A?_ 4* 'A $1 4 . , with CHICAGO PETE and GIP ROBERTS and the Detroiters Hosted by the Famous Coachman THIS FRIDAY January 6, 8 PM-$2 Cover UNIVERSITY CLUB- Michigan Union IT'S HERE FOR YOU Page 2-Thursday, January 7, 1982-The Michigan Daily Reagan pushes order to restrict release of security information Y S. u IF e P.WS " * r W r I I4 Y IM a S "a WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan administration will begin briefing Congress today on a proposed p- residential order that would let gover- nment officials invoke national security more easily and more often in keeping information from the public. Stephen Garfinkel, director of the In- formation Security Oversight Office, said he will present the proposal to the Senate Judiciary Committee and the House Intelligence Committee at closed briefings. "I THINK THEY will have suggestions that we will seriously con- sider," Garfinkel said. He added that the current timetable calls for President Reagan to sign the order next month. Congressional approval is not required. An initial draft of the order, obtained by The Associated Press in October, would reverse a 25-year-old trend toward restricting the power of gover- nment officials to shelter information from public view. Reagan could simply sign the order, giving it the force of law. But as in an earlier executive order governing U.S. intelligence agencies, the ad- ministration is willing to negotiate the final terms with congressional over- sight committees. The administration's draft intelligen- ce order drew criticism on Capitol Hill for seeking to remove many of the restrictions imposed on the CIA in the 1970s. The final order, signed Dec. 4, broadened the CIA's powers but not nearly so muich as in the earlier draft. THE DRAFT of the secrecy order would scrap President Carter's 1978 rule that government secrecy be balanced against the public's, right to know. It would make national security the sole basis for deciding whether to apply the secrecy stamp. Critics contend the proposal also would effectively exempt the CIA from the Freedom of Information Act by mandating withholding of "information relating to intelligence sources and methods.' "THE DANGER is that we will not be able to get information about CIA wrongdoing" because the agency could claim that nearly all its activities relate to its sources and methods, said Morton Halperin, director of the Center for National Security Studies and a former National Security Council staff member. MIDNITE 8pm to Midnite MAD'NSS Jan.8th th Fr day Polish students organizing resistance to martial law ~aiteKns gone v !41A Dbil Saturday (Continued from Page 1) looking for people violating the cur- few." Polish Foreign Trade Minister Tadeusz Nestorowicz flew to Moscow and signed an agreement designed to rebuild the Polish economy with deliveries of Soviet fuel, raw materials and machinery, the Soviet news agency Tass reported. Radio Warsaw said the pact called for "deliveries of goods of fundamental significance for the Polish economy which greatly exceed our exports." To cover the shortfall, the radio said, the Soviet Union granted "long term finan- cial credits on convenient terms amounting to 2.7 billion rubles" - the equivalent of $3.86 billion at the official exchange rate. POLISH OFFICIALS denounced. President Reagan's sanctions yester- day as inhumane and said Poland, in ABORTION CARE + No Age Limit + Completely Confidential " Local Anesthesia . Tranquilizers " Birth Control-VD " Board Certified M.D.'s " Blue Cross/Medicaid " Immediate Appts. 526-3600 (Near Eastland) desperate need of grain, would have to triple domestic production to meet minimum food requirements. Reports reaching the West said Polish authorities also have accused farmers of hoarding grain and other food supplies. News of the trade agreement stirred hopes that Poland would be able to repay some of its debts to Western banks soon. Before the broadcast, Lon- don banking sources said there was no sign that Poland has paid even part of the $500 million interest due by Dec. 31 on the $2.4 billion in loans supposed to be repaid in 1981. THE SOURCES said a small group of banking representatives is to meet in London today to discuss the debt. Poland owes about $16 billion to the banks and another $10 billion to Western governments. Despite deteriorating relations with the Soviet Union oyer its role ,in Poland,. the United States plans to intensify communicatons with the Kremlin, possibly through a summit meeting Secretary of State Alexander Haig said yesterday. Without making specific commit- ments, Haig made clear this applies to his own scheduled meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and perhaps a conference this year between President Reagan and Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev. A direct exchange between the superpower leaders, Haig said, "is more, rather than less, important in times of crisis." IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Schlachter to plead guilty to training Libyan terrorists WASHINGTON- Douglas Schlachter, accused of helping two ex-CIA em- ployees train terrorists in Libya, has agreed to plead guilty to two violations of federal law and then help prosecutors investigate the case, a prosecutor said yesterday. Schlachter, named in an indictment as project supervisor for the terrorist training project, will plead guilty to one conspiracy count and one count of violating a law regulating exports of defense materials, Assistant U.S. At- torney Lawrence Barcella told a federal judge. Schlachter was indicted, along with former CIA employees Edwin Wilson and Francis Terpil, and accused of violating federal laws by shipping ex- plosives to Libya and using them in the training project. Students in Sudan protest austere economic measures KHARTOUM, Sudan- Police fired warning shots in the air and threw teargas at thousands of students marching yesterday to protest President Gaafar Nimeiri's austere economic measures. There were no reports of injuries during the march through the center of the city in a third day of protests. U.S. Embassy sources said visiting Sen. Charles Percy (R-Ill.), who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, met with Sudanese officials and Western diplomats as scheduled, despite the unrest. The senator arrived in this African nation early yesterday after visits to Israel, Jordan and neigh- boring Egypt. The students chanted protests against the United States, the Nimeiri government and the Washington-based International Monetary Fund. Spanish king denounces allegations by military MADRID- King Juan Carlos yesterday denounced as "slander" allegations by members of the military that he supported last year's attempt by right-wing elements to overthrow Spain's democratic government. His unprecedented speech revealed new signs of conflict between the military and the civilian government. The 44-year-old monarch said he was fully aware of leaflets being cir- culated within the armed forces insinuating he was involved in last February's attempt by right-wing military men to overthrow the civilian government. PSC plans public hearings on phone deregulation LANSING- The Public Service Commission yesterday announced an un- precedented series of statewide public hearings to bring attention to a bill in Congress that the PSC believes could triple basic telephone rates. PSC Chairman Eric Schneidewind said such increases could "literally destroy" the state's current telephone system. The hearing will take place between Jan. 11 and Jan. 28. Pierce not being pressured to drop out of governor's race LANSING- Sen. Edward Pierce, a Democratic candidate for governor and outspoken backer of state-funded abortions for door women, said yesterday he has not received any direct pressure from his party to drop out of the race. _.. The physician-lawmaker from Ann Arbor, in a news conference centering on the abortion issue, said if elected he would continue Republican Gov. Williar Milliken's practice of vetoing legislative attempts to cut state fun- ding for Medicaid abortions. Vol. XCII, No. 79 Thursday, January 7, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. 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