/ Page 2-Thursday, April 8, 1982-The Michigan Doily Yale, Michigan family From APand UPI YALE, Mich. - A woman and her four children were found shot to death yesterday at their rural home three miles south of Yale, police said. It was the third mass murder in Michigan in seven weeks. Robert Cleland, the St. Clair County prosecutor, identified the dead as Betty Giuliani and her children. Erick, 19, Kathleen, 16, Cindy Joe, 13, and Dino, 9. He said all four children were adopted. The five people were shot to death with a .22-caliber rifle," Detective Bruce Lindke of the St. Clair County Sheriff's Department said. At a late afternoon news conference, Cleland said police and his office had ruled out the possibility that one of the five victims had shot the other four, then committed suicide, as originally suspected. "THE INDICATIONS that we have at this time are that the deaths are a homicide," Cleland said. He would not elaborate. St. Clair County sheriff's deputy Ray Gleason said police were talking to a young male "friend of the family" who Cleland said might have "been in a. position to see something." C] not describe the teen-ager as a "All we want to do is talk to1 said. Earlier, Lindke had said po investigating the slayings as a suicide because there was no i of forced entry at the home a dication of robbery. A neighbor who had plann bowling yesterday with Mrs. found the bodies inside the hoi tly before 8 a.m., authorities s neighbor, who wished to anonymous, said she spoke Giuliani by telephone about at murdered elan d before the probable time of the killing. him," he Erick Giuliani quarterbacked the Yale high school football team last year lice were and his sister, Kathleen, sang in the a murder- high school choir this year, according to ndication Albert Kimmel, the Yale schools nd no in- superintendent. Cindy Joe Giuliani was an eighth- ted to go grader at Yale Junior High School and SGiuliani Dino was a fourth-grader at Yale me shor- Elementary School, Kimmel said. aid. The Assistant St. Clair County Medical remain Examiner Benjamin C. Clyne said the toMrs.victims appeared to have been shot in talfour the head. half-hour * State Senate redistricting proposal sent to Milliken;o veto expected LANSING (UPI)- The Senate, on its second at- tempt, narrowly approved and sent for almost cer- tain veto by Gov. William Milliken yesterday a plan to redraw Michigan's congressional districts accor- ding to 1980 census figures. The 20-16 vote to approve the measure and send it to the governor came about five hours after the Senate had fallen one vote short of passing the plan. ALTHOUGH Democrats authored the plan, four members of the party joined Republicans in opposing the reapportionment proposal. Democrats on the committee pushed the defeated plan out Tuesday, while GOP members boycotted. It was finally approved on a 56-40 party-line vote in the House early yesterday. The Republican Milliken has said he would veto the plan if it arrives on his desk in its current form. "THIS PLAN will not become law," said Senate Republican Leader Robert VanderLaan of Kentwood. "I think the three-judge panel will be more respon- sive to the people of this state than the what I call 'political hacks' that authored this plan.'' Senate Democratic Leader William Faust of Westland said he believes the problem will be resolved by U.S. District Court judges no matter what happens with it in the Legislature. The Michigan Democratic Party already has asked the three-judge panel, two of whom have Democratic political backgrounds, to take the issue from the Legislature and come up with a plan by May 4. FAUST SAID if Milliken vetoes the bill, the court will assume control. If the Legislature fails to act before it leaves for Easter break later this week, "they'll take it away from us," he said. Democrats say their plan is fair because it would provide for nine mostly Democratic seats, eight GOP seats and one which could go either way, as opposed to the current 12 Democrats and seven Republicans now representing the state. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Reagan enjoys tropical vacation KINGSTON, Jamaica- President Reagan, escaping a bitter Washington cold spell, flew to the sunny Caribbean yesterday for a five-day working vacation to promote his plan for developing the region's depressed economies. Reagan, the first American president to visit Jamaica, arranged to spend the day in Kingston for talks with Prime Minister Edward Seaga before flying today to Bridgetown, Barbados. In Barbados, Reagan will meet with Prime Minister Tom Adams and then lunch with the leaders of Dominica, Antigua and Barbuda, St. Lucia, St. Vin- cent and the Grenadines and St. Kitts-Nevis. Administration officials say Reagan's $350 million Caribbean Basin Initiative is designed to revive the islands' economies through the power of the free enterprise system and to make the lure of communism unattractive to the region's poor. There was some dispute among Reagan's staff on the political wisdom of traveling to a tropical island at a time of recession across the country and record post-winter snowstorms in much of the Northeast. Japan admits wartime atrocities TOKYO- The Japanese government yesterday confirmed the existence of a secret World War II Imperial Army unit that allegedly killed more than 3,000 people-perhaps including American GI's-in chemical and biological experiments. The victims were mostly Chinese, Koreans, Mongolians and Russians. But there have been persistent rumors a small number of American prisoners of war also died in the experiments to produce weapons for chemical and biological warfare. "The atrocities occurred during the most extraordinary wartime con- ditions," State Minister Kunio Tanabe told the lower house of parliament. "It's most regrettable from the point of view of humanity," he added. Tanabe, who reports directly to Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki, was the fir- st to indicate the Japanese government had knowledge of the atrocities committed by the Imperial Army's unit No. 731. Poland invites Pope to visit WARSAW, Poland- A government minister said yesterday that Pope John Paul II was welcome to visit Poland late this summer and asserted that martial law had not affected church-state relations. The pope had hoped to proceed with the visit despite the imposition of mar- tial law Dec. 13. But Poland's Archbishop Jozef Glemp, after talks with the pope,. has since made the restoration of workers' rights a condition for the visit. Taking issue with Archbishop Glemp, the Polish governmentis Religious Affairs Minister Jerzy Kuberski said there was no reason why the pontiff should not proceed with plans to visit his homeland in August. The martial law government appears to be hoping the visit will help legitimize its status in the eyes of Poles. Church-state negotiations over the visit are currently under way. Grenade hurts nun in Nablus TEL AVIV, Israel- A grenade hurled at a holy site inNablus wounded a Greek Orthodox nun on Passover eve yesterday and police defused a bomb before it exploded at another religious landmark in the occupied West Bank town. In Nablus, the grenade was hurled at a group of tourists in a cave under the Greek Orthodox church at Jacob's Well, wounding a nun who worked at the site and a Nablus Arab, the Israeli military said. The incident came during one of the heaviest tourist seasons in the Holy Land with the start of the Jewish Passover at sundownand Easter weekend two days later. Officials said some 105,000 Jews and Christian pilgrimshad arrived for their respective holy days. Citing a recent escalation of guerrilla border activity, Israeli army Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Raphael Eitan did not rule out a confrontation with the Palestinians in south Lebanon, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and abroad. JOIJCM The E State cuts amount of funds to be withheld from 'U' (Continued from Page 1) cc D(gh the sword of micnigan . -7 Besides withholding a total of $80 million from the state's four-year colleges, the executive order calls for cuts of $125.8 million from state depar- tments, $7.1 million from home heating aid, and $200,000 from the $800,000 Pon- tiac Silverdome subsidy. Under the original order, all final quarter appropriations to the state's colleges and universities would have been cut. Planning called for those funds to be repaid to the schools at the beginning of the new fiscal year. The order is part of an overal budget plan to fill a $611 million state shortfall. Other parts of the plan include a six- month hike in the 4.6 percent state in- come tax to 5.6 percent, a new set of taxes on entertainment activities, and a 10-cent-per-package increase in the state's cigarette tax. The cigarette tax hike was approved by the Senate Legislature is still considering the other tax plans. University officials, most of whom said they were not expecting the revised executive order, declined ex- tensive comment until they could study the new plan more closely. Also yesterday, Budget Director Gerald Miller called off a key meeting scheduled for this morning with Wall Street financial houses, admitting the prospects for agreement on resolving the state's fiscal crisis are too uncer- tain. '420 MAYNARD ST . . Student Publications Building The ENSIAN Yearbook is the best way to capture your years at Michigan. To reserve your copy of the 1982 ENSIAN, return the coupon below with $15.00. Please reserve my copy of the 1992 ENSIAN, at the price of $15.00. I will pick it up in April. (To have the ENSIAN mailed, please add $2.00.) Name, Ann Arbor Address Mailing Address Detroit Labor History Tours invites you to take the Detroit Labor History Bus Tour Saturday April 17, 1982 9 am to 3 pm TOUR INCLUDES: Polonia Restaurant, Labor History Slideshow, Diego Rivera Mural Presentation at Detroit Institute of Arts and Westside De- troit Labor History bus tour. $8/or $7 students and unemployed For information call: 763-2300 or 761-8178 or 878-2586. Call by April 12th Sponsored by The NationalLawyers Guild Vol. XCII, No. 149 Thursday, April 8, 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 Apn 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. 6 _..._ _ w Ntb ow C? Ip I \,~ ~ 1OfV NOV \ 41(RE -it -- 7 - /A& I- f 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 . .BOB WOJNOWSKI Associate Sports Editors BARB BARKER MARTHA CRAL LARRY FREED JOHN KERR RON POLLAC 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. Jonathon Stewart. Richard Wolk. LIBRARIANS: Bonnie Hawkins. Gary Schmitz. 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Becki Chottiner, Murcia Eisen, Laura Farrell, Sandy Fricka, Meg Gibson, Pam Gillery, Marci Gittlemon, Jomie " Goldsmith, Mark Horito, Laurie Iczkovitz, Karen John- son, Ada Kusnetz. Gito Pillai. Chantelle Porter, Don Quandt, Pete Rowley, Leah Stanley. Tracy Summerwill NO MORE WAITING The yearbooks ore here 0 0 1* Pick up your 1982 Michigan Ensian beginning Friday, April 9 at: Student Publications Building 420 Maynard (Next to SAB) I , PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1982 JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL La