The Michigan Daily, Saturday, November 5, 1983 - Page 3 U.S. seizes Soviet arms in Grenada ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada (AP)-U.S. Army officers seized 38 loaded rifles, five pistols, ammunition and bayonets that Soviet diplomats tried to "smuggle'' onto American planes evacuating them from Grenada yester- day, A U.S. official said. The 49 Soviets were among 126 Com- munist-bloc diplomats, dependents and Cubans evacuated in two U.S. Navy DC- 9 jets that took them from Point Salines airport, south of St. George's, to Merida, Mexico, where they tran- sferred to a Soviet jetliner that took them to Havana. MEANWHILE, 14 Congressmen flew to Grenada from Washington, via Bar- bados, for a three-day fact-finding trip. The group is led by Rep. Tom Foley, (D-Wash.). He told reporters on the flight that Congress "would like to see the United States withdraw all military forces as soon as possible from Grenada," even if the interim gover- nment set up by Grenada's governor general, Sir Paul Scoon, asked them to stay. About 1,800 U.S. soldiers boarded 12 C-14s yesterday and flew back to their camp at Ft. Bragg, N.C. That leaves about 4,000 on this small Caribbean island. U.S. officials said additional units would pull out within the next few days. U.S. TROOPS invadtl Grenada Oct. 25 following a coup the week before by a -HAPPI Highlight Marxist general in which Prime Minister Maurice 3/4Bishop was slain, ending a power struggle within his left- wing government. Scoon, who had been appointed governor general of Grenada, a Com- monwealth member, by Queen Elizabeth II in 1978, broke diplomatic relations Tuesday with the Soviet Union and Libya and ordered their diplomats to leave. Sixteen Libyans flew to Lon- don on Thrusday. State Department spokesman Guy Farmer told reporters about the Soviets' angry departure. "THEIR BAGGAGE was searched and two boxes holding 38 AK-47s, each with a round in the chamber, were found," he said. The AK-47 is the standard automatic rifle used by infantrymen in Warsaw Pact countries. Farmer said the pistols were hidden in typewriter cases, and the U.S. of- ficers also found 300 magazines of am- munition. The planes left at 2:30 a.m. after a seven-hour delay caused by Soviet protests and the search. Farmer said the evacuees were 49 Soviets, 53 Cubans who had taken asylum in the Soviet Embassy, 15 North Koreans, six East Germans and three Bulgarians. He said all but the Soviet ambassador also were frisked for arms but no ad- ditional weapons were found. _/ if Happy to be home AP Photo, Two members of the 82nd Airborne shake hands as they arrive at Fort Bragg, Fayetteville, N.C. on their return from duty in Grenada. Greyhound still striking, profits 'poor' 3 f y t 2 The University's Women's Glee Club performs classical music, traditional Michigan music, and a country medley tonight in Rackham Auditorium. The concert, conducted by Rosalie Edwards, begins at 8 p.m. The Harmonettes, an octet, will also perform. Films Alternative Action - Time Stands Still, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 4. Mediatrics - The Great Santini, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Hill St. - The Chosen, 7:30 & 9:30, 1429 Hill. Cinema Guild - Alsino and the Condor, 7 & 9 p.m., Lorch. AAFC - Sophie's Choice, 6:30 &.9:15, MLB 3. Cinema Two - Demon Pond, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Aud. A. Performances School of Music - Trumpet recital, William Camp, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; Open Tower Carillon demonstration, 11 a.m., Burton Tower. Ark - Claudia Schmidt, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., 1421 Hill. Theatre and Drama - "Plotters of Cabbabe Patch Corner," 10 a.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Performance Network - "The Forest" by Alexander Ostrovsky, 2 & 8 p.m., 408 W. Wash. Dance Dept. - "Similar Contrasts: A Dance Concert," Lori Davis and Jeanette Leabu, $ p.m., dance building, Studio A. Second Chance ,- Toby Redd, 9 p.m. PTP - "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat," 2 & 8 p.m., Power Center. Speakers ICLE Workshop - Joseph Sax, "Recent Developments in Environmen- talLaw," 11:30a.m.,116Hutchins Hall. National Lawyers Guild - Judges from Nicaraguan Supreme Courts, "The legal system and human rights in Nicaragua," 5 p.m., Lawyers Club Loungs. Zen Buddhist Temple - Zen Master Samu Sunim, "Building Buddist Community," 6p.m., 1214 Packard. SYDA Foundation - Swami Samatananda, "The Joy of Self Awareness," 1522 Hill St. Meetings Ann Arbor Go Club - 2 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 9 a.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Miscellaneous Football - Michigan vs. Purdue, lp i., Ann Arbor. Graduate Christian Fellowship - po ck dinner, 6 p.m., 1290 Barrister. Friends of the Matthaei Botanical ( Tens - annual fall sale, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., 1800 Dixboro Rd. Hockey - Mich. vs. New Hampshir. 3p.m., Yost Ice Arena. Women's Volleyball - Mich. vs. Loyola univ., CCRB. New Jewish Agenda - Shabbat Meditation, 1p.m., 1010 Rose. EMU Department of Music - Workshop for high school stringed- instrument players, all day, EMU. Soundstage - auditions for student musicians wishing to play in the U- Club, 7 to 10 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union. Call 763-1107 for appt. Horace Rackham Faculty Research Grant - exhibition, "Albert Weber: Works in Progress," 9 a.m. to noon, Slusser Gallery, School of Art. Hands-On Museum - Honey tasting, 1 & 3 p.m., 219 E. Huron. PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)-Wives and children marched with striking bus drivers outside Greyhound headquar- ters yesterday, while the company said applicants seeking the strikers' jobs were pouring in by the thousands. Greyhound Corp. also released a financial report saying profits in the quarter ending Sept. 30 remained "poor," and were down slightly from a year earlier. The results were not af- fected by the walkout called ateWed- nesday midnight by 12,700 members of the Amalgamated Transit Union. GREYHOUND HAS said it will remain closed for two weeks to allow present employees to consider a three- year contract offer and then re-open, using as many new employees as necessary. In San Diego, meanwhile, Trailways manager Dan Villareal said, "This normally is one of our slowest periods, but because of the strike, it is more like our slowest periods, but because of the strike, it is more like our heaviest time, more like Christmas. All our buses are full coming and going." Greyhound Lines normally carries 60 percent of the intercity traffic, and Trailways is the second largest carrier, with about half that many passengers. AMTRAK AND Trailways are honoring tickets already purchased through Greyhound and are billing Greyhound for the refund. Ms. Meyer said so far as she could determine, no Greyhound passengers were stranded. Greyhound Lines, the corporation's intercity bus division, is demanding a 9.5 percent pay reduction; employee contributions of 5 percent to the pension plan, and cuts in various benefits. Greyhound has said that under its proposal drivers would average $29,578 a year in wage and fringe benefits while office personnel would average $18,476. Union leaders claim the cuts would average between 20 and 25 per cent. THE COMPANY said it needs the tollback to again become competitive with discount airlines and other major bus lines with lower pay scales. About 75 to 100 people picketed the headquarters, a dozen or so of them children and many of them wives. Carrying strike signs, they moved slowly around the complex. There were no incidents. One youngster carried a sign saying, "Greyhound is unfair to my Daddy." Another's sign said: "Greyhound is trying to brake the union!" Greyhound officials said the com- pany has taken more than 20,000 ap- plications for the strikers' jobs but it has not hired any replacements in the hope that employees will change their minds in the next two weeks. "A lot of people think we have hired (replacements)," said spokeswoman Kathy davidson. "We absolutely have not. Our employees have first right to those jobs." Jobless rate falls to lowest level since Feb. 1982 WASHINGTON (AP)-Civilian unemployment tumbled to 8.8 percent in October, slashing the ranks of the jobless to below 10 million for the first time since February 1982. President Reagan's chief spokesman yesterday termed the report "exceedingly good news." Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said it was fresh eviden ce that Americans "are going back to work." He got little quarrel from private economists, who said they were surprised by the healthy decline. The AFL-CIO, a harsh critic of Reagan's economic policies in the past months, said it was "very happy." In human terms, the .5 percentage point decline from September's 9.3 per- cent unemployment rate translated into these vital statistics: Some 320,000 people went back to work; total unemployment decreased from 10.4 million to 9.9 million, and joblessness declined among every population group. THE decline in the jobless rate was at- tributable in large part to the fact that the number of people looking for work plunged by 553,000, when statistics were adjusted for seasonal variations. Because two-thirds of the 553,000 were betweenthe ages of 16 and 24, it was clear that by mid-October, when the figures were gathered, most of these labor force drop-outs who previously had been categorized as unemployed had returned to- schools and colleges. Total employment, as measured by the Census Bureau's random survey of 60,000 U.S. households, actually fell by 17,000, from September's record 101,945,000 to 101,928,000, when adjusted for seasonal variations. THE 8.8 percent rate returned civilian unemployment to the level of March 1982. Since the depths of the recession, when joblessness hit 10.8 percent with more than 12 million unemployed last December, more than 2.8 million people have gone to work as the rate has drop- ped two percentage points. Speakes, traveling with Reagan to North Carolina, told reporters aboard Air Force One that administration of- ficials had not expected unqmployment td fall well below 9 percent until sometime next year. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce labeled the report "truly awesome," and the National Association of Manufacturers declared that their figures show "the economy is now in a classic postwar expansin led by in- creased consumer spending and rebuilding of inventories by business" While the AFL-CIO statement said the labor federation was pleased with the news, it added: "We hope this presages the end of the long, un- necessary nightmare to which American workers have been subjected since mid-1981." 800.621-5745 IN ILLINOIS CALL 312.922.0300 AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 600 407 S. Dearborn. Chicago, IL 60605 Tenant center 's fight for funds heats up (Continued from Page 1) Doug Weiner, chairman of the resource center's board. "Nothing was done with the money last year," he said. "With the MSA morley, we can do. everything the tenants' union does and do it better." To prove their point, Weiner and Lin- coln Ashida, the resource center's chief financial officer, Wednesday showed the Daily the union's financial books. Although the books were con- fusing and not neatly or carefully kept, union president Mary Consani said, "they are up to date and no one of the treasurers has ever had any problems understanding them." YESTERDAY, Weiner and Ashida found themselves locked out of the Michigan Union office the two organizations share - a lock-out union leaders say will continue until a staff meeting next thursday. "The only effective thing to do is to lock them out," said Consani. "They're not supposed to be in the offices in the first place." Union members hope next week's meeting will clear up the problem, which they call an "internal conflict." WEINER SAYS that keeping he and Ashida locked out of the offices is "hur- ting the community by keeping us from our counseling appointments." Weiner claims the center has coun- seled between 175 and 200 people since the beginning of the term and that he and Ashida are the only members who keep their office hours or do any work for the organization. Consani says the office hours Weiner is talking about were not even posted until last Wednesday and calls Weiner's estimates of the number of people counseled "totally not reliable." ROWLAND chalks the problems up to a "personality conflict" between the members of the two organizations, but she says she doesn't think the conflicts are "unresolvable." She and Julia Gittleman, volunteer coordinator for MSA, want to "revitalize"' the tenants' organizations by bringing in new volunteers. "We want to put a big emphasis on getting new blood into the organization," Gittleman said. Rowland plans to work with MSA Treasurer David Livingston and union members to review the organization's budget. "We want to find the best way to utilize all the money," Rowland said. "It's unfortunte that when we tried to improve the organization this power struggle began." Consani said a budget reorganization might include bringing in clerical workers and a volunteer to organize lobbying efforts for tenants' issues. Reviewed minority program lacks results To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Malicious Intent t I sp (Continued from Page 1) are still no minorities on the staff, and why so few even seem to want to be. But they did offer several explanations. At the same time as the affirmative action program was initiated, the Review also overhauled the rest of its application system. The "entirely new and very complicated" system lets the candidate apply many possible ways, said Managing Editor Marie Deveney. An unfamilarity with the new system may have scared some applicants off, she said. MARTIN DUNN, CHARIMAN of the Black Law Students Alliance, echoed Deveney: "There are a lot of reasons why some people didn't apply. People didn't know what was going to develop. They were unable to plan ahead last year. They've been uncertain." Other members of the staff said the affirmative action program simply had not yet been able to break through the momentum of past failures to recruit minorites. "The discouragement fac- tor is probably bigger for minority students," Deveney said. For the most part, however, Deveney said the journal is still studying the problem to determine exactly what has caused it. "WE WANT TO KNOW why only two (minority students) completed the ap- plicaiton," She said. "We had hoped to get more input and feedback (from those who applied). We will try to en- courage more participation through the Review itself or through other student organizations. We will try and be a lit- tle more aggressive." Most people involved agree that judging the program after only one year would be unwise. "Last year was a transitional year," said Dunn, "I would like to give it some time. A lot of people are more aware this year. I don't think anyone has labeled it a failure. Most are willing to give it some time." REVIEW STAFF members said they would probably keep the affirmative action system intact, but probably not expand the opportunities for minorities more than they have. "I expect that we will retain this program," said Deveney. "The in- terest in easing access while at the same time retaining excellence, is there.. . We will definitely try and keep that opportunity intact, but I'm not sure it will go beyond that." At the end of this year the Review's editorial board will review the program and issue a recommendation on whether to alter the program. Ann Arbor Civic Theatre presents THE PHILADELPHIA STORY ~11~1 sz 3 s t s Z - s i wui m..'+NV. av MAK >wav wi .c .. e. euiuwu ' moo Y uA Y an " N.. - , ±M Huss. .po ' ui Fr YY i: iin ki"+..y uw :. ur n W pIn It W up aua V+^P F w.l pORm f n '+nv. rx'P - - 1Vb~tl4.,.4'tu - sA.- w -- s? a >QI _ _ v::L~r l 4. a4 and-..trm 4.0444".... _ t. .44 ,MmT40 AM44 '4.4 '40. Students to stay put under new bomb threat policy (Continued from Page i) zinski said that during any future dorm - which has not happened in the 15 years he has worked there - it would nrohab1v hb in a luinge. nlo y, Aether a n rt+wn.wu a.ww ;,sw n