The Michigan Dail Chrysler renegotiates Michigan loan LANSING, Mich. (UPI) - The "new" Chrysler Corp. is getting a new deal on its $150-million loan from Michigan, in- eluding a shorter repayment schedule and lower interest, it was announced yesterday. The original terms of the loan called for an interest rate of 15.5 percent and a repayment schedule stretching through 1995. { UNDER THE new terms, the interest rate is dropped to 11 percent and repayment will be made by 1989. As part of the agreement, Chrysler paid off $20 million of the loan three to four years ahead of schedule. Chrysler Vice President James Tolley handed Gov. James Blanchard a check for the $20 million at a Capitol ceremony announcing the loan renegotiation. THE PAYMENT reduces the loan principal to $125 million. Chrysler paid the other $5 million on the principal Jan. 4 in accordance with the previous repayment schedule. The new repayment schedule calls for five annual payments of $25 million each starting Jan. 4, 1985. Michigan Treasurer Robert Bowman said the new terms are a good deal for the state, despite the lower interest rate, because the duration of the loan has been shortened. And he said Chrysler had the option of merely paying off the loan to avoid the high interest payments originally negotiated in 1980. Chrysler has paid Michigan more than $89 million in interest on the loan since the first payment was made in May 1980. Democratic hopefuls - Saturday, March 3, 1984 - Page 3 Bartender says he expected r-oin tavern FALL RIVER, Mass. (UPI) - The bartender in a tavern where a young mother said she was raped testified yesterday he feared trouble just minutes before and said he was ready to call police and have her taken out. Carols Machado told a Bristol Superior Court jury he was worried because the 22-year-old mother of two was "laughing and talking with the boys" around the bar at Big Dan's Tavern in nearby New Bedford, "I WAS SEEING things like I'd never seen before, a group of guys around a girl in. such a tight conversation," Machado said, testifying in Portuguese with his remarks translated into English by a court interpreter. "I was going to call the police to put her out," the bartender added. Machado, testifying for the third day in the trial of six men accused in the alleged gang rape, said he asked a patron to call police, but the man did nothing. Minutes later, the bartender said, he heard a loud noise, looked over the bar and saw the woman on the floor, with two defendants trying to pull off her blue jeans. He said the woman ordered three drinks before the incident and was talking to most of the other men in the bar, with her arms around one of them. Under questioning by defense lawyers, Machado, who is not a US. citizen, denied suggestions he was testifying for the prosecution to avoid deportation for illegal possession of firearms during an unrelated incident last October. campaign From AP and UPI Walter Mondale told Maine voters yesterday that "I haven't made a promise I can't keep" and headed south for an Atlanta faceoff with Sen. Gary Hart, who is pressing his assertiontha people are more interested in "new visions" than Mondale's endorsements. While Mondale and Hart were touching political bases in New England, Sen. John Glenn and the Rev Jesse Jackson concentrated their effor ts in the South, where the four Democratic presidential candidates are fighting foi convention delegate seats at stake 'March 13 in the Florida, Georgia and Alabama primaries. MONDALE, who has conceded he nc longer is the front-runner and is in a tight battle with Hart for the presiden tial nomination, unveiled his new aggressive style as he returned to the stump in Maine. in South Hart, the 47-year-old contender, also refused to claim the role of favorite and said during a brief campaign stop in Vermont, "I don't think people should expect a miracle every Tuesday."~ As Mondale and Hart proclaimed they are in a two-way horserace, the odd man out - Glenn of Ohio - campaigned in Georgia, desparately looking for the "Super Tuesday' breakthrough that could keep his can- didacy alive. Glenn, pouring all of his dwindling resources into the South, has shut down his offices in Texas, Michigan, Maine and Washington. Jackson, ,lashing out at Hart, Mon- dale and Glenn in almost non-stop tours of the South, campaigned in Florida. McGovern is concentrating his cam- paign in Massachusetts, the only state to vote for him in the 1972 presidential race. Shutdown AP Photo The Davis-Besse nuclear power station in Port Clinton, Ohio, shut itself off yesterday after a steam system valve stuck. The incident was given low priority as an emergency and Toledo Edison officials said they don't know how long the plant will be out of service. Board censures blind doctor OGDENSBURG, N.Y.(AP) - A doctor blinded in an auto- accident said yesterday he expected punishment for operating on at least eight patients after he lost his sight, but thinks the state went too far with a censure that now threatens his practice. The state board of regents said John Bongiovanni, a urologist, performed at least eight urinary, bladder or prostate operations in late 1980 or early 1981. THE STATE HEALTH Department announced yesterday that it had fined A. Barton Hepburn hospital $4,000 for allowing the same operations. John Symons, the hospital administrator, who hired Bongiovanni as the hospital's medical director last Feb. 1, said the hospital agreed to the fine in July 1983. He said the medical procedures performed by Bongiovanni were not surgery "in the sense of cutting people open." "They were operative procedures which sometimes are done in doctors' offices; in some situations done by ancillary personnel non-physicians," Symons said. However, a state Health Department official said the procedures were surgical and that thge censure would stand. AS BONGIOVANNI'S punishment, the regents limited his license to practice until he undergoes retraining; banned his guide dog from patient areas; ordered him to inform patients that he is blind; proscribed his participation in further surgery, and limited the urology practice to consultation. "The Health Department isn't going to change its mind. I can tell you that," said Kathleen Tanner, Director of the Of- fice of Professional Medical Conduct. He said the retraining restriction was a veiled message that he should undergo retraining in some non-manual prac- tice of medicine, such as psychiatry. 4HAPPENINGS Highlight The School of Music sponsors several recitals, including bassoon,; voice and clarinet performances, starting at 4 p.m. in Recital Hall. Also, the Con- temporary Directions Ensemble plays at 8:30 in Rackham Anphitheateri Films AAFC - Casablanca, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 4. Alt. Act. - Betrayal, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Cinema Guild - Danton, 7 & 9:30 p.m., Lorch Hall. Cinema 2 - War Games, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Mediatrics - Gaslight, 7 p.m., Sunset Boulevard, 9 p.m., MLB 4. Performances Reader's Theatre Guild - Oral performance of works by Updike, Poe, Douglas Adams, Lewis Carroll, 8p.m., Anderson Room, Union. Hillel - Chava Albertstein, 8p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Ark - Rare Air, 8 p.m., 1421 Hill Street. Speakers Union of Students for Israel - Several Speakers, "Arab-Israeli Relations - Past, Present, and Future," 11 a.m., 1429 Hill Street. Non Jewish Agenda - Rita Giacaman and Tamara Berger, "The West Bank Today: Palestinian and Israeli Women Speak," 4 p.m., Ann Arbor Public Library. Progressive Zionist Caucus - Gary Brenner, "Peace Now Today," 4:30 p.m., Union. Meetings Tae Kwon Do Club - 9p.ni., Coliseum. Ann Arbor Go Club - 2 p.m., room 1433 Mason Hall. Muslim Students Assoc. -7:30 p.m., Muslim House. Miscellaneous Matthaei Botanical Gardens - Lobby Sale, 10 a.m., Botanical Gardens. Affirmative Action - Bronze Elegance Fashion Show, 8 p.m., Union Ballroom. Latin American Culture Project - Brazilian Carnival, 8 p.m., Half-Way Inn. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 U.S. aided England, magazine says (Continued from Page 1) American help," the report said. IT SAID WEINBERGER, "an ardent Anglophile," pushed through the aid without fully informing Alexander Haig, secretary of state at the time. The Economist said Weinberger's "most remarkable offer of the war" was a proposal to let Britain use the 11,750-ton USS Guam if either of Britain's two aircraft carriers, HMS Invincible or HMS Hermes, were put out of action. But defense sources in Washington said it would have been unrealistic to turn over the helicopter carrier Guam to the British during the war because of the time needed to instruct a new crew on how to operate such a vessel. THE USE OF an American crew on the Guam in a war zone would have been out of the question, the defense sources said. The Economist said 98 percent of British intelligence on Argentine movements was supplied by the United States, and "Britain persuaded the Americans to move a military satellite from a Soviet-watching orbit over the northern hemisphere to cover the Falklands area." The order to sink the Argentinian cruiser Belgrano, in which 368 Argen- tinian sailors died, was probably com- municated to the British nuclear sub- marine, HMS Conquerer, over an American military satellite link, the magazine said. American aid, The Economist said, poured into the American Wideawake airbase on British-owned Ascension Island in the south Atlantic. It included Sidewinder AIM-9L missiles, "the single most decisive weapon of the campaign," 12.5 million gallons of aviation fuel and thousands of mortar rounds. NOW YOU CAN LEARN BOTH! FINALLY! A SPEED REAOM~ PROGRAM THAT CUTS YOUR READING TIME WITHOUT SACRIFICING COMPREHENSION OR RECALL! FAST AND SMART ...ISN T THAT HOW YOU WANT TO READ? BREAKTHROUGH RAPID READING Call Days, Evenings or Wee ends for Details KIPIAN (3131662-3149 EDUCATIONAL 203 E Hoover s SPS ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 9,600 screened for measles (Continued from Page 1) of the University Hospital, Briefer said, but is neither a student nor a campus, resident. Briefer said he didn't "think we'd ever have an epidemic on campus" because of the swiftness in which Health Services initiated the inoculation drive. The vaccination drive was most in- tense the week of Feb. 13, just before spring break. Health officials were worried that some students would carry the virus with them around the country during break. "WE'RE NOT aware of any other outbreaks around the country, but (now) would be just about the time (10 days after exposure) that symptoms would be showing if they were infec- ted," Daniels said. Daniels said that University health officials are trying to prevent another viral scare by compiling a thorough immunization evaluation on all studen- ts. They are considering sending evaluation forms to students, but that is still in the planning stages, she added. "It's not easy, though," Daniels said, adding that health surveys are not mandatory and few students take the time to fill them out. "It's also very difficult because very few students know their immunization status," she said. Briefer is trying to get the ad- ministration's cooperation in making the surveys a requirement, but so far he has had no success. , The State Department of Health ab- sorbed the cost of the immunization drive by providing the vaccinations free of charge to the University. Health Services is still giving free in- noculations. 764-0558 764-0558 GRADUATE ASSISTANTSHIPS AVAILABLE AT EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Get Good Teaching Experience While Working Toward an M.A. $3150 per year, plus 8 hours free tuition per SEMESTER For information call James Reynolds or Judith Johnson 487-1363 or 487-4220 DEADLINE: MARCH 15, 1984 For application forms write: DIRECTOR OF GRADUATE-STUDIES English Department EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY Ypsilanti, MI 48197 AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 2, \ 9 a.m. stress... Another semester of early classes can be handled easier when you live on campus. University Towers is only 5 minutes from the diag, your classes, favorite restaurants, shopping and recreation. Sleep later and enjoy our convenient location! Best yet, our rent is very reasonable: Malicious Intent ---------- 1 y f, '"/ / n~ / Y