6 Page 2-Thursday, March 10, 1983-The Michigan Daily RHA votes against Campbell' By JACKIE YOUNG Campbell's soup lovers in University dormitories can still expect Campbell's products to be served, as the result of a Residence Hall Association vote last night against a University food service boycott of Campbell's products. The RHA voted last month to invite a Campbell's spokesperson to come speak to the group after listening to claims made by a University group pushing for better working and living conditions for migrant farm workers in Ohio. On March 2, Campbell's Director of Public Relations Scott Rombach ad- dressed the group, arguing that Cam- pbell's is being singled out unfairly by. FLOC (Farm Labor Organizing Com- mittee). "We're (Campbell's) being singled out in this social scenario. We're not an anti-union, anti-socially concerned company," he said. Rombach told the group that Cam- pbell's does not employ farm workers nor have they ever done so in the past. "Legally we can't negotiate with migrants because they are not em- ployees," Rombach said. He added, however, that about 130 migrant workers are employed by farmers who Are contracted by the company. CAMPBELL'S is the third largest tomato grower in Ohio, behind Hunts boycott and Heinz, said Rombach. But because the company's red and white cans are more visible on supermarket shelves, FLOC has chosen to pick on Cam- pbell's, he said. A bil lhas been introduced in the Ohio legislature which would allow agricultural workers to organize unions. Both FLOC and Campbell's support the bill. A similar bill has already been adopted in California. Notre Dame University has already initiated a similar boycott against Campbell's but 30 universities nation- wide have rejected the Campbell's boycott. The RHA vote was 13-3, with nine abstentions. AT LAST night's meeting, Dave Monks of the University's FLOC sup- port group, said he was "disgusted" with the way the RHA has handled the issue. By not letting a FLOC represen- tative speak after Rombach, he said the RHA gave Campbell's an "unfair ad- vantage." Monks also said that FLOC members were denied admittance to last week's RHA meeting when Campbell's presen- ted its side of the issue. "RHA violated my rights as a University resident at the last meeting, by not letting me attend. I don't think RHA represents the views or is the true voice of the students on campus," he said. BUT RHA Vice President Pam Mc- Cann said the incident last week was "a misunderstanding" and that as a resident, Monks does have the right to attend any RHA meeting. Monks also protested an RHA decisionnot to have Biology Prof. John Vandermeer speak to the group. Van- dermeer has written a bookconthe tomato industry and taught a class on migrant workers at the University, said Monks. According to Monks, FLOC presently has support groups in 43 cities across the country and is supported by numerous groups including the Ohio Council of Churches, AFSCME, the United Church of Christ, and the United Auto Workers. Fancy Footwork This student appears to have found a new way to sit on the window ledge near Angell Hall Auditoriums. Authorities say they know Tylenol murderer s identity SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State.........668-9329 East U. at South U......662-0354 Arboriand...............971-9975 Maple Village.........761-2733 CHICAGO (AP) - Federal and state investigators believe they know who killed seven Chicago-area people with cyanide-spiked Tylenol, but lack the evidence needed to make an arrest, a published report said yesterday. Investigators targeted a Chicago- area man as the prime suspect about Oct. 9, less than two weeks after the deaths of seven Chicago-area people who took cyanide-filled Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules, according to USA TODAY, a national newspaper which made its debut in Chicago yesterday. The newspaper quoted an uniden- tified source close to the case as saying, "We know who did it. We just have to prove it." THE SOURCE would not identify the MEDICAL SCHOOL OPENINGS Immediate Openings Available in Foreign Medical School Fully Accredited ALSO AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL AND VET SCHOOL LOANS AVAILABLE INTERVIEWS BEGIN IMMEDIATELY For further details and/or appointment call Dr. Manley (716) 832-0763 / 882-2803 suspect or the evidence being sought or say why an arrest has not been made, the newspaper said. Spokesmen for the FBI and Chicago police, both of which have played major roles in the investigation, denied knowledge of such a suspect. "I don't know where the heck they're getting that from," said FBI spokesman Anthony DeLorenzo. But he stopped short of calling the report false. "I DON'T want to say it's erroneous - that's not proper to do," DeLorenzo said. "The newspaper may have talked to somebody who said something like that. We have suspects, just like in any other case. But we don't have any hot suspects like this article would in- dicate." Chicago police Lt. August Locallo said his department knows nothing about a prime suspect either. He said the police, whose investigation of the case he has headed, have no suspect "at all" resembling the one in the USA TODAY report. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Mansour gets Senate approval LANSING - Sister Agnes Mary Mansour officially became Michigan's welfare director yesterday with a vote of confidence from the Senate out- weighing efforts of anti-abortion forces to oust her from the job. But the Roman Catholic nun's future as the chief of Michigan's largest state agency remains in doubt despite the 28-9 Senate vote to confirm her. She is under orders by Detroit Archbishop Edmund Szoka to resign for failing to condemn state funding of abortions for welfare recipients. The question of Sister Mansour's ability to keep the job granted her by Gov. James Blanchard may ultimately be decided in the Vatican. Her religious order, the Sister of Mercy, said last week she can keep her post. The vote to confirm the nun came after an hour of emotional debate-on the abortion issue and followed by a one-day Senate confirmation hearing described by many as a "three-ring circus." During the committee meeting, she maintained her stand of personally opposing abortions, while tolerating funding for the procedure for poor women. Sister Mansour, the president of Mercy College in Detroit, said she was "very pleased" by the confirmation. Demonstrators protest as Carter visits West Bank BETHLEHEM, Israeli-occupied West Bank - Jewish settlers and Israeli soldiers yesterday battled rock-throwing Palestinian youths protesting the visit of former President Jimmy Carter. Police and army spokesmen said five Israelis were injured by stones in three demonstrations near Hebron, and 13 Palestinians were arrested in the Arab sector of Jerusalem after they stoned police cars and staged an anti- Carter march. Israel radio said Carter eliminated a tour of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem because of the large number of Arabs gathered out- side the church. Though violence swirled around Carter, he never saw any of it, said a U.S. official in his entourage.; In Bethlehem, Israeli civilians and a soldier fired pistols and an automatic weapons after they came under a barrage of stones near town hall an hour before Carter arrived, witnesses said. No one was reported injured. Pope stops in Haiti, ends trip PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haita - Pope John Paul II offered "words of comfort and hope" for the world's poor and criticized "aggressive proselytism" by other religions yesterday in a whirlwind conclusion of his visit to Central America and the Caribbean. "It is a question of having a dignified standard of living," the pope said in remarks prepared for delivery at a eucharistic congress in Haiti, the Western Hemisphere's most destitute country and the last stop on his eight- nation tour. The church does not "want to accuse and point out what is wrong" but desires "to contribute positively toward development, especially with leaders," he added. John Paul flew across the Caribbean to Haiti after a two-hour visit to English-speaking Belize, formerly the colony of British Honduras. Ad- dressing a crowd of 30,000 there, he spoke in favor of "ecumenism" between Catholics and other Christians but warned against "aggressive proselytism that disturbs and hurst, sometimes with unworthy procedures." Reagan: more Salvadoran aid WASHINGTON - President Reagan will announce his decision on emergency military aid for El Salvador in a speech today, an ide said. But Speaker Thomas O'Neill asserted Reagan does not have the votes to win House approval for any increase. Reagan met with Republican congressional leaders and foreign policy ad- visers, including Secretary of State George Shultz, as he prepared to make final decisions on help for the war-torn Central American nation, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said. Reagan will announce the decision in a major address today to a meeting of the National Association of Manufacturers in a Washington hotel, Speakes said. "The subject will be Central America and El Salvador," he said. The president has been reviewing options for increasing aid to Salvadoran forces for more than a month. Since the start of March, Reagan and his top aides have voiced heightened concern almost daily. Gunmen attack Turkish official BELGRADE, - Two Armenian gunmen ambushed the Turkish am- bassador as he sat in his car waiting for a stoplight yesterday, critically wounding him in a fusillade of bullets that killed an innocent bystander.. One of the gunmen was wounded and captured, the other escaped. The Ambassador, Galip Balkar, 47, was rushed to a hospital, where he un- derwent emergency brain surgery. Doctors listed his condition as critical. Balkar also suffered shoulder and spinal injuries. The fleeing gunmen opened fire on bystanders, including an armed off- duty policeman, who gave chase and returned fire. In Athens and Paris, a group calling itself "Justice Fighters Against the Armenian Genocide" claimed responsibility for the shooting. Vol. XCIII, No. 124 Thursday, March 10, 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. I 10 Parsons School of Design Summer in France/Italy/Japan Parsons in Paris e July 1-August 13 Paint on the Left Bank, explore prehistoric caves in the Dordogne, visit the masterpieces of Renaissance Art in Tuscany. Courses include: Painting, Drawing, French History, Language & Literature, Landscape Painting & Pre- historic Anthropology. Cost for the 6-week program including 9 credits of study, round trip airfare and double occupancy accommodations with continental breakfast ranges from $2650 to $2775 depending on choice of location for the last two weeks (Dordogne or Siena). Photography in Paris 0 July 1-30 Study the practice of the medium in the "City of Light" with American and French photographers. Extensive darkroom facilities are available on the Parsons campus. The program is co-sponsored by the Interna- tional Center of Photography and coincides with the Rencontres Internationales de la Photographie in Arles. Program costs including 6 credits of study, round trip airfare and double-occupancy accommodations with continental breakfast range from $2075 to $2600, depending on choice of housing. Studies in the History of Architecture, Interior Design and European Decorative Arts@" July 1-30 This program is offered in collaboration with the world famous Musee des Arts Decoratifs. The museum's staff supplements the Parsons faculty with specialized presentations thatinclude aspects of the museum's collection normally not available to the general public. Excursions to points outside of Paris include Versailles, Fountainebleau and Vaux le Vicomte. Courses offered: The History of French Architecture, Studies in European Decorative Arts. The program costs, including 6 credits of study, round trip airfare and double-occupany accommodations in a 4-star hotel are $2600. Fashion Design in Paris " July 1-30 Study the history and contemporary trends of French fashion design in Paris under the supervision of museum staff and practicing designers. The curriculum includes visits to textile showrooms and presentations of fashion collections. Courses offered: The History of European Costume, Contemporary Trends in French Fashion. Program costs, including 6 credits of study, round trip airfare and double-occupancy accommodations range from $2075 to $2600 depending on choice of housing. Italian Architectural History and Contemporary Design e June 30-July 29 The architectural past and present of Italy is studied in Rome, Florence and Venice where on-site presenta- tions are made by Parsons faculty. Contemporary Italian architectural, interior and industrial design are studied through guest presentations made by leading Italian designers. Courses offered: The History of Italian Architecture, Studies in Contemporary Italian Design. The program costs, including 6 credits of study, round trip airfare and double-occupany housing in first class hotels including continental breakfast and all land transfers are $3150. Summer Workshops in Japan Clay Fibers, Metal e July 20-August 28 Courses in ceramics, fibers, metals and the history of Japanese crafts are held under i e supervision of master Japanese craftsmen and i. 4mbers of the Parsons faculty in Tokyo, Kyoto an Inbe (Bizen). Workshops are supplemented by viss to local museums, Japan's famous hillside kiln sites, textile facilities and metalsmithing shops. The fee for six academic credits, roundtrip airfare from New York and double-occupancy accommodations in deluxe hotels and guesthouses is estimated to be $2925 to $3475 depending on the field of study. Editor-in-chief......................BARRY WITT Managing 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 son Faye. Chris Gerbosi, Paul Helgren. Steve Hunter. Doug Levy. Tim Makinen, Mike McGraw. Rab Pollard Dan Price. Paul Resnick. Scott Salowich. Amy Schiff. Paulo Schipper, Adam Schwartz, John Toyer, 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 I For more information and a brochure, please send the coupon below or call the Office of Special Programs: (212) 741-8975. 15 ,. , _s . . .. .. r ......aa.... ta ean e h n h :r ll n .-