Shultz promises U.S., allies will not initiate any war ~ ~1~The Marines. The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, February 2, 1983-Page 7' State may not evacuate toxic -.4 '4 TOKYO UPI - Secretary of State George Shultz, urging Japan to join Washington's effort to boost defenses, yesterday pledged the United States to "deter aggression" throughout the world in the face of a North Korean war alert. "The United States and its allies will start no wars," Shultz told a news con- ference on the third day of his four-day visit to Japan. He leaves for China today and then goes on to South Korea and Hong Kong. "OUR EFFORTS to build up our defense forces are efforts to create the capacity to deter aggression," he said. "That is our objective." "It applies whether we are thinking with respect to the Soviet Union, North Korea, what is happening in Cambodia or throughout the world." But North Korea, in a broadcast monitored in Tokyo, bitterly denounced annual U.S. and South Korean military exercises that began Monday, charging they were creating a situation where "war may break out at any moment." IN A SEPARATE broadcast, North Korea charged South Korean forces fired "more than 300 antiaircraft gun shells" at a North Korean plane on what it called routine duty near the western border between South and Nor- th Korea Monday. "The entire people will get ready in full combat gear to smash in time the enemy's war moves and defend the skies, land, and seas of the country and their posts like an impregnable for- tress," the North Korean Central news agency said in a broadcast monitored in Tokyo. But in Seoul, South Korean defense ministry spokesman Park Chong-shik identified the North Korean plane as an AL-28 jet bomber and said the North Koreans distorted the incident. PARK SAID THE bomber intruded into South Korean airspace and was turned back by antiaircraft ground fire. The communist nation said it was, putting its forces on "semi-war" readiness, and linked the exercises to "moves of the U.S. imperialists, Japanese militarists and South Korean puppet clique to complete the system of a triangular military alliance." Shultz said it was clear that "more needs to be done" to fulfill Japan's self- defined mission of "being responsible for the defense of the air space of Japan and for the seas around Japan." BUT HE SAID Washington was hap- py with the efforts to build Japan's defenses outlined by Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone, who became prime minister in November and, is regarded as more militant than his predecessors. South Korea, like Japan, is home to 40,000 U.S. military personnel. The "Team Spirit" military maneuvers in- waste burial site Schultz . ..promises to "deter" aggression volve 180,000 troops, the largest number ever. North Korea, aided by Chinese troops, battled South Koreans and allies led by U.S. troops in a bloody 1950-53 war. Pyongyang, which has no diplomatic ties with Tokyo or Washington, gets aid from both China and the Soviet Union. I - .2~ - 7* x 4,, ' 'From the Country w5h Ca m AP Photo Help for the hungry This Project AIM truck sits outside the Capitol in Lansing yesterday as part of a 10-truck convoy hauling food for Michigan's hungry. Pol0ice note-s. Police pursue stolen car Police pursued a stolen car from Ann Arbor to Ypsilanti Monday before the car was finally stopped and its teen- age driver arrested. The car's owner had reported it stolen from the parking lot of Denny's restaurant at 3310 Washtenaw Ave. some time between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday, police said. Officers spotted the car being driven down Platt road about 7:20 that evening and began to chase it. The driver, a 17- year-old Milan man, finally came to a halt at the intersection of Elder and Michigan Ave. in Ypsilanti. - Halle Czechowski LANSING (UPI) - Plans to evacuate 50 families living near Michigan's wor- st toxic waste site are now uncertain following Gov. James Blanchard's comment yesterday that he is unsure an evacuation or even immediate cleanup are needed.' Blanchard's remarks at a Flint news conference angered residents living near the Berlin & Faro Liquid Waste Incineration Co. site at Swartz Creek and left the state Department of Natural Resources uncertain how the project will proceed. "NO DECISION has been made to move anybody," Blanchard said. "I have put everything on hold and have done so since I was sworn in." The department believes that up to 300 barrels containing cyanide and hydrocholoric acid are buried beneath- a lagoon on the 40-acre dump site. they recommended an evacuation during cleanup operations as a precaution should the substances mix and form deadly hydrogen cyanide while being moved. The governor's staff indicated last ARMY I SURPLU 201 E. Washington at Fourth NOW OPEN SUNDAY! 11-4 OPEN M-SAT, 9-6 OPEN FRI. 9-8 994-3572 week that he probably would sign the order removing residents from their * homes for about three weeks. Today spokeswoman Sue Carter said yester- day it probably will be next week before a decision is made. Blanchard said there are disagreements among his advisers as to whether an evacuation will be needed at all and even on whether the materials should be removed from the site. HE SAID no people or chemicals will be removed "until it is absolutely necessary." Department spokesman Thor Strog said the agency had believed it was "not a matter of if, but a question of when" Blanchard would sign the order for the $150,000 evacuation. He noted that the state is under court order to remove the chemical barrels as well as sludges containing the suspected carcinogen C-56 this spring. Any effort to remove the materials must begin by about mid-February because continued warm temperatures make the chemical waste mot'e volatile. 15% OFFK ALL MERCHANDISE (Except Sale Items) Expires Tuesday, Feb.8, 1983 WANTED: Prospective Marine Corps Pilots Harrier: the AV-8B enables Marine Aviators to do corkscrew maneuvers, climb like a hawk, race beyond the speed of sound, hover like a hummingbird, take off like a ski jumper and strike with the ferocity of an eagle. If that sounds like your type of challenge, maybe you can be one of us. The Marines PLC or OCC Air Program guarantees Flight School after graduation. Whether you just started your academic career or are wrapping it up, we have on aviation program for you, if qualified. Must be college students or graduates. No experience necessary. Opportunities unlimited. Freshman and Sophomores: The MARINE CORPS will pay you approximately $1101.91 plus room and board for six weeks of your time during the summer of 1983. You fly (at our expense) to Quantico Virginia, and will be trained in the leadership skills of a future MARINE CORPS LIEUTENANT. After completing the six weeks of training, you will fly home, with NO OBLIGATION, and continue your college education. Participation in further training that leads to an Officer's Commission is up to you. This program is called the Junior Platoon Leaders Class and is designed especially for college freshman and sophomores. Juniors The MARINE CORPS will pay you approximately $1870.43 plus room and board for ten weeks of your time during the summer of 1983. You will fly (at our expense) to Quantico Virginia, and will be trained in the leadership skills of a future MARINE CORPS LIEUTENANT. After completion of the ten weeks of training, you will fly home, with NO OBLIGATION, and complete your college education. Upon graduation, you may accept a commission as a "Lieutenant of Marines." This is called the Combined Platoon Leaders Class and is designed especially for Juniors. G1 ew.The proud.The Marines