The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, October 6, 1982-Page 7 Sweden traps suspected Soviet sub near coast Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Sweet dreams This student takes a break yesterday in the Diag. Unseasonably warm weather has encouraged many students to ex- ploit4his Ann Arbor phenomenon. Rowny: U.S. idea better than a freeze STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI) - Swedish naval forces said yesterday they had trapped a suspected Soviet submarine in coastal waters near a top secret naval base and were dropping depth charges to force the vessel to the surface. The submarine was trapped in Horsf- jarden Bay, 10 miles from the open sea, and could only escape through two narow passages in the rocks, a military spokesman said. "WE HAVE put up barriers," spokesman Bertil Lagerwall said, ad- ding "it will not be easy" for the sub- marine to slip away. Sweden threw naval, coast guard, and customs resources into the inten- sive search. Helicopters with sonar hovered above the water and the navy frigate Smaland, a submarine and several smaller ships were searching the bay. Musko naval base, 20 miles south of Stockholm, is Sweden's most sensitive naval installation. Its radar sweeps the country's eastern coast facing the Soviet Union on the Baltic Sea. It is situated in the Stockholm archpelago, an area with a maze of 30,000 scenic islands. THE SWEDISH navy, which is at- tempting to force the submarine to the surface so that it can be identified, has dropped 12 depth charges in the three a in r Iar r L2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES WED only $1.75 Debra Winger " Richard Gere AN WED.-12:40, 3, 5:20, 7:40, 9:55 THURS.-7:40, 9:55 S It's A Comedy, A Thriller & A Romance! THUR.-7:10, 9:30 (R) WED. 12:20, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30 days since the vessel's periscope was sighted Friday, a navy spokesman said. Lt. Col. Jan-Ake Berg of the defense staff said Soviet, Polish and West Ger- man submarines were known to be in the Baltic. But the West German Defense Ministry said none of its submarines was in Swedish waters and a Pentagon source said, "It's not one of ours." THE SEARCH for the submarine began Friday when the submarine periscope was spotted observing a military exercise of about 3,000 .men near the Musko naval base. The Soviet Union considers the waters strategic because they would be the country's best all-weather access to the Atlantic Ocean in time of war. Western defense plans call for Soviet ships to be "bottled up" before they can reach the open sea. A NAVAL spokesman said oil slicks have been seen on the water's surface and that Navy experts have made radar and hydrophone contact with the sub- marine. "The oil spots do not necessarily mean that it (the unidentified sub) has been damaged," Adm. Christer Kierkegaard told a news conference. Naval spokesmen said there have been no further sightings since Friday, but air bubbles have been seen on the surface, indicating a large object moving in deep water. Last November, a Soviet "whiskey class' U-137 submarine, believed to be carrying nuclear weapons, ran aground near the sensitive naval base at Karlskrona and was stranded for more than a week in a sensational diplomatic confrontation. WASHINGTON (AP) - Under orders "to move as rapidly as the situation permits," U.S. arms control negotiator Edward Rowny is entering a , second round of talks with the Soviet Union convinced that Americans would aban- don the nuclear freeze movement if they understood the administration's treaty proposal. Freezing weapons at current levels, as Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev suggested last May, or only trimming stockpiles of intercontinental ballistic missiles and long-range bombers would heighten the risk of nuclear war, Rowny said in an interview before flying to Geneva for the new round of talks beginning today. ROWNY'S reasoning: It takes the sort of deep reductions proposed by the United States to correct the 5-2 Soviet lead in missile power, or throw-weight. That edge, Rowny and other U.S. strategists theorize, heightens the risk of a first strike. According to this logic, the Soviets might be tempted to take advantage of their commanding lead in heavy ground missiles by launching an attack on U.S. silos. Conversely, the United States could be more inclined to open fire before the Soviets act on their strength. Under orders from President Reagan "to move as rapidly as the situation permits" in the latest negotiations, Rowny will explain with "a lot more detail" the proposed treaty that he outlined during the first, six-week round of talks. "IF A NUMBER of these people who join the freeze movement would recognize the administration has a proposal now - many of them don't know it - I think they would abandon the movement and say, 'Don't waste time, don't go into a freeze, don't hobble yourself,' " Rowny said. Brezhnev, however, .has dismissed the proffered treaty as "unrealistic" and designed to "insure American superiority." The chief Soviet negotiator, Viktor Karpov dismissed the U.S. formula as a "one-sided" ap- R"own ... claims Soviet nuclear superiority proach. Instead, Brezhnev has called for a freeze on the modernization and deployment of strategic weapons as a basis for negotiations. This tack coincides with a worldwide freeze movement, which has powerful support in Congress and among state legislatures. Consistenly, polls show a heavy majority of Americans want a freeze. Oil6 PREVIEW OCTOBER 6,7 -8:00 P.M. jCTOBER 8 -10 & 14 -16- 8:00 P.M. 17 - 2:00 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE, ANN ARBOR ICKETS AT THE PTP TCKETOFFICEINTHE MICHIGANLEAGUE 764-0450 Tories foresee Labor challenge pA I BRIGHTON, England (AP) -Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher is the "best thing since sliced bread," the chairman of her Conservative Party said yesterday. But he warned that Britain's new centrist alliance could get enough Tory votes to put the opposition Labor Party in power next year. Opening the annual party conference, Chairman Cecil Parkinson said Thatcher was "the best, most hard-working prime minister and political leader on earth ... full of backbone and guts, a real Tory and the best thing since sliced bread." - DEFENSE Secretary John Nott hailed Thatcher for her leadership in the Falklands War. Britain's victory was due to the "guts, determination and professionalism" of the British troops, he said, but without Thatcher .}"it would have been impossible." That touched off a standing ovation by the 750 Tory stalwarts. But Parkin- son warned the Conservatives not to let post-Falklands euphoria lull them into complacency toward the general elec- tion Thatcher is expected to call next year. The danger, he said, comes from the new Social Democratic-Liberal Party alliance. "BECAUSE there will be three par- ties at the next election," he said, "with just 35 percent of the vote or thereabouts, Labor could become the party of government." He said Britain's 14 percent unem- ployment rate cannot be solved by some "master stroke," and the Conser- vatives need two terms to reconstruct the economy. "We can point to progress in many areas," said Parkinson, "com- petitiveness rising faster than anywhere else, inflation down at 8 per- cent and falling, interest rates down, productivity up. The next 18 months will be crucial in our history." The Tories now have a 37-seat majority in the 635-member House of Commons. In the latest opinion poll yesterday, 42 percent of those questioned supported them compared with 30 percent for Labor and 27 per- cent for the alliance. --, WAsIiNqTON INTERNSIIIp Juniors or Seniors with a 3.0 average interested in Congress? Earn 16 credits on Capitol Hill. We Wo1 in fligi And like a we've mad in hi i 47 'mo With in SYSTEM; .YOL If your degree is a B.S. or M.S. rni ri-havn wjr hanna tornak 06G I~g IJM !r I are Link. rid leader it simulation. my world leader, le a lot of friends igh places. k ?s f . ' g, A a { N. 0S%" mamma. - Unique Internships based on your interests. Work with members of Con- gress in their offices and on their com- mittees. - Seminars with leading government experts, focusing on current policy issues " Washington Faculty headed by the chairman of the Congressional Intern Advisory Council. * Discussion Groups to share infor- mation and opinions with fellow student participants from around the country. ..s 1 '=..III...,- --."-.+ I _ ' a1' F I Filing deadline for Semester November 1. For applications and information: lI: an interest S ENGINEERING, i can too. in A.E., E.E:, M.E., C.S., Math or Physics this ke friends in hinh niace I ink deveinn and I j I ! KICTc1rfI I kmi\ inCIT\ / 4 3