a0 Page 2-Tuesday, October 26, 1982-The Michigan Daily City may prohibit d (Continued from Page 1) work about the time it gets dark have complained to me," Belcher said. "One woman was pulled into an alley by her coat belt by one of these people." Margaret Messina, an employee of Lawyer's Title Insurance on N. Fourth Avenue, which is down the street from Sculpture Plaza on Fourth Avenueand Catherine Street, said, "A lot of times we'll have to work late at night, and when we leave, (the people in the plaza) use vulgar language. They'll say things like, 'Hey bitch,' or 'You look real nice tonight, let me show you a good time.' "SINCE THE Wonder Bar closed, there's been more problem," she added. The Wonde was at 118 N. Fourth Avenue, butc down about a month ago. The bar major gathering place for ther now found in the two plaza area cording to City Councilmember L Peterson. "People need a place to gathe said. "Seems to me that (the m office) is trying to clamp down on of social distress. If you're not ri white, you're not going to be able to the new bars near Briarwood.' people would be drinking on p rinking in tw was property if they could afford it," he of a said. er Bar The city has responded to the com- closed plaints by drafting an amendment was a which would prohibit any open alcohol people containers in these two parks. City as, ac- Council will vote on the amendment Lowell Dec. 12. Belcher said that the choice facing the city was whether to classify r," he the two plazas as parks or not. Beer ayor's and wine, but no other alcohol, are signs allowed in all city parks according to ch and the current law. e to go "WHAT WE envisioned was people These having picnics or playing ball in a big, rivate grassy area, and not the urban areas,' Belcher said. City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw proposed the amendment to the Coun- cil. "The street people - those people who hang around Fourth Avenue and its vicinity - apparently drink and r4 o parks misbehave. I haven't seen any of this myself, though," he aded. "Those people who sit in the park don't have nice places to live and they have nowhere to go," said Susan Messer, of Legal Services of Southeastern Michigan. "Everyone needs somewhere to go," she added. ONE WOMAN who works on N.Four- th Avenue said, "We've been paranoid abut it, but so far they haven't done anything to us. They only hurt each other." She said, however, that "recen- tly, they'll come up to you as you go to your car. They're dead drunk and they want to talk." Cleveland Colman, one of the people who frequents Sculpture Plaza said, "There's no place for people to go. We just sit over there and drink beer and don't bother nobody. People are afraid of the people who hang out there." "People are afraid of anything that's different," said Simon Green, a Liberty Plaza regular. "I haven't seen anybody here hassling anybody. The anger that's behind any negativeness will only be increased by taking away the only place we can go." JOSTEN'S GOLD RING SALE 2t. $15/$30 Rebate See Your Josten's Representative. Date October 25 th- 29 th Time 11:00 - 4:00 Place Ulrich's Books ,S Main Store: Electronics Showroom: 549 E. University MORE THANABOOKSTORE 1110 S. University (at the corner of E. University and S. University 662-3201) Say Q®.! 11w% "- M~DISCOU N T MUFF LR AMER*CAN ANO FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST FROM AS LOW AS.. Traied *ITS MANY Specilist 93 MALLCARS Installed *AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS FOREIGN CARS Featuring CUSTOM DUALS HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS "One of the finest names CUSTOM PIPE BENDING in automotive parts!" Y PSILA N TI IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Agent Orange test found faulty WASHINGTON - Plysical exams for Vietnam veterans who fear their ex- posure to Agent Orange imperiled their health are often inadequate and per- formed by government doctors who do not know what to look for, congressional investigators said yesterday. Moreover, the Veterans Administration computerized registry in which examination results are stored is unreliable and should be scrapped, the General Accounting Office said after a 2 -year study. Veterans' addresses were not in the computer files, making it difficult to find veterans for followup exams or treatment, the GAO said. The agency found that many VA doctors are suspicious of the complaints of veterans. In six of 14 hospitals that GAO visited, the chief environmental physicians - in charge of Agent Orange exams - "believed the program served only to pacify veterans who were exploiting the Agent Orange issue for personal gain," the report said. Don't tell us how to run U.S., Shultz says to Canadians OTTAWA- Secretary of State George Shultz told Canadians yesterday that the United States won't tell them how to run their country and "don't you try to tell us how to run ours." At the same time, Shultz told Canadian reporters that the United States would like Canada to beef up its armed forces and make sure its foreign in- vestment rules are fair to American investors. In an official working visit to the Canadian capital, Shultz made it clear that the United States does not intend to mend frayed U.S.-Canadian relations by ignoring its own national interests. Shultz held private discussions with Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau and External Affairs Minister Allan MacEachen. Canadian officials said the talks focused on protectionist trends that have developed in both nations. The issues discussed included attempts in the U.S. Congress to protect American interests against Canadian trucking, lumber and timber operations, acid rain pollution and American investment in Canada, par- ticularly in the energy field in which U.S. interests hold a 72 percent share. Two Catholics killed in Belfast BELFAST, Northern Ireland- Extremists bludgeoned a Roman Catholic kidnap victim to death and gunned down another Catholic in the city of Ar- magn yesterday in apparent retaliation for the kidnapping of a Protestant militiaman. Police said the mutilated body of Joseph Donegan, 48, father of seven, was found slumped in a back alley in Belfast's Shankill Road district, a heartland of Protestant militancy. The killers used a knife and blunt instrument to damage Donegan's face beyond recognition, and a gold watch he was wearing helped the family identify his body, the police said. A short time later, Peter Corrigan, 47, a campaign worker for the Irish Republican Army's legal Sinn Fein political wing, was shot to death as he walked to a local welfare office in Armagh, near the border with the Irish Republic. Corrigan had 11 children. Police said they fear that Protestant militiaman Thomas Cochrane, 55 ab- ducted three days ago by Provisional IRA guerrillas in the border county of South Armagh, may have been killed. "Our experience in cases like this is that if you haven't found your man alive after three days, you find a body in a ditch somewhere," said a senior police officer who requested anonymity. Police said three men have been detained for questioning in the Donegan kidnap-slaying. No details were immediately available. Pope, archbishop discuss church's role in Poland VATICAN CITY- Pope John PaulII and Poland's Roman Catholic primate began talks yesterday on the situation in Poland since the banning of Solidarity and what their church should do about it. It was the pontiff's first meeting with Archbishop Jozef Glemp since the Communist military regime on Oct. 8 outlawed the independent labor federation, which the church supported. No details of the talks were available. But one of the chief problems facing the church leaders is whether to support strikes and demonstrations called by underground Solidarity leaders to sabotage the government's campaign to replace their nationwide independent union with small local unions con- trolled by the Communist Party. Iran challenges Israel in U.N. UNITED NATIONS- Iran yesterday challenged Israel's right to sit in the U.N. General Assembly, and called for a vote to suspend the Jewish state. The vote on withholding Israel's credentials is scheduled for today. The United States, which has been lobbying intensively, threatened to pull out of the Assembly and withhold $149.9 million it still owes on its 1982 U.N. dues if Israel were ousted. Meanwhile, in Jerusalem Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, in testimony to the commission probing the Beirut massacre, took responsibility yesterday for letting Lebanese Christian militiamen into the Palestinian refugee cam- ps. He said Prime Minister Menachem Begin knew nothing about it. Sharon said, "Our central concern was to save our soldiers' lives. Moreover, there was a Cabinet decision reached June 15, 1982, which spoke in a clear fashion, in my opinion the clearest fashion possible, of integrating the Lebanese forces (Christian militiamen) into the fighting in Lebanon." 6 2606 Washtenaw Ave...... 572-91 77 (11/2 mile East of US 23) ndividually Owned & Operated IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES COPE DAILY AND SAT.8-2MPM Copyrght 0 1982 Meneke I U " Seniors . Graduate Students iBMS areer Wednesday, October 27, 1982 9am-5pm Michigan Union, Pendleton Room 0 0 0 1VoeicbiganII aol1 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 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, 763-03759: Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. BS/MS in CS, Computer Engineering, EE, ME, IE, ChE, Math, Physics, MBAs. Come informally any time during the day and learn about career opportunities in IBM from many different locations throughout the country. Then sign-up on interview schedules of your choice for formal interviews which will take place on Friday, November 5. No long lines. No overflows. No missed opportunities. Refreshments will be served. Bring 3 resumes. Editor- in- chief. Managing Editor.............. News Editor. Student Affairs Editor. University Editor .. . ... . Opinion Page Editors ..... Arts/Mogazine Editor. Associate Arts/Magazine Editor. Sports Editor ................ Associate Sports Editors ....... . Photography Editor ............ .DAVID MEYER ... PAMELA KRAMER ANDREW CHAPMAN ANN MARIE FAZIO ....MARK GINDIN ...JULIE HINDS CHARLES THOMSON RICHARD CAMPBELL . .. .. BEN TICHO .BOB WOJNOWSKI ..BARB BARKER LARRY FREED JOHN KERR RON POLLACK .BRIAN MASCK Laura Clark, Richard Demok. Jim Dworman, Obvid Forman, Chris Gerbosi, Paul Helgren, Mtt Henehon. Chuck Jaffe. Steve Kamen, Robin Kopilnick, Doug Levy, Mike McGraw. pLrryMishkin, Dan Newman. Jeff Quicksilver. Jim Thompson, Karl Wheatley, Chris Wilson.Chuck Whitman. BUSINESS Business Manager ... ....E...JOSEPH G. BRODA Sales Manager ................ KATHRYN HENDRICK Display Manager....................ANN SACHAR Finance Manager ............ SAM G. SLAUGHTER IV Assistant Display Manager......... PAMELA GOULD. Operations/Ntionol Manager ......LINDSAY BRAY Circulation Manager ......... .........KIM WOOD. Sales Coordinator . ........... E. ANDREW PETERSEN Ad