Mideast ti KIRYAT SHMONA, Israel (AP) - Israel and Lebanon said they made 'imarked progress" yesterday on agreements to end hostile propaganda aknd to establish future liaison between 0 thie two governments. But the apparent key obstacle on the road to withdrawing foreign troops from Lebanon - Israel's demand to man listening posts in Lebanon - was riot discussed at the latest round of negotiations, conference sources said. A COMMUNIQUE read to, reporters by Lebanese and Israeli spokesmen said, "Marked progress was made, especially on the issues of liaison and the end to hostile propaganda." They said the negotiations involved three subcommittees, discussing with- drawal and security arrangements, future relations between the two coun- alks spur optimism The Michigan Daily- Prosecutor -Friday, January 28, 1983-Page 7 see tries and possible guarantees of whatever agreement comes out of the talks. There was no indication of what sort of "liaison" was envisaged, but in the past, Israeli officials have expressed the hope that Lebanon will allow them to maintain the office staffed by Foreign Ministry personnel in the Beirut suburb of Baabda shortly after Israel invaded June 6 to smash the Palestine Liberation Organization. THE SPOKESMEN also announced that for the first time since talks began last month, the subcommittees would meet outside the framework of formal negotiations, which have been taking place twice a week and alternating between the Beirut suburb of Khalde and the Israeli border town of Kiryat Shmona. Subcommittees will meet next Tuesday and Wednesday in the Mediterranean resort city of Netanya, 20 miles north of Tel Aviv, and move to Lebanon the following week, said spokesmen Atef Tarabe of Lebanon and Israel's Avi Pazner. The latest talks came amid reports of growing U.S. criticism of Israel for allegedly putting obstacles in the way of progress. One U.S. official told repor- ters in Washington that Israel "is being extremely stubborn and unhelpful on Lebanon," and claimed Israel was not taking reasonable positions. THE UNITED STATES is refusing to back Israel's demand for three to five listening posts in southern Lebanon to monitor the area in case Palestinian guerrillas try to infiltrate back to the border with Israel. Begin ... remains optimistic on Mideast funds for drug SAULT STE. MARIE (AP) - Facing 75 - the other, what he sees as a lively narcotics trade he said. "It1 and a budget fit for a dogcatcher, a catch people j prosecutor in rural Michigan is raising bridge with a. money from ordinary citizens for the CONCERN fight against drug smuggling. - 'about the s Chippewa County Prosecutor Patrick was inadequa Shannon at first made a private appeal in the mainly for funds but he didn't get enough. So pealed to loca last week he went on the radio and October. pleaded with the public. He saidt "AFTER THAT.. . people were sen- couraging, bu ding me checks," Shannon said. "A went public. janitor gave me $25." association ti He's raised $8,000 so far, in donations .003 percent+ and a pledge from the county's town- collections f ship association, which agreed to use a Shannon est piece of the property tax collections for about $4,700 t the drug war. $3,400 already Some of the money will be used to Shannon sa make undercover drug buys, and Shan- with state, cc non eventually wants to set up a drug cement offic investigation squad. oversee use o "WE HAVE A drug trade here that's "They hav going right into Canada," Shannon cover buys or said, although federal drug enfor- like to orga cement efforts are aimed south. Shan- vestigation s non's Upper Peninsula jurisdiction dards, the cot faces Ontario across the St. Marys seem minor. River. the county's "We're at the very end of Interstate year involved king squa4 end is southern Florida, hasn't been uncommon to just a mile or two from the pound of grass," he said. ED that his $58,000 budget ize of the dogcatcher's";- te for policing drug traffic rural county; Shannon ap" al service clubs for cash iii the response was erd- ut not overwhelming, so hi The county's township ,hen pledged to turn over of township property tax for drug enforcement. imated that would add o his treasury to augment y collected. id he will meet next month ounty and city law enfoi- ials to set up a panel to f the money. e money now for undet- r whatever," he said. "I'd anize a special drug in- quad." By big city star,-- inty's drug problem might But Shannon said two df four homicides in the pad d drugs. ew ruld Ne atceclink forces of nature . G ; k~ G aa r ' AP Photo Where's the U? Two signs on Interstate 25 near Las Vegas can't agree on how to spell Albuquerque. The nearer sign forgot about the "u" in the second syllable. NEW YORK (AP) - The apparent discovery of a particle named "W" seems to provide strong support for an aspect of the "grand unification theory," an attempt to link the basic forces of nature. The apparent discovery was made by a group headed by Carlo Rubbia of Harvard University, a leader of the team at the European Laboratory of Particle Physics, known as CERN. THE GRAND unification theory holds that all four of nature's basic for- ces have evolved from a single force, which was created in the first flashes of the "big bang," the cosmic explosion that created the universe. The theory would provide physicists with a much greater understanding of the universe, and would give them clues to the questions of how it was formed and how, and if, it will end. Researchers around the world have been racing to find the "W" particle, with the general understanding that to the victors will go a Nobel Price in physics and a place in the history of science. RUBBIA, WHO announced his results Wednesday at the annual meeting of the American Physical Society, reported finding only five "clean events" in the debris of a particle collision in the ac- celerator, or atom smasher, at CERN, indicating the presence of "W" par- ticles. A second group of researchers at CERN, in competition with Rubbia's group, reported at the same time fin- ding four "events" that might be "W" particle "tracks," but did not claim this as definite proof. In reporting the fin- ding, Allan Rothenberg of CERN said only that the "events" were candidates for designation as "W" particles. This race reminded physicists at the meeting of a similar competition a few years ago when groups led by Burton Richter of Stanford and Samuel Ting of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology fought to be first to discover what came to be called the "J- psi" particle. BOTH GROUPS discovered particles almost simultaneously, one naming it "J" and the other "psi." They shared the Nobel Prize in 1976. Richter also was part of the current race for the "W" particle. The CERN accelerator is essentially a circular tunnel, four miles around, under the French-Swiss border. Billions of protons, which along with neutrons make up the nucleus of the atom, are fired against a beam of antiprotons in it. A computer analysis of the billions of resulting collisions produced the five "clean events," and "confirms the discovery of the 'W' intermediate vec- tor boson postulated by the unified theory of weak and electromagnetic in- teractions," the lab said. r 11 !THE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD M ,)41 R S 51 A TEf 16) H7H0(Atic.-,I to JC P,.,,,.'y hln thn . d , .s....Iy 1), , , " NS 2001",t'.i, a, j){ ;(' t l~ IS R 5Nftt'vs ST RT :G W f$ 1 ( 1,1 iM GIFT CERTIF ICATI AO E-NOW ON SALE tI) \ OX1300MP, VILLGEX NT,, Vb I' Ly [ Ls A G E O0, v 5;,1 -l S OO s i o., ER * .-. DOOMSSOPEN MON. SAT '30AM SUN 1130 A D OORR S OPEN 12:30 D A I L Y x : i. DUSTINHOFF MAN ThISIS A H 0 AWAY TO MAKE A LKI 10:00, 12:15, 2:30, 5:00 7:30, 10:00 -. ...- - - .- -.. - The Man of the Century. The Motion Picture of a Lifetime. GANDHI rIA COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE 10:00, 11:00, 2:00,3:00, 5:30 7:00, 9:00, Fri & Sat-10:45 No Posses, Discounts, or $1 Tuesdays tu mu - mu - - - - -- mu i SALLY FIELD JAMES CAAN JEFF BRIDGES GOODBYE 20th CENTURY. L FOX FILMS''.~ 100,12:15,2-30,5:00,7:30, 10:00 RICHARD PRYOR JACKIE GLEASON ToY A COLUMIA _E PICTURES RELEASE P 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:15 THE MAN FROM SNOWY RIVER .o0 KIRK DOUGLAS THE MOVIE 'fOUU WAN'T TO - 5:00 TFilL AID.Y(XIR 7:00 NEf3O. RS9:30 102iI C .N.UR .FOX.F.IMS For the ride of your life... 1:00 3:00 7:00 A PARAMOUNT 3 PICTURE Michael Nesmith presents Carter, Ford to meet next month in Ann Arbor The Adventure of Lyje Swann c1982 )ensen criey-aictures Inc All righits reseed Printed in USA o.( 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:15 NR students fight budget cuts in review's final days (Continued from Page 1) past year. the Ann Arbor meeting will pull together the facts uncovered at the earlier sessions, Daily said. In addition to Ford and Carter, who were together previously for the funeral of Anwar Sadat in October, 1981, the conference will include television producer Norman Lear, creator of "All in the Family," former Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare David Matthews, who now heads the Kettering Foundation, Harland Cleveland, director of the University of Minnesota's Hubert Humphrey Institute, John Gardner, HEW iecretary-in. the -Kennedy ad- ministration, and former University Professor of Education Wilbur Cohen, a key figure in the drafting of the Social Security Act of 1935. SEVERAL congressional leaders also have been invited, but none have committed yet, library director Wilson said. Other contributors to the Domestic Policy Association are the Johnson Foundation of Wisconsin, the Benton Foundation of Chicago, and the Public Agenda Foundation of New York. In addition to local and national press coverage, the conference will be televised via closed-circuit television to 145 sites nationwide so that some 9,000 participants from the smaller forums may participate. The forum is open by invitation only due to the limited size of the auditorium. aii 1 seats .i5 - Shows Start 12:15 -I V7he 1fsinnar "~ ' ' A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE (Continued from Page 1) } University Vice-President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye said he would probably release a final decision on the school's budget before the mid- February Regents meeting. "SNR students expect Frye's decision to mirror the review committee's suggested one-third cut. WHEN THE review committee's report was released last month, the school issued its own budget proposal, calling for only a 20 percent reduction. } The 20 percent plan is "one of our best options," SNR graduate student Charles Griffith said after the meeting, "but nobody's going to be happy with that." He said the Regents would probably be receptive to the students because they are not directly involved with the administration's five-year redirection plan, which he called "the smaller but better hoax." After the meeting, the students don- DAYTONA INN BROADWAY Is SPRING r BREAK HEADQUARTERS IN Call now for - -; wn $,%atin ,4Ura va4 ned green ribbons "to show solidarity," and said they would distribute the rib- bons around campus to make the school's plight more visible. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 764-0558 ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE Main Street Productions Presents An Evening with lonesco The sold soprano * The lesson January 27, 28, 29 and February 3,4, 5 8:00 P.M* For Ticket Information 662-7282 338 South Main ..I :1 .'l" i :: i.t''iFRS. .." + :caIaLR *:tx:-n..r: -. f ww