Page 2--Saturday, October 16, 1982-The Michigan Daily Poles riot WARSAW- Street clashes erupted yesterday for the third straight day in the Krakow suburb of Nowa Huta after riot police used tear gas, stun grenades and flares to disperse hundreds of Poles attending a mass held for a youth killed in an earlier anti-gover- nment protest, witnesses said. Poland's official PAP news agency said police ac- ted "energetically and unambiguously" to prevent disturbances sparked by the police killing Wed- nesday of a youth protesting the nation's martial law authorities~ "THEY ARE chasing people through the streets," one witness said of the third straight day of street battles. The witnesses said fighting broke out after 1,000 defiant Poles emerged from a church chanting "Solidarity!" and "The Army is with us." They were leaving a special mass for the slain youth, 20-year-old Bogdan Wlosik. Police encircled the square outside the church, FDA propo after church service IN BRIEF , leaving the crowd no avenue of escape, and advanced slowly firing tear gas and water as they chanted the name of the banned independent union. THE STREET fighting was the latest in a series of anti-government protests stemming from the outlawing last Friday of Solidarity, the first union in the Soviet bloc free of Communist Party control. Riots erupted in Gdansk Monday and Tuesday and spread to Wroclaw and Nowa Huta on Wednesday, when a plainclothesman shot Bodgan Wlosik. He died on an operating table Thursday. The state-run media has blamed the protests and riots on hooligans, youths and agitators inspired by leaders of the banned union's underground, but Wlosik and 14 others killed since martial law was im- posed were workers. AUTHORITIES admitted workers were reluctant to join new official trade unions set up by the coun- try's military rulers to replace Solidarity. According to PAP, Nowa Huta's giant Lenin mill, the country's biggest factory, employs about 40,000 people but only 100 have signed up for the new union. "The number of people expressing their readiness to join in and rebuild the trade union structures is steadily growing, but there also are factories in which the founding committees meet with reluctance or even outright lack of confidence from personnels," PAP said. Nowa Huta is a model city built during the Stalinist 1950s as a counterforce to Krakow, Poland's ancient capital where 57 percent of the voters rejected Com- munist candidates during 1947 elections. The protests and riots in Nowa Huta present an ideological quandary for the authorities, since much of its population is young and has known nothing but communism. Riots have increased in fury during the past 10 months, observers say, indicating the frustration of people there. From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Drug makers will respond quickly to the deaths caused by cyanide-laced Extra-Strength Tylenol and begin selling "high risk compoun- ds" in tamper-resistant packages early next year, the government said yester- day. Dr. Arthur Hull Hayes, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, said he expected his agency to issue a new regulation requiring tamper- resistant packaging by the first week in November. In an appearance before a House Energy and Commerce sub- committee on health and the environ- ment, Hayes predicted that capsules would be the first target. FDA GENERAL counsel Thomas Scarlett said no new laws for FDA to issue t regulations. Several persons died in area after taking Ext Tylenol capsules which cyanide. FDA and law enf ficials have concluded tha tampering occurred after left the manufacturer. "We are now faced witht this country that there are people who are willing tod as insane as poison peopl even know," said Rep. He (D-Calif.), who is chairma committee. VARIOUS TYPES o resistant packages a tamper-proofdrugs are needed available on some drug products. Hayes said. he revised Daniel O'Keefe, general counsel of the Meanwhile, a self-styled criminal Proprietary Association, the trade "mastermind," charged in a $1 million the Chicago group for the non-prescription drug in- Tylenol extortion plot and also once tra-Strength dustry, displayed some samples. arrested as a murder suspect, was h contained Hayes said FDA can't anticipate all sought nationwide yesterday by in- orcement of- the possible ways consumers may be vestigators trying to find the cyanide t the cyanide hurt, so consumers must take some killer. the product responsibility. A new dimension was added to the "Individuals have got to have an mystery when the fugitive, Robert the reality in elevated sense of awareness about their Richardson, was identified Thursday a lot of crazy health responsibility. They really have by Kansas City, Mo., police as James do something to look at the medicines they take. Has Lewis. le they don't the cellophane been torn? Has the seal Lewis was charged but never tried in nry Waxman been punctured? Do the capsules or the a 1978 murder in which extortion was in of the sub- tablets or the liquid look strange? Are allegedly the motive. they discolored? Do they smell badly? Lewis is still wanted in Missouri on of tamper- If so, take them back to the place of charges of theft and forgery in a land lready are purchase and get something else," fraud scheme. Young, DeVos clash on social services issues (Continued from Page 1) Young-who's surprise speech at the conference was warmly received by the S roughly 300 council members-was quickly escorted away after speaking. In a heated speech directly following Mayor Young's, DeVos disagreed with most of Young's pleas. "Soup kitchens don't solve the problem, they only provide a short- term solution to it," Devos said. He ad- their pro ded, however, that he thought soup kit- solve the chens were sometimes necessary in our Respon society. tion of D IN CONTRAST to Young, DeVos was any argued that government funded social (Detroit service programs for the pbor do more demandi harm to those people than good. now the "We have fostered and indeed en' DeVos. "couraged people with the notion that DeVos- ;they're ignorant and unable to, solve with a H oup kitchens don't solve the problem, they nly provide a short-term solution to it.' -Richard DeVos Amway Corporation chairman DeVos said that a change in society's attitude, from negative to positive, is an important step to solving today's problems. "WE CAN'T always finger point," he said. "Detroit will not solve its problems if it goes on degrading and ridiculing itself." After his speech DeVos was asked what advice he gives to college students who are currently facing dire economic straits due to the staggering tuition costs. "I give them the same advice that I give everbody else. They can't blame others for their problems. They must help themselves the way that we did," blems. Individuals are able to ir own problems," he said. nding to Young's bleak descrip- etroit's economic woes, DeVos thing but sympathetic. "It ) has also led the way in ng more for doing less, and day of reckoning is here," said -clad in blue suit, complete [eadlee for governor button- spoke with the fervor of a football coach at halftime. HIS WORDS echoed at times the tough rhetoric that President Reagan used in his 1980 presidential campaign. "Those who really want to succeed, succeed. Those who don't, didn't try har4enough," DeVos said. Si iilarly, kids who don't make it through ligh school or college can usually blame themselves, said DeVos. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Khomeini aide assassinated A top aide to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was killed and his son was wounded yesterday by a suicidal guerrilla who blew himself and his victim to pieces with a grenade in an embrace of death, the Iranian news agency reported. The Islamic Republic News Agency said the attacker, a leftist Mojahideen guerrilla, died when he grabbed Ayatollah Ashrafi-Esfahani, 83, and pulled the pin on his grenade inside the main mosque in Bakhtaran, 300 miles southwest of Tehran. Ashrafi-Esfahani's son was wounded in the attack which came as his father spoke at a mosque prayer meeting. He was listed in satisfactory con- dition at a hospital. Several other people also suffered injuries. Ashrafi-Esfahani was Khomeini's special representative in Bakhtaran, formerly Kermanshah. IRNA said he had taught religious studies in the province for 30 years and was one of the most respected religious scholars in ran. U.S. missile plant bombed TORONTO- A crate of dynamite exploded outside a plant producing guidance systems for the U.S. Cruise missile and the company chief yester- day blamed terrorists for the blast. Eight people were injured. Police estimated 300 to 500 pounds of dynamite in an orange-colored crate set beside a van outside the plant caused the powerful blast at Litton Systems Canada Ltd., a subsidiary of Litton Industries of Beverly Hills, Calif. The plant has been a frequent target of anti-nuclear protests. "It is frightening that a terorist activity such as this can hap pen in Canada," Lit- ton Canada President Ronald Keating said. "It is the threat to the lives of Litton employees and other innocent bystanders that disturbs me so much." The force of the blast at 11:30 p.m. EDT Thursday blew apart the van, leaving only a license plate and the steel engine block. It shattered windows in nearby buildings and rocked buildings up to two miles away. Only minutes before the explosion, a woman telephoned police to warn a bomb had been planted in a van near the factory and would go off in 20 minutes. The bomb exploded 10 minutes after the call, however, and policemen approaching the truck narrowly escaped death from flying shrapnel. Atty. Gen. plans tour to study drug, refugee problems WASHINGTON- Attorney General William French Smith plans to fly: over the Golden Triangle in Thailand and walk through an illegal drug bazaar in the Khyber Pass on a 20-day, round-the-world trip to study drug and refugee problems, administration officials said yesterday. "This is the first time an attorney general has ever made this kind of a trip," said a high administration official. "The purpose is to emphasize the importance we attach to these problems" and thus increase foreign cooperation with the United States. Two officials briefed reporters about the six-nation trip at the Justice Department on the condition they be identified only as "a high ad- ministration official" and "an administration official." The trip, which begins Tuesday, will take the 24-person party to Tokyo, Hong Kong, Thailand, Pakistan, Paris and Rome. Smith will be accompanied by his wife, Jean, acting Drug Enforcement Administrator Francis "Bud" Mullen, Immigration and Naturalization Commissioner Alan Nelson, Smith's spokesman Thomas DeCair, two secretaries and at least two special assistants. The other 13 members of the group will be "mostly security people," the administration official said. Wholesale prices, production rates drop during September WASHINGTON-, Dipping for the fourth time this year, prices at the wholesale level fell in September at an annual rate of 1.7 percent, the gover- nment said yesterday. The new figures meant that, through September, wholesale inflation was running at an annual rate of 3.1 percent and raised the possibility the pace for all of this year would be the slowest since the 2.2 percent of 1970. At the same time, the Federal Reserve Board reported that production at the nation's factories was off 0.6 percent last month, the 12th decline in the last 14 months. Economists, heartened by the improved price picture, nonetheless largely attributed the declines in both reports to the stifling recession which they said still gripped the economy in September. Gunman releases one hostage NEW YORK- A career criminal and prison informant, fearing police bullets and inmate revenge, kept police at bay outside a Brooklyn hospital locker room for a second day but released one of his two hostages yesterday afternoon. More than 60 armed police and hostage negotiators camped outside the dingy basement room that Larry Gardner took over at the sprawling King's County Hospital complex. Gardner, although tired, apparently had not slept since the ordeal began, police said. Gardner, 33, seized a prison guard's gun and took five hostages Thursday when he was taken to the hospital to have a cast removed from a broken hand. The guard, Vernon Burton, was superficially wounded in the scuffle. Three of the hostages were released unharmed during the first 14 hours in trades for food, blankets, a television, a radio and other amenities, plus the broadcasting of his complaints over radio and television. Two hospital employees, John Leonard and Elton Smith, remained with him yesterday morning. They had not been harmed. Vol. XCIII, No. 41 Tuesday, October 26, 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 Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 Dy 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, 763-0375'; Circulation. 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 0 C E A he said. Jobs such as waitressing hopping, DeVos said, still anybody that wants the work. and bell- exist for (Continued from Page 1) Shapiro calls :for new committment to higher ed. were among featured speakers at the conference. Although not present for any of the day's speeches, Shapiro nonetheless was quick to respond to DeVos' com- ments that students should get part- time jobs to finance their education, claiming that these jobs are readily available for those who want them. "Students are already doing that (holding jobs), but they have to concen- trate on schoolwork, too," Shapiro said. THE COUNCIL of Michigan Foun- dations is an association of gran- tmakers, private and community foun- dations, . banks serving foundations and charitable trusts, and corporations with giving programs. These foundations, numbering almost 800, gave grants which totaled over $206,297,532 in their last reporting year. Speaking to the council, Shapiro said the state of Michigan faces critical economic and political challenges. He added, however, "We do have the resources, human and otherwise, to sustain the challenge." Shapiro said Michigan has had a history of economic and political leadership and "we ought not to let our heritage of leadership slip into other hands." (tb udi Wii rnIt1Et FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS FOUNDATION 502 East Huron, 663-9376 Jitsuo Morikawa, Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sunday Worship. Child :care provided. Oct. 17-"Religion and the World Crisis"-John Floid. Sunday: Church Loyalty Dinner- 12noon. 11:00 a.m.-Church School. Classes for all ages. Class for undergraduates. -Class for graduates and faculty. Also: Choir Thursday 7:00 p.m., John Reed director; Janice Beck, organist. Student Study Group Wed. at 6:00 .p~m. Support group for bereaved students, 'alternate Weds., 7:00 p.m. 11:00 Brunch, second Sunday of each month. Ministry Assistants: Marlene Francis, Terry Ging, Barbara Griffen, Jerry Rees. *V * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH .1432 Washtenaw Ave., 662-4466 (between S. University and Hill) ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thompson-663-0557 = Weekly Masses: Mon.-Wed.-5:10 p.m. Thurs.-Fri.-12:10 p.m. Sat.-7:00 p.m. Sun.-8:30 and 10:30 a.m. (Upstairs and downstairs) 12 noon and 5 p.m. (upstairs and downstairs) North Campus Mass at 9:30 a.m. in Bursley Hall (Fall and Winter Terms) Rite of Reconciliation-4 p.m.-5 p.m. on Friday only; any other time by appointment. NEW GRACE APOSTOLIC CHURCH 632 N. Fourth Ave. Rev. Avery Dumas Jr., Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sunday School. 11:45 Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. Evening Service Bible Study-Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m. For rides call 761-1530 * * * CAMPUS CHAPE L FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120 S. State St. (Corner of State and Huron) Worship Schedule: 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Morning Worship in the Sanctuary. Oct. 17-"Birds of a Feather . ." -Dr. Gerald R. Parker. Church School for all ages-9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Choir Rehearsal-Thursday at 7:15 p.m. Ministers: Dr. Donald B. Strobe Rev. Fred B. Maitland. Dr. Gerald R. Parker Education Directors: Rose McLean and Carol Bennington LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN (The Campus Ministry of the LCA-ALC-AELC) Galen Hora, Pastor 801 S. Forest at Hill St. Sunday Worship at 10:30 a.m. Mon. 1-2 p.m., Bible Study Wed. 9:00 p.m., Movie Night. Fri., Oct. 22, Retreat Weekend. Financial aid cuts not so sevre this year, Regents told (Continued from Page 1) another resolution to keep them con- stant. The Reagan plan would have meant nearly a $7 million loss in aid to Univer- sity students, according to figures sup- plied by Grotrian. It would have also called for the elimination of Sup- plemental Educational Opportunity Grants, State Student Incentive Grants and National Direct Student Loans, and reduced Pell Grants and College-Work- Study. "I DO NOT think at this point that (Reagan's) budget levels will be allowed to stand," Grotrian told the regents. In other business, the Regents ap- proved the terms of a plan to finance the building of the Adult General Hospital, which is currently under con- struction. Under the plan, the State Building Authority will provide $140 million for the project, estimated to cost $193 million, according to Norman Herbert, the University's investment officer. Construction costs were originally estimated at $210 million, but some of the bids have been lower than projec- ted, Herbert said. The state will provide another $20 million, and the University will match that figure to createa safeguard, for investors against rising costs. The other $30 million will have been paid for by the end of November, Herbert said. The Regents also approved a plan to increase University contributions to the employee health insurance premiums. Rate increases by Blue Cross-Blue Shield and Major Medical insurance companies forced the expenditure, ac- cording to Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff. The increased contribution caused a $1 million rise in the General Fund 01 61 Editor-in-chief ........ ........... ....DAVID MEYER Managing EditorC.................PAMELA KRAMER News Editor................... ANDREWM CHAPMAN Student Affairs Editor ............ANN MARIE FAZIO University Editor .................... MARK GINDIN Opinion Page Editors .................. JULIE HINDS CHARLES THOMSON Arts/Magazine Editors ......... RICHARD CAMPBELL Associate Arts/Magazine Editor.........BEN TICHO Sports Editor..................... BOB WOJNOWSKI Associate Sports Editors .............. BARB BARKER LARRY FREED JOHN KERR RON POLLACK Photography Editor ..................BRIAN MASCK Laura Clark, Richard Demok. Jim Dworman. Dbvid Forman, Chris Gerbosi, Paul Helgren, Malt Henehan, Chuck Joffe, Steve Kamen HRabin Kopilnick, Doug Levy. Mike McGraw. Larry Mishkin, Don Newman, Jeff Quicksilver, Jim Thompson, Karl Wheatley, Chris Wilson. Chuck Whitman. BUSINESS Business Manager .. .JOSEPH G. BRODA Sales Manager KATHRYN HENDRICK Display Manager ......... ANN SACHAR Finance Manager............SAM G. SLAUGHTER IV Assistant Display Manager ......... PAMELA GOULD Operations/National Manager. LINDSAY BRAY Circulation Manager . KiM WOOD Sales Coordinator . E. ANDREW PETERSEN Classified Manager .. .... PAM GILLERY 11 I A