4 Page 2-Thursday, February 3, 1983-The Michigan Daily Speaker supports laser weapons By KRISTIN STAPLETON The blame for America's economic woes should not be placed on inflationary monetary policy or huge budget deficits, but on lagging investment in moder- nizing technology, a representative of an anti-nuclear freeze group said yesterday. Andy Rotstein, a representative for both the Fusion Energy Foundation and politician Lyndon LaRouche's National Democratic Policy Committee, said that the most effective way of bringing the economy out of its downswing would be to fund "beam weapons research" - investment in anti- missile laser defense systems. ROTSTEIN SPOKE to about 25 people at the Michigan League last night in what was originally scheduled to be a debate between him and a member of the Nuclear Freeze movement. He said all of the representatives of the freeze movement he contac- ted declined the debate. The groups Rotstein represents oppose the freeze movement because they believe it is controlled by people who are against the development of science and technology, Rotstein said. . "The nuclear freeze movement is, in fact, a smokescreen," he said. "The very idea that a nuclear freeze is a war- avoiding strategy is completely fallacious, as well as dangerous," Rotstein said. A more efficient defense against nuclear war would be a laser weapon system to destroy the ballistic missiles which carry nuclear warheads before they can detonate their payloads, he said. ROTSTEIN said the investment made in laser defense systems would also provide the stimulus for world wide economic recovery. He estimated that with an investment of $300 million in fiscal 1984 and $1 billion for ten years after that, real GNP growth would be "in the order of four to six percent per year. ' Rotstein attributed this effect to "spin-off technology" which would be caused by research in the areas of nucler fusion and laser technology. Asked how research would be financed, he said the government should print new money. The effect would not be inflationary, he said, since it would be accompanied by increases in productivity resulting from the new technology. Jeff Masnari, a member of the Students for a Nuclear Freeze whom Rotstein wanted to debate, said he refused the request because he considered Rotstein and the organizations he represents "ex- tremists." "TO BE SEEN debating such an extremist group would make us seem like an extremist group, and we don't think that would be in the interests of the nuclear freeze movement," Masnari said. Masnari said the laser defense idea is not a solution to the problem of nuclear buildup. "You're essen- tially escalating into a new kind of arms race," he said. Marnari also questioned the feasability of laser defense systems. "The accuracy and effectiveness (needed to pinpoint enemy missiles within the at- mosphere) will not be there for sixty years," he said. ROTSTEIN SAID that, although the idea is con- troversial in academic circles, the technology to build the system has already been developed. Some experts say the idea is totally impractical because laser beams are easily refracted by at- mospheric phenomena, such as clouds, and could be rendered ineffective with reflective missile shields. Panel cites lack of time for not expanding inquiry (Continued from Page 1) COMMITTEE member Daniel Ringler, a professor of laboratory animal medicine, said that time con- straints of getting the guidelines ready for the March Senate Assembly meeting would make sub-committee reviews of individual grants before that time A nearly impossible. Ringler also said there was siderable discussion over whether to single out grants or to pick them at ran- dom "with the committee feeling that Eynon's and Kerson's selection of questionable grants was debatable. It seems the investigators perhaps did not take all information into account in similar to methods other committees drawing up the report covering military research on campus." Ringler added that. members of the RPC were not satisified that these research grants would violate the Regents' guidelines. Although no alternative proposal was suggested during the meeting, Ringler said he suspects that a proposal to establish committees within each school or college to review the research, project proposals the units receive may be presented during next week's com- mittee meeting. The committee was divided on the issue. Some members favored an over- seeing committee, a proposal some committee members termed "totalitarian." Others suggested there should be a check-off box on the form filed by the researcher, indicating that the resear- ch to be conducted conforms to Regental guidelines. THE RPC ALSO discussed mechanisms for policing the guidelines, working with research policies have drafted in the past, Marx said. The RPC has worked for the past year to produce guidelines for non-classified research projects, which total more than 2,400 per year at the University. The Regents have already approved a policy for classified research projects, which are less numerous. Democrat Cranston first to announce 1984 candidacy Last Chance to Ski t he West. SeaAUOat.sSki the Champagne Powder! steamboat springJscolorado * FEBRUARY 19 - 26 @7 NIGHTS * DELUXE CONDOMINII @5 DAY LIFT TICKE Transportation i Call Coll $2:oink UM LODGING * TS INCLUDED s extra. (Continued from Page 1; substantial reductions in our arsenals of megadeath." "NO PRESIDENT ever has given ending the arms race the priority atten- tion it demands," he declared. Cranston said his stand comes not from the nuclear freeze movement, but from the fallout of Hiroshima and the conference of 50 Americans who gathered shortly after World War II to discuss the meaning of the nuclear age. "Ever since . .. I have concentrated on arms control, defense and foreign policy so that I could work construc- tively and creatively, against the holocaust of modern war," he said. "I believe in the necessitiesofadefen- se, but we have overleaped the bounds of reason. "There can be no limited nuclear war .. . only devastation," he said. "The cost of this insane policy - for both America and Russia - is that neither of us can meet the most basic aspirations of our people." NOON LUNCHEON Homemade soup and sandwich - $1.00 Fri., Feb 4th Ann & Don Coleman, codirectors Guild House: "Cuba Today: Reflec- tions on Recent Visit" Guild House(802 Monroe. {662-5189} IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Marine draws pistol when challenged by Israeli soldiers WASHINGTON - A U.S. Marine captain climbed aboard an Israeli tank, his pistol drawn and loaded, and faced down an Israeli commander who tried to push his column through an American checkpoint in Beirut yesterday, of- ficials said. The Reagan administration immediately called an Israeli representative on the carpet over the "gravity" of the episode. The column of three Israeli tanks backed off after Marine Capt. Charles Johnson, of Rock Island, Ill., pulled his weapon and loaded it in front of an Israeli lieutenant colonel, scrambled onto the commander's tank and demanded the withdrawal. Johnson told the Israelis "they would have to come over him," Pentagon officials said. The incident stood as the most dangerous to date in six or seven face-offs between Israeli soldiers and U.S. Marines serving as peacekeepers in Lebanon. The Israeli commander', not named by U.S. officials, was said to, have been involved in at least two of the previous incidents. "The recurrence of challenges to the Marines by Israeli Defense Forces is unacceptable," said State Department spokesman Alan Romberg. "We view such incidents very seriously, both because they endanger the safety of the troops involved and hamper the peacekeeping efforts of the multinationalforce." Crucial U.S.-Sino Talks begin PEKING - Secretary of State George Shultz arrived in Peking yesterday on a crucial fence-mending mission but China's foreign minister told him "dark clouds" still hung over Sino-American relations. As Shultz began a long round of talks with Foreign Minister Wu Xuegian, China's official Communist Party newspaper blasted Washington and demanded a halt to joint U.S.-South Korean was games. "This perverted action," said the People's Daily, "has seriously en- dangered stability in the Korea peninsula... .The Chinese people resolutely oppose such arrogant and reckless acts of the United States." Arriving from Tokyo for a four-day visit, Shultz told reporters on his plane that North Korea's declaration of a military alert in response to the war games was a "provocative" act that "raises the level of tension" in the Korean peninsula. But he said he saw no risk of a military "explosion." Shultz added that President Reagan dispatched him to China in the belief "there is a great need for renewal in the United States-China dialogue." Supreme Court halts prayer In Alabama public schools WASHINGTON- A Supreme Court justice yesterday ordered a halt, at least temporarily, to state-sponsored prayer sessions in Alabama public schools. Justice Lewis Powell set aside the effect of a federal judge's order that had allowed such school prayer. In the same order, Powell reinstated a previous injunction outlawing the prayer sessions. Powell's action came only hours after he was asked for help by the agnostic father of three Mobile, Ala., schoolchildren. The justice said, in effect, that Alabama officials cannot enforce a cop- troversial 1982 state law until he rules on the father's plea. The legal saga took an unexpected turn last month when U.S. District Judge Brevard Hand of Mobile ruled that federal courts are powerless to prohibit such classroom worship. Hand's ruling came in a legal challenge to a 1982 law that allows teachers to lead willing students in a prayer at the start of each class, and provides to all schools a suggested prayer. Two :charged in $11 ilionheist NEW YORK - Two men, including the lone guard'n duty at'Sentry Ar- mored Car-Courier Co. the night of an $11 million robbery, have been arrested in connection with the largest cash heist in U.S. history, the FBI announced yesterday. Lee Laster, assistant director in charge of the FBI's New York office, said Christos Potamitis, 24, of Queens, was arrested late yesterday afternoon in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Potamitis was on duty at Sentry's Bronx warehouse the night of the Dec. 12 robbery, Laster said. A man identified as his "associate," George Legakis, 21, of Brooklyn, was arrested Tuesday night, Laster said. Both were charged with bank larceny. Laster told a news conference that the two arrested men "were not acting alone." Senators demand military cuts WASHINGTON - Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici, R- N.M., said yesterday President Reagan's proposed domestic spending cuts are extreme and military spending must be reduced. Budget Director David Stockman, however, defended the 1984 budget,; saying: "There is nothing way out of balance, there is nothing drastically wrong." He hinted, however, the administration may bend a bit on militaiy spen-: ding and aid for the jobless. "There is a channel, an area, for hard and tough argument, and it cer- tainly includes the defense budget, but it (defense) is not the solution to the. problem of this budget," Stockman said. When Democractic Sen. Donald Riegle sharply questioned Stockman, a fellow Michigander, about the high unemployment in their home state, Stockman proposed taking an inventory of available government programs to help the unemployed. Vol. XCIII, No. 102 Thursday, February 3, 1983 The Michigan Daily is ed.ted 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 O'ates: $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, 763-0375!; Circulation, 764-0558: Classified Adverti'n0 7s4-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 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