4 . Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Sunday, October 23, 1983 European protest of U.S. missiles peaks From AP and UPI Hundreds of thousands of anti- nuclear protesters poured into the streets of Europe yesterday to protest U.S. plans to base new cruise and Per- shing-2 missiles in five NATO nations starting later this year. The biggest turnout came in West Germany where the protest ranked as probably the largest nationwide demonstration since World War II. Organizers claimed 1.3 million people demonstrated in West Germany in the climax to a 10-day "action campaign" against the missiles. Police said only half as many as that turned up, despite the clear skies and bright sunshine. Some 200,000 demonstrators linked arms along the 67-mile route from the U.S. Army's European headquarters at Stuttgart to a suspected Pershing missile base at Neu Elm. Hundreds of thousands of other anti- nuclear demonstrators marched elsewhere in Europe. Except for a few scattered incidents, the continent-wide protest was nearly free of violence. Across the Atlantic too, in the United States and Canada, demonstrators joined the protest in rallies timed to coincide with U.N. Disarmament Week. The largest U.S. rallies were at arms depots and factories where Cruise and Pershing missiles are manufactured. In the El Segundo area outside Los Angeles, an estimated 2,000 protesters paraded past TRW Inc., Rockwell In- ternational, Hughes Aircraft and Mc- Donnell Douglas. Americans also pro- tested near military and nuclear in- stallations such as New Hampshire's Peace Air Force Base, home of the Air Force unit that dropped atomic bombs on Japan, and possible missile storage sites in New York. In his weekly radio address, President Reagan responded to the protests by accusing Moscow of a "capaign to intimidate the West." He said Moscow's intransigence in arms control talks will not block deployment of the missiles. "We will continue our efforts to make the Soviets heed the will of the world, stop stonewalling and start negotiating in good faith," Reagan said. In the absence of a break-through at U.S.-Soviet arms talks in Geneva, West Germany and Britain were scheduled to receive the first of 572 medium-range nucler missiles within the next few weeks. In London, the Guardian newspaper said the first missiles would arrive within the next 10 days. AP Photo Demonstrators carrying a skeleton effigy march through the streets of Lon- don yesterday in the climax of a ten-day protest against nuclear weapons. Gunman demands talk with Reagan, kidnaps aides (Continued from Page 1) ing to White House spokesman Peter Roussel. Reagan tried five or six times to call the man from a car phone, but spokesman Peter Roussel told reporters, "They never communicated. The man hung up on him each time." RICHMOND County Sheriff J. B. Dykes said Harris freed six hostages during negotiations with sheriff's deputies and Secret Service agents, during which he demanded a meeting with Reagan. "After demands for whiskey and food, the seventhdhostagewbolted from the room from where he was held and escaped unharmed. The subject was captured," Dykes said. The man who bolted was identified as club manager Jim Armstrong. Among those held at gunpoint were Davis Fischer, special assistant to the president, and Lanny Wiles of Ponte Vedra, Fla., a fast food executive who works part time as a White House ad- vance man. DURING THE hostage incident Harris asked for whiskey and food, said Richmond County Sheriff J.B. Dykes. Reagan was taken off the course and driven under heavy guard to his nearby quarters on the club grounds. Roussel said, "I would like to emphasize at no time was the president ever in danger." His spot on the course was an estimated 600 to 700 yards away from the pro shop. Harris was to be arraigned Monday morning. He was being held at FBI headquarters in Augusta. POETRY READING with Danny Rendleman Joe Matuszak Josie Kearns Jan Worth MON., OCT. 24-8 P.M. at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE IN BRIEF Compilied from Associated Press and United Press International reports King against Jackson candidacy WASHINGTON - Coretta Scott King says it would harm both blacks and Democrats if Jesse Jackson runs for president, creating a "backlash" that could help reelect President Reagan. "I just don't think this is the year for a black to seriously run," she said. "No black can win the Democratic nomination - Jesse Jackson or anybody else." King visited Washington this past week to see the Senate vote to establish a new national holiday in honor of her crusading husband, Martin Luther King, Jr. She said a candidacy by Jackson would hurt Democrats' chances of elec- ting anyone. "I believe it's going to create some serious problems," she said. "It might cause the kind of backlash that would tend to help Mr. Reagan and the con- servative trend in this country. That might mean another four years (of Reagan) --or worse." Jackson is on leave as head of Operation PUSH in Chicago while he decides whether to run for the Democratic presidential nomination. Grenada's junta says U.S. is concocting excuse for invasion PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad - Grenada's leftist military junta yesterday accused the United States of inventing reports that American residents are in danger so that U.S. forces can invade the tiny Caribbean nation. The Pentagon said a Navy convoy carrying 2,000 Marines had been diver- ted from its original destination of Lebanon and was steaming toward Grenada in case the 1,000 Americans there need protection. But the State Department said there are no immediate plans to evacuate them. A military junta seized power in Grenada last week after an internal power struggle, killed leftistPrime Minister Maurice Bishop, three Cabinet members and several of his supporters, decreed a 24-hour curfew and war- ned that violtors would be shot. It lifted the curfew briefly yesterday so island- ders could buy food. Most Americans in Grenada, a 133-square-mile island with a population of 110,000, are students or staff members of the St. George's University School of Medicine. State-run Radio Free Grenada said Gen. Hudson Austin's 16-member Revolutionary Military Council called U.S. claims that the Americans are in danger "an excuse for a U.S. invasion of Grenada." Syrians threaten to rocket U.S. ships, planes in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon - Syria's government yesterday threatened to fire its rockets at Lebanon-based U.S. ships and planes because of what it called President Reagan's desire to "terrorize Syria." The threat in the Syrian government newspaper Tishrin came as Syrian- backed Druse gunners shelled and sniped at Lebanese army positions in the strategic mountain town of Souk el-Gharb and nearby outposts overlooking Beirut. Tishrin's editorial was apparently a response to Reagan's news conferen- ce Wednesday in which he said Syria is an obstacle to Middle East peace. The Syrians have occupied parts of Lebanon for eight years and support the Druse militia fighting Gemayel's army and rightist Christian militiamen. Shootouts between Druse and Lebanese soldiers also were reported in southern Beirut near the defense lines of Israel's occupation army, forcing authorities to close major roads temporarily. State-run Beirut radio said the clashes, a daily occurence despite the Sept. 26 cease-fire, could "lead to the total collapse of the truce and destroy the planned peace talks even before they open." Iraq. assault kills hundreds Iraq unleashed a barrage of surface-to-surface missiles yesterday on three Iranian cities, killing hundreds of people, Tehran Radio said, and Baghdad said it had mined Iran's second largest port, Bandar Khomeini. An Iranian military communique broadcast by the radio said hundreds of people were "martyred" in the missile and artillery attach against the cities of Marivan, Dezful and Masjid-e Solaiman. An Iraqi military communique, however, made no mention of the attack butsaid Iraqi troops killed 3,235 Iranian soldiers in a two-day battle to recap- ture lost territory in the northern Banjwin sector. The Iranian communique said thousands of people gathered at Dezful to rescue victims of the attack by three Iraqi missiles on the city's residential areas. Marcos swears in new panel to investigate Aquino slaying MANILA, Philippines - President Ferdinand Marcos swore in a new panel yesterday to investigate the assassination of opposition leader Benigno Aquino, replacing the commission that resigned when its impar- tiality was challenged. In ceremonies at his Malacanang palace broadcast on national television, Marcos swore in a businessman, an educator, a lawyer, a labor leader and a retired judge. The president described the Aug. 21 assassination of Aquino, his chief political rival, as a "national shame" and a tragedy that has given rise to "all kinds of emotions," making a thorough and impartial investigation dif- ficult. Opposition leaders have accused Marcos of complicity in the assassination, a charge Marcos denies. Sunday, October 23, 1983 Vol. XCI V-No..41 (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. 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, 763-0376; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0557; Display Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. Faye, Paul Helgren, Steve Hunter, Doug Levy, Tim Editor-in-chief . . ........... ....... 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