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March 06, 1982 - Image 2

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1982-03-06

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Authorities
9 area resi
drug crack
Nine area residents were arrested
this week on charges of trafficking
high-grade cocaine and heroin.
An undisclosed number of outstan-
ding warrants remain in the latest
sweep of the Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti
area by the Livingston and Washtenaw
Narcotics Enforcement Team, accor-
ding to spokesman Herman Neuman.
Police recovered one ounce of 90 per-
cent pure heroin in the arrests Monday
of three men in a Belleville apartment.
Arrested were Gilbert E. Andrews, 25,
Joe E. Abraham, 24, and his brother
Joe N. Abraham, 23.

arrest
dents in'
rdown,
In a related case police arrested
Claude B. Dennis, 44, at his home
Tuesday. Another suspect, Kosiuesko
Foster, 33, surrendered to Ypsilanti
state troopers.
Neuman called the arrests
significant, because only eight persons
were arrested on heroin charges in all
of 1981.
Cristopher R. Poma, 23, and Lee Ann
DeNotter, 26, were arrested in a
Belleville house Tuesday on charges of
cocaine delivery. Neuman said police
found one ounce of 46 percent pure
cocaine was found at the house.

tCarlos' issues threat
to French minister;

From AP and UPI
PARIS - Carlos the Jackal, terrorist.
mastermind behind a series of spec-
tacular international crimes has sent a
threatening letter to French Interior
Minister Gaston Deferre demanding
two comrades be released from a Fren-
ch jail, it was disclosed yesterday.
Carlos gave French authorities one -
month to release Bruno Breguet, 31,
and Magdalena Kaupp, 34 arrested in
Paris last month for plotting to blow up
the Paris city hall.
"You have arrested the members of
my organization even though they had
no intention of committing a terrorist
act in France," the half-page letter
written in Spanish said.
"I give you one month to release
them - if not I will take up the matter
personally with the French government
and in particular with Minister Gaston
Defferre," said the letter signed with

Carlos' real name, Erich Ramirez San-
chez.
The 32-year-old Venezuelan authen-
ticated the letter with his thumbprints
- which matched those recorded by the
international police association Inter-
pol.
The thumbprints matched those
taken from a Paris apartment following
a June 1975 shootout between a suspec-
ted terrorist and three French counter-
intelligence agents.
A spokesman at the French Interior
Ministry said the half-page letter writ-
ten in Spanish was delivered Wed-
nesday to the French Embassy at The
Hague, Netherlands.
According to police officials "Carlos"
is the 32-year-old son of a rich leftist
Venezeulan lawyer who gave each of
his three sons one of the names of
Russian revolutionary leader Vladimir
Ilich Lenin.

Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAS
Thne Pantyhose Prance
The first annual air band contest was held last night at the U-Club. Go Go, an
all-male group, did not win but were the darlings of the crowd. Members are
(from right) Garvin Goraff, Todd Scott, and Tom Panic.

IN BRIEF
"
Compiled from Associated Press and
United Press international reports
NRC wants public meeting
to be declared secret
WASHINGTON- The chairman of a House subcommittee said yesterday
he's "inclined to refuse" an unusual request from the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission that he declare secret some portions of a public hearing held
earlier in the week over nuclear shipments.
The NRC wants to review the transcripts of Wednesday's hearing at which
commission Chairman Nunzio Palladino expressed doubts about inter-
national safeguards aimed at keeping atomic fuel from being diverted into
weapons.
A day after the session, John Suermann, head of the NRC's office of
congressional liaison, called the House subcommittee on energy conser-
vation and power and asked that transcripts of the hearing, attended by 30 to
40 people, including an Associated Press reporter, be withheld from release.
Suermann refused to say what parts of the hour-long hearing the NRC
wanted classified. Palladino also declined to go into detail, saying, "my staff
told me we may have gotten into some classified areas and we wanted to
review it."
Airline sells tickets for $1
DALLAS- Braniff International again sold tickets for one dollar in 10 dif-
ferent cities yesterday, but buyers had no guarantee their tickets will be
valid if the financially troubled airline folds before they can be honored.
The offer, covering all Braniff-served cities in Texas and Oklahoma ex-
cept the Dallas-Fort Worth area, allows anyone who buys one ticket from
Braniff to buy another of an equal or lesser value for $1. The tickets will be
good between March 15 and April 30.
It was the third cut-rate sale the debt-ridden airline had begun in an at-
tempt to generate cash flow during a normally slow time of the year.
Spy plane to probe cloud
LOS ANGELES- High-altitude spy planes will probe the stratosphere
within a week in an effort to learn the origin of a mysterious cloud covering
most of the Northern Hemisphere, the Los Angeles Times reported Thur-
sday.
The cloud, 10 miles up and so thin it cannot be seen with the human eye,
probably was caused by an unnoticed volcanic eruption somewhere in Asia
or the Pacific around Jan. 20, Owen Toon, a research scientist at the federal
space agency's Ames Research Center.
Other, less likely, possibilities include an exploding meteor or undetected
nuclear explosion, Toon said.
"We don't expect it to have any effect on the climate or weather of
anything like that," he said. "It should just make for some colorful
twilights."
He estimated the material in the cloud to be about as much~ spewed by the
eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980. He said the cloud, first observed in
Japan in late January, may have resulted from a volcanic eruption that went
unnoticed or was larger than it appeared to observers.
State department delays
Salvadoran information
WASHINGTON- Concern over disclosing sensitive intelligence yesterday
delayed release of the "totally persuasive" evidence Secretary of State
Alexander Haig promised on Nicaraguan and Cuban involvement in the
Salvadoran civil war.
"It is simply taking longer than he hoped it would," said State Department
spokesman Alan Romberg. "We are talking about information that would
come largely from intelligence materials."
White House communications director David Gergen said an "active ef-
fort" is under way to determine if the administration can release classified
information on the extent of external involvement in the war.
Haig told the House subcommittee on foreign operations Thursday he ex-
pected to make public on Friday "totally persuasive" evidence that the
Salvadoran civil war is being directed by outside forces.
01 be Sidirgzn 33 Itl-
Vol. XCII, No. 121
Saturday, March 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) ; $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
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The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International,
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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.

f

UAW optimistic that GM talks will resume

DETROIT (UPI)- United Auto Workers President
Douglas Fraser said yesterday he was optimistic the
union and General Motors Corp. would reopen early
contract talks but warned GM should not expect more
concessions than Ford Motor Co. received. r
The UAW's General Motors Council will meet next
week to decide whether to reopen contract concession
negotiations with GM, the union announced yester-
day.
THE GM COUNCIL, which is made up of about 300
elected union leaders from GM locals around the
country, is scheduled to meet at 10 a.m. Thursday at
the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Suburban Dearborn.
Fraser told a news conference there would have to

be a "substantial majority" of rank-and-file mem-
bers favoring reopening the talks for reopening to
come about. fle estimated there would be more than
65 percent in favor of the reopening.
"From the polling we've done obviously we believe
that the majority would be there or we wouldn't have
called the Council," Fraser said.
GM EXECUTIVES recently have said the Ford
contract would be a starting point if negotiations
resume with the UAW. But Fraser rejected that idea.
"If Ford is just a starting point I would not be op-
timistic at all," Fraser said. "I would hope GM does
not expect us to make more concessions than Ford
did. I think that is totally unrealistic."

He said he did not expect the industry to emerge
with a three-level pattern of concessions effecting
GM, Ford, and Chrysler Corp.
FRASER SAID GM should not expect greater con-
cessions especially since GM made a profit last year
while Ford suffered a loss of more than $1 billion.
Asked if he would set a deadline for the new talks he
replied: "We ought to be able to do it in a week."
Earlier Friday UAW Vice President Owen Bieber,
head of the union's GM Department, said GM's
recent plant closing announcements have caused a
weakening of the rank-and-file opposition to early
contract talks.'

Unon board
LtJutIdecides to

0

shut down

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.
Mid-week Lenten Service: Wed-
nesday 7:30 p.m.
Choir: Wednesday 8:30 pm
Bible Study: Sunday-9:15 a.m.,
Wednesday-b0 p.m., Thursday-10
p-m.
NEW GRACE APOSTOLIC CHURCH
632 N. Fourth Ave.
Rev. Avery Dumas Jr., Pastor
9:45a.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.In.
Morning Service-(Special Musical
Group)
"Time of Meeting," 6:00 pm.
Special Missionary from Africa at the
11:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. services.

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH and
AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS
FOUNDATION
502 East Huron 663-9376
Jitsuo Morikawa, Pastor
10:00 a.m.--Sunday Worship.
care provided.
March 7: "Sense of Awe."

Child

Sunday: Lenten Worship Service 7:00
p.m.
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. 7 p.m.
11:00 Brunch, second Sunday of each
month.
Ministry Assistants: Nadean Bishop,.
Terry Ging, Barbara Griffin, Jerry
Rees.
* * *
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw Ct.
A Campus Ministry of the
Christian Reformed Church
Reverend Don Postema
10:00 a.m. Service of Holy Com-
munion.
Wednesday, 10:00 p.m. Evening
Prayers.,

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.
March 7: "The Most Misunderstood
Verse in the Bible." Dr. Donald B.
Strobe, Speaker.
Church School for all ages-9:30 a.m.
and 11 a.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
* . .*
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.-662-4466
Service of Worship :
Sunday 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.
College Students Fellowship Sunday
11:00 a.m.-
Wednesday: lioly Communion, 10:00
pm
* * *
LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN
(The Campus Ministry .
of the LCA-ALC-AELC)
801 S. Forest at Hill St.
Sunday Worship at 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 5:30 p.m. Agape Meal.
Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Choir practice.
Friday 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Volleyball
* * *
ST. MARY'S
STUDENT CHAPEL
(Catholic)
331 Thompson-663-0557 t

bowling alley
(Continued from Page 1)
"IT'S JUST TOO expensive to keep it
up," said Marc Dann, the chairman of
the Board of Representatives and an
LSA sophomore.
"At present the bowling alley is
breaking even and present maintenan-
ce costs and employee salaries are
covered, however the cost of procuring
machine parts is prohibitive," he said.
"Breaking even," Dann continued,
"for 65 bowlers a week is just not
enough to justify the use of the space."
The alley began operating.more than
50 years ago with human pin setters,
according to Dann. In 1955, automatic
lanes were installed and half of those
were renovated in 1964.
THE BOWLING alley was closed this
past summer while representatives of
the Brunswick Corporation inspected
the facility and estimated that the
necessary repairs would cost between
$150,00 and $200,000.
The board decided last month
revenues from the lanes have not been
sufficient to justify the capital expense
necessary to replace the equipment and
remodel the facility.
After receiving the Brunswick report,
the board voted in August to allot $3,000
to resurface the lanes, purchase new
pins, and hire a professional mechanic
to work with student mechanics to put
the machines back in working order.
ON SEPTEMBER 21, the lanes were
reopened. The bowling alley
management subsequently attempted
to increase patronage of the lanes
- through a promotional campaign.
"The student response was dismal,"
said Frank Cianciola, Michigan Union
director.
According to David Mitchell-Yellin,
recreation coordinator of the Union,
only 25 students indicated interest in
league play and only 32 were interested
in the intramural winter tournament.
Tnr ,,iPntc c in ,n dn. hr TTniesr-

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 EditorW.................. B WOJNOWSKI
Associate Sports Editors............BARB BARKER
MARTHA CRALL
LARRY FREED
JOHN KERR
RON POLLACK
Chief Photographer....-...........BRIAN MASCK
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, paul Engstrom, Kim
Hill. Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas.
ARTISTS: Norm Christiansen, Robert Lence, Jonathan
Stewart. Richard Wolk.
LIBRARIANS: Bonnie Hawkins, Gary Schmitz.
NEWS STAFF: John Adam, George Adams, Jason
Adkins, Beth Allen, Perry Clark, Poe Coughlin, David
Crawford, Lisa Crumrine, Pam Fickinger, Lou Fintor,
Steve Hook, Kathlyn Hoover, Harlon Kahn, Indre
Liutkus, Nancy Malich, Mike McIntyre, Jenny Miller,
Amy Moon, Anne Mytych, Nancy Newman, Don
Oberrotman, Stacy Powell, Janet Rae, Lauren
Rousseau, Chris Salato, Jim Schreitmueller, Susan
Sharon, David Spak. Lisa Spector, Bill Spindle, Kristin
Stapleton, Fannie Weinstein, Barry Witt.
OPINION PAGE STAFF: Dan Aronoff. Linda Bolkin,
Kent Redding. Nathaniel Worshay.

ARTS STAFF: Tonia Blonich, Jane Corl, James Clinton,
Mark Dighton. Adom Knee, Gail Negbour, Carol
Poneman, Ben Ticho.
SPORTS STAFF: Jesse Borkin, Tam Bentley, Jeff
Bergida, Randy Berger, Mark Borowski, Joe Chapelle,
Laura Clark. Richard Demok, Jim Dworman, Lauri
Foinblatt; Mark Fischer, David Forman, Chris Gerbosi,
Paul Helgren, Matt Henehon, Ch.uck Jaffe, Steve
Kamen, Josh Kaplan,nRobin Kopilnick, Doug Levy.
Mike McGraw, Larry Aikhk-. non Newman, Andrew
Oakes, Jeff Quicksilver, Sarah Sherber, George
Tanasiievich, James Thompson. Karl Wheatley, Chris
Wilson, Chuck Whittmon.
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ................. JOSEPH BRODA
Sales Manager ................ KATHRYN HENDRICK
Operations Manager ............ SUSAN RABUSHKA
DesployManager..................ANN SACHAR
Clossifids Manager............. MICHAEL SELTZER
Finance Manager ................. SAM SLAUGHTER
Assistant Display Manager ......... PAMELA GOULD
Nationals Manager ................. LINDSAY BRAY
Circulation Monaager .................. KIM WOOD
Sales Coordinator ............ E. ANDREW PETERSEN
SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Wendy Fox, Mark Freeman.
Nancy Joslin, Beth Kovinsky, Caryn Notiss. Felice
Oper. Jodi Pollock. Tim Pryor, Jeff Voigt.
BUSINESS STAFF: Hope Barron, Fran Bell, Molly
Benson, Denise Burke, Becki Chottiner, Laura Farrell,
Sandy Frcko, Meg Gibson, Pam Gillery, Marci
Gittleman, Jamie Goldsmith, Jan Goldstein, Mark
Horita, Koren Johnson, Ada Kusnet, GitoaPillai, Dan
Quandt, Pete Rowley, Lech Stanley, Hildy Stone,
Tracy Summerwill, Joseph Trulik, Mary Ellen
Weinberg.

COMING SOON

« QUNIVERSITY
- PASSWORD

PUBLICATION SCHEDULE
1982
JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRL
-- - _ - _ _ - -- _ c u r r- AP, L W T F 4

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