4 Page 2-Sunday, March 6, 1983-The Michigan Daily Jury to rule on Belushi probe LOS ANGELES (UPI) -' One year after the death of comedian John Belushi, a prosecutor was completing preparation of evidence yesterday for a grand jury investigation he expects to result in a criminal indictment later this month. Deputy District Attorney Michael Montagna, who was presenting eviden- ce to the grand jury probing Belushi's death from a lethal dose of cocaine and heroine in a Hollywood hotel, said Friday he expected to wind up his case next week. BELUSH, 33, who gained fame playing a series of characters on TV's "Saturday Night Live" and went on to a career in movies, was found naked and dead on the bedroom floor of his bungalow in a Sunset Strip hotel March 5, 1982. A woman who" drove up to the bungalow in Belushi's red Mercedes the day of his death was taken into custody, questioned and released - despite the fact she had drug paraphernalia in her possession. She was later identified as Cathy Evelyn Smith, a Hollywood groupie. Months later, an interview with her in the National Enquirer led the district attorney to reopen the case, which police had closed two weeks after Belushi's death, concluding he had ad- ministered the fatal overdose himself. MISS SMITH, 35, of Toronto, was quoted in the tabloid as saying Belushi was injected with drugs 24 times in his last 30 hours. She said she did some of the injections for him, including the fatal dose - the "coup de grace." "I didn't mean to do it, but I was responsible for his death," Smith said in the interview. Montagna said earlier Smith could face second-degree murder charges if prosecuted, but he refused further comment Friday, citing the secrecy of grand jury proceedings. He said he has no plans to bring Smith before the grand jury. She has been living in Canada and has already refused an invitation to testify. Students protest 1984 financial aid changes Step by stepserenity AP Photo Cincinnati residents savor record-breaking weather yesterday as they relax on the downtown Serpentine Wall. The wall is a series of curved steps that lead down to the Ohio River. W., Germ ans vo crucial elections (Continued from Page 1) two small parti thousands of foreign-controlled nuclear and the envir weapons on its soil. Greens - may h( Kohl sought the election 19 months if neither ma early as a mandate for his center-right Bundestag del coalition, formed Oct. 1 after the Free nment outright Democrats ended their 13-year West Ger parliamentary alliance with the Social coalitions for Democratic Party because of its draft after World leftward and joined the Christian Democrats of Democrats. De t s RECENT PUBLIC opinion surveys Dietrich Gensl show Kohl, 52, and his'Bavarian sister port Kohl for cl party, the Christian Social Union, a few 5 percent of percentage points ahead of the Social representation Democrats in contests for the 497 seats A 5 percentv in the Bundestag, or Parliament. a party 25 B But the margin is so narrow that the higher votes representation. TONIGH Tthe election h SECOND of Western d PRESENTS ticularly the 19 Organizationd cruise and P 516 994-535, Western Europ negotiators co year. The SovietI Pact allies hv mans to show ( by voting ag te in today ies - the Free Democrats onmentalist, anti-NATO hold the balance of power jor party wins enough egates to form a gover- many has been run all but four of the year- ormed in 1949, four years tar II ended. The Free Foreign Minister Hans- cher have agreed to sup- hancellor if they win the the vote needed for in the Bundestag. vote automatically gives Bundestag seats, while produce proporational has been abroad as a test defense policies, par- 979 North Atlantic Treat decision to station 572 'ershing 2 missiles in pe unless U.S. and Soviet onclude an arms pact Union and its Warsaw e been urging West Ger- opposition to the missiles ainst Kohl's coalition, (Continued from Page 1) A second student concern this year is the Solomon Amendment, which links. student aid to draft registration. The amendment requires all men who receive financial aid after July 1 to submit proof they have registered with the Selective Service. That responsibility logically falls on student government, Hayman said, but no students from the Michigan Student Assembly will be at the conference in Washington. Instead MSA sent more than 1,800 petition signatures to Washington op- posing the Solomon Amendment, said Jono Soglin, MSA member. MSA ALSO plans to start a letter- writing drive to Washington this week to object to budget cuts and the draft law amendment, Soglin said, but atten- ding the conference is too costly. "We cut out conferences all together because there are so many of them," said MSA president Amy Moore, who attended the conference last year. "I do not think that is the way money should be wisely spent. It turns into a three-day party." Moore stressed, however, that lob- bying efforts in Washington last year were very successful, but MSA cannot foot the bill this year. INSTEAD, THE petitions, letter- writing drive, and hearings, which will examine the proposed cuts, will take place in early April. The Public Interest Research Group in Michigan, which also sent represen- tatives to the conference last year, is finding itself short of people power. "PIRGIM is focusing its efforts on the state budget cuts," said Mark Bier- sdorf, a full-time intern for PIRGIM in Lansing. Biersdorf has been lobbying for a state tax increase to prevent the state house from cutting more money from higher education. "I AM NOT belittling the federal aid problem," Biersdorf said. "I would love to go to Washington, but we have limited resources and this is where we have to put them." After Congress recesses on April 1, Biersdorf says PIRGIM can focus on the federal aid cuts. Part of the problem is that students don't perceive the proposed cuts as a big threat, said Cor Trowbridge, PIRGIM member. Because Congress didn't approve last year's cuts, studen- ts think Reagan is only bluffing and won t go through with the new proposals, she said. This view is a risk, Trowbridge said, and it has made it difficult to find students to work on the issue. "Students feel that life has gone on. We could try to get people upset about it, but it doesn't seem as urgent," she said. Poice notes Peeper startles woman A second floor Betsy Barbour resident was startled when she spotted 9 peeping Tom outside of her window last Thursday night. Campus security was called in to investigate the incident but no peepers were found. Security of- ficials believe the peeper might have climbed up a drain pipe on the side of the building. -Jackie Young Newspaper box blown USA Today, a national daily newspaper, is finding it difficult to break into the Ann Arbor market: Early Friday morning suspects blew up one of the newspaper's boxes on the corner of East University and South University. Ann Arbor Police said officers heard a noise like firecrackers exploding and when they arrived on the scene they found a fragment from the box. had broken a $300 glass door at the nearby Ann Arbor Bank and Trust. Police have no suspects. - Halle Czechowski IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Tennessee Williams eulogized ST. LOUIS-Tennessee Williams, who once called St. Louis residents "stupid and provincial," was buried here yesterday beside his mother. A gathering of family, friends, and the curious spilled out from under a green canvas tent during a light rain at Calvary Cemetary as the mahogany casket containing the body of the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright was laid to rest. Earlier, some 1,200 mourners attended a funeral Mass at the St. Louis Cathedral. Rev. Jerome Wilkerson, pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in St. Louis and friend of the Williams family, eulogized Williams as someone whose writing "seemed to be so much more therapy to others than for him- self. He did a lot of dying and apparently had very little difficulty with hating life in this world." Retiring UAW chief decides to remain on Chrysler board DETROIT-United Auto Workers President Douglas Fraser, bowing to the persistent request of Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee Iacocca, changed his mind yesterday and agreed to remain on the Chrysler Board of Directors for one year following his retirement in May. Fraser announced his decision to stand for re-election to the board at a noon news conference following a meeting with Iacocca at Chrysler headquarters. Also present were UAQ President-elect Owen Bieber and Vice-President Mark Stepp, who heads the union's Chrysler Department. Fraser's decision is a reversal of his earlier position that he would leave the board on retirement. Fraser, 66, got the seat in 1980 as part of an agreement in which UAW members agreed to concessions to help the No. 3 automaker avoid bankruptcy. Reagan urges $2.50 wage plan for nations unemployed youth SAN FRANCISCO-President Reagan said yesterday he will ask Congress this coming week to lower the minimum wage for youth in the summer and give employers tax breaks in a bid to fight unemployment. "We want to provide incentives for business to hire the long-term unem- ployed," Reagan said in his weekly radio address. Reagan said he will propose a "youth opportunity wage" of $2.50 per hour, 25 percent below the regular minimum wage of $3.35, during the summer months to allow inexperienced youngsters to "make a start in the work- place." Burford takes Reagan's advice DENVER-Environmental Protection Agency chief Anne Burford said yesterday she will follow President Reagan's orders "plain and simple," and not throw open her files to Congress. In a speech to the Colorado Federation of Republican Women, Mrs. Bur- ford admitted she was "fairly confused" by the Justice's Department's decision to withdraw from representing her before Congress on matters it is investigating. "But I will always follow the directions of this president," she said. "When you look at the economy-where it was and where it is-and his efforts to strengthen our defense, it's clear he is a fine leader. "I intend to do what he says, plain and simple," she said. "The Justice Department told me not to release this very sensitive enforcementmaterial, and until I'm told differently, that's the way it is. Two killed in Zimbabwe raid BULAWAYO,Zimbabwe-Prime Minister Robert Mugabe's security for- ces arrested hundreds of people yesterday in a bloody raid that left at least two dead and two wounded in the black suburbs where opposition leader Joshua Nkomo is under virtual house arrest, police sources and witnesses said. Plainclothesmen searched Nkomo's house for arms, an aide said in a telephone interview. "After the police ,left we heard 10 to 20 shots," the aide said. "We don't know what happened or who did what. But there's the body of a man in the street 100 yards from us." Witnesses said a number of Parliament from Nkomo's party plus a party vice chairman were among those seized in the crackdown on the suburbs that form the opposition power base. Australia's Labor Party wins SYDNEY, Australia - Former union boss Bob Hawke and his opposition Labor Party yesterday defeated Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser's conser- vative coalition, which had angered voters by failing to reverse Australia's high inflation and unemployment rates. The jubilant Hawke, a onetime world champion beer drinker, said he would celebrate his election victory with lime juice and mineral water. "I take total responsibility for the defeat," said Fraser, prime minister since 1975, during an emotional concession speech early this morning at his Melbourne hotel. Hawke, 53, campaigned on a platform of national reconciliation among unions, employers and government, embittered by years of strikes. hie Ahrbigun 19ailug Vol. XCIII, No. 121 Sunday, March 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- 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. 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