, _ 1, .4 -Z - - . , 4Ar- - - .i «4 - .1 0 mmoo m mm mm mm m - mm mm mmo - mmo m m "DON'T FORGET I to place your ad in * T1e 1{lJigitan {aig - ume 1 S ublet t Suppement 1 Name 1 Address Phone _ 1 1 1 1 COST:. Only $14 Absolutely No Ads Will Be Accepted I After Mach 149 1 " Mail or bring this 1 1 clipping and payment to 420 Maynard Street l * Make checks payable to The Michigan Daily (actual size of ad) -No Refunds- Please print or tye legibly Supplement will appear In the space provided, as you would like the ad to appear. Friday, March 6, 1982 ' Em m m mm m m m m m mm Mu m m m m m m mU Page 2-Friday, March 12, 1982-The Michigan Daily Senator Williams resigns (Continued from Page 1) table. Despite Williams' twice-daily assurances that he would be vindicated once the Senate heard all the evidence, he appeared to stand no chance of exoneration once he was convicted on nine counts of bribery and conspiracy last May, and later was sentenced to three years in jail. He is still pressing his court appeal. In retirement, Williams will receive a $45,000 pension. He would have received the same benefits if he had been expelled. The resignation was expected to open a lively contest for Williams' seat in New Jersey, where Republican Gov. Thomas Kean was expected to announ- ce an interim successor. The appoin- tment doubtless will add yet another member to the Senate's Republican majority, now numbering 53. In its 193-year history, the Senate has expelled only 15 members, all for treason or disloyalty. The last was Jesse Bright of Indiana, who was ousted in 1862 for conspiring to sell guns to the Confederacy. LSA moves to implement TA English examination, (Continued from Page 1) problem for some foreign TAs, and unanswered questions. He said it does that the program will be beneficial, not as yet specify what the precise some disagreed with certain evaluation criteria will be, or if there provisions-specifically, the will be a grievance procedure for those requirement that current TAs be tested dissatisfied with test results. along with new TAs. TAs can take the test a second time at "Its OK for the ones who are coming the end of their first term. They would here," said Math 116 TA Tom Estep, be denied a TA appointment if they "but to come down on the teachin failed the second examination. assistants who are already here is kind Residential College sophomore ,,n wDeborah Kanter said that the plan "can of unfair." only affect people positively," and ad- FRANK MA, WHO teaches Math 112 ded that while she found having a this term, said that the difficulty some foreign-born language TA an advan- foreign TAs have in speaking English is a "valid problem" that needs attention, tage, English competency was impor- but that the proposal leaves several tant as "sometimes, you want to speak in English." INBRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports U.S. administration aided 'democratic forces' in Nicaragua WASHINGTON- The Reagan administration provided $10.4 million in economic support to "democratic forces" in Nicaragua last year, the State Department confirmed yesterday. The aid was provided openly and not as part of a covert operation, although it was done without public fanfare. It went to such private sector groups as business associations, labor unions, producers' cooperatives, voluntary organizations and community self-help groups. The State Department confirmed the operations and said another $7.4 million is earmarked for the private sector is year. Word of the private-sector aid came against a flurry of news reports that the administration had initiated a covert CIA operation to destabilize the Nicaraguan government, using a $19 million fund. The New York Times reported yesterday that covert financial aid was being provided to in- dividuals and private organizations in Nicaragua for the purpose of bolstering moderate elements there. Marathon, U.S. Steel merge I FINDLAY, Ohio- Marathon Oil Co. shareholders yesterday voted to merge with U.S. Steel Corp. in the second largest merger in American cor- porate history. The acquisition ended a hard-fought but unsuccessful fight by Mobil Oil, Corp. to take over Marathon. At 4:30 p.m. EST, voting inspectors announced that more than two-thirds of the shares had voted in favor of the $6 billion merger with the nation's No. 1 steel producer. A two-thirds.vote was needed to seal the merger, second only to DuPont's acquisition last year of Conoco for $7.8 billion. Surinam rebels attempt coup PARAMARIBO, Surinam- Rebel troops firing submachine guns took over Paramaribo's main barracks and business district yesterday but Surinam's left-leaning military leader said he was trying to put down the coup. Witnesses said the rebels seized control of Paramaribo's streets and im- portant downtown buildings, including the telegraph exchange, after firing into the air. Shooting at the barracks was reported intense in the pre-dawn hours, but casualties were not known. The small, bauxite-rich -nation on South America's northeast coast is a former Dutch colony. Witnesses said the shooting at the barracks broke out about 4 a.m. At about 12:30 p.m. a radio announcement by the rebel "National Liberation Countil" proclaimed a dusk-to-dawn curfew, said schools were closed until further notice, and banned gatherings of more than three people. The communique was issued by a Lt. Rambocus, apparently the rebel chief. But the station quickly went off the air, and reporters said Lt. Col. Desi Bouterse, Surinam's leader, and his deputy military commander, Maj. Roy Horb, surfaced at a military housing complex some four miles from the barracks. American business leaders reduce expansion plans WASHINGTON- For the first time since the 1975 recession, American business leaders plan to trim spending for expansion and new equipment this year, after discounting for increases due only to inflation, the government reported yesterday. The Commerce Department's chief economist, Robert Ortner, said later surveys could well show executives scaling back expansion plans even fur- ther in the next month or two--a hard blow to Reagan administration hopes for robust business investment. But Ortner also said the same executives will probably be talking about more ambitious plans when they see for sure that the current recession "is not endless." 6 0 FLIPPER FNISMCEt 6G,LIt }yiN&1VtVO - 6AML55 A /4 CA4VDNIlr .M r"PAA&/Nr1 1A P# " A " '~ Q-b ,j45r O~o~7Z IHEARD ngIW Evga Fm P, RAIR 'L14DY! WE RZE A-rPLfj4± M-In6es 4G1RE A[3ouT -174E p4 ( -SEX RioT"' ?,- - r S - CM N'l q i ..u~oar.. 11 /l /lf As, ONLY AT FL PPEk M GEE'S C/4t4 You PIA PAC-(-AN r ANb t L-L- -'DA .. NEW / +y' +E"o G AmEEs PLUS OVR b pPp &AL-L' OH WZW . V o G'raC3° I LV S 4T0W f Ad+ Rs AWD VF_ FlMf U&MO IR056 11117a jaQEE'N q IES. ...A DwqAT A 15 I 9 ns. PA&-MAN Cat}M !! QtQC ON ,Q+aa ALI AN C, THM 1S A-..{. THE. LJATST t 1 ESO-6ME S AN D pINgl-L VAC.FIME-s1-T /41L-. TIIE S, PLUS 4 -2." plIPP7ZM125~. L-s, v7Y (A) F L 1pEa- 1 6lE'S-W " UfJ'&5 5 Y (2) TOMMWWs H'OLIDA A P- P ACtKC 4STA -StPurchase / 1 gets you sot ! worth of FREE IJGAMESwithth Ithis coupon. * 1 Exp.- c*3-18-82 *OOD O-1tLe c00Ar' IPltPER . 'itLEE'S E.C ET7 A/Roa FLIPP!E R . -L"EesS. V% ' JEQSINNA~RJ,,tI LN^ ,~,em P2PEt F LEE S LASE" PAID ADVERTISEMENT . 10 ' t --, N _ \ -r...." ..._ _ 'it,. " y . , i .... -; r ti 1 ri " , , ,,' _ l , - ' y . . -- , ~ , . -- ' - , ,, -.. . - ' - -" z': i: a,, Vol. XCII, No. 126 Friday, March 12, 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 -address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Sundicate. 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. WL ,%O: \- .... - , .. ' -!f /. ,rw.%. - ,;; ,/ , -. ...- '''+ IN -7. r ,P & 6 4 %, /'i / / , "' ,./ ' -o . 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 .................... 8OB WOJNOWSKI Associate Sports Editors .............. BARB BARKER MARTHA CRALL LARRY FREED JOHN KERR RON POLLACK Chief Photographer................BRIAN MASCK PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim Hill, Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas, Jeff Schrier. ARTISTS: Norm Christiansen. Robert Lence, Jonathan Stewart, Richard Walk. 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, Harlan Kohn, Indre Liutkus, Nancy Molich, Mike McIntyre, Jenny Miller, Amy Moon, Anne Mytych, Nancy Newman, Don Oberrotmon, Stacy Powell, Janet Roe, Louren Rousseau, Chris Salata, 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 Worshoy. ARTS STAFF: Tonia Blonich, Jane Carl, James Clinton, Mark Dighton, Adam Knee, Gail Negbour. Carol Poneman, Ben Ticho. SPORTS STAFF: Jesse Barkin. Tom Bentley, Jeff Bergido, Randy Berger, Mark Borowski, Joe Chapelle, Laur~a Clark, Richard Demak. Jim Dworman, Lauri Foinblott, Mark Fischer, David Forman, Chris Gerbasi, Paul Helgren, Matt Henehon, Chuck Jaffe, Steve Kamer, Josh Kaplan. Robin Kopilnick, Doug Levy, Mike McGraw, Larry Mizhki-. ron Newman, Andrew Oakes, Jeff Quicksilver, Sarah Sherber, George Tonasiievich, James Thompson. Karl Wheatley, Chris Wilson, Chuck Whittman. BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager .... . ...........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 Manooger .................. 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 I Benson, Denise Burke, Becki Chottiner, Laura Forrell, Sandy Frcka, Meg Gibson, Pam Gillery, Marci Gittleman, Jamie Goldsmith, Jon Goldstein, Mark Horita, Karen Johnson, Ada Kusnetz, Gito Pilla, Don Quandt, Pete Rowley, Leah Stanley, Hildy Stone,- Tracy Summerwill, Joseph Trulik; Mary Ellen' Weinberg. Shouldn't Getting You B3e. If Your PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1 1 ~1982w_ _ I U