The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 28, 1983 - Page 9 Evacuated students relieved to be home From The Associated Press Medical students evacuated from Grenada described yesterday how they barricaded themselves in dormitory rooms and ran to rescue helicopters as bullets whizzed over their heads. But a few students also said they felt no danger from the island's rebel government before the U.S.-led in- vasion began. "I felt sure the military government that took over felt good about our school and liked what we were doing," said Richard Willard, of Bloomfield, N.J. "They went out of their way to make it comfortable for us." Many others, however, said they had not felt safe since Prime Minister Maurice bishop was killed in a far-left coup last week. "It wasn't an invasion, it was a rescue," said John Batista, 25, of Ludlow, Mass., upon his arrival in Boston yesterday. "I personally didn't feel secure when I knew they were executing people downtown." After the takeover, "there was so much hostility and turmoil," said Pamela Lall, of Quincy, Mass., a first- year student at St. George's University Medical School. Maj. Christopher Stroud of the rebel government visited the medical school Sunday night and told students they were safe, but "he wouldn't make provisions for our safety" if they decided to leave, she said. . C-141 transport planes brought more than 340 Americans home Wednesday night and yesterday, and more were expected to arrive today at Charleston Air Force Base in South Carolina. The students were evacuated moments after the compound was secured by American forces late Wesnesday, making their way through sporadic gunfire about 100 yards across a beach and through the surf to waiting helicopters. "My husband and I and several others in our group had to hit the sand at one point because we were under fire," siad Tracy McGrahan of Lincoln, Neb. None of the students was injured in the escape, which was made along with some other Americans from the area. (EhTBLL FOOTBALL 1983 .......... ,,,~ S.i. Hear every exciting play with JOHN KOEHN & BILL DUFEK at the microphones versus ILLINOIS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29 12:20 p. m. 1050 on your am dial - Michigan's Football station since 1945 AP Photo June DiLiberto, right, who with her husband Joseph, was stranded in Grenada when U.S. troops invaded Tuesday, is reunited with her mother Joan McCormich at Logan Airport in Boston, Mass. yesterday. _ ,.. ; ° « .' t P s e AU F: x ti: Reagan defends invasion of Grenada (Continued from page 1) takeover of the Caribbean outpost by the Castro government. WHEN THE attack began, ad- ministration officials had estimated the number of Cubans in Grenada at about 600, mostly involved in constructing a 9,000-foot runway which Reagan had charged could be used by Soviet military planes. Later, the number was put at more than 700. But yesterday, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the number of Cubans on the island when the invasion began had been "upwards of 1,000 . . . It was a combat engineer battalion there, commanded by a Cuban colonel." Earlier yesterday, the House Foreign Affairs Committee approved 32-2 a war powers resolution limiting Reagan's hand in Grenada. The resolution would require U.S. troops now fighting in Grenada to be brought home 6 days from Tuesday. At. U.N. headquarters in New York, the Security Council was to resume debate on a resolution condemning the United States for the invasion. In London, Secretary-General Sbridath Ramphal of the Common- wealth - the Britain-linked group of nations of which Grenada is a member - denounced the American operation as "flagrant aggression" and called for the U.S. troops to be replaced swiftly by a Commonwealth or purely Caribbean force. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said Britain might consider such a request. IC ort 0e 0 0 0 ...GIVE ME SOMETHING GOOD, TO EAT... Don't forget your treats this weekend; stock up on pumpkins and party essentials at Village Corner. We offer a wide selection of beer & wine and great low prices on kegs .. . come in and check us out. I I Marxist leader takes hostage A i (Continued from page 1) base was found and that the operation thwarted a planned Cuban takeover of tthe island. POUNDING artillery fire could still be heard at the Point Salines airport Thursday night. The shelling was to Mhead off a possible counterattack, Marines told a contingent of 12 repor- ters flown to the island. The U.S. forces were also strafing positions with four or five A-7 Corsair Jet aircraft, said Army Lt. Col. Fred Ackers in a briefing on the island. SIX HUNDRED Cuban soldiers and 200 Cuban civilian prisoners were being held in an encampment on a hill overlooking the airport, the reporters were told. Armed Cubans who had been holding out at Richmond Hill prison, in the steep green hills east of the harborside capital, St. George's, were overrun by attacking troops Thursday, 2% days af- ter the U.S. invasion began, the Pen- tagon said.. A SECOND St. George's strongpoint, the Grenadian army headquarters at Fort Frederick, was captured Wed- nesday, the sources said, confirming earlier reports by a Barbadian radio station. Gen. Hudson Austin, Marxist head of the island's military junta, had been believed to be at Fort Frederick. But on Thursday U.S. intelligence sources in Washington said Austin was holding hostages on the southern part of the island. The sources, who would not be iden- tified, said they knew neither the nationality nor number of hostages. Hundreds of Americans remain on Grenada, many of them students at a medical school near its southern tip. AS THE Grenada invasion dragged through its third day, the officially reported U.S. death toll rose to eight. American military leaders acknowledged that their units encoun- tered tougher resistance than expected. I village corner 601 S. FOREST, ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 (313) 995-1818 -,- .. U r Officials urge state to accept automation (Continued from page 1) for a forum sponsored by the Ann Arbor chapter of the Michigan Robotics Research Circle. Automating will allow Michigan's in- dustries to compete with other states, Smith said. Auto industry consultant Peter Van Hull agreed with Smith. "The question of labor is a moot point," he said. "It is the wrong thing to look at. Doing nothing is the worse thing - it is the road to disaster." SMITH SAID it was impossible to estimate how many jobs might be created by the robotics revolution. "It is easier to give an idea of how many will disappear," he said. "We must first develop high technology. Then there are cultural problems. People become threatened with the idea of high technology." The purpose of the forum - last night's was the second in a series - was to advance robotics research and education and industrial technology in the Detroit metropolitan area. Economics Prof. Frank Stafford told the audience that this country must remain competitive with other nation's, such as Japan. "The competition is very rapid. If we don't make the transition, we will become a nation of exporting raw and agricultural materials," he said. -p I)E4AL Chevy Chase and his partners are arms dealers. They sell second-rate weapons to third world nations. BECOME PART OF THE FAIRCHILD SCHOLARS PROGRAM AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND But they're not out to stick it to anyone. A Unique Opportunity for Simultaneous Employment and Graduate Study. You Are Eligible if You Have a B.S. Degree in Science or Write or call Prof. Anthony Ephremides, Director of the Fairchild Scholars Program, Electrical Engineering Department, Univer- sity of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742. Phone (301) 454-6199. Or contact the Fairchild Scholars Program representative when he visits your campus: DATE: Friday November 4, 1983 - J . TIME: 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. CHEVY CHASE SIGOURNEY WEAVER GREGORY HINES A WILLIAM FRIEDKIN FILMA STEVE TISCH-JON AVNET PRODUCTION TrAT C' Cd-%' T' f ly IrAT .,T' D*Tu DIT ny l .~ rn ry nt l"lyTf"W.*l1TC, Enizineeriniz. PLACE: Engineering Placement Service