C NOW OPEN IN BRIAR WOOD 1 HOUR Photo Processing Bring your film to us. Watch it being processed into beautiful color prints right before your eyes - in only 1 Hour. SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFERI 1 - I / $0100 This Coupon Good $ 00 1 off for $2.O0off 110, off 126,135 Color Film Processing & Printing (C-41 Process) (Expires April 19, 1982) 1 I I QUICK PHOTO LABS Briarwood Mail 76 Ann Arbor - _. .. . . .. . . . .- - -- - - - - - Page 2-Friday, April 2, 1982-The Michigan Daily Officials call for action to save Social Securi~ty IN' Compiled fro United Press a BRIEF' m Associated Press and International reports From AP and UPI WASHINGTON- Social Security will be unable to pay retirees' and sur- vivors' benefits on time starting in July 1983 unless Congress takes corrective action "in the very near future," the system's trustees said yesterday. But the trustees, all members of President Reagan's Cabinet, made no recommendations for bolstering the system's sagging Old Age and Sur- vivors Insurance Trust Fund. They said they are waiting for Reagan's National Commission on Social Security Reform to complete a report due by the end of the year. THE TRUSTEES forecast that beneficiaries will get a 7.6 percent benefit increase this July based on the consumer price index. Reagan has op- posed congressional calls to trim that increase. The trustees are Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan and Health and Human Services Secretary Richard Schweiker. Despite benefit cuts enacted in 1981, "the short-range financial status is significantly worse than was estimated last year," the trustees said in their an- nual report to Congress. FOR THE seventh straight year, the combined old age and disability trust funds paid out more than they took in in calendar 1981, the trustees said. Those two funds dropped by $1.9 billion to $24.5 billion - enough to pay benefits for only two months - at the end of last year, they said. The hospital, or Medicare, trust fund rose by $5 billion. Consequently, the three combined funds finished the year in the black, taking in $178.2 billion in benefits and medical bills for 36 million people. Congress passed a stopgap measure 4 last year to tide the old age fund over through 1982 by allowing it to borrow from the healthier disability reserve. Reagan set up the commission after withdrawing his own controversial proposals for cutting early retirement and other benefits. Democrats, who forced the ad- ministration to scuttle proposed benefit cuts last year, were quick to react. "I would not want this report to cause fear in the hearts of those on Social Security," House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said. "I have absolute faith and trust that never in any way will the program be abated. The government is committed to it." Israeli nationalists invade Sinai YAMIT, Occupied Sinai- A boatload of Israeli nationalists landed on the beach and punched through a cordon of soldiers yesterday to join thousands of civilians who were hoping to block the return of the Sinai to Egypt. The nationalists landed in rubber dinghies and about 25 broke through the line of unarmed soldiers, said Moshe Hager, the group's leader. Three others were arrested, along with six anti-withdrawal activists among the hundreds who greeted the invaders. The scuffle on the palm-lined beach near the northern Sinai town of Yamit dramatized the last-ditch battle to halt the evacuation by nationalists who, put no faith in the peace treaty with Egypt, in which Israel agreed to leave the Sinai by April 25. The government ordered all civilians to leave Sinai by yesterday and the> military declared the occupied area an off-limits military zone at midnight Wednesday. But it made no effort to dislodge some 2,000 activists who had evaded roadblocks and squatted" in abandoned homes over the last few mon ths. Reagan undergoes hospital tests WASHINGTON- President Reagan underwent hospital tests yesterday" for a previous inflammation of the urinary tract but told reporters afterwar< ds, "Everything is perfectly normal." "I feel great," Reagan said upon his arrival back at the White House after undergoing about 90 minutes of tests at the National Naval Medical Center in suburban Bethesda, Md. Speaking to reporters on the South Lawn at the White House, Reagan said no medication was prescribed for him and that he did not expect to have to return to the hospital. The White House issued a statement that said the results of all tests ad- ministered to Reagan were normal. "There is no evidence of malignancy and no further evaluation is anticipated,." the statement added. wi A- w S S Salvadoran political parties unable to resolve deadlock When a good friend borrows your carthe tank may, not come back full. But the trunk does. SAN SALVADOR- Rightist parties and centrist Christian Democrats remained deadlocked yesterday on formation of a coalition to lead a representative assembly and name an interim president. Jose Napoleon Duarte, president of the ruling junta and a Christian Democrat, left open the possibility he might step aside. "I've never personally sought any position. I've always obeyed the dic- tates of my party ... I will obey any decision my party takes," Duarte told a news conference yesterday in response to questions. On Wednesday, Duarte said he planned to remain at the helm and insisted that his party had to be included in any viable government. The Reagan administration, which has supported the Christian Democrats but said before last Sunday's elections it would work with whichever party won, stepped up pressure against a right-wing government. Pesticides kill birds in N.Y. ALBANY, N.Y - Volunteers acted as live scarecrows yesterday to prevent birds from swooping onto a suburban cornfield where more than 2,000 birds have died after bait "drenched with pesticide." A band of grain surrounding an unharvested corn crop had been sprinkled with pesticide, tentatively identified as parathion, officials said. Permits are required to use parathion against insects. Workers have cleared away more than 2,000 dead birds since a neighbor reported seeing birds falling out of trees Tuesday, said Ward Stone, a wildlife pathologist with the state Department of Environmental Conser- vation. Conservation workers yesterday afternoon raked dirt over the pesticide, which had been spread over nine acres on the farm near the village of Selkirk, a few miles south of Albany. , , r _14 ka ,qi he Mtchtgan lBatlg Vol. XCII, No. 144 Friday, April 2, 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 Doily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International. Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate 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. S Editor-in-Chief ......................DAVID MEYER Managing Editor ................. PAMELA KRAMER ExecutiveEditor .............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 .OB WOJNOWSKI Associate Sports Editors . .... BARB BARKER MARTHA CRAM LARRY FREED JOHN KERR RON POLLACK Photography Editor ................. BRIAN MASCK PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim Hill, Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas, Jeff Schrier. ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHERS: Linda Kelley, Doug McMahon, Avi Pelosoff, Elizabeth Scott, Jon Snow. Diane Williams. ARTISTS: Norm Christiansen. Robert Lence. 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