01 Page 2-Saturday, April 9, 1983-The Michigan Daily Student, publication board tells :R e ents to divest The Board for Student Publications, the financial governing body of the Daily, the yearbook, and the Gargoyle, has joined the growing list of campus groups pressuring the Regents to divest from South Africa. In a letter to the Regents dated yesterday, the Publications board asked the University to pull its $380,000 share of University investments out of companies doing business in the apar- theid nation.: THE FACULTY Senate Assembly and Michigan Student Assemblv also have endorsed, divestiture this year. The Regents are expected to decide on Friday whether they will follow a new. state law that demands educationalinstitutions to divest. Some University officials contend the legislation is unconstitutional. Others agree on that point, but believe divest- ment is the right move anyway. In its request, the publication board recommended that the University maintain one share in each of the ap- proximately 40 companies that would be affected by divestiture in order "to allow the University to participate in the company's decision process." Publications investments are made up of past profits of the Daily and other student publications. The faculty, professional, and student board invests that money in the University's $130 million endowment fund. Financi es tighten up on loans IN BRIEF Hallelujah! Brother Jed returned to the diag yesterday and was welcomed by a large and receptive crowd. EPA official, says Burford slowed cleanup of toxic waste dumps WASHINGTON - A senior Environ- mental Protection Agency official said yesterday former EPA Administrator Anne Burford urged him to go slow on cleaning up the nation's toxic waste dumps. "I have the personal view there was an implicit policy to slow down the Superfund Cleanup," William Hedeman, director of EPA's office of emergency response, told a Senate committee. "The progress of programs I have been identified with may have been impeded for that pur- pose." HEDEMAN MADE the statement in response to a question from Sen. George Mitchell (D-Maine). Mitchell asked a panel of EPA of- ficials appearing before the Senate En- vironment Committee if they had ever been told to go slow on cleaning up toxic waste sites so the administration could argue the law need not be extended because all funds had not been used. Hedeman said he tried to reach alter- natives with states having trouble providing their required 10 percent share of the toxic waste cleanup costs under the $1.6 billion Superfund program. "I WAS TOLD essentially that a state should come up with 10 percent, but that ultimately we should not aggressively pursue alternatives," Hedeman said. "Who told you that?" Mitchell asked. "The administrator," Hedeman said. THE SUPERFUND toxic waste cleanup program is due to expire in 1985 unless extended by Congress. Anne Burford resigned last month as EPA administrator as congressional committees intensified investigations into wrongdoing at the agency. William Ruckelshaus has been nominated by President Reagan as her replacement. Compled from Associated Pressand United Press International reports Soviet Union expells two Britons MOSCOW-The Soviet Union yesterday expelled a British military at- tache and a journalist for spying, the latest move in the diplomatic tug-of- war between the Kremlin and the West. "ThisSoviet action is clearly in retaliation for the expulsion of three Soviet officials in London last week," aspokesman for the British Embassy said. Squadron Leader David Williams, 33, Britain's assistant air attache in Moscow, and Anthony Robinson, 40, correspondent for the London-based Financial Times, were ordered to leave'the Soviet Union within a week, the spokesman said. British ambassador Sir lain Sutherland protested "the unjustified action," describing the expulsions as "clearly in retaliation" for the ousting of three Soviets from Britain last week. The Foreign Office in Londn said, "We are considering seriously the new situation it has created." Challenger crew returns home CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.-With a mild rebuke to the folks who packed their ship for its first outing,. the Challenger astronauts tidied up the space. shuttle for today's trip home. Their only remaining task was to rendezvous with a phantom target in space. Paul Weitz, Karol Bobko, Story Musgrave and Donald Peterson are coming home from a highly successful, five-day orbital mission that in- creases NASA's chances of being able to ready the nation's second space freighter for flight again in only two months. Challenger is scheduled to touch down at 1:54 p.m. EST on the long paved runway that shuttle Columbia used for its fifth landing last November. The clay runway where Challenger originally was to have landed is under water from recent heavy rains. Yesterday afternoon afternoon Weitz and Bobko were to execute the fifth and final maneuver in a mock exercise to test Challenger's ability to shift its orbit to reach a precise point in space. The shuttle will need that capability to rendezvous on the 13th flight with an ailing sun-study satellite which the astronauts are to repair. Defense budget doomed by negative thought', Reagan says WASHINGTON-President Reagan blames the news media's "drumbeat of negative thought" for the defeat of his 1984 defense budget increase on Capitol Hill and will stick with the proposal, his spokesman said yesterday. Reagan "hasn't changed one iota" from his commitment to a 10 percent increase despite its overwhelming rejection by the Senate Budget Commit- tee Thursday, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said. The committee, controlled 12-10 by Republicans, voted 19-2 against Reagan's 10 percent defense budget increase and then voted 17-4 to allow only 5 percent growth. Speakes said the senators who voted against Reagan were being "respon- sive to the public, who is responsive often to the domineering force of the media." Cambodian plane downed KHAO I DANG, Thailand-Vietnamese gunners shot down a Thai Air For- ce jet yesterday and a Cambodian rebel leader charged Hanoi's forces massacred hundreds of refugees with grenades and bayonets. Concerned about Thailand's security, the United States rushed antiair- craft missiles and long-range howitzers to Bangkok. The first delivery of Redeye ground-to-air missiles was expected Saturday. Additionally, two giant C-5 transport planes will deliver 155mm long-range howitzers and ammunition to Thai forces on Monday, a State Department spokesman said in Washington, and more howitzers will arrive by sea April 19. In the Thai border province of Surin, 225 miles northeast of Bangkok, a Royal Thai Air Force A-37 "dragonfly" jet fighter was hit by Vietnamese ground fire and crashed in a rice field, killing the pilot and co-pilot, military sources in the area said. New Orleans mops up slowly NEW ORLEANS-Houses were marked with mud-colored waterlines, soggy furniture was strewn on sidewalks and one discouraged resident. posted a "For Sale" sign as New Orleans bailed out yesterday after a day of near-record flooding. Telephone service, knocked out for all long-distance calls and most local ones Thursday - effectively isolating the city - was restored yesterday ex- cept in some parts of the central business district. Businesses reopened, but almost all went short-handed as employees stayed home for the real work of the day-mopping up. The floods came before dawn Thursday after 11 inches of rain fell on the city, which is ordinarily impassible in some areas after a quick 5- or 6-inch rainfall. By sunrise, almost every major thoroughfare was under water, and police urged residents to stay home. Bus and trolley service shut down and few taxis ventured out. The deluge disappeared from the streets within hours after the rains stop- ped, thanks to a city drainage system that is the largest in the world. The system is capable of draining 25 billion gallons of water a day through 250 miles of pipe, but can only handle an inch of rain an hour before the saucer- shaped city begins to flood. The waters drained from the city are pumped into either the Mississippi River on Lake Pontchatrain, on New Orleans' north side. Longtime residents said Thursday's water levels had been reached only twice before in this century. Vol. XCIII, No. 150 Saturday, April 9,1983 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. 0 7 CJ J alesa won't speak at Harvard to poor v y CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - Lech Walesa said yesterday he won't leave Poland to speak at Harvard Univer- sity's commencement, but Harvard may break three centuries of tradition and have Walesa's speech read in his absence. The Alumni Association had said Thursday in Cambridge, Mass., that Walesa, former head of the outlawed Solidarity union, accepted an invitation to give the graduation day address on June 9. But today a spokeswoman who was reached by telephone at Walesa's apar- tment in the Baltic port of Gdansk said: "He will be unable to travel there for well-known reasons . . . He is simply not sure that he would be able to cross the Polish border in both directions." THE SPOKESWOMAN declined to be identified. She also said that Harvard had con- ferred an honorary doctorate on Walesa, but a Harvard spokeswoman said that was not true. "The rule is - and this has been true for almost 35 years - in order to receive the honorary degree the person must be in Cambridge on the morning of com- mencement," said the spokeswoman, Margery Heffron. SHE WOULD not say whether a degree had been offered to Walesa, but noted that Harvard's honorary degrees are never announced ahead of time, "because we're never sure whether the person is going to show." The 39-year-old labor leader has not left Poland since martial law was im- posed in December 1981 at the peak of Solidarity's power. He was released in November after an 11-month inter- nment. Reports of Walesa's rejection puzzled Harvard officials, who thought he had accepted in a March 5 letter to univer- sity President Derek B ok. "HARVARD interpreted his letter and other signals we received to mean that he intended to come if allowed to," school spokesman David Rosen said. "His response as reported in the press is somewhat confusing and baffling." Rosen said Harvard hoped to receive a call from Walesa or his wife. "I wouldn't say at this time that he won't be here - or that he will be here," he said. Bok had written to Walesa on Jan. 31 on behalf of the Harvard Alumni ex- change, Rosen said Walesa's response mentioned the possibility of sending a speech if he could not come in person. "He said, 'In the event I can't get out of the country, would it be possible for me to send you a prepared text to be ready in my absence?' " Rosen said. "That is under consideration." It would be a first. In 331 previous Harvard commencements, the speaker has always appeared in person. Qburjcb inr~bip 'eruicen countries WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal reg- ulators, facing congressional charges of unwise lending by big U.S. banks to poor countries, have drawn up a plan to tighten their control over such loans. In a joint memorandum sent to Congress, the chiefs of the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit In- surance Corp., along with the com- ptroller of the currency, proposed a five-point program that also would require banks to disclose more infor- mation on how much they have lent to foreign countries. THE PLAN would bolster examination programs so warnings would be sounded earlier on banks with. risky foreign loans, and it would require banks to put aside more money to back up those problem loans. It does not propose limits on loans to individual countries, suggested by some in Congress as a way to avoid ex- cessive concentrations of debt over- seas. The regulators said the program was designed to encourage "prudent len- ding" without setting up "arbitrary ob- stacles" to the flow of money among countries or preventing reliable borrowers from getting credit. THE PLAN is expected to be spelled out Monday by the regulators during a banking committee hearing on the Reagan administration's request for an increase of about $8.5 billion in the U.S. contribution to the International Monetary Fund. The IMF's lending pool is running out of money due to the unprecedented number of loans made to rescue nations having trouble paying their debts, which now amount to $65 billion by the less developed countries. The request, coming at a time of a weak economy and tight-fisted spen- ding, has rankled some in Congress and prompted complaints that the money is nothing more than a bail-out for banks caught with millions of dollars in loans to debtor countries. Just Thursday, members of the House Banking Committee told Treasury Secretary Donald Regan that restrictions on banks' foreign lending should be a condition of Congress' ap- proval of more money for the IMF. Separately, a staff report published yesterday by the IMF said strict bank secrecy laws in"offshore" banking cen- ters, often small islands in the Carib- bean, had made government super- I p ,^ FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave., 662-4466 (between S. University and Hill) Campus/Career Fellowship Coordinator: Steve Spina Sunday a.m. Sunday 9:30and 11:00 a.m. Coffee Hour-10:30 social hall Wednesday p.m. 8:00-Allelous (Christian Fellow- ships), French Room 8:30-Study/Discussion Groups 9:30-Holy Communion, sanctuary ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thompson-663-0557 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS FOUNDATION 502 East Huron, 663-9376 Colonial Worship Service April 10: "Maintaining A Truly Spiritual Health" -Roger Williams Student Student Group-Thursday 6:00 p.m. 9:55 a.m. Sunday Worship. Child care provided. 11:00 a.m.-Church School. Classes for all ages. Class for undergraduates. Class for graduates and faculty. Also: Choir Thursday 7:15 p.m., John Reed, director; Janice Beck, organist. Ministry Assistants: Marlene Francis, Terry Ging, Barbara Griffen, Jerry Rees. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN (The Campus Minstry of the LCA-ALC-AELC) Galen Hora, Pastor 801 S. Forest at Hill St. 668-7622 Sunday Worship at 10:30 a.n. Sunday 6p.m. Vegetarian Dinner CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Ct. A Campus Ministry of the Christian Reformed Church Pastor: Reverend Don Postema 668-7421 10 a.m. Morning Worship 6 p.m. Evening Service of Holy Communion Wed. 10 p.m. Evening Prayers * * * NEW GRACE APOSTOLIC CHURCH 632 N. Fourth Ave. Rev. Avery Dumas Jr., Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sunday School. 11:45 Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. Evening Service Bible Study-Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m. For rides call.761-1530 FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1205S. State St. (Corner of State and Huron) 662-4536 hi t Weekly Masses: Mon.-Wed.-5:10 p.m. Thurs.-Fri.-12:10 p.m. Sat.-7:00 p.m. Sun.-8:30 and 10:30 a.m. (Upstairs and downstairs) 12 noon and 5 p.m. (upstairs and downstairs) North Campus Mass at 9:30 a.m. in Bursley Hall (Fall and Winter Terms) Rite of Reconciliation-4 p.m.-5 p.m. on Friday only; any other time by Editor-in-chief.....................BARRY WITT Managing Editor ..................... JANET RAE Opinion Page Editors...............KENT REDOING 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 ion fay., Chris G.rb@si. Paul HeIgren, Steve Hunte Doug levy. Tim Makirten. Mike McGraw, Rob Pollard Dan Price. Paul Resnick, Scott Solowich. Amy Schiff. Paulo Schipper, Adam Schwartz, John Tdyr. Steve Wise. BUSINESS MANAGER........SAM 9. SLAUGHTIER IV SALES MANAGER'.....................MEG GIBSON DISPLAY MANAOER.................JEFF VOGT CLASSIFIED MANAGER..............PAM GILLERY OPERATIONS MANAGER.......LAURIE ICZ(OVITZ NATIONAL MANAGER .............. GITA PILLAI FINANCE MANAGER ................ JOE TRUiK ASSISTANT DISPLAY MANAGER ...NANCY GUSSIN CIRCULATION COORDINATOR.......TIM McGRAW