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February 06, 1982 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily, 1982-02-06

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Page 2-Saturday, February 6, 1982-The Michigan Daily

El Salvador rebels ambush army

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -
Army patrols swept southeastern El
Salvador yesterday to drive out
guerrillas who seized the nation's two
key highways in a spreading campaign
to disrupt upcoming elections.
A Defense Ministry spokesman said,
guerrillas killed one soldier and woun-
ded six others and three civilians on the
outskirts of Usulutan, El Salvador's
fourth largest city, 66 miles east of the
capital, on Thursday.
REBELS ALSO ambushed an army
patrol on the coastal highway near the
Lempa River, 55 miles to the east,
wounding two soldiers and setting fire

to two army vehicles abandoned by the
troops, local officials said.
The guerrillas waited on the highway
after the attack, talking with their
camp by walkie-talkie and chatting
with journalists passing along the road.
"We are on the offensive. We have
moved the struggle from the coun-
tryside to the streets," the rebel patrol
leader told the reporters.
RADIO Venceremos yesterday
broadcast a claim that guerrilla forces
have succeeded in dividing the
Massachusets-sized nation and now
control the southeastern section.

The broadcast said guerrilla territory
includes the provincial capital of
Usulutan. There have been clashes in
the area for the past four days.
The rebels say they are fighting for a
"revolutionary break" with El
Salvador's 50-year dominance by the
rich and the army. The U.S.:backed
junta charges they will impose a
marxist regime on the Central
American nation.
THE ARMY sent patrols into the area
to flush out rebels who have attacked
scores of vehicles on the coastal high-
way and the Pan Amercian Highway to
the north, the two main roads cutting

across the Central American nation.
The highway attacks were part of a
growing guerrilla campaign to disruot
the junta's plans for March elections of
a constitutional assembly that will set
the rules for presidential elections in
1983.
There were no official reports on
casualties in the Usulutan fighting. Lef-
tist sources said at least 17 soldiers
have been killed.
Church and human rights groups
estimate more than 32,000 people have
died in El Salvador's political violence
since the junta took power in an Oc-
tober 1979 coup.

Polish student group to appeal dissolution

WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Poland's Independent
Students' Association said yesterday it plans to ap-
peal its dissolution under martial law.,
At the same time, a new official survey showed
martial law is strongly opposed by 19 percent of the
nation. The figure was considered significant
becausenearly on'e in five dared speak out against
martial law in an official public opinion poll.
A SPOKESMAN FOR the students' association said
lawyers for the 80,000-member group, registered
legally by the authorities during a 29-day student
strike in Lodz a year ago, were to submit formal ap-
peal papers to a court shortly.
The education minister dissolved the student group

in early last month after it led strikes at 71 of
Poland's 91 colleges. The regime said the group was
counter-revolutionary and interned many of its
leading activists along with those of the independent
union Solidarity.
"In our opinion, the decision to dissolve the
association was illegal," the spokesman said. 'Our
charter did not grant the minister the right to
dissolve the organization. This can only be done by a
court."
THE SPOKESMAN, who declined to be identified,
said the appeal was "not a protest of any kind," and
that the association was conducting "no concrete ac-
tivity now." He said the association hoped to form a

legally sanctioned group to help internees.
The regime says more than 4,000 people are inter-
ned under martial law.
Poland's army daily Zolnierz Wolnosci published a
public opinion poll that said 41 percent of those sur-
veyed said martial law was justified, 29 percent felt
positive about it and 19 percent viewed it with "strong
disapproval." The other 10 percent offered no opinion.
The poll, which said those interviewed spoke
"spontaneously and in an uninhibited manner," was
taken by the Polish Television and Radio Center of
Public Opinion Studies, which is generally regarded
here as respectable and accurate. The size of the
sample was not given.

Social

Security
error to
be cleared

WASHINGTON (AP) - Members of
Congress flailed the Social Security
Administration yegterday for giving
some teenagers misinformation and
others none about the impending cutoff
of benefits for college students.
Deputy Commissioner Paul Simmons
said the agency has decided to send
pamphlets within a month explaining
the changes to the nearly 800,000
students aged 18 through 21 now getting
the aid.
THE LEAFLETS, which will be sent
with an annual reporting form students

must fill out, will not go to high school
students unless they are 18 or within
five months of their 18th birthday.
Simmons told the House Ways and
Means subcommittee on Social.
Security his agency sent "fewer than
100,000" 17- and 18-year-olds the wrong
pamphlets in recent months indicating
college benefits were still fully
available. Some got the wrong notices
twice.
Simmons said the agency has no in-
tention of sending notices to all child
beneficiaries because-the only purpose

would be to help them "circumvent the
intent of the law" Congress passed last
year.
Rep. J. J. Pickle (D.-Texas) said all
children getting Social Security
because a working parent died, became
disabled or retired should be notified.
Those who got child's benefits before
last August can still get student benefits
at reduced levels through age 22 or
April 1985, but only if they are enrolled
and attending college full time before
May 1.

IN BRIEF
Compiled from Associated Press and
United Press International reports
President submits plan to
limit information to public
WASHINGTON- The Reagan administration has submitted to Congress a
plan to let government officials invoke national security more easily in
keeping information from the public, a shift that would reverse a 2 -year
trend toward increased government openness.
The proposal, which President Reagan can implement on his own
authority, would require that government officials classify documents as
secret even "if there is reasonable doubt ... about the need to classify in-
formation."
The proposed presidential order would drop President Carter's
requirement that government secrecy be balanced against the public's right
to know.
South African political
prisoner found dead
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa- The discovery of a political prisoner
hanging in his cell prompted a wave of protests yesterday by friends and
relatives who said Neil Aggutt could never have killed himself as claimed by
police.
Aggutt, a 23-year-old labor organizer in the food and canningindustry, was
found hanging in his cell in a Johannesburg jail Thursday night.
He was the first white among the 46 people who have died in the custody of
security police since 1963.
Study says skies safe
despite aircontrollers' strike
WASHINGTON- The nation's airways are generally as safe now as they
were before the air controllers' strike, an independent study commissioned
by the Federal Aviation Administration concluded yesterday.
However, the Flight Safety Foundation study said there may be a decrease
in the safety margins to all users because the reduced service offered by the
FAA since last August has led to an increase in flying by visual flight rules.
The foundation, a non-profit group that gets 75 percent of its financial sup-
port from the airline industry, conducted the $185,000 study for FAA chief J.
Lynn Helms, who commissioned it.
Mubarak ends U.S. visit
WASHINGTON- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak ended three days of
talks with President Reagan and other top U.S. officials yesterday by war-
ning that the festering Palestinian problem could lead to new bloodshed in
the Middle East.
Mubarak told a National Press Club lunch the present situation is "an in-
vitation to further violence and tension." He called on Israel and the
Palestinians to recognize each other's right to live in peace.
"The core of the Middle East problem is the Palestinian question,"
Mubarak said as he wound up his first visit to Washington since he became
head of state after Anwar Sadat's assassination in October.
Williams' attorneys open defense
ATLANTA;- Attorneys for Wayne Williams opened their case yesterday
and called as a witness a Utica, N.Y., pathologist who said autopsy reports
on Williams' two alleged victims showed nothing to indicate they were mur-
dered.
The defense presented four witnesses, including Dr. Dan Stowens, director
of laboratories at St. Luke's Memorial Hospital in Utica, who said he saw
nothing in autopsy reports indicating that Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, and
Nathaniel Cater, 27, Williams' alleged victims, were murdered.
The two men were among 28 young Atlanta blacks slain during a 22-month
long rampage.
Ken Lawson, a former police recruit testified that the men staking out the
bridge where the accused killer first came under suspicion were sleeping
and drinking on the job.
Vol. XCII, No. 105
Saturday, February 6,1982
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); $13by mail out-
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nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor.
Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send
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News room: (313) 7640552; 76-DAILY. Sports desk. 764.0562; Circulation 764-0558: Classified Advertising.
764.0557; Display advertising. 764-0554; Billing. 764-0550.

'Qlrtdi UIrrtb4I. 5 Rape down,
awareness

UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN STUDENT
CHAPEL
Serving the Campus for 39 Years
Robert Kavasch, Pastor
1511 Washtenaw between Hill St. and
-S. University
Sunday services: 9:15 and 10:30 am.
Sunday Supper: 6:00 p.m.
Choir: Wednesday 8:30 pm
Bible Study: Sunday-9:15 a.m.,
Wednesday-10 p.m., Thursday-10
p.m.
* * *
NEW GRACE APOSTOLIC CHURCH
632 N. Fourth Ave.
Rev. Avery Dumas Jr., Pastor
9:45 a.m. Sunday School. -
11:45 Morning Worship
7:00 p.m. Sunday Evening Service.
Bible Study-Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m.
For rides call 761-1530
UNIVERSITY CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
409 South Division
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Rev. Steve Bringardner, 761-5941
Christian Education-9:45 a.m.
Service of Worship-11:00 a.m.
"Time of Meeting," 6:00 pm.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.-6624466
Service of Worship and
Holy Communion:
Sunday 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.
College Students Fellowship Sunday
11:00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Communion, 10:00
pm

FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
120 S. State St.
(Corner of State and Huron),
Worship Schedule:
8:30 am (First Sunday of Every Mon-
th)-Holy Communion in the Chapel.
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Morning Wor-
ship in the Sanctuary.
Feb. 7th: "Coincidence or Provi-
dence?" Rev. Wayne Large.
Church School for all ages-9:30 a.m.
andl11a.m.
Choir Rehearsal-Thursday at 7:15
p.m.
Ministers:
Dr. Donald B. Strobe
Rev. Fred B. Maitland
Dr. Gerald R. Parker
Education Directors:
Rose McLean and Carol Bennington
* * *
LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN
(The Campus Ministry it
of the LCA-ALC-AELC)
801 S. Forest at Hill St.
Sunday Worship at 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Choir practice.
Friday 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Volleyball
* C *
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw Ct.
A Campus Ministry of the
Christian Reformed Church
Reverend Don Postema
10:00 a.m. Service of Holy Communion.
6:00 p.m. Evening Worship.
Wednesday, 10:00 p.m. Evening
Prayers.

ST. MARY'S
STUDENT CHAPEL
(Catholic)
331 Thompson-663-0557 S
Weekly Masses:
Mon.-Wed.-5:10 p.m.
Thurs.-Fri.-12:10 p.m.
Sat.-7:00 p.m.
Sun.-8:30 and 10:30 a.m. (Upstairs
and downstairs)
12 noon and 5 p.m. (upstairs and
downstairs)
North Campus Mass at 9:30 a.m. in
Bursley Hall (Fall and Winter Terms)
Rite of Reconciliation-4 p.m.-5 p.m.
on Friday only; any other time by ap-
pointment.
* * *
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH and
-AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS
FOUNDATION
502 East Huron 663-9376
Jitsuo Morikawa, Pastor
10:00 a.m.-Sunday Worship. Child
care provided.
Feb. 7th: "Ethical Disorder."
Sunday: Church Loyalty Dinner 12
noon.
11:00 a.m.-Church School. Classes
for all ages. Class for undergraduates.
Class for graduates and faculty.
Also:
Choir Thursday 7:00 p.m., John Reed
director; Janice Beck, organist.
Student Study Group. Thurs., 6:00
p.m.
Support group for bereaved students,
alternate Weds. 7p.m.
11:00 Brunch, second Sunday of each
month.
Ministry Assistants: Nadean Bishop,
Terry Ging, Barbara Griffin, Jerry
Rees.

still urged,
(Continued from Page 1)
and never hitchhiking, Lynch-Miller
said.
Dave Foulke, director of security for
University housing, said University
Security offers an escort service for
women who don't want to walk home
alone late at night. Either a ride or an
escort will be provided for women who
call security.
IN ADDITION, a federally-funded
late night taxi service is scheduled to
begin March 1. It will be operated by
the Ann Arbor Transportation
Authority using local cab companies.
Rapists plan most of their attacks
and often know their victims, Wright
said. "Their primary goal is an ex-
pression of power, dominance, and con-
trol. Many see themselves as. losers,
but have normal sexual outlets
available to them," he said.
Most rapists are "disturbed, violent
people," according to Prof. Nathan
Caplan, a researcher at the Univer-
sity's Institute for Social Research.
"The purely sexual aspects are really
and truly secondary to the violence
part," he said.
Caplan, a psychologist, has done ex-
tensive research on Michigan's new
criminal sexual conduct law. He'called
it "the most advanced and enlightened
rape law in the United States."
Caplan said the best way to reduce
the incidence of rape in the future is
through increased reporting of the
crime, increased willingness of
prosecutors to pursue rape cases, and a
more enlightened attitude toward the
crime by judges.

Editor-in-Chief-.....................DAVID MEYER
Managing Editor...............PAMELA KRAMER
Executive Editor ............... CHARLES THOMSON
Student Affairs Editor ............ANN MARIE FAZIO
University Editor ...................MARK GINDIN
Opinion Page Editors...........ANDREW CHAPMAN
JULIE HINDS
Arts Editors ...................RICHARD CAMPBELL
MICHAEL HUGET
Sports Editor .................. MARK MIHANOVIC
Associate Sports Editors...........GREG DeGULIS
MARK FISCHER
BUDDY MOOREHOUSE
DREW SHARP
Chief Photographer .............. PAUL ENGSTROM
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim Hill, Deborab
Lewis, Mike Lucas, Brian Masck.
ARTISTS: Norm Christiansen, Robert Lence, Jonathan
Stewart, Richard Walk.
LIBRARIANS: Bonnie Hawkins, Gary Schmidt.
NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Perry Clark,
David Crawford. Lisa Crumrine, Pam Fickinger, Lou
Fintor, Joyce Frieden. Steve Hook, Kathlyn Hoover,
Harlan Kahn, Mindy Layne, Mike McIntyre, Anne
Mytych, Nancy Newman, Dan Oberrotmann, Stacy
Powell, Janet Rae, Sean Ross, Lauren Rousseau,
Susan Sharon, David Spak, Lisa Spector. Fannie
Weinstein, Barry Witt.
OPINION PAGE STAFF: Dan Aronoff, Linda Balkin,
Kent Redding, Nathaniel Worshay.

ARTS STAFF: Tonio Blanich, Jane Carl, James Clinton,
Mark Dighton, Adam Knee. Gail Negbour, Carol
Ponemon, Ben Ticho.
SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Jesse Barkin, Tom
Bentley, Randy Berger, Mark Borowski, Joe Chappelle,
Laura Clark, Martha Crall, Jim Dworman, Karen Filth.
Larry Freed, Matt Henehan, Chuck Jaffe, John Kerr,
Doug Levy, Jim Lombard, Larry Mishkin, Dan Newman,
Andrew Oakes, Ron Pollock, Jeff Quicksilver, Sarah
Sherber, Kenny Shore, James Thompson, Josie
VonVoigliander, Kent Walley, Karl Wheatley, Chris
Wilson, Bob Wojnowskl.
BUSINESS STAFF
Business-Monager................ JOSEPH BRODA
Sales Manager..............KATHRYN HENDRICK
Operations Manager ............ SUSAN RABUSHKA
Display Manager..................ANN SACHAR
Classifieds Manager............. MICHAEL SELTZER
Finance Manager .................SAM SLAUGHTER
Assistant Display Manager ......... PAMELA GOULD
Nationals Manager ................. LINDSAY BRAY
Circulation Manager .................. KIM WOODS
Sales Coordinator ........ ...E. ANDREW PETERSEN
SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Wendy Fox, Mark Freeman,
Nancy Joslin, Beth Kovinsky, Caryn Natiss, Felice
Oper, Jodi Pollock, Tim Pryor, Jeff Voigt.
BUSINESS STAFF: Hope Borron, Fran Bell, Molly
Benson, Becki Chottiner, Laura Farrell, Sandy Frcka,
Meg Gibson, Pam Giilery, Marci Gittleman, Jamie
Goldsmith, Jan Gcddstein, Karen Johnson, Ada
Kusnetz, Rob Perelman, Gito Pillai, Dan Quandt. Pete
Rowley, Leah Stanley, Hildy Stone, Tracy Summerwill,
Joseph Trulik, Mary Ellen Weinberg.

_.. .--

--

LORD?

Quit complaining.
Take a
Daily break

PUBLICATION SCHEDULE
1981
SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER
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20 22 23 24 25 26 18 20 21 22 23 24 22 24 25 964-096
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