4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 9, 1983 IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports U.S. ship fires on Druse 3 M A j 4 II ii if if f I ,1 j.4. 1J :1 Q4 f Ii t. t . ' 4 -:' I ). I£ *1 .3 Now theres a store just for you; with frt quality iens at outlet prces... every day! If you love linens, now you can afford to go absolutely wild! Because our Linen Center has more sheets, bedspreads, draperies, pillows, towels and tablecloths than you've ever seen under one roof. Of course, they're "first quality' Sure, you'll find lots of "brand names" you'll recognize. But what really makes the Linen Center so special is our SHOPPING SPREE SWEEPSTAKES And right now, during our Grand Opening, you'll find even more to love. Like our "Linen Lover Shopping Spree." Register, and you could win a $100, $250 or $500 Shopping Spree. (No purchase necessary.) Here's just a small sam- ".r - i ., ;w. ". - ' . ' ' 'fi'r.: . = /' ," ' ,: " Vi': 's . r' ::? :S .. 'a: X y r S i , ' > %: . : P,. ; F. :6, o- "k. ' t _ f <; i : : . 'i Y .S :':: P . ici. o: " :3 3 T. r. pling of our tantalizing Grand Opening Specials. So come on by-you're ;..' 1 ;/ .. :: i yTh 4. < 'I p I1 .4Ag X 5 t i . II 3I militia position in Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon - The U.S. Navy unleashed its firepower in Lebanon for the first time yesterday, destroying a Druse militia battery that shelled Beirut airport in violation of a truce pledge while two Marine generals were inspecting Marine positions. No casualties were reported at the airport, where four Marines have been killed and 28 wounded since late last month. But police said 52 Lebanese were killed and 14 wounded in fierce Christian-Druse fighting in the moun- tains overlooking the airport. The Druse, in a statement issued by the Progressive Socialist Party, claimed Lebanese troops and Christian Phalange and militiamen burned down a Druse religious shrine in Ebey, 7% miles southeast of Beirut and "massacred" 40 men, women and children who had taken refuge there. Rebels attack Managua airport MANAGUA, Nicaragua - Two light planes piloted by rebel exiles rocketed Managua airport and the area around the Nicaraguan foreign minister's home yesterday, causing heavy damage at the airfield and wounding two soldiers, officials said. Army spokesman Commander Roberto Sanchez said anti-aircraft gunners at the airport downed one of the planes, a propeller-driven Cessna 402, which crashed at the base of the control tower, killing the pilot and co-pilot. Two U.S. senators scheduled to land in Managua had to be put in a holding pattern because of the rocketing and later flew to Honduras. Sanchez identified the pilots of the planes that attacked Managua as Agustin Roman, a Nicaraguan who once worked for the national airline Aeronica, and Sebastian Muller, an air force deserter. Police battle hundreds in Chile x x r a } 5 S R Y } 4 4 ..x- . '- : : - '.5:.-. - j4~..~**~4~4 . ..4 y.4.: ~.4."' .4,.4.44..... - . . .. . .44*4 "z nr' - J M""Y..o ariY?.. wV4.s4.94oocsr.. ,. ..,.^'n ""r+" - . .- . - :: ~. . .,G+.Ar' "+t n t~s -y . . -^ -W I I r-. m. f }., FIRST QUAIITY SPRINGMAID SHEET SETS -h 'r Twin Full Queen King COMPARABLE VALUE $12.00 18.00. 25.00 30.00 LINEN CENTER PRICE S 5.99 10.99 14.99 19.99 SANTIAGO, Chile - Police battled hundreds of demonstrators in Santiago yesterday during a "Day of National Protest" against the military regime of President Augusto Pinochet. The demonstrators, mostly university students, threw rocks and shouted "He's going to fall, he's going to fall." Scores of people were arrested, including copper workers union president Rodolfo Seguel and former Senator Patricio Aylwin, both affiliated with the five-party Democratic Alliance that called the protest, according to repor- ters on the scene. Witnesses said policemen beat Aylwin as he watched a rally and put him on a police bus. Reporters saw many marchers pulled by the neck or the hair onto police buses, thrown to the ground and stomped on. The day of protest was the fifth in as many months of rising unrest over an economic recession and Pinochet's authoritarian rule. Communists and other leftist groups have called for street demonstrations to last through Sunday, the 10th anniversary of the bloody coup that over- threw Marxist President Salvador Allende and brought Pinochet to power. Heterosexual contact could be linked to AIDS, report finds CHICAGO - AIDS, a deadly disease spreading fear among male homo- sexuals, may also be spread by intimate heterosexual contact, doctors reported yesterday. Groups at highest risk for contracting acquired immune deficiency syn- drome, a breakdown of the body's immune system, are male homosexuals, intravenous drug users, hemophiliacs and Haitians. "This mode of sexual transmission may provide a vector for the spread of AIDS to low-risk populations," said Drs. Arthur Pitchenick and Margaret Fischl of the University of Miami and Dr. Thomas Spira of Atlanta's Center for Disease Control. They reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association on two AIDS patients not among the high-risk groups. One was a 30-year-old black woman, the wife of an intravenous drug user, who showed no symptoms of AIDS. The other was a 30-year-old white man who had no predisposition to AIDS except for minimal contact with a homosexual brother. Neither of their high-risk relatives suffered from AIDS. St Louis teachers told to work ST. LOUIS - A federal judge yesterday ordered 3,800 teachers and other school workers to end the biggest of the nation's current teacher strikes because it was disrupting a court-approved desegregation plan. U.S. District Judge Stephen Limbaugh's order directed the strikers to get back to work immediately, but union officials declined to respond until they had been served with the order. Copies were being mailed yesterday to each striking teacher and school worker. Union President Evelyn Battle White said she was sure the teachers would stay at their picket lines at least until they were served notice of the temporary restraining order. The judge set a Friday afternoon hearing on whether to continue his direc- tive. About 2,700 teachers and 1,000 support workers have been on strike over wages and class size since Wednesday, which was the first day of school and the first day of a voluntary busing program. The plan is designed to bring about 550 suburban students to 11 inner-city "magnet" schools that attract students by offering special courses. St. Louis schools remained open Wednesday and yesterday with the help of about 500 administrators and volunteers, but officials conceded that most of the effort was aimed at keeping order, and there was little teaching. Vol. XCIV - No. 2 Friday, September 9, 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. 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; C.1assified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. "'7"k .:" .r 4'. . . :.te t+ya' ,)Q..' ,, "cy y '++'/ . d. a.. ' A4A". w ; 1ST QUALITY FLANNELETTE QUILTED FAMOUS BRANDX SOLID REVERSIBLE COMFORTERS NAMES LIKE... FIELDCREST COMPARABLE VALUE LINEN CENTER PRICE CANNON' Twin $20.00 BURLINGTON Full 30.00 $12.99 ANY SIZE SPRINGMAID Queen 40.00 -MUTA I. PEPPERELL . . .r .* ...6r._ .... .. ..r. . SPECIAL PURCHASE 1ST QUALITY IMPERIAL ENSEMBLES "THE NEW EXTRA SOFT TOWEL" COMPARABLE VALUE LINEN CENTER PRICE Bath $8.00 $2.99 Hand 5.00 1.99 Wash 2.50 1.49 Fingertips 3.00 1.49 ."-j~ . 4. '4~44'*~44444S:~i-,-~,<~- ~1 ~ ." r -1 I I I . 4. - der - . .. .. a' r > . . < J " 71T"..< 'T ',;y ' /< ri Yrj">" .1 . __y"Y N .. h+. / N ' ^>.'" .' Jy _Y'' 4/ t.: . F : : rG 11 September 7-October 7 :3 t > -f: 6..Q j. <,l Linen Center° Editor-in-chief ......................BARRY WITT Managing Editor .......................JANET RAE News Editor ..................... GEORGE ADAMS Student Affairs Editor.................BETH ALLEN Features Editor ................. FANNIE WEINSTEIN Opinion Page Editors ................. DAVID SPAK BILL SPINDLE Arts/Magazine Editors ..............MARE HODGES SUSAN MAKUCH Sports Editor ........................ JOHN KERR .sifOAA SPORTS STAFF: Jeff Bergida, Randy Berger, Katie Blackwell, Joe Bower, Jim Davis, Joe Ewing, Jeff Faye, Paul Helgren, Steve Hunter, Doug Levy. Tim Makinen, Mike McGraw, Jeff Mohrenweiser. Rob Pollard, Dan Price, Mike Redstone, Paulo Schipper, John Toyer, Steve Wise. Business Manager ........ SAMY L G. SLAUGHTER IV Operations Manager ............ LAURIE ICZKOVITZ Sales Manager......................MEG GIBSON Classified Manager .................PAM GILLERY 1. E: