Page 2 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 20, 1984 Freeze will be on November ballot By TRACEY MILLER A proposal to make Ann Arbor a nuclear-free zone' will not appear on the city election ballot in April, but sponsors of the proposal said yesterday the Novem- ber elections are "exactly what we wanted." The proposal was lifted from the spring ballot earlier this week by City, Attorney R. Bruce Laidlaw, who said signatures on petitions supporting the motion were not properly notarized. THE MICHIGAN Alliance for Disarmament :(MAD), which sponsored the proposal, collected the .5,000 signatures necessary to place the proposition on the April ballot and submitted the petitions before the -Jan. 3 deadline. But city officials announced last Monday that the petitions were invalid because the signatures had not been notarized. Janis Michael of MAD yesterday said the group had received the petitions back and is continuing its campaign - this time eyeing the November elec- tions. "Originally we were aiming for the November ballot, but we were told by city hall that we would not be able to be on that ballot, as it was to be a special election and we would need (signatures from) 20 per- cent of the registered voters." THE 5,000-signature requirement MAD is working under represents 5 percent of the city's registered voters. After the notarization foul-up, MAD was told that its proposal could appear on the November ballot. The group can use the signatures it has already collected provided the signature collectors are notarized before the petitions are submitted for the November elections. LAIDLAW SAID yesterday thatvthe city will accept the signatures again for the November ballot. "There is no law that says that we can't give back the signatures that have already been turned in. We just have never done it," he said. Laidlaw said one could argue that the petitions should not have been returned to MAD because once submitted they become public property. "But we will stick by our agreement to accept the signatures in November," he said. MAD still must accumulate 5,000 signatures in the next six months. Only a small portion of the petitions already submitted have been checked for validation by the city clerk. Shultz sees no progress in arms negotiations OSLO, Norway (AP) - Secretary of State George Shultz, acknowledging he made no headway in trying to reopen nuclear arms control talks with ,the Soviet Union, vowed yesterday that 'the United States would maintain its "willpower and self-confidence" while seeking new opportunities for negotiation. Shultz said at the wind-up of a five- ,day European trip he had "nothing :positive to report" after his five-hour meeting in Stockholm on Wednesday with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei 'Gromyko on breaking the deadlock in the negotiations. BUT HE also indicated the Soviets may be getting ready to reopen East- West talks on limiting conventional for- ces in Europe. These negotiations, suspended a month ago, "are in a somewhat different category for the Soviets," Shultz said. The negotiations, called Mutal, and Balanced Force Reductions, focus on the troops stationed in Europe by NATO ahd the Warsaw Pact. The talks have been going on for more than 10 years. Shultz rejected Gromyko's bitter condemnation of U.S. policies in a speech Wednesday to the 35-nation disarmament conference in Stockholm as "incorrect and unacceptable." The Soviet foreign minister denounced the United States as the main threat to peace in the world. SHULTZ assailed the Soviets as promoting unrest in Central America by shipping arms to revolutionary for- ces there. Shultz spoke at a news conference in Oslo, where he was questioned exten- sively on his Wednesday meeting with Gromyko in Stockholm. The Soviets suspended the discussions in Geneva in late November to protest NATO's deployment of new U.S.-built Pershing 2 missiles in Wes4 Germany and cruise missiles in Britain. Last month, parallel talks in the Swiss city to cut back long-range weapons also stalled. Asked about their discussions on how to resume Geneva talks, Shultz said: "It was not in any sense a negotiation or anything approaching a real discussion of the subject matter as such, but there is no agreement at this point on how to conduct those talks." *(U m mm - mm mmm - m m m - m mmmmmo m m= * *I 4 'Normandie Flowers ; Carnations for the price ofi 11 04 S. University . "Your Campus Flower Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Connection" 313 /996-1811 one coupon per person per day: Good thru Jon. 31, 1984 a L m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m= m m m m m m m m m mmm NOON LUNCHEON Friday, January 20 Professor Thomas E. Weisskopf, Dept. of Economics: "An American Strategy for the Left" At GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE Homemade Soup and Sandwiches available for $1 (optional) ... vows to seek'new talks Kelley wants Midland nuclear plant scrapped IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Gov't says incomes rose in '83 WASHINGTON-Americans' personal income was up 3.2 percent in 19834- ter subtracting taxes and inflation, a six-fold improvement over recession- wracked 1982, the government said yesterday. Both government and private economists said the increase in Americans' disposable income reflected the country's healthy economic recovery in 1983, but some warned that 1984 won't present so rosy a picture. The 3.2 percent increase compared to a puny .5 percent rise in 1982.. Helping the rise was the final round of personal income tax cuts in July and the surge in employment as 4 million more Americans found jobs during the year. Also, incomes were not battered by high inflation. For all of 1983, con- sumer prices are expected to be up only 3.2 percent. Commerce Secretary Malcolm Faldrige said the increase was an even larger 5 percent when compared between the fourth quarter of 1982 and the fourth quarter of 1983-marking the best improvement since 1977. However, he and various private economists said Americans probably will not do as well in 1984. "With the tax reduction program behind us, this year's growth in income and spending will be slower," Baldrige said in a statement. Security increases in Beirut after university official's miurder BEIRUT, Lebanon -U.S. officials tightened security yesterday amid fears of neW attacks by the Islamic terrorists who assassinated the president of the American University in Beirut. The U.S. Marines, victims of an October suicide bombing by the same group that claimed to have killed Malcolm Kerr Wednesday, opened fire on a Jeep when it approached their base at "an excessive rate of speed," about 15 mph. Marine spokesman Maj. Dennis Brooks said the Marines "showed great restraint" by disabling the vehicle carrying two Lebanese airport technicians instead Qf shooting to kill when six warnings to halt were ignored. The technicians were coming to repair a radar installation. - After several 'days of violence, Beirut was quiet with Lebanese unive sities and the Roman Catholic school system closed to protest Kerr'. assassination outside his campus office by gunmen using silence-equipped pistols. The Islamic Jihad, or Holy War, claimed responsibility for killing Kerr and also said the Saudi consul kidnapped Tuesday, Hussein Farraj, would be executed soon after an Islamic trial. Woman denied right to starve SAN FRANCISCO-The CaliforniaSupreme Court yesterday rejected a bid by cerebral palsy victim Elizabeth Couvia for the right to starve herself to death while receiving pain-killers and hygienic care in a Riverside hospital.4 In a brief order, with no comment, the entire court denied therequest tq overturn a lower court decision that prohibited Bouvia from starvingherself to death at Riverside General Hospital while medical workers provide her with pain-killers and personal care to ease the pain of dying. All seven justices participated in the ruling not to grant a hearing to Bouvia, who is a quadriplegic. Four votes are required to grant a hearing and there were none. The hospital earlier this week had said it would provide health care in- definitely for her because it "cannot logically or humanely discharge her." Ex-senator loses bid to avoid ail NEW YORK - Former Sen. Harrison Williams, the first senator in 59 years to be convicted of crimes in office, lost two last-minute court efforts yesterday to delay the start of a three-year sentence for his Abscam convic- tion. Only hours after a federal judge in Uniondale declined to stay the start of Williams' sentence at a Pennsylvania federal prison, a three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan also denied the stay. ''We've considered all the appropriate factors and we are denying the motion,'"said Judge Wilfred Feinberg, chief judge of the federal appeals court. At the earlier session in Uniondale, U.S. District Judge George Pratt said he would not "change the course of events." But Norman Buntaine, William's attorney, appealed to the Manhattan court, which held a brief hearing. Buntaine said afterward he did not know whether he would file a further appeal. Williams, found by reporters as he sat in a parked car outside the Manhat tan courthouse waiting for the hearing, he was "fighting mad" and vowed to "stay in there and fight." General's death ruled suicide SAN ANTONIO, Texas-An Army Reserve general found hanging in a stairwell committed suicide because of financial problems, and probably wanted to spare his family by making it look like a terrorist killing, the medical examiner said yesterday. Maj. Gen. Robert Ownby, 48, was found dangling from a second-story lan- ding in a headquarters building at Fort Sam Houston early Jan. 11, his hands bound behind his back with a belt. A typewritten note pinned to his sweater said the two-star general had been "sentenced and executed" for "crimes by the U.S. Army against the people of the world." However, Bexar County Medical Examiner Dr. Vincent DiMaio said he decided almost immediately that Ownby had taken his own life. "It was fairly evident from the beginning that it was a suicide," DiMaio said. "It was obvious that he had tied his own hands and there were no marks on his body indicating a struggle. There was no sign of foul play." LANSING (UPI) - Attorney General Frank Kelley, citing an Indiana firm's decision to abandon construction of a nuclear plant, urged Consumers Power Co. yesterday to do the same with its troubled Midland facility. Kelley recommended a plan that would involve elimination or drastic reduction of stockholder dividends, but Consumers officials said the Indiana situation is not a fair comparison. In a letter to John'Selby, Consumers president and chairman, Kelley cited actions taken by the Public Service Company of Indiana Monday "under circumstances similar to yours." The Indiana firm cancelled construc- tion of its two-unit Marble Hill nuclear facility, following the recommendation of a gubernatorail task force. That task force called for common stock dividen- ds to be eliminated for a period of three years and then resumed at a rate equal to 35 percent of net income. Consumers officials, saying they had not yet received Kelley's letter, restated their commitment to com- pleting the plant and stressed that Con- sumers' electric rates are among the lowest in the nation. Friday, January 20, 1984 Vol. XCIV-No. 91 (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 Gerbosi. Jeff Harrison, Pau,, Editor-in-chief ........................ BARRY WITT 'Helgren, Steve Hunter, Tom Keoney. Ted Lerner. Doug. Managing Editor ......... . ....... JANET RAE Levy, Tim Makinen. Adam Martin. Mike McGraw,' News Editor......................GEORGE ADAMS Scott McKinley Barb McQuade LisacNofen, Phil, Student Affairs Editor . ........ BETH ALLEN Nusseall Rob Pollard, Mike Redstone. Scott Salowich.. a---...,,. .,,,'t, ,«rav n *. Paula Schipper, Randy Schwartz. 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