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January 12, 1982 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily, 1982-01-12

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6

Page 2-Tuesday, January 12, 1982-The Michigan Daily
NATOalles ondemn Soviets

IN BRIEF

From AP and UPI
BRUSSELS, Belgium- America's NATO allies
agreed yesterday for the first time that U.S. san-
ctions against Poland and the Soviet Union had
"significance" and that they would consider actions
of their 'own to press for an easing of repression in
Poland.
The Western European allies, in a joint declaration
immediately after an emergency meeting of foreign
ministers, "deplored" what they termed a Soviet
campaign against Poland, where martial law was
declared Dec.13.
NATO Secretary General Joseph Luns said the
ministers wanted to "stress the significance of
measures already announced by President Reagan,"
a reference to the limited economic sanctions im-

posed Dec. 26 by the U.S. government.
THE DECLARATION on Poland was worked out at
a six-hour meeting requested by U.S. Secretary of
State Alexander Haig. Haig came to the meeting
seeking a condemnation of alleged Soviet in-
volvement in the Polish situation and support for U.S.
sanctions.
The declaration did not require any of the allies to
take sanctions against the Soviet Union or Poland.
However, it was the first time the alliance as a
group acknowledged that individual members might
be considering steps of their own.
THE STEPS could include restrictions on Polish
and Soviet diplomats and organizations in the West,
reduction of scientific exchange agreements and
assistance to Polish exiles in the West, Luns said.

He added that allies will continue food aid to the
Polish people but will make sure it is distributed by
private religious groups, rather than the military
government.
Haig called the decisions set out in a 16-paragraph
joint declaration a "solid success for the alliance."
THE FOREIGN ministers of the 15 NATO allies
warned that direct armed Soviet intervention in
Poland "would have the most profound consequences
for international relations."
The Soviet Union responded swiftly and angrily
yesterday to'the NATO statement condemning the
declaration of martial law in Poland, calling it "in-
tolerable interference" in that country's internal af-
fairs.'

Students protest training of Salvadoran soldiers

(Continued from Page 1)
organizers. Several passersby joined
the crowd, but most moved along
quickly to avoid frost bite.
Shifting political priorities could ex-
plait lower public interest in the
Salvadoran situation, according to Tom
Hayes, director of the Ann Arbor Inter-
faith Council for Peace, one of the
event's co-sponsors."
"WITH THE Reagan Ad-
ministration's domestic policies taking
hold, the insecurity that people once felt
about El Salvador, they now feel here at
home," he said.
Hayes also suggested that public in-

terest in El Salvador might have waned
because of a lack of media coverage.
Many reporters covering El Salvador
left last year after being warned by
Junta officials that the officials would
no longer be responsible for the jour-
nalists' safety, he said.
Ann Arbor opponents to the Reagan
administration's actions in El Salvador
hope to place a referendum on the
November ballot condemning Reagan's
foreign policy, First Ward City Coun-
cilman Lowell Peterson said at the
rally.
AT ROTC headquarters, at North

Hall, the protestors changed anti-
military slogans for about 15 minutes,
much to the amusement of about 15
ROTC students and several officers
who watched from the North Hall lob-
by.
One ROTC student remarked, "These
guys are pretty tame. It's not worth
sticking around for." There wsas no
confrontation between the ROTC
students and the demonstrators.
As the crowd chanted "ROTC off
carmpus," an Ann Arbor policeman said
jokingly, "That was my chant from the
sixties."

The demonstrators at Fort Bragg
were chanting "no draft, no war, U. S.
out of El Salvador," and carried a sign
saying "Send food not bombs to El
Salvador."
Roman Catholic and human rights
groups say some 32,000 people have
died in political violence since the
military-civilian junta came to power
in October, 1979. An estimated 15,000
leftists guerillas are trying to bring
down the Junta, which has had U.S.
support and has resisted calls for
negotiations with the insurgents.

When at last your classes are through
Keep the Michigan League in view;
The entrees can't be beat,
The desserts are a treat-
It's a break for your wallet, too!
. -L
TheMichigan
Next to Hill Auditorium
Located in the heart of the campus.
it is the heart of the campus.

Official: State's economy
may have bottomed out

Lunch 11f:30 to 1:15
Dinner 5:00 to 7:15
SPECIAL LOW PRICES FOR
STUDENTS
Send your League Limerick to:
Manager, Michigan League
227 South Ingalls
You will receive 2 free dinner
tickets if your limerick is used in
one of our ads.

v
LANSING (UPI) - Last month's
seasonally adjusted unemployment
rate was possibly the highest since the
Great Depression, but Michigan may
have finally touched bottom, a budget
expert said yesterday.
Deputy Budget Director Douglas
Roberts said while unemployment rose
to 14.4 percent in December, the
seasonally adjusted rate was even
higher -15.3 percent.
Roberts cautioned that seasonal fac-
tors used during the 1950s were not en-
tirely reliable and there may have been
a month during that period when ad-

p 6

justed joblesness was higher.
ROBERTS predicted "actual unem-
ployment" will continue to get worse in
the months ahead, but said he expects
the seasonally adjusted rate to remain
static.
Asked if Michigan's economy has hit
the bottom, he said "yes."
"We're looking for a stable economy
but unfortunately at a low level," he
said.
The administration continues to look
for a turnaround in the second half of
1982, but Roberts said he expects double
digit unemployment to linger "for
years."

Compiled from Associated Press and
United Press international reports
Reagan refuses sale of
U.S. planes to Taiwan
WASHINGTON- President Reagan, in a move clearly aimed at
bolstering his sagging relationship with China, has rejected a longstanding
request from Taiwan for advanced U.S. fighter planes.
Instead, the State Department said yesterday, the president believes that
the island nation's defense needs can be met by replacing its aging jet
fighters with new versions of the same models.
Taiwan had sought, at the least, to replace its fleet of F-5E fighters with
the F5 G Tigershark, an advanced version with more speed, agility and
range. The Peking government vehemently opposed the sale, viewing the
issue as a test of its fledgling ties with the United States.
Reagan's decision was taken as a signal that despite his pro-Taiwanese
rhetoric of the 1980 presidential campaign, he now views the link with the
communist mainland of equal or more importance to America.
Second quake jolts East
BOSTON- A second earthquake in three days rattled New England
yesterday afternoon, shaking buildings from Maine to Boston.
The tremor was reported shortly after 4:30 p.m. EST. Officials said it ap-
parently was an aftershock of a quake that struck a remote area of
southeastern Canada on Saturday morning.
Nafi Toksoz, director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's
Wallace Geophysical Observatory, said, "I presume it's an aftershock,
maybe a 5 or a 5%" on the Richter scale. He said the tremor was still being
measured.
Buildings were reported shaken at Cheshire in western Massachusetts, on
Boston's waterfront, in Keene and Concord, N.H., and points in Maine and
Connecticut.
Red Brigades suspects may
lead to kidnapped general
ROME- Two Red Brigades suspects arrested last weekend had been in
contact with the kidnappers of U.S. Army Gen. James Dozier and could
provide important new evidence in the case, investigators said yesterday.
The two, criminologist Giovanni Senzani, 42, and Franca Musi, 28,were
arrested Saturday along with eight other Red Brigades suspects in what
police described as the most important operation in 22 years against the
terror gang.
Interior Minister Virginio Rognoni told parliament the arrests could lead
to significant developments in the Dozier kidnapping and other pending
terrorism cases.
Police said documents confiscated during the arrests showed the hard-line
Red Brigades faction that kidnapped Dozier was pressing Senzani to act as
interrogator of the 50-year-old general abducted Dec. 17 in Verona.
Haitians drive out invaders
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti- Haiti says security forces and inhabitants of
Tortuga Island chased off a handful of armed invaders over the weekend,
but an exile in Miami claimed yesterday the "invasion" was far from over.
The government said Sunday that it had driven the exiles from the island,
located about 15 miles off the north shore of this impoverished Caribbean
nation. Reliable sources said four to eight men landed on Tortuga on Satur-
day, although the exiles claimed several hundred would be joining the in-
vasion.
A U.S. Embassy official in Haiti said the invaders arrived in-two groups
and totaled "about 10." The official, who asked not to be identified, said
there was a brief gun battle between Haitian troops and the invaders, who
then fled into the hills.
A brief Haitian government statement made no mention of casualties or
whether any invaders had been captured.
Vol. XCII, No.83
Tuesday, January 12, 1982
The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer-
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the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub-
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6,.

R
S

INTERVIEW NOW
GRADUATING IN MAY? Winter is the perfect time to
interview on campus for jobs or graduate/profession-
al school admissions.
Explore this opportunity
"THE NUTS AND BOLTS OF
ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWING"
WHERE: MLB Aud. 4
WHEN: Thursday, January 14 4-5 p.m.
Everything you need to know about:
0 On-campus recruiting policies & procedures
" How to fill out your CIF (Campus Interview Form)
"Signing-up for interviews
" Tips onwriting resumes & career objectives
" Prepping-up for your interview
CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT
OFFICE OF STUDENT SERVICES

BLUEBONNET BOWL
Remember the Thrill of Victory Forever
With Your Very Own
SOUVENIR TROPHY (ten inches tall)
SEND $10 PLUS $3 POSTAGE AND HANDLING TO:
GU ENTERPRISES 13A, 5025S. EASTERN AVE.,
SUITE NO. 16, BOX 347, LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89119
NAME
STREET
CITY, STATE, ZIP

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the achievers who are reshaping the wo rld
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We achieved this success by cutting
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Check out an Intel career. We'll talk
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We'll explain the advantages of choosing
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SIGN UP FOR'
CAMPUS
INTER VI EWS'
January 26 & 27
We want to have some straight talk with
graduates. If you are unable to meet with
our recruiters, send us your resume or a
letter that outlines your education, work
experience and your career ambitions, in
care of."INTEL COLLEGE RELATIONS,"
to the location of your choice: Oregon,
5200 N.E. Elam Young Parkway, Hillsboro,
OR 97123: California, 3065 Bowers
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Editor-in-thief .................... SARA ANSPACH
Managing Editor............... JULIE ENGEBRECHT
University Editor................LORENZO8ENET
News Editor ........................ DAVID MEYER
Opinion Page Editors..........CHARLES THOMSON
KEVIN TOTTIS
Sports Editor ................... MARK MIHANOViC
Associate Sports Editors ............ GREG DeGULIS
MARK FISCHER
BUDDY MOOREHOUSE
DREW SHARP
Chief Photographer .............. PAUL ENGSTROM
PHOTOGRAPHERS-Jackie Bell, Kim Hill. Deborah
Lewis, Mike Lucas, Brian Mosck.
ARTISTS: Robert Lence. Jonathan Stewart, Richard
Walk. Norm Christionsen.
ARTS STAFF: Richard Campbell. Jane Carl, James Clin-
ton, Mark Dighton, Michael Huget, Adam Knee, Pam
Kramer, Gail lNegbaur, Carol Poneman, RJ Smith. Ben
Ticho.
NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Andrew Chap-
man, Perry Clark, David Crawford, Lisa Crumrine,
Ann Marie Faoio, Pam Fickinger, Joyce Frieden, Mark
Gindin, Julie Hinds, Steve Hook, Kothlyn Hoover,
Harlon Kahn, Mindy Layne, Mike McIntyre, Jennifer
Miller, Nancy Newman, Don Oberrotman, Stacy
Powell, Janet Rae, Sean Ross, Susan Sharon, David
Spok, Fannie Weinstein, BarryWitt.

SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Jecse Barkin, Tam Ben-
tley, Randy Berger, Mark Borowski, Joe Chapelle,
Laura Clark, Martha Croil, Jim Dworman, Karen Floch,
Larry Freed. Matt Henehon, Chuck Jaffe, John Kerr,
Doug Levy, Jim Lombard, Larry Mishkin, Dan
Newman, Andrew Oakes, Ron Pollack, Jeff
Quicksilver, Sarah Sherber, Kenny Shore, James
Thompson, Josie VonVoigtlander, Kent Walley, -Karl
Wheatley, Chris Wilson, Bob Wojnowski.
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager.... ........RANDI CIdELNIK
Sales Manager .................. BARB FORSLUND
Operations. manager.............. SUSANNE KELLY
Display Manager...........MARY ANN.MISIEWICZ
Classifieds Manager............. DENISE SULLIVAN
Finance Manager ............... MICHAEL YORICK
Assistant Display Manager.........NANCY JOSLIN
Nationals Manager SUSAN RABUSHKA
Circulation Manager................KIM WOODS
Sales Coordinator...........E ANDREW PETERSEN
BUSINESS STAFF: Liz Altman. Hope Barron, Alan Blum,
DanielBowen. Lindsay Bray. Joseph Broda Glen Can-
tor, Alexander DePillis, Susan Epps. Wendy Fox.
Sebastian Frcka. Mark Freeman, Marci Gittelman.
Pamela Gould. Kathryn Hendrick. Anthony interrante,
Indre Liutkus. Beth Kovinsky. Caryn Notiss, Felice
Oper. Jodi Pollock, . Ann Sachor. Michael Sovitt,
Michael Seltzer, Koren Silverstein. Sam Slaughter.
Nancy Thompson. Jeffrey Voight.

PUBLICATION SCHEDULE
1981
SEPTEMBER OCTOBER - NOVEMBER DECEMBER
S F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S
;,--4-61 2 3 1 .3 45 67 12 3 45
101112 4 6 7 8 9310 8 $1011 1213 14 6 89 101112
13 15 16 17 18 19 11 13 14 15 16 17 151 17 1819 20 21
20 22 23 24 25 26 18 2021 22 23 24 22 24 25 26-97-:8
2 J729 30R 25 6 27 28 29 30 31AR
J ANUA RY FEBRUA RY MARCH APRIL

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