4 Page 2 - The Michiqan Daily - Sundav. November 20. 1983 Five may be charged (Continued from Page 1) service. He said he is a "ticket broker," selling yesterday because he feared and not a scalper, because he resells undercover officers would be trying to tickets to games and concerts across buy tickets. the country at face value and adds a Ann Arbor police Sgt. Paul Bunten service charge to that price, a practice said plain-clothes officers always his lawyer says is completely within the patrol on game days looking for illegal law. vendors of tickets and other items. He On Thursday, he said, a man calling said records would not be available un- himself "Mr. Barber" called to order til tomorrow of any arrests of scalpers four tickets for yesterday's game and at the game. said someone would come to Mark's One of the salesmen involved in the storefront office to pick them up. He police crackdown is Mark (he declined said he recognized the men who came to give his last name) of E-Z Ticket to pick them up as police officers, but PLO rebels kill 25 with ticket was not worried because he has always had a good relationship with the city police. After he gave the men the tickets and cited his price, mark said, the badges came out." Earlier in the day, he said, a police officer he knew came in and asked to buy two tickets. Mark said he gave the officer the tickets "on the house," as he often does for people he knows in the police department, University athletic ticket department, and other offices. He also said he has worked closely scalping with police on recovering stolen tickets and trying to donate to charity groups tickets he can not sell. Mark said his business is well-known by police, who sometimes wave to him through his storefront window as they pass on patrol, and by the athletic ticket department and the box offices from which he buys tickets. He has a city license, pays taxes, and regularly ad- vertises the tickets he sells for events throughout the country. "We have no intention of violating the law," he said. Arafat supporters (Continued from Page 1) were killed during the demonstration, which took place in the camp Friday. Syria's defense minister, Gen. Mustafa Tlass, was quoted by the pro- Syrian magazine Al-Kifab Al-Arabi as saying, "If the Americans attack us, then we shall answer with all adequate means. We have flyers ready to under- take kamikaze attacks on American warships" off Beirut. Tlass also said Syria possesses sur- face-to-surface missiles with an 85-mile range capable of hitting Israel's Negev nuclear reactor. SYRIA HAS 50,000 troops in Lebanon, backed up by 5,000-7,000 Soviet troops in Damascus, many of them deployed at sophisticated missile batteries that could present a danger to U.S., Israeli' or other intruding jets. "When there is a Lebanese resister who storms the Marine base, why shouldn't I have pilots prepared to ac- complish similar heroic missions?" Tlass said. It was the first time a Syrian Cabinet minister praised the Oct. 23 suicide bombing that killed 239 U.S. ser- vicemen at the Marine base in Beirut. ISRAELI JETS killed an estimated 40 guerrillas in the eastern Baalbek area Wednesday in retaliatory strikes, and French jet fighters killed about 50 in the same region Thursday. On Friday, Shiite Moslem guerrilla leader Hussein Musawi told reporters in Baalbek, "Plenty of our suicide men, wearing their death shrouds, shall chase them around the clock. The aggressors will taste new methods of suicide retaliation that they haven't ex- perienced before." Syrian-backed Palestinian rebels pounded Tripoli yesterday with 100 shells a minute, terrorizing residents and setting ships ablaze in an inten- sified assault to oust Yasser Arafat from the port city. After 24 hours of heavy fightinj, the supporters of the Palestine Liberation Organization chairman were entren- ched at the edge of the battered Bed- dawi refugee camp adjoining Tripoli while Syrian tanks pounded the city. Arafat aides said the PLO chief had no intention of leaving Tripoli as long as the Syrian and rebel siege continued. iOAPSo * S i Here is a synopsis of what happened on the campus' Sunday- favorite soaps this week as submitted to the Daily by KA PPA ALPHA PH I PARTYstudents. If you're interested 2-FOR-i prices all night in writing next week, call 764- $2.00 before 11:30 0552. Monday- All My Children GR EEKS F REE LAMBDA CH I A LPH A PARTY TJenny spends her 18th birthday with LAMB A CH ALHA P RTYTony. She wanted to be with Greg, and pitchers 1%3 regular price Tony's attempts to cheer her up only depressed her more. Jesse dreams of reuniting himself, Angie, and their Tuesday- LADIES FREE baby, but Mr. Baxter is determined to make sure this never happens. Angie 2-FOR-i till 10:30 sneaks over to see Jesse. Nina tries to take advantage of the riff in Cliff and D.J. SPINS TOP 40 AND FUNK! Devon's relationship, but Cliff's answer is a cool no. Tadd has a lot of explaining to do upon returning to Pine Valley. He lies to Mrs. Martin and Opal to cover SHORTWAY ANNOUNCES 30 MINU TE EXPRESBU From Student Union to Metro Airport NOV. 22nd, 23rd 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-552-3700 his affair with Marion, but it's only a matter of time before it's everybody's business. - Douglas C. Middlebrooks General Hospital Laura's back. The Cassadines kid- napped her and took her to their secluded Greek island. Helena Cassadine helped her escape to Athens where she caught a flight to the U.S. Now she's wandering the docks of Port Charles and will not make her presence known. Blackie and Jimmy Lee have seen her but do not know who she is. Luke and Leslie have weird vibes about Laura and think she may be back. Grant gives all the DVX names to the U.S. government. One of the names checks out so he is released. General Hospital kicks him off the staff for his involvement with the DVX, and the Quartermaines are bumming heavily that he and Celia are staying in their house. Monica sticks by them. Luke moves into the mayor's mansion. -A lphi Phi sorority INBRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Four die in Texas train crash BAYTOWN, Texas - An engine hauling tankers in a rail yard smashed in- to parked freight cars and telescoped early yesterday, killing four men as a tanker carrying jet fuel slammed into the engine from behind, authorities said. The dead men and a fifth trainman whose legs and arm were broken lay in the wreckage and jet fuel leaked from the tanker for two hours before other rail workers discovered the crash, the second fatal train wreck in Texas in eight days. Texas Department of Public Safety spokesman Larry Todd said there was no danger from the jet fuel. The collision was in a yard area where trains are not tracked elec- tronically, Baldwin said. The yard is used by work trains to "build," or put together, freight trains for cross-country hauling. All the victims were Southern Pacific employees, a railroad spokeswoman said. On Nov. 12, four people died when an Amtrak train derailed near Marshall, Texas. Earlier this week, there were freight train accidents in Louisiana, New Mexico and California. One person died in the Louisiana wreck. Greyhound runs for third day, rallies and violence continue A Greyhound bus was escorted by police into Macon, Ga. yesterday after being pelted by rocks, but picket lines at bus terminals around the nation were relatively quiet as the bus company worked for a third day to resume service in 27 states. Four men, two in a car and two in a pickup truck, were waiting alongside U.S. highways 19-41 outside Griffin and threw rocks at a Greyhound bus traveling from Atlanta to Macon, then followed the bus, passed it and drove slowly ahead of it, Griffin police officer Sam Parks said. No injuries were reported. Meanwhile, local presidents of the Amalgamated Transit Union left Scot- tsdale, Ariz., carrying to the membership the company's latest contract proposal that calls for a $40-a-week pay cut for drivers. A membership vote will be tallied Nov. 29. Union leaders originally refused to put the new offer to a vote, saying it was virtually the same as an offer rejected before the strike that called for cuts in wages and benefits. Details of the new offer were not disclosed, but some union sources who requested anonymity said the new version set the wage cut at 6.5 percent. Incidents of harassment were reported around the country, but strikers generally were calm in contrast to outbreaks of violence that caused more than 130 arrests when buses first returned to the highways. Salvador rebels attack two towns SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - Leftist rebels battled 30 national guar- dsmen in two towns northeast of the capital yesterday, and saboteurs dynamited a string of power lines blacking out two provinces. Civilian and military informants, who spoke on condition they not be iden- tified, said several hundred guerrillas attacked Dolores and Cuyantepeque, two small towns 60 miles northeast of San Salvador. "The fighting is heavy and there are many casualties," said one civilian source in Sensuntepeque, about 11 miles north of Dolores. "Most of the wounded have been evacuated to Sensuntepeque or the capital." The fighting cut off telephone communications to the embattled towns at 2 a.m., shortly after the attack on Doloresstarted, a military officer in Sen- suntepeque said. Leftist guerillas have launched hundreds of such attacks in their four- year-old war against the U.S.-backes Salvadoran government. The latest operations appeared aimed at consolidating their control over a swath of territory near the northern border with Honduras. Storms blast U.S., injure nine A tornado spawned by heavy thunderstorms injured five people and des- troyed as many as six houses in rural southeastern Texas yesterday, while a wintry storm blasted Colorado, leaving up to 17 inches of snow. Meanwhile, the thunderstorms caused rain and hail in Arkansas and Louisiana. The tornado touched down at a cotton planation near Millican, Texas, shortly before 10 a.m., sending one person to a hospital in critical condition and cutting electricity to the area, Texas Department of Public Safety spokesman Larry Todd said. Marcos regime warns that riot Police will control civil unrest MANILA, Philippines - Thousands of protesters, some chanting "Mar- cos, Hitler, dictator, puppet," marched near Manila yesterday as the gover- nment warned that riot troops would guard against outbreaks of violence in the capital. President Ferdinand Marcos' government said crack anti-terrorist bat- talions, including an armored unit, have been ordered to control civil unrest in Manila sparked by the slaying of opposition leader Benigno Aquino. The announcement came as thousands of workers and opposition groups prepared for a series of anti-Marcos work stoppages and demonstrations, including a nationwide strike scheduled for on Nov. 28. In a thinly-veiled warning to the growing ranks of protesters marching almost daily through the streets of Manila, military officials said the riot troops would "be able to function well when the situation calls for it." Government radio said the special unit had recently undergone training in "controlling civil disturbances and in checking urban guerrilla operations." Sunday, November 20, 1983 Vol. XCI V-No. 65 (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. Tom Ehr, Joe Ewing, Chris Harrison, Paul Helgren, Editor-in-chief .... BARRY WITT Steve Hunter, Tom Keaney, Ted Lerner, Doug Levy, Managing Editor............ JANET RAE Tim Makinen, Adam Martin, Mike McGraw, Scott News Editor ......................GEORGE ADAMS McKinloy, BorbMcQuode Lisa Noferi, Phil Nussel, Rob Student Affairs Editor................... BETH ALLEN Pollard, Mike Redstone, Scott Solowich, Paulo Schip- Features Editor ..................FANNIE WEINSTEIN per, Randy Schwartz, Rich Weidis, Steve Wise, Andrea Opinion Page Editors.................. DAVID SPAK Walt. BILL SPINDLE Business Manager r .. SAM G SLAUGHTER IV Arts/Magazine Editors .............. MARE HODGESI Soles Manager .. ........ MEG GIBSON SUSAN MAKUCH Operations Manager LAURIE ICZKOVITZ Associate Arts Editor.................. JAMES BOYD Classified Manager ......... PAM GILLERY Sports Editor........................... JOHN KERR Display Manager ..... . JEFF VOIGT Associate Sports Editors............JIM DWORMAN Finance Manager JOE TRULIK LARRY FREED Notionols Manager RON WEINER CHUCK JAFFE Coop Manager . ...... . DENA SHEVZOFF LARRY MISHKIN Assistant Display Manager . NANCY GUSSIN RON POLLACK Assistant Classified Manager .... LINDA KAFTAN Chief Photographer ................DEBORAH LEWIS Assistant Sales Manager JULIE SCHNEIDER NEWS STAFF: Jerry Aliotto, Cheryl Boacke, Sue Bar. Assistant Operations Manager .. STACEY FALLEK to, Jody Becker, Neil Chse, Stephanie DeGroote, Soles Coordinator ....... STEVE MATHER Laurie DeLater, Marcy Fleisher, Rob Frank. Jeanette Circulation Supervisor .......... TIM BENNETT 4 14 4 41 4 4 The Young Restless and the a. S a ' R9 'V 4 ,S. . , it . 'W 'tI ,K I Jack rescues Jill from her car in which she was trapped by the blizzard. Seeking refuge in an abandoned sum- mer cabin, they arouse old passions. An unknown stranger witnesses and photographs their activities. John ex- presses his concern over Jill's whereabouts after returning from din ner with Dina. Tracey's pusher visits her in the hospital and threatens her not to inform on him. Ashley expresses doubts about her future with Eric and suspects a relationship between Jack and Jill. Amy is hired by Paul and Andy as a secretary at the insistence of Jazz. Kevin takes Victoria shopping which only worsens her condition. Rick carries her to the hospital where she recovers. Victor proposes to Julia, but Julia is undecided. - Joe Ortiz, John Jones, Bill Stahl, and Jerry Walden N~00 0 "o 4 A °'1 Greetigca~rdt s home or the holidy (7-.