0 C Page 2-Thursday, February 17, 1983-The Michigan Daily LOSE 20 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS! Famous U. S. Women's Alpine Ski Team Diet During the non-snow off season the U.S Women's Alpine Ski Team mem- bers used the "Ski Team" diet to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That's right- 20 pounds in 14 days! The basis of the diet is chemical food action and was devised by a famous Colorado physi- cian especially for the U.S. Ski Team. Normal energy is maintained (very important!) while reducing. You keep "full" - no starvation - because the diet is designed that way. It's a diet that is easy to follow whether you work, travel or stay at home. This is, honestly, a fantastically suc- cessful diet. If it weren't, the U.-S. Women's Ski Team wouldn't be per- mitted to use it Right? So, give yourself the same break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose weight the scientific, proven way. Even if you've tried all the other diets, you owe it to yourself to try the U.S. Women's Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really do want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this out as a reminder. Send only $3.00 ($3.25 for Rush Service) - cash is O.K. - to:Ski Slim, P.O. Box 1372, Morro Bay, CA 93442. Don't order unless you expect to lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski Team Diet will do. *1982 Reagan promses jobs bill; defends besieged Gorsuch IN BRIEF From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Reagan, declaring economic recovery "is beginning to flex its muscles," said last night he hopes to sign legislation by March that will spend more than $4 billion to create 470,000 jobs for the nation's unemployed. Reagan said the jobs bill would be followed by a further program aimed at long-term economic recovery, which he hopes Congress will pass quickly. "One of the most discouraging things about the recession is its duration,'' Reagan said in ithe opening statement of his 16th formal news conference. "There is encouraging news," he said, citing a 0.9 percent jump in industrial production and a record 35.9 percent in- crease in housing starts last month. "THIS UPTURN is supported by other favorable economic reports in recent weeks," he said. "As a resultsof the economic program already in place, the recovery is beginning to flex its muscles." But Reagan said, "the question still before" the nation is how to reduce unemployment. He said he has instruc- ted his economic advisers "not to bring me just another quick fix." "We've been working toward a bipar- tisan compromise on jobs and humanitarian aid, and I hope within the next several days we can reach agreement with the Congress so a bill can be on my desk by March," he said. WHILE FINAL details are incom- plete he said it would include $4 billion for creating 470,000 new jobs directly and indirectly, $2.9 million for exten- ding unemployment insurance and $300 million in "humanitarian relief." Reagan defended the embattled ad- ministrator of the Environmental Protection Agency as both the White House and Congress said they were nearing agreement on congressional access to disputed EPA documents. Reagan said EPA head Anne Gorsuch had compiled a "splendid record" which was being overlooked in the "flurry of accusations" in recent weeks over the agency's handling of a $1.6 billion program for .hazardous waste cleanup. GORSUCH HAS been cited for con- tempt of Congress by the House for refusing under a claim of executive privilege to turn over documents relating to how the EPA used the "Superfund" in the nation's toxic waste Reagan ... economy is flexing its muscles cleanup program. There have been charges that political considerations allowed some businesses not to pay their share in cleanup operations. "I can no longer insist on executive privilege (to retain the documents) if there is a suspicion in the minds of the people that maybe it is being used to cover some wrongdoing. That we will never stand for," Reagan said. TONIGHT'S BEER NIGHT AT UNO'S ? QUART BEER 49 OUART AFTER 9 PM. PIZZA BY THE SLICE- $1.00 DAILY 11:30-2 a.m. FROZEN AND CARRY- 1321 S. UNIVERSITY OUT AVAILABLE ANN ARBOR 769-1894 restaurant and bar p S Industry rebound hins at economic recovery (Continued from Page 1) commodate a "moderate recovery" while attempting to drive'the inflation rate even lower. UNTIL HIS term ends in August, Volcker is expected to maintain the an- ti-inflation priorities he adopted when President Carter appointed him to the job in 1979. At that time, inflation had reached 13.3 percent compared to last year's 3.9 percent. If the December and January in- crease in the Fed's industrial produc- tion index are maintained, they even- tually will prompt factories to begin calling back workers, Volcker said. The Fed expects unemployment to average 9.9 percent to 10.4 percent by the fourth quarter. It was 10.5 percent in the last three months of 1982. IN ITS NEW report on industrial production, the Fed said the output of consumer goods grew a seasonally ad- justed 0.9 percent in January, reflec- ting an increase in the production of cars and home goods. Auto assemblies - at an annual rate of 5.6 million units - were about 10 percent higher last month than in December, it said. Private reports have predicted auto production will continue rising in the next few months. THE PRODUCTION of food and clothing also grew in January, although a decline was recorded in consumer energy products. The Fed reported a January surge in the production of construction supplies and of basic metals, particularly steel. The strong showing by the depressed steel industry was mostly attributed by economists to the boost in auto output. The report also said the output of defense and space equipment advanced 0.8 percent last month. OVERALL OUTPUT of products was up 0.6 percent last month, and produc- tion of materials was up 1.3 percent. But January's production rate was still 3.2 percent below the year-ago level. The Commerce Department said new houses were begun last month at an an- nual rate of 1.72 million units, the highest since the 1.83 million rate of September 1979. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Soviet troops operating missiles in Syria, Shultz says WASHINGTON - Secretary of State George Shultz said yesterday that Soviet troops are in Syria to operate Soviet SAM-5 long-range anti-aircraft missiles which Moscow recently supplied. While U.S. intelligence officials had anticipated a Soviet presence to operate the missiles, Shultz offered the first public confirmation this has happened. Appearing before the House foreign Affairs Committee, Shultz said the missiles, which have a range of up to 190 miles, don't seriously threaten Israel. "Right now it's hard to argue that there is somebody around there that really can threaten Israeli security," he said. Shultz said he has been personally assured by Syria that its troops will withdraw from Lebanon when Israeli troops leave. He said he saw a "reasonable possibility" that Jordan's King Hussein would become involved in Middle East peace talks. Shultz also said President Reagan won't retreat from his "zero option" proposal for eliminating all medium-range nuclear missiles from Europe, although he's willing to discuss Soviet counterproposals. Begin wins no-confidence vote JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Menachem Begin's coalition easily defeated three parliamentary no-confidence motions yesterday aimed at toppling the government over the Beirut massacre inquiry. The 64-56 vote, followed party lines. It was the 12th time Begin has crushed no-confidence motions since his re-election in June 1981. Reports circulated, meanwhile, that serious efforts were under way to draw Begin's Likud bloc and the opposition Labor Party together into a "national unity government" aimed at healing Israel's split over the inquiry report and the ouster of Ariel Sharon as defense minister. Both Labor and Likud appeared divided over whether to go ahead with the' union. Sharon resigned as defense minister Sunday after the inquiry commission criticized his decision last September to let Lebanese Christian militiamen in to two west Beirut refugee camps where hundreds of civilians were slaughtered. But Sharon remained in the Cabinet as a minister without por- tfolio. EPA documents to be released WASHINGTON - Top Reagan administration officials went to Capitol Hill yesterday to outline a compromise that would release disputed Environmen- tal Protection Agency documents but would limit who in Congress could see them. The documents are the focus of a half-dozen congressional investigations of the EPA and of a constitutional struggle between Congress and the White House. The administration's refusal to release them led to a contempt of Congress charge against EPA Administrator Anne Gorsuch. Administration sources, who answered questions on condition they not be named, said the basic proposal was to show the documents only to Rep. Elliott Levitas, chairman of the subcommittee that originally subpoenaed them, and the ranking Republican on his subcommittee. No one else on Capitol Hill would see the original documents in their entirety, the sources said. Meanwhile, another possible compromise was being discussed to gain congressional testimony by a fired EPA official who headed the $1.6 billion superfund toxic waste cleanup program that is the subject of the six in- vestigations underway in Congress. Australian brushfires kill 30 ADELAIDE, Australia - Brushfires driven by galeforce winds ravaged hundreds of square miles of southern Australia yesterday, killing at least 30 people and destroying more than 100 homes in one of the country's worst blazes in half a century. "We have given up trying to save homes," said one firefighter. "All we can do now is to attempt to save people." Hundreds of people were injured, including at least 30 hospitalized in serious condition, authorities said. They said at least 18 people perished in the state of South Australia - some trapped in cars, others in their homes - and at least 12 more died in the neighboring southeastern state of Victoria. U.S. sends AWACs to Egypt WASHINGTON - The United States has sent "several" AWACs planes to Egypt and has moved an aircraft carrier battle group to counter aLibyan aircraft buildup apparently aimed at the Sudan, Pentagon sources disclosed last night. The carrier Nimitz and its escorts are now operating north of the Gulf of Sidre, waters claimed by Libya but held by the United States to be inter- national. It was over that gulf that U.S. fighters shot down two Libyan planes two years ago. According to the Pentagon sources, who spoke only on condition that they not be identified, Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy has moved air units to bases in Chad, the adjacent country to the south where Libya has been supporting one faction in a civil war. Those units appear to threaten the Sudan, Chad's eastern neighbor, the sources said. Egypt has moved units of its own air force to bases in southern Egypt, nor- th of Chad, to be in a position to counter any Libyan moves, the sources said. Vol. XCIII, No. 114 Thursday, February 17, 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. C 1 I 14 4 0 Local groups plan actions against rally by neo-Nazis 0 (Continued from Page1) sponsored a non-violent counter demonstration, has not decided how it will respond this year. RABBI ALLAN Kensky, of the Jewish Community Council of Washtenaw County, which wasione of the 25 groups participating in last year's peaceful counter-demonstration, said the council will meet next week to discuss its response to the rally. "We're planning a formal response to the Nazis' annearance this year. although we're not sure what form that will take," he said. "We're upset that they're coming here." The All People's Congress, however, has already obtained a marching per- mit for a "strong and militant demon- stration" against the S.S. Action Group rally, said congress member Mike Shane. Members of the congress appeared at the Ann Arbor City Council meeting Monday night, carrying a sign that said, "We need jobs, not racism. No to the Klan and Nazis." Mayor Louis Belcher has expressed his opposition to the neo-Nazis' ap- pearance in Ann Arbor, but said he cannot prevent them or anyone from assembling a peaceful rally. 0 GESIGIA INISTHUITE TEIIEIULI IF AMICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY Partially funded by the Michigan Student Assembly, FREE copies of this informative booklet are now available at the MSA office, 3909 Michigan Union. The booklet contains information on how to prevent sexual assaults and where to get help and additional information. PICK UP YOUR COPY TODAY - EDUCATE YOURSELF AND HELP IN THE FIGHT TO MAKE THIS CAMPUS AND YOUR CITY SAFE. PMtect you Body..., Major areas of graduate study and research (M.S. & Ph.D.): Aerodynamics Aeroelasticity Bioengineering Combustion Computational Fluid Dynamics Computer-Aided Design Propulsion Structural Dynamics Structures-Composites Individual Tuition & Fees are $1,452 per calendar year. Total financial aid per calendar year: $13,452 Center of Excellence in Rotary Wing Aircraft Fellowships $14,452 Lockheed/Georgia Tech Research Assistantships Editor-in-chief......... .....BARRY WITT Monaging Editor....................... JANET RAE Opinion Page Editors................KENT REDDING DAVID SPAK University Editor................FANNIE WEINSTEIN News Editor........... GEORGE ADAMS Student Affairs Editor .BETH ALLEN Arts 'Magazine 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 Larry Mishkin, Lisa Noferi, Rob Pollard. Dan Price. Jeff Quicksilver. Paul Resnick, Wendy Rocha, Lenny Rosenbaum, Scott Salowich, John layer, Judy Walton. 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 CDIRCULATION CCORDINtATOR.,. -TIM MicRAW i I ANJ