The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 10, 1984 - Page 5 Lavelle sentenced to six months in prison, fined WASHINGTON - A federal judge yesterday sentenced fired EPA official r Rita Lavelle to six months in prison and a $10,000 fine, 'saying her perjured testimony to Congress violates "the t very core" of public trust in gover- nment. But Lavelle called her prosecution ''an unbelievable nightmare" and vowed to appeal her conviction on four counts of perjury, filing a false sworn statement and obstructing a congressional investigation into the Superfund toxic waste cleanup program. Under the sentence imposed by U.S. District Judge Norma Johnson, Lavelle, 36, must serve at least five months before becoming eligible for parole. Following the jail term she will have a five-year probationary term, during which she must perform charitable community service for little or no pay. Johnson rejected a defense request that Lavelle be spared prison time and instead by allowed to teach or perform other volunteer work for Catholic Charities in her home state of Califor- nia. 4 Appealing the conviction will delay imposition of the sentence for at least several months, during which she will AP Photo be free without bail. 'Former Environmental Protection Agency official Rita Lavelle and her attorney James Vierbower meet reporters out- Eleven months after President Mside U.S. District Court yesterday after she was sentenced to six months injail and fined for lying to Congress. Reagan fired her from the Environ- mental Protection Agency, Lavelle is the first high-level official of his ad- ministration sentenced to prison for commiting a felony while in office. "You indeed violated the public trust," Johnson said in announcing the sentence. "The perjury offense strikes at the very core of the trust that had been conferred to you." The judge also scolded Lavelle for still insisting that her lies under oath to two congressional panels was merely a mistake, saying, "You can't admit to yourself the injury you caused the federal government.. . the injury to all of us citizens." The judge said Lavelle had "refused to set the record straight" even though she knew that her contentions about her former employer, Aerojet-General Corp., were false. Lavelle had sworn under oath to two Angressional committees last February that she had not known until June 17, 1982, that Aerojet had dumped wastes at the Stringfellow Acid Pits in California. The government charged that Lavelle was told on May 28, 1982, about Aerojet's involvement at Stringfellow and left a trail of lies to cover up efforts she made to ingratiate herself with Aerojet so that she could land a high- paying job there once she left the EPA. Lavelle was convicted on four counts of lying about the date in testimony before two congressional committees; one count of lying in a sworn statement. and one count of trying to obstruct a congressional investigation by sending the statement to Congress. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 Parks, Blanchard honor King at Capitol LANSING (UPI) - The great martyr oA the civil rights movement was honored yesterday in ceremonies at the Capitol attended by a woman con- sidered by some to be the mother of that movement. Rosa Parks of Detroit - whose irusal to give up her seat touched off the famous Montgomery, Ala. bus bdycott in the 1950s - joined Gov. James Blanchard, state Sen. Jackie Vaughn (D-Detroit), and other dignitaries in the Capitol rotunda for a noontime celebration in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. THE CEREMONY marked King's; 55th birthday and the 16th anniversary Daily Classifieds Bring Results of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change. It also was dubbed a ceremonial tree planting - although the tree itself ac- tually was placed in the Capitol's south lawn last fall. Blanchard said the life of King demonstrates that "the power of justice and truth lives on and transcends mere mortals." PARKS told the crowd that King "would be happy to be in our midst today." "I was a troubled woman when I first met him," she recalled, thinking back to the days of the boycott. King's teachings "did bring about a change in my thinking about people, racism and humanity," she said. SHE said she remembers "how eloquent and dedicated he was to the betterment of mankind." Parks said it was her first visit to the Capitol in the 27 years she has lived in Michigan. The crowd also heard from two young honor students from Benton Harbor. "He was a peaceful warrior," said Kirsten Enders, a fourth grader. Music was provided by the Salt and Pepper choir of Ottawa Hills High School. The program closed when the speakers and members of the audience joined hands and sang with the choir the civil rights anthem "We Shall Over- come." This spring, a plaque will be placed on the tree planted in King's memory. A Department of Natural Resources official said the sugar maple likely will continue through the year 3000 bearing witness to King's life. Weary Jackson woos Detroit minorities Subscribe to The Michigan Daily . PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT - NIGHTS The College of Literature, Science, and the Arts is currently interviewing students interested in participating in an alumni fundraising telethon. LSA alumni across the country will be called from campus. The telethon runs five nights per week, Sunday through Thursday, January 29 through February 16. Each week you select'two of the five nights available, with some opportunity to work additional nights. HOURS: 8:00 to 11:00 p.m. PAY: $3.55 per hour LSA students preferred Call 763-5576 ' i I - I I (Continued from Page 1) because web's lazy," he said. "We work the hardest, and the longest, on the last Of the jobs, doing the most menial dhores. We're not lazy," Jackson told the predominantly black crowd. JACKSON called for stronger gover- nment education programs, saying, "Nobody should want to go to college in America and .be turned away because they don't have the money." He also pushed the idea that minorities are capable of leading the nation. "Hispanics were running nations before America was a nation," he said. "Can a handicapped person run this nation? When Hoover ran it down, it was Roosevelt in a wheelchair - a han- dicapped man - who brought it out." JACKSON has made a major effort to bring minority and labor groups into his campaign by forming a "rainbow coalition" of various organizations; representatives of many such groups' were on hand Sunday to show their sup- port. The candidate also was welcomed by city officials and state legislators who praised his diplomatic efforts in the Middle East. Conspicuously absent from the rally, was Detroit Mayor Coleman Young, who is supporting former vice president Walter Mondale's candidacy. During a press conference before his speech, Jackson played down the importance of losing Young's endorsement, saying that he had talked to the mayor and "We have more in common than in con- flict." IN INTRODUCING Jackson, however, Minister Louis Farrakhan said Young's and other black leaders' endorsement of Mondale would hurt Jackson's campaign seriously. Jackson's campaign has propelled him into a tie for third place among eight men seeking the Democratic nomination. And he said he is pleased with the success. "Mondale's been run- ning for six years. I've been running two months. I'm running number three, and I'm impressed," he said. Although many observers, including Rev. Jerry Falwell, have predicted that Jackson will be offered a vice presiden- tial bid after the Democrats pick their candidate next July, Jackson said it was too early to discuss that possibility. "One doesn't run for the vice presiden- cy," he said. "One runs for the presidency." "Mondale has done a good job at (being vice president)," he added, "and maybe he should extend his reign. I (19,;. ~f /i- "=\ c (2 1 ,.f C. '_, J j l 4 7,' U-.>> (i come join our staff The Univcrsity of Michigan Housing Division RESIDENCE HALL POSITIONS 1984-85 SEEKING STUDEN'T'S: In erestcd( iI wo>rking wAilih oh licistudcits in a residelc hall ('11virl*0 e 11 n lt. Intcr-st1 1 ( i lt dev'f O}ing a spirit of (Y)I1 i I11 I wit h in t I (si(lV(, ULhall me11r t i l >(1p 1ing ndstrentheniciing skillsIIn gro up icald csl '~ )j 1 aniavis~ing. Inrrste CII I2d2 eelo( ping p rognnamninng hit( a di scrsr stdcmiI popuai n 11 in rw sted in d-vl in g :ww sk ills and ial itis I( rI a ict il . POSITIONS AVAILABLE: -- I / /J We're looking for eo le w can see beyande o viol /S ho uS. A\ssistimt RrsiclitI)it c' tar Rusidvntit;Ad isOi s (ciin F('\ cidcc uw iv' I lcadI I 2) a ialls QU A L IFICA T IONS: M ust by a rcgistcrl Ui o;l XIstudt on wth Ann At I :AlmIbor)Campus dluritg the pc xiiod of CntI(mpln1tc MLst have (ollI I((ie a mI) flinliut of four tms 21 0m cquiv, 11cmand 18 unicrgraluat ccrctdit hours towarid p am rognu b w (then( of the SpringP Ter 1198. Undrgralduatc applicans mus hav at Icast a 2.50 cum itMce gradc point avcragc in the s( 1hoolm ) collegc in wh ih th( a rc cnrold by t(' (he end of t he Spring Term 198. 1.graduate au1)11( ants mnust be itt good aIderni( slailding in thw school If Christopher Columbus had been content to ship cargo around the Mediterranean, he would have missed the opportunity to discover the New World. If LINKABIT engineers weren't thinking about what could be, instead of what is, we wouldn't be at the forefront of the telecommunications industry. Thanks to a cadre of conceptual achievers, however, LINKABIT has continued to set the standard in diverse and complex projects such as MILSTAR terminals, video scrambling equipment, domestic satellite systems, modems, codecs, advanced processors and fault- tolerant systems. Now, we're looking for more of the same kinds of thinkers to join our ranks in the following areas: physical environment. San Diego, America's Finest City in location, climate, cultural and recreational facilities, offers you and your family an unsurpassed lifestyle. This invigorating setting, combined with the challenge, satisfaction, and reward of a career at LINKABIT, provides an unbeatable opportunity to fulfill your goals. Opportunities are also available in the Washington, D.C. area and Boston. On Campus Interviews Friday, January 20 Please contact your College Placement Office to arrange an on-campus interview. If you are unable to meet with our representatives, please forward your s S Satellite Data Communications Satellite Network Technologies