I Page 2-Thursday, January 14, 1982-The Michigan Daily UAW and Ford to resume talks DETROIT (UPI)- Ford Motor Co. btoke off early contract talks with the United Auto Workers yester- day, apparently miffed at the short notice it was given of a General Motors-approved plan linking con- tract concessions to cuts in car prices. Peter Pestillo, Ford's vice president for labor relations, said the automaker would resume bargaining with the union this afternoon following a meeting of the company's board of directors. PESTILLO SAID the company will use the time to study a plan presented to it by the union that has already been adopted by GM. Ford-Chairman Philip Caldwell was to meet with reporters yesterday. Usually during negotiations, each company receives proposals from the union at the same time. But UAW President Douglas Fraser said the union had no obligation to tell Ford of the plan earlier since the automaker did not help develop the concept. GM's approval of the proposal will help the UAW in its dealings with Ford, he added. "IT'S A BARGAINING advantage, we think. We'll find out later on," Fraser said. Meanwhile, Fraser said the union was "dismayed, disturbed and shocked" by concessions proposals made by GM yesterday but acknowledged the offers were part of the bargaining process. The union leader said following a bargaining session with GM that the No. 1 automaker's proposals involve concessions "everywhere" in the union con- tract, but he refused to reveal a dollar figure. "It's a helluva lot bigger than a breadbox," he said. The historic proposal adopted by GM on Tuesday- the second day of early contract talks with the auto industry-calls for the automaker to give car buyers rebates equal to the amount of concessions made by the union. GM had been discussing the plan with the union since November. Ford did not get details of the plan until GM Chairman Roger Smith was announcing his company's agreement to go along with it. w o ei rE C g F 41 Haitian rebels fight r PORT-DE-PAIX, Haiti (AP) - This exiles there. reek's attempted invasion of Haiti is He was involved in earlier attempts mly the latest in a series of attempts by to oust Duvalier's father, the ruthless xiles trying to end the dictatorial Francois "Papa Doc." egime of President-for-Life Jean The new rebels, who began landing on laude Duvalier. tiny Tortuga island last weekend, are The latest group of invaders are hoping as their predecessors did to tap ollowers of Bernard Sansaricq, a a presumably large reservoir of discon- asoline station operator in Miami, tent in the hemisphere's poorest nation, la., who is known as a conservative Western observers say. Nearly 6 ner among politically active Haitian million residents are squeezed into an epression a arid area the size of Maryland. THREE-QUARTERS of the Haitians earned less than the World Bank's ab- solute poverty level of $140 per year four years ago, according to an internal report of the U.S. Agency for Inter- national Development. Illiteracy is estimated at more than 80 percent. The infant mortality rate is among the highest in the world, and sanitation and health are major problems. tnd poverty Some 30,000 Haitians have fled to the United States in recent years. Young Duvalier, who became president-for-life at age 19 when his father dies, uses his personal police and other military forces to control the nation tightly. They have defeated other attempts by ill-equipped and ill- prepared bands of rebels. }Observers here say the current attempt is likely to suffer the same fate. MWOMEM Be part of a New University tradition sing Jet crashes into bridge during D.C. snowstorm J with the U of M WONMEN'S GLEE CLUB Auditioning Now Call Mrs. Edwards 665-7408 Joanne 995-1061 (Continued from Page 1) suburban Virginia. The 4:04 p.m. crash, about a mile and a half from the White House, came as the 14th Street bridge was clogged with commuters heading home after gover- nment offices were closed early because of the snow. THE SNOW stopped shortly after the ABORTION CARE " No Age Limit " Completely Confidential " Local Anesthesia " Tranquilizers " Birth Control-VD " Board Certified M.D.'s " Blue Cross/Medicaid " Immediate Appts. 526-3600 (Near Eastland) crash, but the foul weather impeded rescue efforts. The temperature hovered in the 20s, and wind whipped the river. The airport had been closed for run- way clearing until shortly before the plane took off, in visibility of about a half mile, close to the minimum allowed. Three inches of snow had fallen, and it was snowing heavily at the time of the crash. After striking the bridge, the short- range, twin-engine jet plunged into the water between that span and two others carrying traffic toward the suburbs. The bridge is less than a mile from the airport. Some of the victims could be seen at dusk, strapped into airliner seats beneath the surface of the Potomac. THE FEDERAL Aviation Ad- ministration said there was no initial indication that the crash of an Air Florida jet was linked to any break- down in the air traffic control system. "From preliminary information, it has absolutely nothing to do with the air traffic controllers," FAA spokesman Ted Maher said of the crash into the Potomac River. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Telephone calls being monitored in Poland WARSAW, Poland- Big Sister is warning telephone callers their conver- sations are "being controlled" in martial law Poland. Since telephone service in Poland's major cities was restored last Sunday, some numbers start a screechy voiced woman chirping: "Rozmowa Kon- trolowana, Rozmowa Kontrolowana." In Polish that means "the call is being controlled, the call is being con- trolled." Foreign journalists call the voice Big Sister-a variation on Big Brother, the symbol of dictatorship in George Orwell's "1984." In an announcement that telephone service would be restored within the nation's big cities, the authorities said that the calls would be subject to con- trol and could be cut at any time if whoever was listening deemed them damaging to the state. Secret FDR tapes discovered NEW YORK- Three decades before Richard Nixon secretly recorded conversations in the Oval Office, Franklin Delano Roosevelt did the same thing-and those recordings survive, American Heritage magazine disclosed yesterday. Fourteen news conferences and seven or eight conversations late in 1940 were picked up by a microphone, hidden in Roosevelt's desk, which was con- nected to a recorder in the White House basement, the magazine said. The recordings contain no major historical revelations. Roosevelt is heard discussing, among other things, the possibility of war with Japan, in- tergration in the armed forces, and Republican presidential candidate Wen- dell Wilkie's reputed affair with a New York woman. Record cold wave kills 134 A Dixie snowstorm that left almost a million people without power yester- day laid siege to the big cities of the Northeast as the death toll in the week's record cold wave reached 134. Georgia Gov. George Bushee declared a state of emergency in Atlanta which was immobilized by half a foot of snow and ordered out 230 National Guardsmen to aid stranded motorists and help clear out thousands of aban- doned cars. The storm that had charged out of Texas swung up the Eastern Seaboard, closing schools in Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and the suburbs of. New York City. Up to 10 inches of snow was forecast in some areas around New York City. In the West, snowdrifts 40 feet high were hampering efforts to recover the bodies of two men from Billings, Mont., who were spotted Saturday from the air near the wreckage of their small plane atop 9,472-foot Mount Baldy in western Montana. Broadwater County Sheriff Rick Barthule led a six-man party up the mountain in snowmobiles yesterday in the third attempt to retrieve the bodies. Business ignores Reagan's pleas for expansion WASHINGTON- The nation's businesses, starting the year mired in recession, intend to ignore the Reagan administration's plea for a 1982 surge in expansion, a government survey showed yesterday. A Commerce Department poll of executives concluded that they now plan to actually cut back spending for new plants and equipment by 0.5 percent this year, not counting increases due only to inflation. Such plans can change quickly, but if "real" capital spending actually falls this year, it would be the first such decline since the severe 1974 recession. Top Reagan officials have said repeatedly that incentives in the multiyear tax cut enacted in 1981 should spur investment this year and help pull the national economy out of its second recession in two years. Many businesses have cut production and laid off workers as the recession has deepened, shelving at least for the present any plans to-expand. hUe Michigan Bafig Vol. XCII, No.85 Thursday, January 14, 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 semsters); $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 Michigone Uoily 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. I Get anew ""The Texas Instruments new TI-40 and TI-55-II calculators have angled displays for easy-to-see-answers. The slanted display makes these calculators more interested in the TI-55-II, which easier to use at arm's length-and that's just the comes with the Calculator Decision-Making beginning. The economical TI-40, with built-in Sourcebook. The TI-55-II features 56-step functions like trig, stat, logs, roots, programmability, multiple memories, reciprocals and more, will help you scientific and statistical operations, through math and science courses- conversion factors and much especially since it comes with the more-a total of 112 functions. informative book,Understanding An extremely powerful cal- Calculator Math. culator, at an excellent price. The book explains how to use Both calculators have LCD the TI-40 to work through, and displays, long battery life understand, common problems. _ and fit right in your pocket. If you're an advanced math TI-40 and TI-55-II calcu- or science major, you'll be lators. Two new slants on math Editor-in-Ahief..................SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor........JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor .................LORENZOSENET News Editor ........................DAVID MEYER Opinion Page Editors...........CHARLES THOMSON KEVIN TOTTIS Sports Editor ...................MARK MIHANOVIC AssociateSports Editors...........GREG DGULIS 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 Christiansen. Arts Editors ..................... MICHAEL HUGET RICHARD CAMPBELL ARTS STAFF: Jane Carl, James Clinton, Mark Dighton, Adam Knee, Pam Kramer, Gail Negbour, Carol Ponemon, Ben Ticho. NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Andrew Chop- man, Perry Clark, David Crawford, Lisa Crumrlne, Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger, Joyce Frieden, Mark Gindin, Julie Hinds, Steve Hook, Kathlyn Hoover, Harlan Kahn, Mindy Layne, Mike McIntyre, Jennifer Miller, Nancy Newman, Dan Oberrotman, Stacy Powell, Janet Rae, Sean Ross, Susan Sharon, David Spak, Fannie Weinstein, Barry Witt. 'SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Jtsse Sorkin, Tom Ben- tley, Randy BergerMk. Mk orowski, Joe Chapelle, Laura Clark, Martha Croll, Jim Dworman, Karen Floch, Larry Freed, Matt Henehon, Chuck Jaffe, John Kerr, Doug Levy, Jim Lombard, Larry Mishkin, -Dan Newman, Andrew Oakes, Ron Pollock. Jeff Quicksilver, Sarah Sherber, Kenny Shore James Thompson, Josie VonVoigtlander, Kent Walley, Karl Wheatley, Chris Wilson, Bob Wojnowski. BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager .... .......... RANDI CIGELNIK Sales Manager ...................BARB FORSLUND Operations manager...........SUSANNE KELLY Display Manager........... MARY ANN'MISIkWICZ 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 Altmon. Hope Barron. Alan Blum. Daniel Bowen, Lindsay Bray, Joseph Brod. Glen Can- tor. Alexander DePillis. Susan Epps, Wendy Fox, Sebastian 'Frcka, Mark Freeman. Marci Gittelman. Pamela Gould, Kathryn Hendrick, Anthony Interronte. Indre Liutkus, Beth Kovinsky. Coryn Notiss, Felice Oper, Jodi Pollock. Ann Sachar. Michael Sovitt, Michael Seltzer, Karen Silverstein. Sam Slaughter. Nancy Thompson. Jeffrey Voight. 0 PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1981 SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER S M T W T F S- S M T.W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S 0 .-4-6 1 2 3 1 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 1011 12 4 6 7 8 9 10 8 1011 121314 6 8 9 10 n12 13 15 16 17 18 19 11 1314 15 16 17 15 17 18 19 20 21 20 22 23 24 25 26 18 20 21'22 23 24 22 24 25 P6-Ainin f 0h0 -6- 27 2930 25 6 27 28 29 30 31 - 1982 JANUIARV FT RzioiARV MRC AI 40 I L.I