The Michigan Daily - Sunday, September 11, 1983 - Page 7 Prof finds funds for draft resisters (Continued from Page 1) Since the requirement only restricts disbursing federal aid Gold is not breaking the law by directing students to independent sources for loans or grants. "MY FEELING in taking this action on my own is not in violation of the law. I have not put myself in jeopardy," he said. Gold also said he doesn't think his position is in conflict with the Univer- sity's stand on the issue. "I don't feel I'm in opposition to University policy (on providing replacement funds). The University is doing what it thinks is proper," he said. GOLD'S WORK finding alternative funds has been independent of the civil liberties board he heads, but he will recommend that members support his proposal at a, meeting Friday in the Fleming Administration Building. In May, the board wrote a letter to University officials and the faculty Senate Assembly urging them to sup- port a repeal of the law in Congress. Since the law was enacted a year ago, University officials have kept a low profile on strongly criticizing it, Grotrian said. University President Harold Shapiro has previously criticized the law for being an administrative burden and inappropriately making the University a policing arm of the federal gover- nment, but he has avoided taking a stronger stand such as backing a repeal. Unlike other schools nationwide such as the University of California, Yale and Stanford Universities, which have moved to replace lost federal aid with their own funds, University officials have refused to take such action. University officials have maintained that using University funds to replace lost federal aid would be unfair to those students who comply with the law. Yet officials say they support Gold's action. "If private sources want to sup- port students, that's terrific," said Billy Frye, the University's vice president for academic affairs and provost. Frye, who called the law a "lousy regulation," said it would be inap- propriate for the University to circum- vent a federal law. Prepare for LSAT, GMAT, GRE, SHE University Test Preparation Service (313) 425-TT ANN ARBOR 2 INDIVIDUAL THEATREs 5ti Ave or bberty 71-700 $2.00 WED, SAT, SUN SHOWS TIL 6pm 4th & fINAL WEEK NO BOOZE! NO SMOKING! :r.. " RODNEY .. /DANGERFIELD .r EA$7 . ~MONEY (R) MON-7:30, 940 SAT. SUN-1:30,3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:40 Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON. Imitation insect This isn't a centipede - it's the Michigan cheerleaders, giving one of their famous performances at yesterday's football game. Soviet propaganda effort builds Ii- _ - _ MOSCOW (AP) - Mixing meticulously prepared arguments and ,eountercharges with an intense anti- ;U.S. campaign, the Kremlin has :nobilized its chief spokesmen and its. :finely tuned propaganda machine to try to minimize damage from the South :Korean plane disaster. At home, the government has por- trayed itself as the victim, placing the -blame for the death of 269 people on President Reagan and painting the .United States as a Nazi-like- -provocateur. Foreign reaction has been angry. But concrete repercussions, at least so far, have been limited to airline boycotts and a cut in business ties between Aeroflot and U.S. airlines. No gover- nment economic sanctions have been Pilots appear .P (continued from Page 3) debris - including items of clothing and small pieces of airline metal and plastic - believed to be from the downed plane had been found along. beaches and in the waters of Japan by nightfall yesterday. President Ronald Reagan, in his weekly radio address after meeting with Secretary of State George Shultz and with the National Security Council, 4aid the Soviets have "stonewalled the :world, mobilizing their entire gover- :iment behind a massive cover-up, then brazenly threatening to kill more men, :Women and children should another :eivilian airliner make the same I ordered and none are being forecast. Still, some observers believe the Sept. 1 downing of the South Korean Boeing 747 by a Soviet interceptor has seriously damaged EastrWest relations, chipping away at any measure of trust achieved since the Cold War years. But the Soviet propaganda effort is not just directed at governments. It also seems clearly aimed at Western European peace activists, whom the Soviets have been courting in hopes of stopping NATO's missile deployment plan. It remains to be seen whether the plane tragedy has tarnished the peace- loving image Moscow has been trying to cultivate among peace activists but one American diplomat, who asked not to be identified, commented: "One is left with a vision, a view, of the Soviet Union as a country in which this sort of thing can happen. That is a mark, a stigma even, that is going to endure." Kremlin efforts to try to erase such a mark at home and abroad have been in- tense, starting with a careful series of official statements and culminating in a rare news conference Friday by the military chief of staff, Marshal Nikolai Ogarkov, chief Kremlin spokesman Leonid Zamyatin, and Deputy Foreign Minister Georgi Kornienko. Throughout, the Soviet propaganda approach was "a tried and true one," the American diplomat said. Walkman's. Nat. 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"RATHER THAN tell the truth about the Korean Air Lines massacre, rather than immediately and publicly in- vestigate the crash, explain to the world how it happened, punish those guilty of the crime, cooperate in efforts to find the wreckage and recover the bodies, apologize and offer compen- sation to the families and work to prevent a repetition, they have done the opposite," he said. Reagan has declared a national day of mourning today for the people aboard the jet, including Rep. Larry McDonald (D-Ga). M USIC C LUB MEMBERS RECEIVE ALOPMS500 1 5CASSETTE TAPES ANYLABELUANYARTISTF*' OVER 25,000 F E TO CHOOSE FROM! 'By joining Americas fastest growing family of music collectors, you will be able to take advantage of the best value in the music industry today! Members receive 15 certificates; simply redeem one certificate when buying an album or tape from us, at national list price, and receive yoursecond choice FREE. 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