0 Page 2-Wednesday, February 16, 1983-The Michigan Daily Palestinian parliament to decide on peaceplan From AP and UPI ALGIERS, Algeria - One of Yasser Arafat's chief aides said yesterday that the Palestinian exile parliament will adopt a "clear-cut resolution" on President Reagan's Middle East peace initiative at its meeting this week. Abu Jihad, Arafat's deputy military commander in the Fatah guerrilla organization, refused to elaborate. But Ahmed Abdel Rahman, the Palestine Liberation Organization's chief spokesman and one of PLO chairman Arafat's closest aides, told a news conference: "The Reagan plan has definitely not been rejected outright." THE 400-MEMBER Palestine National Council opened a week-long session Monday to consider various Middle East proposals, and Arafat's moderate majority clashed openly and acrimoniously on the sidelines with a Moscow-influenced, hard-line minority opposed to peace moves through Jordan's King Hussein. But the pragmatic approach of the PLO chief was virtually certain of overwhelming support. Abu Jihad and Abdel Rahman acknowledged that there were sharp differences among the PLO leaders, but Abdel Rahman told reporters these "are being narrowed, and the council's resolutions committee is drafting compromise wording that will unite all ranks of the Palestinian revolution. Meanwhile, Lebanese army troops marched into east Beirut yesterday in a move President Amin Gemayel hopes will reassert government control over the stronghold of the Israeli-backed Lebanese Christian militia for the first time in eight years. THE 1,600 Lebanese army troops were deployed across east Beirut without incident, but still faced the tough task of neutralizing the Christian militia forces who have vowed not to disarm until all foreign troops, especially Syrians and Palestinians, leave Lebanon. The Christian militiamen, who have controlled east Beirut since the 1975-76 civil war, stayed off the streets while the army took up positions. "The world is watching us to judge the quality of the Lebanese state and whether it is able to rise again," Gemayel told the troops before they moved into east Beirut about two hours after midnight. FOR TOP QUALITY SUMMER CAMPS IN BEAUTIFUL MAINE Minimum Age Required: 20 a June 19 to August 22 Salary Range: $650 to $1000 based on 'experience & qualifications plus Free Room, Board, Laundry, Travel & Clothing Allowance for Counselors with teaching ability in one or more'of the following: Archery, Arts & Crafts, Canoeing, Archery. Baseball, Basketball. Ca- Dance, Dramatics, Fencing, Golf, noeing, Computers. Football. Golf, Gymnastics, Overnight Camping. Karate, Lacrosse. Overnight Camp- Piano/Song Leader, Riding (English), ing, Riding (English), Riflery, Sailing. Riflery, Sailing, Scuba, Swimming Scuba, Shop/Crafts, Soccer, Swim- (WSI), Team Sports, Tennis, Water Ski- ming (WSI), Tennis, Trampoline, Wa- ing Also Dining Room Supervisor & ter Skiing, Wind Surfing, Also Office Office Staff/Typists Working married Staff/Typists Working married cou- couples without children welcomed pies without children welcomed Call or Write Immediately for application: CAMP SOMERSET CAMP COBBOSSEE for GIRLS for BOYS 180 East End Avenue P.O. Box 99. Mianus Drive New York. N.Y. 10028 Bedford, N.Y. 10506 (212) 744-3420 (914) 234-9773 U of M ski special.111 Now you can ski at the resort with more... for less. From Feb. 18-27, Schuss Mountain is offering a spring break special. For just $32 per person per day, you get lodging in a village room, plus an all-area lift ticket. That's a savings of up to $11! Good midweek or weekend. And, up to six can stay in the same room. Schuss Mountain offers 14 slopes, five lifts, ski lessons and rentals, 19 kilometers of cross-country trails, plus the great new Ivanhof Restaurant and Meeting Center. And, best of all, the snow's great right now. So come up to the new Schuss Mountain. You ought to ski us now. AP Photo PLO leader Yasser Arafat's top aids said yesterday at a Palestinian Parliamentary meeting that he would seriously consider President Reagan's Middle East peace initiative. The exiled parliament held its meeting in Algeria. Financial aid cuts in proposed 1984 budget, (Continued from Page 1) loan program, but no definite plans need. The self-help grant would tie the have been made, Grotrian said. cost of attending a particular institution STUDENTS REJECTED from to the amount of federal money a federal grants can try to find non-work student could receive. study jobs or obtain loans. But under This is good news for more expensive the Reagan plan, qualifying for a GSL schools like the University - which would be more difficult. Now, if a costs $6,100 a year for residents and family can't fulfill its expected con- $10,000 for non-residents - because tribution a student's GSL can make up students would be able to receive larger for it. Under Reagans proposal the loan grants. cannot replace the family contribution, But students at less expensive schools said Elaine Nowak, director of the like community colleges would receive University's GSL program. smaller grants than they do now. ANOTHER SERIOUS PROBLEM GROTRIAN SAID the proposal is bet- with Reagan's proposed changes Nowak ter than expected because the Pell said, is the huge increase in paperwork Grant cuts will be offset with an in- to process GSL applications. This crease in work study funds, but he is translates into more delays for students concerned about middle income studen- especially if a needs test is administered ts who won't qualify for either federal for every application. aid or work study. Added to this is the draft law "We're especially concerned about amendment which will require all the needs of non-residents, who are financial aid recipients to be registered closed out of the traditional Pell Grant with the Selective Service. No GSLs will program,"'Grotrian said. "The Univer- be processed without proof of sity is developing alternative sources registration, which means even more for these students." piling up of applications Nowak said. The University is considering its own It's going to be insane," she said. East Quad gets chalk art IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports State may settle creationism controversy out of court LANSING-A meeting between State School Superintendent Phillip Runkel and the chief of Jackson County's Western schools yesterday spurred optimism that Michigan's leading creationism controversy can be resolved out of court. Western Superintendent Robert Bass declined to go beyond a terse statement released through the state Education Department, but a spokeswoman in his office said officials "expect it to be worked out" without the state filing suit. Further meetings are planned. Runkel's meeting with Bass came one week after release of a state report concluding that the Western district was improperly teaching creationism-the Biblical version of the origins of life-as a science. A panel of state and independent experts who reviewed the "Controversies in Science" unit of the district's advanced high school science course con- cluded that it made a "biased presentation toward creationism." Gorsuch says most of EPA criticism is 'harassment' WASHINGTON-The head of the Environmental Protection Agency, which is being investigated by a half-dozen congressional committees, yesterday characterized much of the criticism of EPA as "political harassment." Ann Gorsuch, however, told the Senate environmental and public works committee that the EPA will act "aggressively" to clean up the nation's worst toxic waste sites. Gorsuch told a Senate committee that opponents have refused to acknowledge that the EPA can do anything right and, instead, have fired barbs to gain publicity themselves. Noting the.rash of criticism directed at her agency, she said: "Nobody can be that wrong all that much all the time. Personally, I have to finally judge that a great deal of it is political harassment. "You know the old rules," she continued. "You harass, delay, destroy, and finally stop. The only thing that makes me very upset is that this type of harassment probably will impede our progress toward our goal, which is cleaning up America under superfund." Temperatures shoot up in East Winter about-faced in the East yesterday with a flow of 50-degree tem- peratures that shrank mountains of dirty snow dumped by the Blizzard of '83-but left a commuter's nightmare of slushy, bottlenecked roads. The mercury soared in eastern cities buried by up to 3 feet of snow in last weekend's blizzard, blamed for at least 71 deaths. Early afternoon mercury soared to 51 in Washington, 50 in Baltimore and 41 at Philadelphia. Tem- peratures near 50 were forecast in New York. Only about 1,000 miles of Philadelphia's 2,600 miles of streets had been cleared, with another 800 miles were listed as passable, in an operation that had already cost the city more than $2.5 million. Philadelphia got more than 21 inches of snow in the blizzard, a record for the city. By contrast, New York City had cleared practically all of its 6,000 miles of streets at a cost of about $5 million. Lucious Riccio, an assistant sanitation commissioner in New York, calculated that with 20 inches or more of snow falling on the city, about 100 million cubic yards were cleared from the streets. State prison under lockdown MARQUETTE-Inmates at Marquette State Prison were under a "partial lockdown" yesterday because of two disturbances in which four guards were injured by rebellious inmates. In the most serious incident, nine dangerous inmates overpowered three guards in segregated Housing Unit B Monday at the end of a scheduled exer- cise period. Assistant Warden Paul Maynard said the prisoners attacked without war- ning, taking the guards' keys, which can open half the cells in the block. Maynard said the inmates had control of the keys for about 12 minutes before the disturbance was brought under control by guards with shotguns. The three guards were treated for cuts and bruises. Maynard described the uprising as "potentially serious." "We can only assume they intended to free the other prisoners," Maynard said. "The apparent goal was to take control of the housing unit." Soviets test-fire new missile WASHINGTON-The Soviet, Union has fired a new intercontinental ballistic missile in a test which could raise questions about whether Moscow is violating the unratified SALT II nuclear arms treaty, U. S. intelligence sources said late yesterday. Officials said a small, solid-fuel missile was launched Feb. 8 from Plesetsk and that preliminary analysis of information picked up by American monitoring equipment suggests it may have been the first successful test of a second new Soviet ICBM. "It was a missile we haven't seen before," said one of the sources, who spoke only on condition they not be named. U. S. officials confirmed last December that the Soviets had test-fired a medium-sized, solid-fuel ICBM. The SALT II treaty specifies that the Soviet Union and the United States may flight-test and deploy only one new type of ICBM, which must be a light one, according to a July 21, 1979, letter signed by then-Secretary of State Cyrus Vance in submitting the treaty to President Carter. 0 be fichrigan 19at'1V Vol. XCIII, No. 113 Wednesday, February 16, 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- 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 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 Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 4 6 S cuss U) untaip Mancelona, MI49659 For reservations call 800-632-7170, toll free. (Continued from Page 1) LIM STARTED THE memo board drawings two weeks ago when he recreated the back cover of the Boom- town Rat's album, The Fine Art of Sur- facing for a friend. "It was just a spur of the moment thing," Lim said. Since then, Lim has reproduced album covers from Split Enz, Elvis Costello, XTC, English Beat, and the Stray Cats,and several famous works of art. He also drew an Argyle sock pat- tern on the memo board of two "sorority girls," he said. LIM'S ART HAS escaped the usual grafitti and vandalism that most dorm memo boards are victims to. So far no one has even run a finger through his work, Lim said. The only drawing that has disap- peared Lim erased himself, to put up another drawing. Residents have responded positively to Lim's work, said Hinsdale resident Mary Toole, and the drawings may even promote unity among the residen- ts. "Everyone is protecting everyone else's chalkboards," Toole said. The only problem with the drawings, she added, is that people who want to leave notes have to write on the doors. Lim, from southwest Detroit went to a small Catholic school. As a high school student there, he was not serious about art. "I took normal art classes that everybody else took," he said. "I never took it seriously." Last year Lim was ready to pursue a premed curriculum, he said. But driving home from a concert he had a sudden inspiration to become a com- mercial artist. At that point, he became serious, he said. "But I'm still growing," he ad- ded. Now Lim wants to enroll in the art school. He calls his drawings "My homework-for the art school." Lim hopes to graduate from the art school and move to New York, he said. 6 S YOUR PRODUCTIVITY WITH ()NE MOVE. 'a Ijau fctwring Data 5'stern s In icorporated has the technlO'gya1 n/d the momentumtnto take you u'here o U'ant to go. As part of the Schlumberger family of companies, MDSI creates software systems that recolitioniZe the world of C_ 'A, ( - the rapidly expanding field of Compuiter-Aide'd Design and Compute'r-Aided \anufa turing. OUr own numeri cal machine control language, COMPACT11 , has hecome the interna- t ional sta.nda rd. And o r softtwxare pax kage-' arc Imniprovingzt he produc tivcityv of thousands of mintifacturers around the world. If you want to go places, make the move to MIDSI. You'll join us in a period of continued growth and on-going product development - where your own produr- tivity will be hallenged and enhanced bc the work \ou'll create. Currently we're looking for graduates in Computer ScienCe, Software, and lanufactturing/industrial Engineering aniu'-. to pursue careers in: INTERACTIVE GRAPHICS INFORMATION SERVICES tO' COMPUTE R-AIDED \IA>A, FACR .RING COMPUT ER-AIDED DESIGN SOFTAARE DEVELOPMENT TOOLS If VoL ~is us on campus, but would like to know more about us, pease contact your placement office or send your re-uine to Director of College Recruiting, ianufaCturing Data S'rems Incorporated, P.O. Iox. ' f8, 42 H ilynouth Road, Ann Arbor, \Michigan 48 10. An e >ual .pportunit emplover m f v h. u Ann Arbor Court Club invites you to share in the celebration of our Seventh Anniversary! For seven years, we've helped people like yourself enjoy healthier, happier and longer lives by providing supervised physical conditioning. We want you to experience what Ann Arbor Court Club is all about - so we've set a special anniversary sale price of 70% off our initiation fees. That's right, 70% off! We have the area's largest Nautilus cent; offering both a spacious coed area, a private women's only facility and the extras of an olympjC free- weight room. You can enjoy unlimited useof our ten racquetballcourts; relax in our coed whirlpool or ease back in one of two dry saunas. We provide the specialties of a teache-supervised nursery, a traied Ann Arbor Court Club 2875 Boardwalk Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 O624243 Editor-in-chief........ . .......BARRY WITT Managing Editor--------------------..JANET RAE Opinion Page Editors--------------KENTREDDING DAVID SPAK University Editor...-.........FANNIE WEINSTEIN News Editor-------------------..GEORGE ADAMS Student Affairs Editor .................. BETH ALLEN Arts/Mogazine Editor..................BEN TICHO Associate Arts/Magazine Editors ...... LARRY DEAN MARE HODGES SUSAN MAKUCH Sports Editor. . ...-...... .......JOHN KERR Associate Sports Editors............JIM DWORMAN LARRY FREED CHUCK JAFFE Larry Mishkin, Lisa Noferi, Rob Pollard, Dan Price, Jeff Quicksilver. Paul Resnick. Wendy Rocha. Lenny Rosenbaum, Scott Salowich, John Toyer, Judy Wolton, Karl Wheatley, Chuck Whitman. Rich Wiener, Steve Wise, BUSINESS MANAGER........SAM G. SLAUGHTER IV SALES MANAGER....................MEG GIBSON CLASSIFIEDS MANAGER.....-.........PAM GILLERY OPERATIONS MANAGER-........LAURIE ICZKOVITZ DISPLAY MANAGER..................JEFF VOIGT NATIONAL MANAGER-................GITA PILLAI FINANCE MANAGER...-.............MARK HORITA ASSISTANT DISPLAY MANAGER-..... NANCY GUSSIN ASSISTANT FINANCE MANAGER........JOE TRULIK SALES COORDINATOR--------.E. ANDREW PETERSEN 4 . .I