Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom \'. ' Sitr l lalig BETTER YET Mostly sunny today with a high in the lower 50s. Vol. XCII, No. 128 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, March 14, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages Illo l o ll ll llo lllll 111 I 1 i ii iii Watt GOP leaders push prepares to hand lands over to states WASHINGTON (UPI) - In the face of President Reagan's new plan for massive federal land sales, Interior Secretary James Watt is pursuing his own programs for donating billions of dollars in property - even tracts near Nevada gambling casinos. Among the land the Interior Depar- tment is considering giving to cities and states, or transferring for as little as $2.50 an acre, are parcels along the Las Vegas strip and near celebrities' homes in Palm Springs, Calif. SOME FEDERAL officials worry that Watt's program will conflict with Reagan's new policy and Watt will surrender some of the government's most marketable property in approving donations under his year-old "Good Neighbors" program. Watt has been left with a thorny political dilemma as a result of Reagan's recent push for major land sales to help cut the budget deficit. Only a year ago, the Interior Secretary unveiled a "Good Neighbors" program, inviting Western governors to apply for donations or purchases at cut-rate prices of some of the most valuable public land-those crimping community expansion.. INTERIOR spokesman Harmon Kallman said Watt "simply hasn't determined how those two programs (Reagan's and his own) are going to fit together. An option paper is now being prepared for him, giving him several choices." But when asked if Watt was still planning to continue the "Good Neigh- bor" donations in light of Reagan's an- nouncement, James Monroe, a BLM spokesman, said, "Sure, that's a current policy directive from the secretary." for balanced budget EASTON, Md. (AP)- Republican of- ficeholders yesterday overwhelmingly endorsed the "goal of a balanced budget by 1985," but in mild, con-, ciliatory terms clearly designed to close the party rift over President Reagan's unpopular budget. The non-binding resolution adopted at the fifth annual Tidewater Republican Conference asserts that Reagan's economic recovery program is working so far and voices general support for keeping his tax cut intact. ADMINISTRATION officials at the conference expressed immediate pleasure with the outcome while con- ceding that balancing the budget by 1985 was unlikely. "They expressed it as a goal, they didn't say anybody was going to be shot if we didn't achieve it," said budget director David Stockman, who headed a delegation of five Cabinet-level of- ficials at the conference. The resolution, approved by voice vote, defused concerns by some party leaders that the session might produce a bitter battle over the Reagan budget, concerns heightened by the sharp criticism of the president's policies voiced recently by Sen. Robert Pack- wood (R-Ore.), the conference chair- man. THE FEW efforts made from the floor to criticize the Reagan budget or to vow a stronger commitment to achieving a balanced budget were shouted down as participants extended an olive branch to the White House. "The conference is very wary, and I think correctly so, about doing anything they regard as taking the ball away from the president," Packwood said. For instance, a proposal by Rep. Joel Pritchard of Washington that "defense spending increases must be restrained" was rejected in favor of a vaguely worded pledge to "enact such fundamental policy changes in spen- ding programs as may be necessary" for full economic recovery. THE FINAL result "is so watered down it sounds like one of those Democrat proposals," said Rep. Bill It's Alpo tim e Daily Photo by JON SNOW A canine takes time out from his busy schedule sitting outside Maison- Edward's tobacco shop in the arcade to break for a hearty lunch from Ronald McDonald's place. Stockman ...-No one will be shot Frenzel of Minnesota. The conference sidestepped a proposal that would have put members on record as opposing "legislative cur- tailment of the jurisdiction" of the Supreme Court and other federal courts See REPUBLICAN, Page 3 U.S. watches Nicaraguan leave for home WASHINGTON (AP) - Jose Orlando Tarden- cillas Espinosa went home to Nicaragua yester- day, ending a brief and unhappy chapter for the U.S. State Department in its effort to prove out- side involvement in the rebel war in El Salvador. Tendencillas, who has admitted to fighting on the rebel side in El Salvador, told reporters Friday that he knew nothing about Nicaraguan and Cuban involvement in El Salvador - a com- pletely different story than he had told State Department officials just a short time earlier. OFFICIALS HAD hoped that Tardencillas would tell reporters about being recruited by Nicaragua to fight in El Salvador and that he had been trained in Ethiopia and Cuba. The story would have helped confirm the Reagan ad- ministration's allegations of Cuban and Nicaraguan involvement in the Salvadoran in- surgency. In Nicaragua, there was no immediate official comment, but the pro-government newspaper Barricada called Tardencillas' action "an example of the dignity of a Nicaraguan youth." The paper is owned by the ruling leftist San- dinista National Liberation Front. Meanwhile, Secretary of State Alexander Haig planned to leave for New York today for more consultations on a Mexican peace proposal for Central America with Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge Castaneda. IT WILL BE the second time in two weeks that Haig and Castaneda have conferred. However a senior State Department official said yesterday that the administration still believes the plan is flawed because it wouldn't prevent outside in- tervention, which he said threatens all of Central America. "You've got to look at Cuba and you've got to look at the Soviet Union in this mix, and you've got to deal with all," said the official, who in- sisted on anonymity, He said the Mexican plan also needs "a guarantee from Nicaragua to keep the hell out of the affairs of neighboring states." "Without that it only becomes a delaying negotiating tactic to permit the activity to con- tinue, at least .we have to' be concerned as Americans that that might be the outcome, and we cannot permit that." He said the Mexicans "do not reject" the specific U.S. criticism of their plan, which calls for a negotiated end to the fighting in El Salvador, a non-aggression pact between the United States and Nicaragua and talks between Cuba and the United States. Atty. Gen. Kelly urges. "Briarwood shoppers to* fight utility hikes Language co-ops offer a twist By BILL SPINDLE State Attorney General Frank Kelley yesterday joined members of the Michigan Citizens Lobby at Briarwood mall, urging shoppers to fight automatic utility rate increases in Michigan. Kelley and the lobbying group are trying to collect the 230,000 signatures required to place a proposal on next November's ballot which would ban automatic increases, according to Sarah Matthews, a member of the MCL and coordinator of the group's petition drive. BEFORE 1974, Michigan law required utility companies to go before a public service committee for ap- proval of any rate increases. The committee could refuse rate hikes if the company was not purchasing gas at a competitive price. Since then, however, an amendment has allowed the companies to raise utility rates to cover costs of pur- chasing natural gas without the com- mittee's approval. According to Kelley, this encourages companies to buy without searching for, the best market price. "They no longer but it (natural gas) at a competitive price. Consumer's Power is buying gas from Algeria at about three times the world rate," he' said. "At the same time, they are selling surplus gas to Florida and Louisiana. THE MICHIGAN Citizens Lobby started the statewide petition drive several months ago. The local drive, however, was hampered last month when Briarwood - claiming that petitioning does not conform to the general purpose of the mall-took MCL to court. Last week the court ruled that under the First Amendment, MCL members have the right to petition in Briarwood if they stay within 50 feet of its entran- ce, and if they limit petitioning to Saturdays. The group has had similar experiences in other shopping centers around the state, according to Kelley. "Some of them (the malls) have trouble with the First Amendment," he said. "They think it (petitioning) is a nuisance. I don't think constitutional rights are a nuisance.- Kelley will discuss the fight against automatic-rate hikes tomorow at 7:30 p.m. in the Alumni Room of the McKin- ney Building at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti. By CAROL ANN OLDERSHAW Group living can be more than bland food, cramped quarters, and a sea of unknown faces. It can also be a place where you can't read the menu. The University's three language co- ops on campus, Emanuel House (Fren- ch), Max Kade House (German), and Vandenberg House (Russian) give their residents an opportunity to come home after class, eat a homemade meal, and speak to anyone else in the house using a foreign language. IN EMANUEL House, or "La Maison Francaise," house members generally enjoy French language and culture, but do not sit down and chat about Paris or put on French airs, said house member Nigel Ward, a junior majoring in math and computer science. "Some people have not even been to France," he ad- ded. Most of the students in the language co-ops chose to be there for various reasons, including the small size, the atmosphere of cooperation, and of course the exposure to a language. One-third of the members of the Max Kade German house returned this year, according to house members. Rhonda Struble, a senior in chemical engineering said "It's like a family here. When you move in, you feel you automatically have 30 friends." JOHN GAULT, a sophomore in naval architecture, said he moved to the Kade house from another co-op "to practice'my German." The Russian-oriented co-op, Vanden- berg Huse, has a higher proportion of graduate students than the other two Daily Photo by JACKIE B Members of the Max Kade German Co-op gather for dinner in the co-op's dining room. The German co-op is one of three foreign language co-ops at the University's Oxford Housing. language co-ops. Moscow journalist and film critic Valery Golovskoy lives in the house this year. A writer for the Soviet media magazine "Cinema Art and Soviet Screen," Golovskoy is currently a University graduate student. "I am very glad to live here," he said. "There are many young people and a friendly atmosphere." Golovskoy currently does research on 20th century literature, but he taught Russian 103 last term. DAVID ANDREWS, a masters student in Slavic linguistics and a second year resident of Vandenberg House, said, "I like the Russian House because it's not like a traditional dorm. We have a good group of people, it's cheap, work is minimal, and there is no 12-month lease to worry about." "We have nine graduate students in the house this year and hope to have more next year," said Vandenberg Resident Director John Barnet,who is in the PhD Russian Language and See 'U' FOREIGN, Page 2 TODAY- Old age is easy THE SECRET OF living to be 100 revolves around exercise, fresh air, a diet of fresh vegetables and, most of all, not surrendering to old age, a Soviet scientist says. A daily sip of wine won't hurt, either, he adds. Prof. Gurgen Aprikyan studied the habits of centenarians in the highlands of Soviet Armenia, a part of the Caucusus Mountains and home of the world's longest- lived nenln e He tnld the Tass news agencv that a com- the main thing in said. life is rhythm," the Armenian expert Crushed grapes "There's gonna be a lot of drunk cockroaches up here tonight." That was the comment of Jim Raby, who hauled more than 14,000 bottles of sparkling wine to a landfill near Los Angeles on Friday to be crushed under a bulldozer because the wine contained too much alcohol. Keith Morris, a distributor who ordered the dumping of the 1,173 cases of Snumnnte wine .sid the nrnhlem w that the hnttles were Mixed drink It may have been the world's biggest highball, water mixed with a 5,000-gallon shot of bourbon, but it all went down the drain in New Orleans where the booze flows freely. A 20-ton tank of whiskey slipped from a crane and ruptured as it was being loaded on a ship Friday night in the Industrial Canal. Firefighters were called to wash down the area for fear something would ignite the alcohol. "Those rumors you heard about firemen on their hands and knees licking the decks are not true," joked Fire Department spokesman George Rigamer. O * 1958- The Union Board of Directors approved the idea of a student bookstore in the Michigan Union. " 1939- Eighteen hours of rain and freezing temperatures covered Ann Arbor with tons of ice in the worst sleet storm since 1913. The diag was closed with danger signs and pedestrians were warned to watch for falling ice and tree limbs. * 1926- A $3,000,000 fellowship fund to support advanced study in Europe was established by Simon Guggenheim, a former U.S. senator. Qi .I i I