The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, February 10, 1982-Page 7 Salvadoran guerrila attacks grow stronger EL TRANSITO, El Salvador (AP) - espite increased U.S. aid to the alvadoran government, leftist rrillas are making headway in their ar against the junta. Relief workers stimate the insurgents can move reely through one-third of the coun- ryside. The guerrillas have taken their 2 - ear-old hit-and-run battle to scores of ommunities that' lived quietly until a ew months ago. On Monday the insurgents reached nto the capital, attacking 22 city buses, d yesterday announced their inten- n to increase the assaults, par- icularly in the evening. PRESIDENT Reagan's ad- ministration, committed to support the civilian-military junta, announced last week it was sending $55 million in ad- ditional military aid to El Salvador af- ter one guerrilla attack on a military base destroyed 10 warplanes and helicopters, more than half the junta's air force. This sum was in addition to the $26 illion approved by Congress a month ago. Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Enders said the aid was needed to prevent the guerrillas from overthrowing the junta, which plans to hold elections for an assembly March 28. As now planned, the assembly will decide how and when to hold elections next year for president and other leaders. Leftists have refused to par- ipate, claiming there are no guaran- ees.their candidates could run. APPARENTLY intent on showing muscle before the elections, the 5,000 guerrillas of the Farabundo Marti's National Liberation Front have been occupying tiny farm villages and at- tacking strategic targets far from their traditional strongholds in northern provinces near the Honduran border. ' Relief workers caring for refugees uprooted by the fighting say guerrilla nds can now move easily through 10 of 'the country's 14 provinces. The workers asked not to be identified by name for fear of reprisals. "The guerrillas could overrun 'this place anytime they want," said Adelio Masferrer, a shopowner in Berlin, a town near here in the southeastern province of Usulutan.\ He said 30 security force men loyal to the junta PART TIME EMPLOYMENT NIGHTS The College of Literature, Science and the Arts is currently in- terviewing students interested in participating in an alumni fundraising telethon. ISA alumni across the country will be called from campus. The telethon runs five nights per week, Sunday through Thursday, March 7 through April 15. You select two of the five nights available, with an opportunity to work additional nights. Hours: 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Pay: $3.55 per hour LSA students preferred Call 763-5576 STUD-ENTS FACULTY STAFF NOMINATE OUTSTANDING TEACHERS, RESEARCHERS, AND COUNSELORS FOR A FACULTY AWARD: ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: For Associate and Full Pro- fessors. AP Photo, LOCAL RESIDENTS peer into a destroyed bus after leftist guerrillas exploded a bomb at noon Monday in the center of San Salvador. Three similar attacks occurred Monday, police reported. No one was hurt, but at least a dozen people were taken to area hospitals in hysterics, it was reported. guard Berlin's population of 20,000. THE GUERRILLAS have captured few. towns and held none for more than 10 days. But in a spectacular raid Oct. 15, they destroyed the Golden Bridge spanning the Lempa River, cutting the country's major East-West highway. On Jan. 27, they attacked the llopango air base outside the capital, San Salvador, crippling the junta's air for- ce. The United States last week sent six new helicopjers. The war now is more widespread than during a nationwide guerrilla of- fensive in January 1981, which failed for lack of popular support. The position of the junta's armed for- ces, numbering 20,000 men, is now wor- se than a year ago, according to a Western diplomat who asked not to be identified for policy reasons. SO FAR, THE guerrillas have avoided extended face-to-face combat with the army. Reported casualties were relatively low during the second half of 1981 - 16orebel deaths by their own count, and 800 army troops dead or wounded by government estimate. In the same period, according to El Salvador's Human Rights Commission, government soldiers and rightist "death squads" have killed 6,387 civilians. It estimated the 2%-year-old war so far has claimed 3,000 lives out of a total population of five million. As the war quickens, more and more refugees move through the countryside. They are mostly peasants, traveling on foot or by oxcart along dusty roads winding around heavily forested volcanos. A TRIP through the eastern provin- Reagan challenges budget plan critics (Continued from Page ) people could not be trusted with an in- creased share of their own earnings." 'OUTING HIS "new federDlism". pla#-to transfer 43 social prograns to the states, the president told the Iowans: "They say the people we elect to state and local office can't be trusted to run state and local affairs. Well then, who can we trust? A handful of in- lividuals with a strong case of Potomac Fever? The very individuals who got us into this mess?" As for his spending plan, said Reagan, "The budget we have-nrooosed is a line drawn in the dirt. Those who are, serious about reducing the deficit will, cross it and work with us on our proposals or their alternatives. Those who are not sincere in their concern about the deficit will stay on the other side and simply continue their . theatrics. The American people are' tired of theatrics." In Michigan, Gov. William Milliken warned Reagan's proposed budget could have a "severe" impact on Michigan and said state officials may lobby for changes. MILLIKEN, IN one of his sharper breaks with a president he helped elect, also told reporters it appears the poor are hurt under Reagan's spending plan for the 1983 fiscal year. Milliken in- dicated he has some problems with the president's'"new federalism." The governor also said he wold sup- port moves in Congress to moderate in- creases in defense spending in order to ease the budgetary pressure on social programs. While stressing the administration's' assessment of the Reagan budget im- pact is not complete, Milliken said "that it will be severe I have no doubt at all." ces where the fighting has been RECOGNITION AWARD: For Assistant, Associate and heaviest recently, revealed a growing population of refugees. Twenty Junior Full Professors. thousand were crammed into the 16 'cities on the tour - a tenth of the AMOCO OUTSTANDING TEACHER AWARD: For Regu- timated total of people displaced by lar Faculty Who Have Demonstrated Excellence Last week alone, 50 refugee families in Undergraduate Teaching. turned up in El Transito, a palm-shaded market town in San Miguel Province TEACHING ASSISTANT AWARD: For Effective and near the Pacific Coast, 7 miles southeast of San Salvador. El Tran- Creative Graduate Teaching Assistants. sito's 11,000 residents have taken in 3,000 refugees. The refugees started arriving in early SEE YOUR DEPARTMENT CHAIR FOR NOMINATION FORMS January. By their accounts, two D R CAI FR7M4-OF2S boatloads of guerrillas landed at Espino OR CALL 764-8323 Beach, 12 miles away, took over that ALL NOMINATIONS DUE: FEBRUARY 19, 1982 town'sthree-story resort hotel as a command post and fanned out across inland farming communities. SUT OCReT CITY sWee SIe fhere s a cit in Europe-o could travel there fr ,So unravel these riddles, and uncve'iskey TO PLAY THE GAME: Answer each of the riddles that will appear here each week in February. Write your answer in the blanks below each riddle. The letters with numbers below them corres- pond to the numbered spaces in the master key. As you -s fill in the letters of the master key, you will be spelling the name and location of a secret city in Europe. Send us the solution, and you and a friend could win a trip there, free. TO ENTER SWEEPSTAKES: 1. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. 2. Grand Prize consists of two regular round-trip economy airfares to the secret city, 30-day Eurail passes, American Youth Hostel so small and et so strong passes, two backpacks and $1000 in cash. - 3. Cut out master key for use as official entry blank or use 3" x 5"Lie sneerl card. Print your answer along with your name and address. Mail snee heterskete to Secret City Sweepstakes, P.O. Box 6018, Norwalk, CT 06852. 4. The first 1,003 correct respondents will receive a poster as an I travel, the pace seems ong entry prize.hh 5. All entries must be received by 3/15/82. Enter as often as you Yet I never lack a shelter. wish, but each entry must be mailed separately. ' 6. A random drawing of all correct entries will be held 3/22/82 by the Highland Group, an independent judging organization whose - decision is final. 7. Sweepstakes void where prohibited, taxed or otherwise restricted. 8. All potential winners may be required to sign an affidavit of eli- gibility to verity compliance with the rules within 30 days of receipt__ of same. For a list of prize winners, send self-addressed, stamped envelope to Secret City Sweepstakesc/oHighland Group, 16 8 Knight St., Norwalk, CT 06851. Illegal money game comes to campus (Continued from Page 1) Close contact is maintained between k nembers to keep track of who is in- volved and how much money has changed hands, he said. According to a member of Lambda Chi fraternity, who also asked to remain anonymous, the money pyramids came to the University from MSU because students at MSU brought their friends from the University into ."tei pe ~ ie . d e Ore o Sv 0 the pyramids. "YOUR ONLY obligation is to buy in for fifty dollars," he said, "then you go to Florida for spring break with the money.". A SIGMA CHI member who is also participating in the scheme, said a problem with finding people to buy into the pyramid is the fear of a big money loss. "People don't want to con their friends or have them lose their money;" he said. "It's a known bet for a known risk. The authorities 'can't do anything about it," he added. Sgt. Norman Olmstead in the Checks and Frauds Division of the Ann Arbor Police Department said he was aware of the money pyramids on campus, but, "They're something we've never looked into," he said. "If someone says they've been victimized and makes a gomplaint, we'd have to investigate. THE DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES presen ts a lecture by Prof. David Herzberger (University of Connecticut) entitled. "METAFICTION AND THE CONTEMPORARY SPANISH NOVEL" Wednesday, February 10, 1982 4:10 p.m. Rackham West Conference Room - --- - QeNeRAL FOOD5' 1NTeRNATIONAL 0 General Foods Corporation 1982 MAKe C cjOD COMPANY { coffees GEI4ERLPOOOS II. Full line of Backpacking & Camping Equipment" .a r% A A AP % N U A I, i ARMY SURPLUS 1 91EICo/I S isse Mocl~a f jiicci . WSSSTYIEiNStANT COFFEE BEVERAGE AANTY ISA CFFBER mINE.AM- IrishYEocbaGlAint AG AL IRISH STYL.E INSTANT COFFEE BEVERAGE AUSTNSI ~~~~~.~~i m M--... . . .. . .. . -