0 4 Puge 2-Friday, February 18, 1983-The Michigan Daily Advancement Libya warns U.S. troops to keep out of bay IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports WITHOUT AN ADVANCED DEGREE College seniors. If you plan to get ajob after graduation, why not consider a profession? a In 3 months, we prepare you for careers in law, management, finance. Our 8 intensive courses are nationally recognized for high aca- demic quality. 0 Over 90% of our graduates secure jobs in their specialties. Over 5,000 graduates hold positions in law firms, banks and corporations in 110 cities. We provide a substantial tuition refund if we cannot secure a job for you in the city of your choice. Guarantee your future. Learn how the Institute can help you advance in a career. Our representative will be on campus March 11, 1983. The Institute for Paralegal Training 235 S. 17th SG Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 732-6600 Approved by the American Bar Association Operated by Para-Legal Inc.. a Pennsylvania Corporation RUM Q 1 would like to arrange an inter- view at another time. Please call me at one of the phones noted. O Please send me information about the InstituteforParalegal Training. Name Address City, State, Zip From AP and UPI Libyan strongman Col. Moammar Khadafy voted yesterday to turn the Gulf of Sidra into a "red gulf of blood" if the U.S. aircraft carrier Nimitz and its battle group dare to re-enter the disputed bay in the southern Mediterranean. In Khartoum, Sudan, President Gaafar Numeiry conferred with President Hissene Habre of Chad reportedly to discuss "foreign threats" facing the region, an allusion to war- nings last week that Libya was massing troops, armor and warplanes along the Chadian border. PRESIDENT Reagan has said there are no plans to involve U.S. forces in the region if Libya clashes with its U.S.- backed neighbor Sudan, but that American troops have a right to defend EMU fears (Continued from Page i) Porter has said that he does not want the council to consider program cuts unless declining enrollment make them necessary. "PERMANENT reductions in programs andtservicesvare not viable alternatives to achieve the budget plan," he said in a statement released last week. College Grmduation Date ( f( t t i % Present phone Permanent phone ,j I I f themselves if fired on. Two U.S. jet fighters conducting war games from the Nimitz shot down a pair of Libyan planes after being fired on over the gulf in August 1981, and the Nimitz and its battle group just com- pleted another set of maneuvers there. "Entering Sidra means an invasion of Libya. The Libyan people want to live as free people and won't accept foreign occupation. The Gulf of Sidra will turn into a red gulf of blood if anyone tries to sail through it by force," Khadafy told his Parliament in the Libyan capital of Tripoli. IN AN address carried by Libya's of- ficial JANA news agency, he warned that the U.S. Navy, operating north of the Gulf of Sidra "forms a challenge to the Libyan nation. The Libyan people won't stand and watch idly if pushed too far." reductions Buchanan said the council will look at services and university efficiency but will not review academic programs to achieve the necessary cuts. "No per- manent change is to come out of this cut," she said. The council is not sure if the ultimate problem will be lack of immediate cash because of deferrments or lack of money because of actual cuts, said Ira Wheatley, head of the Department of History and Philosphy. "The basic question is: How much is the reduction going to be?" he said. THE COUNCIL has not yet gotten in- to the "meat of the problem," he said. "All we can do is wait for the governor to act." Buchanan said the council's final recommendation will hinge on Blan- chard's proposed tax increase. If it is approved soon, she said, state in- stitutions will receive more money and EMU's problems would be reduced. the council has been asked to recommend budget reductions by April 11. Corrections Peace Now, an Israeli peace movement, was incorrectly identified as a pacifist organization in a story in yesterday's Daily. Gur Offer, who represented the group on campus Wed- nesday night, asked American Jews to support the state of Israel but not necessarily its present government, as the Daily also incorrectly stated. Virginia Nordy was incorrectly quoted in yesterday's Daily as saying "The basic problem is that (gays) have asked me to give them some ad- vice ... " The quotation shouldmhave read, "The basic problem is that (the administration) asked me to give them some advice." kinko's copies Our Xerox 9500 offers offset quality & fast service '-4 >= OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 540 E. Liberty St.-761-4539 Corner of Maynard & liberty kinko's cnio kinko's copies Factory use boosts economy WASHINGTON-Factory use is up for the first time in nearly a year, and fewer Americans are filing initial jobless claims, the government said yesterday. The reports spurred wider agreement that the recession has en- ded. The new indicators followed President Reagan's claim a night earlier that "as a result of the economic program we already have in place, the recovery is beginning to flex its muscle." There is far from universal agreement about who should get credit for recovery-or blame for the long recession-but there no longer seems any doubt the rebound is under way. Commenting after yesterday's reports were released, private analyst Allen Gutheim said, "Everybody's very upbeat all of a sudden." Other officials and analysts had similarly encouraging comments after Wednesday reports that showed industrial production rising a strong 0.9 percent in January while new housing construction was leaping a record 36 percent. EPA staffer defies subpoena WASHINGTON-Rita Lavelle, former head of the Environmental Protec- tion Agency's much-investigated hazardous waste program,defied a House supboena yesterday and was warned she may be held in contempt if she con- tinues to defy "the will of the Congress." Rep. John Dingell, (D-Mich), chairman of the House Energy and Com- merce investigatins subcommittee, said Lavelle-who was fired by President Reagan last week-will be given one more chance to cooperate with his panel's investigation into the $1.6 billion "superfund" program. If she still refuses to appear, he said, she likely will be voted in contempt. "The patience of the committee is wearing somewhat thin," said Dingell. "We will not tolerate acts which frustrate the will of the Congress." Meanwhile Embattled Environmental Protection Agency chief Anne Gor- such met with President Reagan yesterday as the White House and Congress neared agreement giving a House panel access to disputed agency files. Gary Hart to run for president DENVER - Sen. Gary Hart (D-Colo.) announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination yesterday, saying he wants to be a people's president and help "break the grip" of special interest government. Hart, 45, stood on the west steps of the state Capitol and told an en- thusiastic crowd he wants to be a "president on the people's side." His speech to about 800 people gathered under cloudless skies was interrupted by applause at least a dozen times. Hart joined Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Dalif.) as an official entry in the race for the Democratic nomination. Several other candidates, including former Vice President Walter Mondale, are scheduled to announ'ce next week. "We now face a stark choice between national renewal or national decline," said Hart, flanked by his wife, Lee, and children, Andrea and John. "Our problems worsen while some retreat to an unfair past and others debate old remedies and contend over shopworn policies." Transfusions may help diabetes BOSTON - Researchers have discovered that ordinary blood transfusions will prevent juvenile diabetes in laboratory animals, and say it may someday provide a way of eliminating the disease in humans. The doctors found that a few transfusions early in life from a type of rats that never get juvenile diabetes will completely stop development of the disease in rats that have a genetic weakness for it. The researchers cautioned, however, that more research is necessary before doctors try this simple therapy to prevent diabetes in humans suscep- tible to juvenile diabetes. "We feel at the present time that we should not make the quantum leap from rat work to human work," said Dr. Aldo Rossini. "But this could be a plausible approach in the future." The study was directed by Rossini at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. It was published in last Friday's issue of the journal Scien- ce. Unlike the more common adult form of the disease, juvenile diabetes often strikes its victims in early adolescence. It destroys the ability to make in- sulin, a hormone necessary for the body to use and store sugar. Police hunt fugitive in N.Dakota ASHLEY, N.D.-A convoy of police officers swooped into this prairie town of 1,200 people yesterday, sealed off the highways and searched several houses in another futile attempt to capture an anti-tax militant accused of killing two U.S. marshals. An FBI agent accused "irresponsible" news reports of tipping the fugitive, Gordon Kahl, 63, that the police were heading for the town about 10 miles from the South Dakota border. The convoy of about 50 to 60 officers left an FBI command center in Jamestown just after dawn, warning reporters not to follow or risk being stopped by state police. The police rolled into Ashley before 9 a.m. and set up a command post behind the McIntosh County Courthouse. Authorities say Kahl was active in Posse Comitatus, a right-wing paramilitary organization that opposes federal taxation. Reporters who tried to follow the convoy were stopped at North Dakota Highway Patrol roadblocks on the four main highways leading into Ashley. But several reporters managed to get into town on back roads. The FBI agent in charge of the operation, Richard Blay, said afterwards he believed Kahl was there but fled when reports were aired that the police convoy had left Jamestown. i1 z i t a } t M i 3 4 r i g t 1 4 K t { M s 4 d V i t t t t 4 a M e k t A E i 7 i ,i i I 1 1 M } E i 7 1 1 Name _ Address Why not Sublet Your Lease Phone 1 through i 1 Summer Sublet Supplement I Mail or Bring in Person with payment to i 420 MAYNARD STREET MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vol. XCIII, No. 115 Friday, February 18, 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. 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