State data on PCB .levels In ..... ....H d insufficient LANSING (UPI)- Recent reports by two state agencies of reduced PCB con- tamination in Great Lakes fish were based on insufficient data, the Toxic Substance Control Commission said yesterday. The commission, embroiling itself in yet another dispute with the state agen- cies it monitors, criticized last week's Natural Resources and Agriculture department reports that fish con- tamination problems are lessening. TO PROPERLY draw their con- clusions, the state departments really needed samples from six times as many fish as were tested, the com- mission's chairman and executive director said during a news conference. They also called for the adoption of stricter tolerance levels for PCB con- tent in fish caught from the Great Lakes. The DNR and agriculture depar- tments revealed last week that only 25 of 209 Great Lakes fish tested showed contamination of PCB, DDT and dieldren above recommended levels. Larry Holcomb, director of the toxic substance commission, said a far greater sample of fish from all over the Great Lakes system should have been taken before those conclusions were reached. I The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 12, 1982-Page 7 Study says military costs $Y exceed WASHINGTON (AP) - More than $1 million a minute is being spent world- wide on the. military, with nuclear stockpiles exceeding 50,000 weapons, according to a study by a coalition of arms control groups. The study, "World Military and Social Expenditures, 1982," charges that nuclear and conventional arms races have wasted resources without enhancing international security. International nuclear stockpiles have mushroomed to represent the equivalent of 3.5 tons of TNT for every person on earth - a total representing more than 1 million times the explosive power of the Hiroshima bomb, the study said. "UNDER ITS heavy military burden, Shapiro asks unity during budget cuts (continued from Page i1) faculty members. The awards ceremony was broken up by frequent laughter and applause. John Knott, the well-exercised english department chairman cracked, "I'm delighted to be able to rise yet once more" as he ascended to the podium to read his third citation midway through the ceremony. 1 million/minute the global economy has suffered,,, is equivalent to 16 billion tons of TNT. writes the author of the study, Ruth In World War II, 3 million turns of wries he utor f te tud, Rth munitions were expended, and' 40 Leger Sivard. "The diversion ofto5milnpeledd. resources from civilian needs is a silent million to 50 mi on people died..a0 killr, urbig podutiviy ad -Spending per soldier averages $19,300 killer, curbing productivity and worldwide but only $380 is spent per development, and adding more millions school age child for education. to the hundreds of millions of people . For every 100,000 people, there are who lack the most basic necessities of 556 soldiers and 85 physicians. An life." estimated 100 million people worldwide The report, using information sup- are engaged directly or indirectly in plied by the Pentagon, the CIA, military activities. United Nations organizations, and . In 32 countries, governments spend several international publications, more for military purposes- than for c World military costs have risen to $600 education and health care combined. biWrlmilityary costshve risenitoi$n00 At least 10 million people have died in billion ayear -well over $1 million a "local wars" since World War II, and minute. more civilians than soldiers have been " The world's. nuclear weapon stockpile the victims. 7, Ir I3 L Star for a day '' Y} };;,1 Daryl Love addresses the camera as he answers politically pertinent questions posed by representatives of Channel 7's Detroit Today television program who visited campus yesterday. AP Photo Up She Comes Prince Charles was on hand yesterday to witness the raising of the Mary Rose, the flagship of his ancestor King Henry VIII. The vessel sank 437 years ago. ,. Record bids anticipated from Alaskan oil lease sale I. WASHINGTON (AP)- An icy stretch of water above Alaska named Diapir Field may hold the biggest reserves of oil and gas found in the United States in 14 years. The oil industry is gearing up for the 1.8 million-acre lease sale this week, which could bring in a record $3 billion in bids. MANY OIL company officials believe the lease sale tomorrow in Anchorage, Alaska, may be the most lucrative of the 41 sales to be offered in In- terior Secretary James Watt's leasing program. Watt, who has been attacked for the ambitious program offering virtually the entire U.S. ,coastline for drilling over the next five years, is hoping the success of the sale will silence critics. "What we need is a big one-something that will show that the oil industry wants this land," Watt has said. THE DIAPIR Field, named for the type of geological formation, lies at the top of Alaska just offshore from the Prudhoe Bay field, the 1968 discovery that accounts for 18 percent of domestic oil production. Diapir's proximity to the Prudhoe field and its transportation system-the Alaska oil pipeline-is the reason the oil industry is excited. The Interior Department puts the chance of finding commercial quantities of oil and gas at 99.3 percent. It estimates that Diapir holds 2.4 billion barrels of oil and 1.8 trillion cubic feet of gas. "This is the crown jewel of the leasing program. Right now it is the most promising area we want to get into," said Charles Mat- thews, president of the National Ocean In- dustries Association, which represents almost 500 companies involved in offshore exploration and drilling. MATTHEWS said the bids could reach "bet- ween $2 billion and $3 billion." That could make Diapir the most successful lease sale in the 28- year history of the federal program, surpassing a 1980 Gulf of Mexico sale which brought the government $2.7 billion. Interior Department officials are not that op- timistic. Watt has said that if the sale exceeds $1 billion it will be a tremendous success. Officials point to the harsh Arctic drilling conditions as one reason the bids could be held down. The sale has been challenged in court by native Alaskans living on the North Slope. Previously, drilling h the year1 the ban t tober. THEI decision other ma their live Enviro aspects t used toc receiving "If Dia be worth they eva Beinecke Defense t had been banned for seven months out of to protect bowhead whales.Watt has cut o just the months of September and Oc,- NATIVE Alaskans contend that Watt's will endanger the whales, seals and arine life that the Alaskans depend on for elihood. inmentalists are unhappy over other of the program, including the methods determine whether the government is g the proper prices for the leases. apir brings in $2 billion, those tracts may $6 billion, but we will never know unless luate them to find out," said Frances e, attorney for the Natural Resources Council. UNISEX Long or Short Haircuts by Professionals at ... DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State ........668-9329 East U. at South U.......662-0354 Arborland ..............971-9975 Maple village ........... 761-2733 S IND VIDUALTHEATRES IN * 701-9700 A Comedy, A Thriller, ;: A Romance! DIVA" Sen. Hatfield addresses a full house (Continued from Page 1) flock of geese. More than 140 of these "accidents" nearly sent American missiles on an unretrievable path toward the Soviet Union, he said. "A faulty computer chip held creation hostage," he said. In spite of President Reagan's asser- tion that the United States has fallen behind the Soviets in nuclear weaponry, Hatfield insisted there is a "rough equivalency among arsenals." "Somehow we get into these number games," he said. "I think we have found a certain eroticism and fascination with nuclear weapons. We have reached the point of mutual overkill. How much is enough?" HATFIELD compared the nuclear arms race with two men standing waist high in gasoline, holding matches. "One guy has eight matches and the other has nine and someone is trying to tell them that they need 15 or 16," he said. Hatfield also said he had sponsored a bill in the Senate that would allow tax- payers to stipulate that their tax money could not go to the Pentagon. 7:10, 9:30 Wed-12:20, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30 Richard Gere - Debra Winger "AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN" (R) a desperate romance Tues-5:20, 7:40, 9:55 ° Wed-12:40, 300, 5:20, 7:40, 9:55 - ; _________________________ I __________________________ AP Photo Easy as pie Perhaps after hearing about the University's record-breaking sandwich, the Hilton1 make dessert. The 10-ton, 18-foot pie, used 440 bushels and took 24 hours to bake.. made it to the festival, 10,000 others only managed to consume one quarter of the pie. NY Harvest Festival decided to Although no Michigan students Solidarty defies strike ban (Continued from Page 1) ' Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 764-0558 the interior of the country where Solidarity support was strong. THREE LARGE convoys of police trucks were seen heading north in the direction of Gdansk. The Gdansk strike was the first open defiance of the labor law adopted Friday by Parliament to annul the liberalization measures won in a nationwide strike wave in the summer of 1980. The law cancelled the registration of all unions and the right to strike. It authorized the organization of local unions only under Communist Party control. 'The workers' strike committee ap- pealed for support from other factories in Gdansk, Gdynia, and Sopot, but there were no reports of sympathy protests. Leaflets and posters that appeared in Gdansk Sunday night announcing the strike also called for walkouts, in Silesia, center of the coal industry in southern Poland. Official sources in Wroclaw and Katowice, the most im- portant Silesian cities, said they were calm. Meanwhile, the government announ- ced that 308 people had been freed from internment as Premier Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski promised in a speech to parliament Saturday. Meet, theTotal The communications industryis accelerating at a rapid pace. Presenting a diversity of ex citing challenges that demand comprehensive solutions. AndM/A CON-with over S500 million in annual sales -is the total communications solution. The -I/A CONI Components Group manufactures the broadest line of h ighly specialized microwave com- ponents in the world- from fiber optic components to communications networks. As part of M/A COM s 22-c9mpany effort, we can offer you a challenging career in a smaller company environ- ment. You 'l enioy leading-edge sophistication. high visibility. And the op portunity to play a vital role on a diversity of projects. From start to finish Meet the challenges of the fast-growing communications industry. Meet NI/A COM. The total communications solution. O portunities exist for individuals who are candidates for aBS. MS or PhD in Electrical or Electronic Engineering, or students with semiconductor engineering interests. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN INTERVIEWS FRIDAY NOVEMBER 5, 1982 sa -- - -"" - "- "-- w - - - Say M-::eMM- DISCOUT UFFLERS - AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST FROM AS LOW AS.. "Trainedy*FITS MANY Specialists ;SMALL CARS Installed *AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS FOREIGN CARS Featuring CUSTOM DUALS Gw .ss. HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS Contact your Placement Office to arrange an interview. or if unable to attend, please forward your resume and a cover letter describing your career plans, to: Manager. CollPe Rplations M/A COMBuilding #3. South