4 Page 2-Sunday, February 6, 1983-The Michigan Daily Advisors pulled From AP and UPI operations. LT. COL. Richard Rapp provided SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - text of the embassy statement deal Three U.S. Army advisers were or- with Wednesday's incident, in wh dered to leave El Salvador because Staff Sgt. Jay Stanley, 25, of Tows they violated regulations during Md., suffered a leg wound from gro operations in which a Green Beret was fire. shot in a helicopter, the American Em- Stanley was the first Ameri bassy said yesterday. soldier wounded in El Salvador si A statement initially released this U.S. military advisors were sent to morning by the U.S. Embassy in San Central American nation in 1981.' Salvador also disclosed that another force is limited to 55 personnel, American military trainer went on a there were 37 advisors in the cour separate "operational" flight which Thursday. took ground fire at about the same THE STATEMENT said two heli' time. U.S. military advises have stan- ters were operating in violation of rt ding orders not to participate in such prohibiting the advisers from enter from Salvador combat operations. A source close to the Salvadoran Air Force said three U.S. advisers were in Stanley's helicopter, which was acting as an air-bound radio relay station for the Salvadoran ground troops. An embassy statement said, "The primary purpose of the flight on which Staff. Sgt. Jay Stanley was wounded was to establish direct contact with a Salvadoran army unit on a tactical operation. "IN ACCORDANCE with standing instructions, American trainers should not have participated in such an operation," the statement said. "At about the same time and in the same area, another trainer went on a different operational flight, also in violation of standing instructions. The flight also took ground fire, although fortunately no one was wounded," it said. An embassy spokesman declined to give details about the second flight or identify the people involved. The embassy said that "as a result of our findings, two warrant officers and one master sergeant have been relived of their duties by the USMILGROUP (U.S. military advisory group in El Salvador) commander and will leave the country on the next available military aircraft." Truckers warned of increased violence From AP and UPI Utah officials warned truckers to stayclose to their rigs yesterday to guard against weekend saboteurs on tfhe sixth day of a nationwide truck strike. Meat prices climbed in the Boston area and one distributor threatened layoffs. In several states, highway patrols beefed up forces, especially at night, as violent acts by truckers and non- truckers alike steadily increased. In Missouri, night patrols were increased by 20 percent for as long as the strike lasts. THE STRIKE was called last Mon- day by 'the Independent Truckers Association to protest scheduled in- creases in fuel taxes and highway use taxes. Since then, more than 1,000 acts of violence have been reported in 37 states, resulting in one death, more than 50 people injured and at least 67 arrests. The striking truckers are demanding a rollback on a five cents a gallon fuel tax hike and other road use taxes passed by Congress in December. There was no let up in the barrage of gunfire, bricks, bottles, bombs and strewn nails directed against truckers who kept their rigs rolling in defiance of the strike by the Independent Truckers Association. The association claims to represent 30,000 of the nation's 100,000 indepen- dent truckers. The independent haulers own and operate their own rigs and haul most of the nation's produce and much of its steel. The strike is opposed by the Teamsters and corporate haulers. "Congress will simply not be in- timidated," Sen. Robert Dole (R-Kan), chairman of the Senate Finance Com- mittee, said yesterday in Washington. Dole's committee helped draft the legislation, which would raise gas taxes from four cents to nine cents a gallon. Dole said he was asking the General Accounting Office, an accounting and investigative arm of Congress, to study the economic impact of increased taxes on independent truckers. the new laws would raise truckers' fees from $240 a year to $1,900 by 1989. 14 Thirst quencher! AP Photo 17-month-old Jennifer Jennings enjoys a cold drink of water after a long, hot afternoon at the Metro Zoo in Miami, Fla. The pipe is part of the zoo's sprinkler system. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Kennedy proposes liberal budget WASHINGTON-Sen. Edward Kennedy(D-Mass.), sounding like he never dropped out of the 1984 presidential race, yesterday blasted the Reagan ad- ministration and proposed hiw own wide ranging liberal agenda for economic recovery. Bringing the Democratic National Committee to its feet with an elec- trifying speech full of vintage Kennedy rhetoric, he said it is time for his par- ty to tell the "great communicator" in the White House: "We do not like what is being communicated." Kennedy's proposals included creation of a National Development Corp. that would be financed partly by public sale of bonds and tax-exempt stocks, a $5.7 billion jobs bill and legislation that would force the Federal Reserve Board to reduce interest rates. Kennedy, who has bowed out of contention for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination, also proposed restricting the growth in defense spending to five percent, capping the third year of the Reagan tax cut and repealing the law that wouldi index tax rates for inflation. The Kennedy speech dominated the weekend meeting, with many mem- bers leaving the floor after the senator spoke. Bank explosion kills two in Spain BILBAO, Spain-Basque separatist set off a powerful bomb in a crowded bank yesterday killing two employees and injuring eight in a fresh outbreak of violence following the collapse of peace talks in the troubled region. Political parties, unions and leaders of the regional government condem- ned the attack; saying it torpedoed hopes for peace in the Basque country; for more than 15 years the scene of separatist violence. A caller identifying himself as a member of the Basque terror group ETA telephoned the Bank of Vizcaya to warn a bomb was planted in its Bilbao head office; a large downtown building housing more than 600 employees. The plastic explosives device estimated by police to weigh between 15 and 22 pounds exploded three minutes later in the banks second-floor foreign ex- change department; before the building could be evacuated. Paraguayan elections labeled farce by opposition leaders ASUNCION, Paraguay-President Alfredo Stroessner, the retired army general who has ruled this country for 29 years, is running for a seventh term today in elections labeled by opposition leaders as a fare. No on doubts the 70-year-old president will win another five-year mandate by the same overwhelming majority he has claimed in past victories. Colorado officials, whose party dominates every aspect of life in this lan- dlocked country of three million people, said they expected to capture at least 89.6 percent of the vote, as they did when Stroeesner ran in 1978. The outspoken Radical Liberal Authentic Party, not recognized by the Stroessner regime, Friday asked voters to boycott the elections. The PLRA said the elections' "exclusive purpose is to guarantee the main- tenance of an autocratic system and the perpetuation of a man in power in open violation of the republican form of government called for in the national constitution." Chean government threatened SANTIAGO, Chile-The collapse of two major banks and state takeovers of five others has produced a rash of speculation about the future of President Augusto Pinochet's military regime. For the first time since the 1973 coup that felled elected Marxist President Salvador Allende, there is serious conjecture that the 67-year-old army general may be losing his iron-fisted grip on this South American country. A three-week-old financial crisis has twice forced Pinochet to interrupt his vacation-once to disprove rumors that he was either dead or under house arrest in a coup of fellow military men. Though such-stories have lost currency in recent days, the extent to which they were believed and repeated among Chileans is a sign of the widespread anger over Pinochet's handling of an economid slump. For Pinochet, the turn of fortune has been dramatic. In September 1980, when Chile's free-market economy boomed, 70 percent of the voters backed a constitutional referendum giving him nine more years in power. But his position has been undermined by a 14 percent decline in the gross national product that, in 1982, put 25 percent of the labor force out of work and bankrupted a record 810 companies: To limit damage to the financial system, the government on Jan. 13 took over seven banks burdened by uncollectable debts, liquidated two of the banks and began investigating shaky conglomerates linked to the other five. Greece warns U.S. about military aid to Turkey ATHENS, Greece-Premier Andreas Papandreou warned President Reagan in a letter released yesterday that American plans to increase military aid to Turkey could affect the outcome of talks on the future of four U.S. military bases in Greece. Papandreou, whose Socialist government wants to shut down the bases eventually, said preserving the balance of power between Greece and Turkey is crucial to reaching a new Greek-American defense cooperation agreement. i Grad women face bias at 'U, CEW conference says (Continued from Page 1) younger women with families, accor- ding to House. But House said women are up against an immovabale force when dealing with professors who are biased against women. Without the enforcement of non-discriminatory policies, it will be difficult to change these professors' behavior, he said. ANOTHER WAY to overcome the problems stemming from predominan- tly male faculties is to increase the number of tenured female professors, House added. Virginia Nordby, director of the Univeristy's Affirmative Action Office, told the audience the Regents and President Harold Shapiro are "ab- solutely committed" to women s issues.. "It is a high priority. , A very high priority," she said. Rather than spending "too much time in political activism," Nordby advised the women to study in order to over- come the barriers they face. But if they feel they are being treated unfairly, they should seek help, she said. SEVERAL MEMBERS of a four- woman panel of graduate students said a one-on-one meeting is the best way to handle problems that arise with faculty members. They also emphasized the importan- ce of support groups which help female students feel less alone and insecure. Another obstacle women face is not being taken seriously, according to Psychology Prof. Jacquelynne Eccles. "Women are perceived as dabblers rather than the tryly committed." In addition, women will often begin to believe negative evaluations of them- selves, she said. These evaluations can then turn into self-fulfilling prophecies, said Eccles. Following the workshop, Center Director Jean Campbell said she was surprised that more conference par- ticipants didn't look at institutional: change as the solution to graduate women's problems. FREE ENERGY AUDITS Have your house analyzed fo energy heat loss. We car make your house energy effi- cient. Endorsed by the Depart- Panel reviews humanities (Continued from Page 1) r n SENTINEL 54150 ENEMGY SAVING PROGRAM Designed by the USA Deportment of Energy ment of Energy. GUARANTEED SAVINGS! CALL TODAY INSURED ENERGY SAVINGS CO. 665-6887 tment's untenured professors, some of whom have long, distinguished careers.. There's a very real possibility that those professors won't make it in the transfer, he said. The review committee's recommen- dation is expected in late March, the group's chairman said. When Duder- stadt announced the review last fall, many students, faculty members, and administrators felt he jumped the gun 764-0558 4 764-0558 by reaching a foregone conclusion the department would be eliminated. But engineering Prof. William Kuhn, the committee's chairman, said, "We're not approaching it in that way. It's one of our options." Prof's wife hit by car Teresa D'Arms, wife of Prof. John D'Arms, chairman of the classics department,and daughter of British author Evelyn Waugh, remained in serious condition at University Hospital last night after being struck by a car Friday night. She was walking her dog outside the D'Arms' home at 917 Olivia when she was hit. COMPUTER TERMINALS FOR RENT $60.00 per month TIPCO 455-8133 Tomorrow there's something special brewing at Uno's * $50 PITCHER AFTER 9 PM. 7 , We're Your New DEALERI Vol. XCIII, No. 105 Sunday, February 6, 1983 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- scriptionrates: $13 September through April (2 semesters) ; $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription riates: $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. 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