candidates. In most cases, the limit is $1,888. As a result, PACs have become the most important way that individuals in special interest groups can make their political views felt. fIw £dligan 1Oafig Volume XCI, No. 35 Tuesday, October 14, 1980 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. 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 Newspaper 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; Composing room: 764-0556. 10 0 01 y _-_ - Editor-in-Chief.....................MARK PARRENT Managing Editor................MITCH CANTOR City Editor...................... PATRICIA HAGEN University Editor...................TOMAS MIRGA Features Editor.................. BETH ROSENBERG Opinion Page Editors................ JOSHC., "ECK HOWA TNITT Sunday Page Editor............. ADRIENNE LYONS Arts Editor....................... MARK COLEMAN . DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor....................... ALAN FANGER Executive Sports Editors........... MARK BOROWSKI STAN BRADBURY GARY LEVY cfrnrT I FWIS Business Manager..........ROSEMARY WICKOWSKI Sales Manager...............KRISTINA PETERSON Operations Manager.......... KATHLEEN CULVER CO-Display Manager............... DONNA DREBIN Co-Disply Manager............. ROBERT THOMPSON Classified Manager................SUSAN KLING Finance Manager................ GREGG HADDAD Nationals Manager.................. LISA JORDAN Circulation Manager...,......,TERRY DEAN REDDING Sales Coordinator..........E. ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Cathy Boer. Glenn Becker. Joe Brodo. Randi Cigelnik. Barb Forslund, Alisso Gold- foden Jeff Gotheim, Eric Gutt. Sue Guszinski. Rosemary Hayes, Kathryn Hendrick. Nancy Joslyn. I O'-'40 I i I 1