I Page 2-Wednesday, January 27, 1982-The Michigan Daily Report says research mayviolate (continued from Page 1) high power microwave solid-state s urces for applications in such missile seeker transmitters as AMRAAM (which Eynon identified as Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles), AIAAM (which Eynon said he could not identify), Phoenix, and DAAMT (Demonstration Air-to-Air Missiles) ... The goal of this program is to develop microwave solid-state technology to improve performance and capabilities of active RF (radio frequency) missile seeker transmitters, expendable decoy jammers, and other missile systems." . "Electromagnetic Scattering," by Engineering Prof. Thomas Senior. Eynon said that Senior's work "is designed to lead to greater understan- ding* of Radar Absorbing Material-material which can be used to coat an object and render it less visible to radar sensing...(It seems) likely to me that the Air Force funds it in hopes of advancing the "Stealth" bomber... which is designed to be 'in- visible' to radar (and) would enable (the bomber) to penetrate enemy defenses, drop its bombs, and escape." *"Ocean Acoustic Tomography," by Engineering Prof. Theodore Birdsall. Eynon said that Birdsall's work in detecting objects in the ocean is aiding the Navy's anti-submarine warfare program. Once the United States has, the ability to detect the exact locations of enemy, submarines, then it wil be able to conduct a "first strike" nuclear attack, Eynon said. The inability to detect exact locations of submarines armed with nuclear weapons has thus far served as a deterrent to nuclear war, he said. guidelines EYNON SAID he had no personal contact with the researchers involved before preparing his report. Haddad, contacted last night ssaid he is "not involved in any guidance systems per se. My work is involved in basic solid state systems which can be used in a number of applications." Haddad's analyses can be used in satellite and microwave com- munications systems and a number of radar systems, including those used in airports and police work, he said. "The Department of Defense has the best available resurces for basic research in solid state devices," Haddad said. RESPONDING to Eynon's report, Senior said last night it is "quite con- ceivable that the work I do is relevant to (the Stealth Bomber)." but added that if he had made any significant con- tributions to weapons systems, the Air Force would have ' "clapped a classification on the work." Senior has been conducting his work for five years, using graduate students from all over the world, he said. Seven students have earned doctoral degrees while working on his project and more than 15 articles have been published in technical journals, Senior. said. "If the Air Force wanted it for the Stealth (bomber) none of these things could have taken place," he said. Birdsall was unavailable for com- ment. EYNON CALLED Research Policies Committee Chairman Kahn's report on defense research to the Senate Assem- bly "inaccurate, incomplete, and misleading." Eynon added, however, that he had no evidence to show that Kahn's mistakes were anything other than oversights. CORRECTION' The University Health Service ad which appeared in the Jan. 26 issue of The Daily gave the incorrect date for the announcement of their winning logo design. It should have read Feb. 26. The deadline for entries remains Feb. 19. We regret any incon- veniences this may have' caused. The Michigan Daily IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Freon gas kills 3 sailors on Navy nssile cruiser SAN DIEGO- The Nagy sealed off a comartment yesterday on the nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser USS Bainbridge where cooling gas leaked from a ruptured pipe, killing three sailors and injuring seven others. The three were overcome by Freon gas Monday night in an air-. conditioning compartment four levels below the main deck of the 565-foot warship, which was docked inSan Diego at the time, officials said. Lt. Cmdr. Mark Baker, a Navy spokesman, said-seven others who had tried to revive the stricken sailors with mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and other means spent 20 hours in a hospital receiving treatment for ill-effects of the gas. The dead were identified as Petty Officer 1st Class Joseph Durr, 26, and fireman Stuard Fields, 20, both of San Diego, and Petty Officer Ist Class John Sullivan, 26, of Columbus, Ohio. .Dues paying non=Unionsts 6. a Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROMJ MSA RESEARCHER BRET Eynon presents his report on defense research at the University to MSA at last night's meeting. Poli~sh intelecuals protest wrkrabs S S * C * - ABORTION CARE. " No Age Limit " Completely Confidential * Local Anesthesia " ,Tranquilizers '0 Birth Control-VD * Board Certified M.D.'s * Blue Cross/Medicaid, * Immediate Appts. 526-3600 (Near Eastland) From AP and UPI WARSAW, Poland A new protest letter from 27 intellectuals yesterday' demanded Poland's martial law authorities end "beating, maltreatment and harassment of people deprived of their liberty." The letter surfaced after Parliament approved military rule and named a military historian to run the univer- sities. The protest, signed by intellectuals, writers, and artists, said interned workers were getting worse treatment than intellectuals and called for publication of a full list of internees and the sites where they are held. INFORMED sources estimate abut 50,000 Poles are held under the martial law decree tht suspendedthe indepen- dent union Solidarity Dec. 13 - more than 10 times the number the com- munist regime admits. Solidarity leader Lech Walesa is believed held somewhere outside Warsaw. Informed sources said Walesa's wife and children visited him last week. Meanwhile, the Polish parliament rubber-stamped a minor Cabinet shakeup sought by military chief Gen Wojciech Jaruzelsli yesterday and then ended a two-day session that legalized martial law. IN GENEVA, Switzerland, Secretary of State Alexander Haig met Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko for a reportedly tough-talking session on the tpolish crisis. The two-day session of the Sejm, the first since martial law was declared Dec. 13, showed that the Polish parliament had reverted to the rubber- stamp body it used to be before the rise of the Solidarity labor movemenit and the unprecedented reforms it helped bring, if briefly, to Poland. Warsaw radio, reporting on parliament's approval of two Cabinet changes proposed by Jaruzelski, said there was no dissent by the 460 mem- bers. to get strike benefits WASHINGTON- A union must pay strike benefits to a financially con- tributing non-member who honors a picket line but refuses to walk it, a federal judge ruled yesterday. The ruling by U.S. District Judge Joyce Hens Green affects workers who contribute to a union under an agency shop agreement but declined to join. The AFL-CIO said there are between 600,000 and one million workers who decline to join unions but pay an equivalent amount in dues. The National Right to Work Legal Foundation, which filed suit in the case, estimated the figure at a minimum of seven million. Israeli Labor Party bid to oust Begin fails JERUSALEM- Prime Minister MenachemBegin narrowly survived another bid by the opposition Labor Party to oust him from office yesterday, defeating by only three votes a no-confidence motion on compensation for settlers being evicted from the Sinai. The tense vote, the second attempt to topple Begin in a month, came a day after the prime minister suffered a stunning setback when Labor succeeded in defeating a government bill to grant $248 million in compensation to set- tlers who will have to pack up and go when Israel returns the rest of the Sinai to Egypt next April. -Top Soviet ideologue dies MOSCOW- Mikhail Suslov, the Soviet Union's top ideologue and for 30 years one of the most powerful men in the Kremlin, has died at age 79', the Tass news agency said yesterday. Suslov, whose brand of law-and-order communism was reflected in last month's crackdown in Poland, was the post-Stalinist era's chief defender of the faith and his passing raised questions about the future course of the Soviet leadership. British unemployment hits 3 million for first time ever ,,fi a V. 6« a <; I k 1 Classic Fi Theatre at the Michigan The SEXCPISOS- - Filmed live in concert FRI., JAN. 29-4:00,7:00, 9:00 & 11:00. MICHIGAN THEATRE 403 E. LIBERTY ST. Admission: $3 the Joffrev Halet of the West. - Denver Post Monday, Jan. 25 Diaghilev Tribute Scheherazade La Boutique Fantasque (excerpts) Spectre de la Rose Rite of Spring Tuesday, Jan. 26 *Mostly Copland Evening Seascape Bolero Billy the Kid Gallops and Kisses Wednesday, Jan. 27 All Guidi Evening In Autumn SFantasia Para un Gentilhombre Carnival D'Aix California's OAKLAND BALLET 'COMPANY - ' Mon.-Wed.,Jan. 25-27 at 8:00 f 11" k AI - h e I- L I -TVrFn Hai Gromyko battle over Poland crisis- Fromn AP and UPI, GENEVA, Switzerland- Secretary of State Alexander Haig ended nearly eight hours of intense discussions with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko last night, and said martial- law in Poland had "cast a long and dark shadow" over their talks. He said Gromyko, while expressing the view that the situation in Poland was a purely internal matter, nonetheless took-part in a "two-sided" discussion on the Poland crisis. AT A NEWS conference, Haig described the talks as "very sober and extremely detailed," and said he told Gromyko the United States is prepared to begin negotiations on the reduction of strategic nuclear weapons "when con- ditions permit." Haig made it clear that the Reagan administration believes such talks can- not take place in an atmosphere he said is poisoned by events in Poland. And he said Poland will not be the only factor in' deciding when the timE is right to begin the talks. "I am not giving you a litmus test of conditions but merely a broad statement of the influence of the Polish situation on the current environment," Haig said. BEFORE THE meetings, Haig said he planned to open the meeting by ex- pressing "outrage" at the Soviet role in Poland. Gromyko said he had "no in- tention whatever" of discussing Poland. The secretary of state said they discussed Central America, Cuba, Afghanistan, southern Africa, and many issues. He called the talks "beneficial from the standpoint of necessary communication... between the Soviet Union and the United States."; But Haig said the Polish issue was the dominant theme of the talks and he repeated three times the rhetorical line that "it was clear the situation in Poland cast a long and dark shadow over all of the, discussions involving East-Westrelations." He said the discussions gave him a chance to present the U.S. position on international concerns. In that sense, Haig said, the "exchange of views ... was timely and important and. valuable." LONDON- British unemployment topped 3 million for the first time in history, new figures showed yesterday, and opposition legislators shouted- for the resignation of Prime Miister Margaret Thatcher. "This is the most tragic day in peacetime that Britain has seen for half a century," said opposition Labor Party employment spokesman Eric Varley, reacting to announcement of government figures showig one in eight of Britain's 24.2 million-strong workforce was without a job. Department of Employment statistics showed a 12.7 percent unem- ployment rate as of Jan. 14, up from last month's 12.2 percent. They said 3,070,621 people were out of work in mid-January, a rise of nearly 130,000 over December. Vol. XCI, No. 96 Wednesday, January 27,1982 The Michigan Daily is.ecited 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. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. 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, Annl Ar- bor, MI 48109. The Michigan Uoilynis a member of the Associated Press and subscribes t ;United Press International; Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552: 76-DAILY. Sportsedesk, 764-0562; Circulation; 764-0558; Classified Advertising. 764-0557;:Display advertising, 764-0554:'Billing, 764-0550. Make Your Dreams Come True"... Editor-in-chief................SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor .............. JULIE ENGEBkECHT University Editor..................LORENZO BENET News Editor...................... DAVID MEYER Opinion Page Editors ..........CHARLES THOMSON KEVIN TOTTIS Sports Editor.................MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors...........GREG DeGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREIOUSE DREW SHARP Arts Editors ................... 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Lindsay Bray, Joseph Brodo, Glen Can- tor. Alexander DePillis, Susar* Epps, Wendy Fox. Sebastian Frcka, Mark Freeman. Marci Gittelman. Pamela Gould. Kathryn Hendrick, Anthony Interronte, indre Liutkus, Beth Kovinsky. Caryn Notiss, Felice Oper. Jodi Pollock. Ann Sachar. Michael Savitt. Michael Seltzer. Koren Silverstein, Sam Slaughter. Nancy Thompson. Jeffrey Voight, r i .P DlRYL "nIl with JO*K ) onwes PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1981 SE\TEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER S M T W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S SM T W T F S 1011t12 4 67 8 910 8 1011t,12 1314 6 8 91. 01112, 131t 15 16 17 18t9 1711 1314 1516 17 151 17 18 192021 F 9 f- 20 l 22 23 24 25 26 18 20 21 22 23 24 22 24 256-2;-M4 ?7 29 30 25 6 77 28 29 30 31- _________ 192