The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 10, 1983-Page 3 Reagan warns of Soviet buildup From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - In a blaze of or- chestrated publicity, the ad- ministration yesterday issued a report which President Reagan said gives Americans the "straight facts" on a Soviet buildup to military superiority on the ground, in the oceans, the air and even space. "The Soviets have not slowed the pace of their enormous military buildup," said the president in a statement put out by the White House minutes before Weinberger presented the 107-page report at a Pentagon news conference. The timing coincided with corpmittee starts in both the House and Senate on the defense budget. "In little over a year," said Reagan, the Soviets "have begun testing new models in almost every class of nuclear weapons. "THEY ARE dramatically expan- ding their navy and air force and are training and equipping their ground forces for pre-emptive attack, and are using their military power to extend tieir influence and enforce their will in every corner of the globe," Reagan said. In the report, reflecting developmen- ts over the past 18 months, Weinberger wrote that "the facts . . . leave no doubt as to the U.S.S.R.'s dedication to achieving military superiority in all fields," including space warfare. Defense officials said they planned to print about 300,000 of the red-and-white- covered booklets for distribution. DESIGNED TO attract readers in the general public as well as Congress, it is filled with multi-colored sketches, photographs, illustrations and easy-to- read charts. Publication of the booklet is part of an intensified administration campaign to win support for its $1.6 trillion rear- mament effort at a time when Congress, former government officials and even defense contractors are at- tacking the level of military spending. Congress has threatened to reduce the proposed $238.6 billion defense budget for fiscal year 1984 by as much as $30 billion. The proposed budget is 10 percent higher than last year. THE HOUSE Foreign Affairs Com- mittee voted 27-9 Tuesday to adopt a resolution urging a mutual and verifiable freeze on nuclear weapons. House Republican leader Bob Michel told President Reagan yesterday the House probably will pass a nuclear freeze resolution, despite * ad- ministration warnings that the move would increase the danger of war. "I'm afraid it will pass," the Illinois Republican said he told Reagan during a White House meeting with congressional GOP leaders. "That's the way I read it in the tea leaves up there (on Capitol Hill)." MICHEL SAID Reagan "obviously did not like" his prediction. The resolution calls upon the ad- ministration to use the START talks for the purposes of "pursuing a complete halt to the nuclear arms race" and "deciding when and how to achieve a mutual verifiable freeze on testing, production and further deployment of nuclear warheads, missiles and other delivery systems." Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker also predicted'success in some form for a freeze motion in the Senate. He said an alternate resolution spon- sored by Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) and William Cohen (R-Maine) was Weinberger ... presents arms report "gathering momentum" in the Senate and contained "a lot of appeal for a lot of members" because it provides fox "not just a freeze, but a build-down." Panel plans open research forum By LISA CRUMRINE The Research Policies Committee voted yesterday to hold an open meeting next week to' explain its proposed guidelines for non-classified research. RPC members cited a lack of understanding, and curiosity about the committee's work as the main reasons for holding the meeting. The committee will also use the meeting to familiarize faculty Senate Assembly members with the proposal before they vote on it at the senate's March 21 meeting. THE PROPOSAL calls for individual University schools and colleges to monitor non-classified research projects by their faculty, and that a committee be appointed to assess the schools' procedures. The March 16 meeting will allow the public to question the committee about the research guidelines, said Medical School Prof. Donald Hultquist, an RPC member. Although the committee's final report will be released today, RPC member Prof. Daniel Ringler said he thinks the meeting is still worthwhile. "Any discussion that comes out of the meeting can certainly come up again on the 21st," said the medical school professor. "Certainly if a member of the RPC becomes aware of any new information, he can bring it up and make the Senate Assembly aware of it," Ringler said, adding he thought the senate would approve the,, proposal. TWICE THIS year the committee turned down proposals by Tom Marx, one of four students on the- committee, to hold open forums on non-classified: research. One committee member said he felt Marx' proposals did not pass because they called for a public forum before the committee made a final decision on the guidelines. "Now the open meeting is- merely to explain the report," said Atmospheric and- Oceanic Science Prof. George Carignan. Committee members who voted against the guidelines last month also plan to release a report. Grand Canyon II AP Photo This 65-foot-deep hole in Sebastapol, Cal. is one of the many results of California's recent heavy rains. The gap runs a quarter of a mile in length. APPENINGS- Highlight "The Mother Lode," an award-winning play by Michigan playwright John Beem, opens tonight at the Performance Network. Set in the 1940s, the play concerns two news reporters who go to a small town in Michigan's upper peninsula to research a feature story about the 1913 "Italian Hall" tragedy which killed 74 people. The curtain goes up at 8p.m. at 408 W. Washington. Films W men's Studies- The Willmar 8, noon, MLB Lecture Rm. 2. Ann Arbor Film Co-Op-Rude Boy, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Aud. A. Cinema Guild - 21st Annual 16mm Film Festival, 7, 9, & 11 p.m., Michigan Theater. Hill Street Cinema - Now.. . After All These Years, 7:30 & 9 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Mediatrics - Ragtime, 6:30 & 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Performances Department of Theatre and Drama - "The Father," 8 p.m., Trueblood Theatre. Music at Midday - Gail Arnold, viola da gamba and Bradley Brookshire, harpsichord, 12:10p.m., Pendleton Rm., Michigan Union. Music at Michigan - String Department recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; Trombone Recital, Laurie Penpraze, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Ark -Trapezoid with violin, hammer dulcimer and base, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill St. English Dept. - poetry reading, John Matthias, 4 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham. Mosher-Jordan - chamber music with cello and piano music of Brahms, Barber and Moore performed by Ken Whitley and Eric Edmunds, 7 p.m., Jordan Lounge, Mosher-Jordan. Speakers Society of Women Engineers - Janice Jenkins, "Why Women Engineers Are Not Going to Graduate School," 6:30 p.m., 311 W. Engin. School of Education - William Cruickshank, "Children with Retarded Mental Development: A Communication to Mainstreaming," noon, Rm. 1322 School of Education. Guild House - Virginia Nordby, "Women and Power: A Legal Perspective," 8p.m., 802 Monroe. Center for Japanese Studies - Byron Earhart, "Japan's New Religions: An Inside View," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm. Museum of Anthropology - William Parry, "Lithic Analysis and the Organization of a Formative Village: Chipped Stone Tools from San Jose Mogote, Oaxaca, Mexico," noon, Rm. 2009 Museums Bldg., Ruthven Museums. Medieval and Renaissance Collegium - George Kish, "Medieval World Maps," 4:30 p.m., MLB Lecture Rm. 2. Social Science Concen. Program/Guild House - Raya Dunayevskaya, "New Moments in Marx's Last Decade," 7 p.m., Rm. 126 Residential College, East Quad. Germanic Languages and Literatures - Mara Wade, "The Galli-Bibiena: Theater Stage Designs and Baroque Avant-Garde," 12:10 p.m., MLB, third floor commons. Center for Russian and East European Studies - Lukasz Hirszowicz, "A Case Study of Minority Attraction to Communism: The East London Jews, 1935-1945," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. Computer Center - chalk talk, consulting staff, "SORT," 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS; Forrest Hartman, "Programming, A Layman's Intro.,'"176 BSAD. Dept. of Chemistry - Arthur Rich, "New Studies in Physics and Chemistry Using Positrons and Positronium," Rm. 1200, Chem. Bldg. Democratic Socialists of America - Margot Duley-Morrow, "The Prospects for Feminist Politics," 8 p.m., Michigan Union. Meetings Ann Arbor Libertarian League - 7 p.m., basement of Dominick's, 812 Monroe. Miscellaneous Canterbury Loft/The Michigan Daily - Campus Meet the Press with Regent Gerald Dunn, 4 p.m., Kuenzel Rm., Michigan Union. WSU president asks S. African divestment DETROIT (UPI) - Wayne State University President David Adamany asked the school to drop its investments in American firms operating in South Afr ica. Adamany made his recommendations yesterday to the WSU Board of Gover- nors His recommendations could af- fect more than $1.3 million in college investments, according to a report by the school. THE STATE became the irsti mthe nation to order its public colleges to divest themselves of investments in American firms doing business in South Africa, a nation that legally classifies blacks as second-class citizens. Michigan law also ordered the schools to sell investments in firms dealing with the Soviet Union. Officials at the University of Michigan argue that the new state law violates their constitutional autonomy. Additionally, they argue, the law prevents them from investing in Michigan firms such as Ford Motor Co., General Motors Corp., and Burroughs Corp., - crucial to future economic development. Adamany's recommendation says- the state law violates the University's constitutional rights. However, he adds WSU should dump its South African and Soviet investments to state the "clear moral position that the University is not involved, even indirectly, in economic support or activity which benefits government's engaged in racial, national or religious discrimination." If WSU's governors support the recommendation, the university will be the first to divest since former Gov. William Milliken signed the law last Dec. 31. TONIGHT'S BEER NIGHT AT UNO'S OUART BEER 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 769-894 I *! Social Security bill will raise retirement age to 67 (Continued from Page 1) Security can be reformed ... or if the only answer to crisis is to raise its cost to the taxpayers." Seventy-six Democrats joined 152 Republicans on the first critical vote to raise the age. Only 14 Republicans voted against it, along with 188 Democrats. The rescue bill, closely following the blueprint prepared by the National Commission on Social Security Reform, would generate $165.3 billion in new revenues or savings over seven years. That would also solve two-thirds of the long-range problem, and the change in the retirement age would wipe out the rest. THE MEASURE also includes a $2.2 billion, six-month extension of sup- plemental unemployment benefits that will allow some workers 10 additional weeks of benefits; a Supplemental Security Income Welfare increase of $20 a month for individuals and $30 for couples in July; and a so-called "prospective payment" plan for Medicare, under which hospital fees would be set in advance based on a patient's diagnosis. The Senate Finance Committee began marking up its version of the rescue bill yesterday. It was expected to complete its work today and send it to the floor for a vote next week. Liberals argued that the higher retirement age would hurt coal-miners and other hard laborers and discriminate against minorities who tend to die sooner than whites. Social Security's old-age fund has been losing money since 1975 and technically went broke last Nov. 5. It has borrowed $17.5 billion from the disability and Medicare funds to keep benefit checks going out on time to the 36 million Social Security recipients. But its borrowing authority has lapsed and unless Congress acts it would be unable to send out checks on time in July. Classifieds get results I - ------------- - - - -------------