6 Closest Campground to NOTRE DAME Spaulding Campground Stay with us for the UM game this weekend Modern Facilities and Hook-upsk call 1-616-684-1393 Page 2-Friday, September 17, 1982-The Michigan Daily Army to strengthen role of Green Berets ~- German Park Recreation Club r-C,40iJ nF rTani) 9 55 rYPontiac1 ran (7 miles north of Ann Arbor) SEPTEMBER 18th 2 P.M.-11 P.M. Knockwurst, Bratwurst, Hamburgers, 'Hot Dogs, Sauerkraut, German Potato Salad, Pretzels, Beer, Wine, Coffee & Pop *fl' . (Continued from Page 1) CURRENTLY, special operation units are subordinate to regular military commands. Critics say that system downplays the importance of special operations and requires a cum- bersome chain of command that prevents fast action and impairs secrecy. Strengthening U.S. capability to wage irregular warfare coincides with the Reagan administration's increased emphasis on covert operations by the Central Intelligence Agency, which in the past has relied on the Green Berets for clandestine military activities. The Green Berets, formally called the Army's Special Forces, are the best ROSH HASHANAH SERVICES . Fri. Eve. Sat. Morn. Sat. Eve. Sun. Morn. Sun. Eve. Sept. 17 Sept.18 Sept.18 Sept. 19 Sept. 19 REFORM 7:30 PM 10:00 AM (at Hille) CONSERVATIVE 7:30 PM 9:00 AM 7:30 PM 9:00 AM (at Power Center) ORTHODOX 7:20 PM 9:00 AM 7:20 PM 9:00 AM 7:20 PM (at Hillel) Dinners are available at Hillel. 1429 Hill St. on Friday. Sept. 17 and Saturday, Sept. 18. Call to make reservations by Thursday noon. Sept. 16 (6633336). Tashlich ceremony at Arb. Sunday. Sept. 19. Leave from Hillel 5:30 PM. known of the U.S. special operation units and reached a peak size of about 13,000 during the Vietnam War. Now, the Green Berets have an authorized strength of 3,600. The Green Berets specialize in teaching armies of other nations coun- terinsurgency tactics, but they also are tained in sabotage and organizing guerrilla wars in enemy territory. Recently, they have trained Salvadoran army units, but in El Salvador and at Green Beret headquarters at Fort Bragg. The Rangers, who wear black berets, are the Army's other major unconven- tional force. 2000 LIMIT - COME EARL Y BIG SCREEN TV FOR VIEWING OF UM-NOTRE DAME GAME 1983 Picnic Dates: June 25th 0 July 30th * August 27th ass IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Factory use drops again WASHINGTON - With goods selling slowly, U.S. manufacturers used just 69.4 percent of their factories' capacity last month, the lowest rate since the 1974-75 recession, the Federal Reserve Board reported yesterday. The August factory-use drop of 0.5 percent below July was the 11th decline in the 13-month recession, giving no hint that the downturn was ending. Reagan administration officials - and some private economists, too - have said better times should be coming before long, now that interest rates have dropped a bit and many Americans have gained more spending money from the big July 1 tax-rate cut. However, government statistics this week showed industrial production and now factory use dropping in August. There was also a 0.9 percent decline in retail sales, a figure unlikely to encourage business executives to increase production and hire back laid-off workers. "These reports simply underscore the fact that the recovery is going to be painfully slow in coming," said Allen Sinai, senior vice president of Data Resources Inc. in Lexington, Mass. Already weakened businesses face still more cutbacks in production and capacity utilization, and probably more layoffs, too, he said. Iran executes ex-minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, convicted of plotting to overthrow the Iranian regime he once zealously served as foreign minister, was executed by a firing squd in Tehran, Iran announced yesterday. The announcement was made by the official Islamic Republic News Agen- cy, which said the 48-year-old former foreign minister was shot to death at Evin Prison Wednesday night in accordance with an Islamic revolutionary court sentence. He had been convicted of masterminding a plot to assassinate Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and other high-ranking officials, and topple the three- year-old Islamic government. He was quoted as telling the court the plan was not to overthrow the Islamic form of government, but to "change officials in order to build the republic." Ghotbzadeh tried to negotiate the release of the American hostages in 1980 but was prevented from doing so because of his feud with the Moslem fun- damentalists and lack of support from other moderates. Unemployment claims soar WASHINGTON- Jobless Americans filed more first-time claims for government benefits in the week preceding Labor Day than at any other time this year-a substantial leap which private economists say virtually assures double-digit unemployment this fall. Some 658,000 people filed initial benefit claims in the week ending Sept. 4, a jump of 29,000 over the previous week, according to seasonally adjusted figures released by the Labor Department. It eclipsed the previous 1982 peak for unemployment insurance compen- sation claims, when 640,000 pleas for relief were made in the second week of January. That had been attributed by statisticians to a fluke resulting primarily from the fact many people postponed placing their claims because of the New Year's holiday. U.P. residents rally in Lansing to stop ELF LANSING- A delegation of Upper Peninsula residents came to the Capitol yesterday in hopes of stirring opposition in the more populous southern Michigan to the submarine antenna Project ELF. Spokesmen for Residents Concerned About ELF were joined at a morning news conference by state lawmakers who explained pending legislation aimed at blocking the project. A small rally attended by just under 100 people was held on the Capitol steps at noon. Under current plans, ELF would consist of about 56 miles of above-ground wires similar to telephone wires to be erected near Marquette in the U.P. Navy officials say the antenna would permit them to communicate with nuclear submarines running far below the ocean surface. ELF and predecessor proposals have aroused considerable opposition on environmental and health grounds. Plan aims to save jobless aid LANSING- A Milliken administration task force yesterday called for saving Michigan's debt-ridden unemployment compensation system by slapping new assessments on employers and workers, tightening eligibility and curbing benefits. Notably missing from the proposal-prepared by Commerce Director Norton Berman, Labor Director William Long and Michigan Employment Security Commission Director S. Martin Taylor-was a recommendation for reinstating a one week wait for laid-off workers. The package, designed to pay off the state's interest-bearing debt by 1986 and avert onerous penalty taxes on Michigan employers, is still likely to prove highly controversial. Michigan's unemployment compensation system will be $2.2 billion in debt to the federal government by the end of this calendar year, officials predict. Vol. XCIII, No. 8 Friday, September 17, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satursay mor- nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 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 Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 764-0562; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 6 14 11 10 0 0 Editor-in-chief ....................DAVID MEYER Managing Editor ................. PAMELA KRAMER News Editor .................. ANDREW CHAPMAN Student Affairs Editor ........... ANN MARIE FAZIO University Editor .................... MARK GINDIN Opinion Page Editors .................. JULIE HINDS CHARLES THOMSON Arts/Magazine Editors ......... RICHARD CAMPBELL MICHAEL HUGET Associate Arts/Magazine Editor ......... 8EN TICHO Sports Editor..................BOB WOJNOWSKI Associate Sports Editors..............ARB BARKER SPORTS STAFF: Jesse Barkin, Tom Bentley, Randy Berger. Jeff Bergida, Mike Bradley, Joe Chopelle. Laura Clark. Richard Demak, Jim Dworman. Obvid Forman. Chris Gerbasi, Paul Helgren, Matt Henehan. Chuck Joffe. Steve Kamen. Robin Kopilnick, Doug Levy. Mike McGraw. Larry Mishkin. Don Newman. Jeff Quicksilver, Jim Thompson, Karl Wheatley. Chris Wilson. Chuck Whitman. BUSINESS Q.. :nnce nnnn8f ....... . JOSEPH G. BRODA L Business Manager . .......... ............- I