4 Page 2-Tuesday, November 23, 1982-The Michigan Daily Andropov gives I semi-approval to future of detente MOSCOW (AP)- Communist Party chief Yuri Andropov said yesterday the future belongs to detente, but declared that the Kremlin will make no "preliminary concessions" toward im- proving relations with the United States. In his first address to the . party leadership since being named general secretary Nov. 12 to replace the late Leonid Brezhnev, Andropov stressed the continuation of Brezhnev's foreign policies, including Kremlin overtures to China. ON DOMESTIC matters, he announ- ced the promotion of a former regional deputy director of the KGB to Politburo voting status, and praised the work of Andrei Kirilenko, 76, whose retirement from the Politburo was officially an- nounced yesterday after several mon- ths of rumors that the number 3 Kremlin man was out. Andropov complained of a sluggish pace in adopting new technology and announced "cautious" experiments may be tried on freeing factories and collectives of rigid central control. He said officials will be taking into account "the experience of fraternal coun- tries," believed to be a reference to other East European states such as Hungary, where he was a Soviet diplomat in the 1950s. "We are deeply convinced that the '70s, characterized by detente were not-as is asserted today by certain imperialist leaders-a chance episode in the difficult history of mankind," he said in a 40-minute speech to the party Central Committee. "No, the policy of detente is by no means a past stage. The future belongs to this policy." THE SPEECH was carried by the English-language service of the official news agency Tass and read in its en- tirety on evening television news. In an apparent reference to Reagan administration statements that the new Soviet leadership should send a signal such as pulling its troops out of Afghanistan, Andropov said: Andropov ... gives detente tempered approval "Statements in which the readiness for normalizing relations is linked with the demand that the Soviet Union pay for this with some sort of preliminary concessions ... do not sound serious, to say the least. "WE SHALL not agree to this ... we have nothing to cancel," he said, noting the Reagan administration sanctions after martial law in Poland, against the Soviet natural gas pipeline, and rejec- tion of the 1979 SALT II treaty. He said the arms race must not be allowed to get out of control. "Mankind cannot endlessly put up with the arms race and with war unless it wants to put its future at stake," said the 68-year-old former chief of the KGB security police. "We are for the search, on a healthy basis, acceptable to the sides concer- ned, for a settlement of most com- plicated problems, especially of course, the problems of curbing the arms race, involving both nuclear and conven- tional arms," he said. "We are for equality ... for honest agreement." Out on a limb Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT' IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Federal judge throws out Louisiana's creationism law NEW ORLEANS- A federal judge yesterday threw out Louisiana's law providing for the teaching of creationism in public schools. U.S. District Judge Adrian Duplantier granted a request for summary judgment from the state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, which had contended the state's 1974 constitution gives it exclusive control over classroom curriculum. The board also said it needed complete power to shelter the public schools from the whims of politicians. A similar trial in Arkansas last year brought a federal ruling that its creationism law was a blatant attempt to bring religion into the schools. Proponents of the Louisiana law have said they would take the case to the 55th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals if they lost in district court. The Louisiana law has been under suspension pending resolution of the legal fight. Chrysler reopens talks with UAW HIGHLAND PARK, Mich.- Chrysler Corp. reopened talks with the United Auto Workers union yesterday to try to end a Canadian strike and agree on terms for U.S. workers. But a top company official said Chrysler still cannot afford an immediate pay raise. "We haven't found any money anywhere," Thomas Miner, vice president of industrial relations, said as bargaining began at Chrysler headquarters. "Our hope is to end this strike and, therefore, we're meeting," Miner said. "We're going to explore every possibility in an attempt to do just that (resolve the walkout)." About 10,000 Canadian autoworkers at Chrysler Canada Ltd. walked out Nov. 5 after the automaker said it could not afford to give them the im- mediate raise they demanded. U.S. autoworkers rejected a tentative contract in the fall over the same issue. They voted against a strike after talks collapsed Oct. 18 and in favor of delaying negotiations until January. Polish soldier hijacks plane BERLIN- A Polish militiaman, assigned as a guard at the "last minute," hijacked a Polish LOT airliner to West Berlin yesterday, firing shots of jubilation over his escape from Poland on arrival, a U.S. spokesman said. The guard seized the twin-engined AN-24 carrying 31 passengers and a crew of four on a domestic flight from Wroclaw to Gdansk with a stop in Warsaw even though there were two other security guards aboard. In addition to the hijacker, four passengers took the opportunity to escape and said they would remain in the West, a West Berlin police spokesman said. The American spokesman said the guard was so excited on his arrival at West Berlin's Templehof airport that he jumped from the plane to the ground without waiting for a gangway and fired six shots of joy into the air. Number of guerrillas in Salvador underestimated, analysts say SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador- The number of leftist guerrillas fighting in this Central American nation is being underestimated by about 2,000 soldiers, some U.S. intelligence analysts believe. Those analysts say there are 7,000 hard-core guerrilla fighters although other analysts are holding to the official U.S. estimate of about 5,000, accor- ding to U.S. embassy and State Department officials who asked not to be identified. These officials, who monitor day-to-day developments in the conflict, said the possible higher number does not mean that the guerrillas are gaining in the 3-year-old civil war against the U.S.-backed rightist government. One embassy official said the Salvadoran army is "much better" than it was when the Reagan administration stepped up military aid and training to El Salvador in early 1981. He claimed that improvement could lead to effec- tive defeat of the guerrillas in "another year if you really go at it." Because of increasing military pressure and interdiction of supply routes, the official said, guerrilla forces are "younger, not as well-trained and not as well-armed... Conditions in the camps are very bad. No medicine. No new clothing." Thompson declared winner of Illinois governor's race SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - Republican Gov. James Thompson was declared winner of the closest Illinois governor's race in history, yesterday three weeks after the election, and Democratic challenger Adlai Stevenson sought a recount. "It's over as far as I'm concerned," Thompson said. The certified tally gave Thompson 1,816,101 votes and Stevenson 1,811,027, a margin of 5,074 votes or just 0.139 percent. Thompson signed a certificate that declared him re-elected to an un- precedented third straight term. An hour later, Stevenson, a former U.S. senator, made his expected an- nouncement that he would take the first steps toward a recount, which in Illinois is complex and costly. An additional 46.418 votes were cast for third-party candidates, so that Thompson won with 49.43 percent of the ballots cast. "We've come a long way and we're not going to let up now in the last mile," Stevenson said of his plans to contest the election. He has said he is confident a recount will favor him because of "inevitable" human and machine error in any election where more than 3.67 million ballots are cast. 10 14 10 14 It's hard to determine who'se in the most danger, Howard Davidson, per- ched above the sidewalk in front of Angel Hall, or passersby walking under the tree he is cutting. Jewsin America misled by poor)leaders, says Kahane 10 Daily editors plead not-guilty It'n Ohio By GEORGE ADAMS Two Michigan Daily editors who were arrested in Columbus, Ohio last weekend entered pleas yesterday of not-guilty on charges of resisting arrest. Photography Editor Brian Masck and Sports Editor Robert Wojnowski were arrested and jailed at approximately 2:30 a.m. Saturday after Masck attem- pted to photograph the arrest of another person. The two were working on a feature story about the mood in Colum- bus the night before the annual showdown between Michigan and Ohio State. EDITOR-IN-Chief David Meyer said the Daily would pay for Masck and Wojnowski's legal counsel, and said Columbus attorney J.H. Sanford was handling the case now, although he had not officially been retained yet as the defense attorney. Sanford filed the not guilty pleas yesterday in Franklin County Municipal Court. "The whole thing would be laughable if it weren't so incredibly incon- venient," Meyer said yesterday. Meyer said the Daily may file a coun- ter suit for false arrest and possible damage to the photography equipment after this trial is finished, but added "our main concern is to get these charges dismissed." Both Masck and Meyer said the charges were "patently false." Sanford said if convicted, Masck and Wojnowski would face up to six months in jail and/or a $1,000 fine. He said he expects the pre-trial sometime in December. Sgt. Rass Oakley -of the Columbus Police Department said there was no official comment on the Daily's decision to fight the charges, but said, "It's always been our view that if someone feels they are not guilty, it's their obligation to fight." "Come to think of it," he added, "I can't remember a reporter being arrested who didn't fight." (Continued from Page 1) academic freedom." Kahane's Ann Arbor visit - although ultimately peaceful - was punctuated with several threats of violence. Ron Glassman, Kahane's Ann Arbor contact, received an anonymous letter which threatened to' "put a surprise in (his) Cracker, Jacks." Glassman said the letter also contained curses against Kahane and a promise of revenge for PLO chief Yassar Arafat. "It's very, very distressing," said Glassman, "but, I can't run scared." Glassman turned the letter over to Ann Arbor Police who responded by stationing two uniformed officers and a detective at the speech. KAHANE WAS quick to blame his lecture cancellation on pressure from Jewish groups. "There is no quesiton," said the rabbi, "that there is a B'nai B'rith Hillel directive that they are not to give me a forum." Kahane added that "If Jewish leaders don't like something I'm doing, I must be doing something right." In an exclusive interview with the Daily, Kahane said that had he arrived last week, he might have filed suit against UAC to gain his right to speak. "(The University) doesn't care on its own if I speak or not, had I been here earlier I would have taken (UAC) to court." Kahane has already filed suit against a Southfield synogogue which canceled his speech scheduled for tonight. An anonymous caller warned League officials Sunday that there was a bomb planted in the building. Security of- ficials said they ignored the threat but monitored the building carefully. Campus Security Director Walt Stevens sent three officers to the speech. AT THE LAST minute, Kahane's speech was moved from the second floor Hussey Room to the basement Snack Bar as a safety precaution. "We wanted to protect property," said League Director Patricia Larson. "He was scheduled to appear in a room with a lot of valuable furniture." Kahane's speech was full of sar- casm and jokes which eased some of the hostility and tension surrounding the evening. "I've been running into this since 1968 (when he founded the JDL) and it's not gotten better, it has gotten worse."~ Although Kahane's lecture was open to all students, the rabbi said it was the Jewish students on campus he hoped to reach. I have a very definite message for Jews," he said. "I really don't care what the non-Jew thinks." In his speech Kahane lashed out at international Jewish leaders calling them "dwarfs and pygmies in a time of giant problems." "They are only worried about being embarrassed in front of the gentiles, so they let six million Jews (in the Holocaust) die unembarrassed," said the JDL chief. He also was critical of Jews who are quick to pin the blame on others. "I think Jews who sit around and worry because Christians don't help Jews are fools. Jews also have brothers and sisters, it's not the monopoly of any other ethnic group, and though the right to sit in the front on a bus is important, it is not as important as ending gas chambers." 14 60 0 0 President Reagan unveils new MX missile plan pipp- (r FINANCIAL AID FOR MEDICAL STUDENTS Limited numbers of full 3 and 4 year schol- arships are available to medical and osteo- pathic students. " Tuition " Academic Fees " Textbooks " Supplies plus " $556 per month To apply you must be a U.S. Citizen, be of high moral character, pass a physical, and either be currently en- rolled in their first year of school or have taken their MCAT, applied to medical school, and be in their sen- ior veor of underaroduate studies. (Continued from Page 1) Reagan said his proposed deployment "would require the Soviets to make costly new technical develop- ments if they wish to even contemplate a surprise attack. Most of the Soviet Countermeasures proposed are really no more than technical dreams on which no Soviet planner or politician would bet the fate of his country." Immediate disagreement over basing plans would be moot, however, if MX opponents are accurate in asserting that they now have rounded up enough votes to deny financing for production of the weapon. MERCHANTS on Main Street in Cheyenne, Wyo. welcomed the new MX missile as a boon to the state's economy, but two long-time enemies- environmentalists and ranchers-are joined in opposition. Sister Francis Russell, leader of a regional anti-MX group, said southeastern Wyoming would become a strategic target with deployment of the MX near Francis Warren Air Force Base in Cheyenne. "Junior high students are now calling Cheyenne the 'powderkeg of the globe,' "she said. 01 e Airbigan MtMl Vol. XCIII, No. 65 Tuesday, November 23, 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 [y 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. I Editor-in-chief DAVID MEYER Managing Editor PAMELA KRAMER News Editor .E ANDREW CHAPMAN Student Affairs Editor . ANN MARIE FAZIO University Editor MARK GINDIN Opinion Page Editors JULE HINDS CHARLES THOMSON Arts Magazine Editor RICHARD CAMPBELL Associate Arts Magazine Editor BEN TICHO Sports Editor BOB WOJNOWSKI Associate Sports Editors BARBBARKER LARRY FREED JOHN (ERR RON POLLACK Photoraphy Editor . BRIAN MASCK ARTISTS Norm Christiansn Pete SinclairJon Stewart Joe Ewing. Paul Helgren, Steve Hunter. Chuck Joffe, Rabin Kopilnick, Doug Levy. Tim Makinen. Mike McGraw. Lorry Mishkin, Liso Noferi. Rab Pollard. Dan Price. Jeff Quicksilver. Paul Resnick. Wendy Rocho, Lenny Rosenb urn. Scott Salowich, John Tayer. Judy Walton, Karl Wheatley, Ch,.ick Whitman, Rich Wiener, Steve Wise. BUSINESS Business Manager JOSEPH G. BRODA Sales Monager KATHRYN HENDRICK Display Manager ..ANN SACHAR Finance Manager SAM G SLAUGHTER IV Assistant Display Monager PAMELA GOULD Operations/National Manager.... LINDSAY BRAY Circulation Manager KIM WOOD Sales Coordinator E ANDREW PETERSEN Classified Manager PAM CGILLERY Circulation Coordinator ......... TIM McGRAW r J 4 TUESDAY LUNCH DISCUSSION qIA ^Ll . a 1I a I