0 Page 2-Tuesday, November 2, 1982-The Michigan Daily IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Honda begins U.S. production MARYSVILLE, Ohio- Honda, the Japanese-based automaker, rolled its first American-built car off the assembly line near this central Ohio city' yesterday. It came at 8:30 a.m. with none of the hoopla associated with such an event; no ribbon-cutting, no speech-making by state and local dignitaries; no repor-. ters or television cameras. Only company employees and executives-including Kiyoshi Kawashima, Honda Motor Co. president-were on hand to watch a slate-gray Accord roll out. "This is the official start -of the line," said Bonnie Shiffer of Honda of America Mfg. Inc. She said Honda expects to produce 300 to 500 cars here in November. A company statement quoted Kawashima as saying, "The most important consideration is maintaining the quality that the American buyer has come, to associate with Honda products which I am confident we can do." Honda placed full-page advertisements in area newspapers to announce the startup. The ad headline read, "Starting now. Made over here." Salvadoran rebels destroy bridge, burn trucks in attack SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador- Salvadoran rebels stepped up a three- week-old offensive yesterday with the demolition of a rail bridge and the burning of trucks, paralyzing traffic to the eastern third of the country. Guerrillas have seized 20 villages in the lightly populated region along the Honduran border during their "October offensive," their biggest of the year. About 100 rebels took part in the destruction of "El Burro" rail bridge in Tecoluca province, 36 miles southeast of San Salvador, officials said. Residents told authorities the guerrillas set off two blasts, in pre-dawn hours that destroyed the bridge, which was not guarded by the army. It was the second attack on the rail line in three days. The eastern provinces have been the biggest producers of cotton, cattle and sugar, formerly El Salvador's largest earners of hard currency. Guerrillas have been conducting economic warfare against the eastern provinces to wreck the government's ability to continue functioning. Rebels also burned seven trucks in Usulutan and San Vincente provinces. including three state-owned energy trucks. I a -UU Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Irish civil rights leader Bernadette Deylin-McAliskey addresses a standing room only audience at Rackham amphitheater yesterday. is insp d bac ci* * ht civi rig s movement I You're Needed Ail Over the World. Ask Peace Corps Fishery volunteers why the rural formers of Nepal, Zaire and Samoa need them to help introduce fish pond management, and harvesting techniques. They'll tell you they are helping to increase the world's food supply. And they'll tell you they are helping improve the diets and futures of people in developing notions. Ask them why Peace Corps is the toughest job you'll ever love. INTERVIEWS AT CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT, NOVEMBER 2, 3 and 4. SEE PEACE CORPS REPS. BRING IN COMPLETED APPLICATIONS OR CALL DETROIT OFFICE 1-800-226-7928 PEACE CORPS By NEIL CHASE The current struggle of the Irish Catholics in Northern Ireland is very similar to the struggle of American blacks in the 1960s, said a leader of Ireland's civil rights movement yester- day. "There is a strong affinity between the black civil rights movement in this country and the civil rightsmovement in our country," said Bernadette Devlin- McAliskey, a long-time spokesperson for the Irish Catholics living in Nor- thern Ireland. THE IRISH political activists have taken a lot of inspiration from Martin Luther King Jr., she explained to the more than 200 people gathered in Rackham Ampitheater last night. The Irish fell very close to other op- pressed groups, she said, including the Palestinians and the Polish. "If Lech Walesa is interned without a trial, he is. one of us," she said. Devlin-Aliskey was elected to the British parliament in 1969. She was, at 21, the youngest member of that body, and remained in Parliament until 1974. In 1981, she and her husband were severely wounded by three assailants who broke into her home in a round of assasination attempts that claimed the lives of several other Irish leaders. SHE WAS even more appalled, however, by the death of Irish children who were shot with controversial plastic bullets used by British army and police. The sometimes lethal plastic bullet is 'designed to be shot at the legs of rioters, she said. "It's fired at children's heads. It's used at will by every soldier and policeman who carries one," she said. The bullets have been blamed for the death of at least eleven children, Devlin-McAliskey said. The bullets are designed and manufactured in the United States, and there is presently a petition drive un- derway to get Congress to demand that See IRISH. Page 5 I Ball Park hotdogs found safe DETROIT- Ball Park brand hotdogs recalled from stores in six states have been checked by sophisticated metal detectors and found safe for con- sumers, Hygrade Food Products Inc. said. The Southfield-based company said Sunday it found nothing wrong with any of the recalled frankfurters and blamed consumers for sharp objects found in some of its hot dogs last week. One woman has admitted she put a razor blade in a hotdog herself. "We began to be suspicious when there were three different kinds of razor blades in the first three razor-blade complaints," said Charles Ledgerwood, Hygrade's vice president of operations. "After recalling Ball Park franks and finding nothing wrong, our suspicion of consumers was confirmed when one complainant admitted lying and another refused to take a lie test." Pope pays homage to saint AVILA, Spain - Pope John Paul II paid homage to St. Teresa of Avila yes- terday at a Mass for 200,000 Spaniards and said the 16th century mystic's life of poverty and meditation was an example for Christian women around the world. "Her voice has resounded farther than the Catholic church," said the pon- tiff in the homily of his Mass. It was celebrated in the walled city on the Plains of Castile where the renowned Carmelite nun and church reformer, one of the most remarkable women in the history of Christianity, was born and founded the first of the 17 convents she established in Spain. Later in the day, a helicopter took the pope to Alba de Tormes, 45 miles northwest of Avila, where St. Teresa died in 1582. There beside the black casket containing her remains, he closed the year-long celebration of the 400th anniversary of her death, which brought more than two million ' pilgrims to Avila and Alba this year. John Paul's 10-day, 16-city tour of Spain, the first by a pope to one of the world's most Catholic countries, was timed to coincide with the anniver- sary, but events postponed it twice. Supreme Court to rule on Three Mile Island reopening WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to decide whether "fears of recurring catastrophe" must be considered before production is allowed to resume at the site of the nation's worst nuclear reactor accident. A lower court said federal officials first must take into account possible psychological harm to residents near the now-dormant Three Mile Island facility outside Harrisburg, Pa. The plant was the site of a March 1979 nuclear accident that stunned the world and led to a continuing debate over federal licensing of nuclear power plants. In other action, the Supreme Court: " Agreed to review claims that white police officers and firefighters in Boston were discriminated against during a round of layoffs last year. " Said it will decide when, if ever, military personnel can sue their superior officers for monetary damages. " Rejected a claim in a New Jersey case that sex education is public schools violates religious freedoms. 0 be Micbl-gan Baflu Vol. XCIII, No. 47 Tuesday, November 2, 1982 pI i :w 0 The Michigan vaily 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. 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