Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, Octobe Lebanese From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - President Amin Gemayel yesterday invited Lebanon's warring Christian and Moslem leaders to peace talks next week, and U.S. special envoy Robert McFarlane expressed op- timism about "national reconciliation." Officials had feared that protracted haggling over the time and place of the talks would lead to a break- down of the two-week-old cease-fire. GEMAYEL'S invitations came after apparent breakthroughs in talks between Syrian leaders and MceFarlane, President Reagan's special Middle East envoy, setting the presidential palace in Baabda as the site of the talks and agreeing to the use of Greek and Italian truce observers. "Events of the last 48 hours have brought us to a position where there is every promise that the national reconciliation process is about to begin," McFarlane said. 4It is a very important day for Lebanon. President Gemayel has nurtured this process and is, I think, on r 11, 1983 schedule peace the threshhold of beginning to build a new Lebanon." the observers should GEMAYEL WAS expected to announce within 24 Nations, but Jumblat hours whether Lebanon's factional leaders would Lebanese officials, agree to his proposal that the talks, as called for in said Italian cease-fire the Sept. 26 truce, be held at the presidential palace in Italy's 2,100-man coni the posh, hilly suburb of Baabda. ce in Beirut. They sa State-run Beirut radio said the date for the talks airlifted to Lebanon. was set for Oct. 19, with a preparatory committee meeting tomorrow to establish an agenda and smooth WITH UNITED Na out details. force, Israel's occupa Gemayel also sent official requests to Rome and various other forces Athens for 600 to 800 military observers to monitor would become the 18 the cease-fire, which halted a month of civil warfare country. involving Christian and Moslem militias and the In yesterday's f 35,000-man army of the Christian-led government. spokesman said opp A GOVERNMENT spokesman in Athens said positions around Sou Greece had accepted a request from Lebanon and s "other interested parties" to send truce observers. said the fighting en Italian officials had earlier said their soldiers also responded with mach would take part, but it was not clear yesterday if they While the army ho had formally agreed to do so. Italian Foreign mountaintop towns,. Minister Giuliu Andreotti said yesterday he believed trols surrounding are talks have some link to the United tt and Syria have opposed this. who asked not to be identified, observers could be drawn from tingent of the multinational for- aid Greek observers would be ations troops, the multinational ation army, Syrian soldiers and s in Lebanon, Greek soldiers 8th alien military force in the fighting, a Lebanese army position forces attacked army zk el-Gharb in the Chouf Moun- non with machine-gun fire. He ended quickly after the army ine-gun fire. olds Souk el-Gharb and nearby Jumblatt's Druse militia con- as. "12 WORDS THAT COULD CHANGE THE WORLD: A STATEMENT ON CHRISTIAN ETHICS" DR. ERNEST T. CAMPBELL Noted Author, Professor and Lecturer Free-The Public is Invited 8:00 p.m. on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12th Rackham Auditorium-915 E. Washington, Ann Arbor Co-sponsored by Campus Chapel, First Presbyterian Church, University Reformed Church, and the U-M Office of Ethics and Religion Federal drug agents prepare to ight office facing a smuggling crisis that WASHINGTON (AP) - Although had left south Florida awash in drugs, drug smugglers quickly circumvented particularly cocaine and marijuana the Reagan administration's first from Latin America, and illegal drug crackdown in south Florda, the new money. The drug gangs conducted wars chief of federal criminal enforcement with automatic weapons on Miami's says federal drug agents will not be out- streets. flanked again. A federal task force centered in "It's a constant cat and mouse Miami and supervised by Vice game," says Stephen Trott, newly in- President George Bush increased stalled as the assistant attorney seizures and financial investigations, general in charge of the Justice Depar- but the drug smugglers began diverting tment's criminal division. shipments to formerly untouched areas THE REAGAN administration took like rural Georgia and Tennessee. a IN BRIEF Compled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Shamir sworn in as new leader JERUSALEM - Yitzhak Shamir was sworn in as Israel's seventh prime minister yesterday and pledged to follow the course charted by Menachem Begin in Lebanon and the occupied West Bank. Shamir won a 60-53 vote of confidence with one abstention in Parliament. Communist deputy Charlie Biton was ejected for screaming insults when Finance Minister Yoram Ariodor was at the podium. Several other leftists walked out of the chamber in protest. Shamir said he would remain foreign minister, a position he has held since 1980, and offered no signs of a change in foreign policy. He also made no changes in the 19-minister Cabinet bequeathed to him by Begin, who resigned on Sept. 15. The coalition of five right-wing and religious parties and two independen- ts, a virtual copy of the outgoing Begin government, controls 64 of the 120 seats in the Knesset. The coalition got only 60 votes because Begin was absent along with Ahron Abu-Hatzeira of the TAMI Party and Avraham Melamed of National Religious Party. Yigael Hurvitz of the Likud bloc abstained. The coalition is divided on economic and religious issues and there is some doubt it will be able to survive two years until the next scheduled election. U.S. botanist wins Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Botanist Barbara McClintock, whose genetic work on corn led to the discovery of "jumping genes" and a greater under- standing of cancer, won the 1983 Nobel Prize for Medicine yesterday. The faculty of Swden's Karolinska Institute said it awarded McClintock the prize mainly for her 1951 discovery of moveable genes in Indian corn - a discovery that was largely ignored for two decades. Only in the 1970s, after genes were found to move in bacteria, did other scientists begin to look at her work more seriously. McClintock, who still works at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island, N.Y., is the first woman to receive the prize in medicine for work she did alone. The Institute, whose faculty names Nobel laureates in medicine, said Mc- Clintock's experiments "reveal a whole world of previously unknown genetic phenomenon."~ Political violence may surge, Panamanian president says PANAMA CITY, Panama - President Ricardo de la Espriella told former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger yesterday that political violence could hit Panama if the United States does not provide more economic aid. The country, vital to the United States because of the Panama Canal, is suffering a severe recession and high unemployment. The social problems "if not promptly solved, could change into social unrest and the loss of peace we value so highly," the president said. At the same time, de la Espriella said, political violence in Central America is increasing. He described it as "a crisis that is...getting closer" to Panama. Kissinger, heading a U.S. commission, is on a six-day tour of Central America to gather information for a report to President Reagan on for- mulating long-term U.S. policy for the region. Hypnosis to aid'in murder case SHERMAN, Texas - A sheriff said yesterday he will hypnotize a widow to see if she can remember the name of the man who may have killed her husband and three others after arranging a meeting to discuss buying an ultralight airplane. The bodies of B&B Ranch owner and Denison building contractor Bob Tate; Grayson County sheriff's deputy Philip Good; and Shermtn.painting contractor Jerry Brown were found Saturday night covered by a carpet in a hangar at the North Texas ranch. Each had been shot twice in the head. The body of Ronald Mayes, a former Sherman police officer who worked at a meat-packing plant, had been dragged almost nine feet and was lying in a pool of blood against a side door, authorities said. lie had been shot five times. Relatives said a colorful, one-seat ultralight airplane - marked Prominently with Tate's initials - was missing from the hangar. They told authorities that three of the men had gone to the hangar to meet another man who was interested in buying a plane. Feminist to be tried for murder GRETNA, La. - California feminist Ginny Foat yesterday made a move from anonymity to political prominence with the beginning of her trial on charges of murdering an Argentine businessman 18 years ago. Foat, who took a leave of absence as president of the California chapter of the National Organization for Women to fight the murder charge, must con- front her primary accuser, former husband John Sidote, and her own bizarre background. Prosecutors will try to prove Foat lured Argentine businessman Moises Chayo to a deserted location and killed him with a tire iron when he resisted being robbed by Sidote. The prosecution's depending on the testimony of her former husband, a convict who has confessed to three homicides. District Attorney John Mamoulides said the husband is a creditable wit- ness, despite his history of violence and alcholism, because his story was clearly against his own interest. IA ." a4 Chevron Says "YES" to Computer Professionals Chevron says "YES" to rewarding careers for Computer Professionals. "YES" to diversity and challenge... to gaining knowledge through asso- ciation with some of the finest minds in our industry... to valuable training and guidance... advancement... and professional growth in this vital career field. Consider what we've got to offer the Computer Professional. Chances are you'll say "YES." COMPUTER PROFESSIONALS come from many fields of expertise, including engineering, science, business administration and computer science. Each contributes a special insight or talent for organization, communication and problem solving that improves and maintains our intricate information network. APPLICATIONS involve diverse areas supporting major functional aspects of the company including finance, administration, logistics, plannin'g, marketing, refining, engineering, exploration, production and chemicals. Our people support two large data centers, state-of-the-art systems software and a vast data communications network. OPERATIONS involve a large IBM mainframe shop using MVS/SP; VM/CMS and VP/CSS Operating Systems; SNA Networks; PL/1, COBOL and FORTRAN Procedure Languages; and IMS, CICS, NOMAD and MARK IV Database and File Management Systems. BENEFITS include immediate assignment to a project at one of our four locations in the San Francisco Bay Area that matches your expe- rience and skills level. You'll receive continuous on-the-job training and the support needed to advance quickly to increasingly responsible assignments. Our horizons are continuing to expand so that, today, talented people can reach high technical or management levels faster than ever before. CHEVRON RECRUITERS VISIT THIS CAMPUS OCTOBER 24-26 To arrange for an interview with Chevron recruiters, check with your College Placement Office. Chevron recruiters will also be interviewing Chemical, Mechanical, Electrical and Civil Engineers as well as MBA candidates in Industrial Relations from November 2.4. For further information on any of these opportunities, please check with your College Placement Office or write: Manager, Professional Recruiting, P.O. Box 7137, San Francisco, California 94120. We are an affirmative action, equal opportunity employer. Vol. XCIV - No. 30 Tuesday, October 11, 1983 (ISSN 0745-967X) 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: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters) ; $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 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 Arbor, MI 48109. 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