4 N CLEMI-VISION & 3M CANADA PART TIME AND FULL TIME SUMMER EMPLOYMENT REQUIRED: INDEPENDENT DISTRIBUTORS & SALES PEOPLE "*Are you looking for a good part time job leading to a full time summer employment? " Are you looking to Develop and Evaluate your entrepreneurial abilities? " Do you desire proof for future employment -"you can work on your own." This product is a very simple glare reflector for CRT's easily installed and demonstrated. Excellent sales re- sults since 3M of Canada has accepted the sole Distri- butorship for Canada. Clemi-Vision is now expanding in all 50 states of the USA through student distribution. Inquiries Welcomed. To attend a demonstration and information seminar to be held near campus, contact by March 12, 1984. Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 9, 1984 Sheriff reign for Domino's IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports , . 14 By RANDI HARRIS After eight years as Washtenaw County's Sheriff, Thomas Minick resigned yesterday to become an executive with the Domino's Pizza company. "I think that Tom Minick has been an excellent sheriff," said County Prosecutor William Delhey. "I regret that he's going, but I understand why." Minick, whose resignation is effective April 20, will be managing security and working with public relations for the Ann Arbor-based pizza firm. Minick first took office in 1977, and he was elected to a second term in 1980. Since the resignation comes in the mid- dle of a term, a committee composed of Delhey, County Clerk Robert Harrison, and Chief Probate Judge Rodney Hut- chinson will appoint a sheriff to fill the remaining 10 months of Minick's term. Delhey said the commission does not have a candidate in mind yet and will probably not meet formally until mid- April. If no successor is named by the time Minick leaves his post, Delhey said, Undersheriff Ronald Schebil would assume the duties until a new sheriff is announced. The resignation leaves "big shoes to fill," said County Administrator David Hunscher. "I consider him one of the finest law enforcement officials I have ever worked with. He is by far head and shoulders above anyone I have ever worked with,"- Hunscher said. Minick was unavailable for comment yesterday. U.S. STUDENTS CANADIAN STUDENTS CLEMI-VISION (days or evenings) ask for Tom Cleminson 3M OF CANADA (9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) ask for Tom Hepburn 519-765-2592 519-451-2500 Public workers strike in France. PARIS - A one-day economic protest strike by nearly 5 million public. workers brought chaos to France yesterday, disrupting government sera:;-$ vices, halting international air traffic, delaying medical operations andi creating massive traffic jams. The strike, involving one-fourth of the country's total work force, was the largest labor outburst since Socialist President Francois Mitterand took,> office three years ago.dd Irate civil servants and employees from nationalized industries stage, noisy demonstrations, shouting "No to austerity, yes to purchasing power' in cities throughout the country. h a The stoppage by France's 4.6 million public sector employees, which als e; closed schools and nationalized banks, was called to protest wage freezes.,., and cuts in the workers' standard of living. 4 The problems came only about a week after the country was hit by a strike.- by truckers protesting the government's taxation policy that caused.; massive traffic tie-ups throughout the country. Poles protest crucifix removaf GARWOLIN, Poland - Hundreds of students opposing the removal of crud-,,, ifixes from their school defied riot police yesterday and took their demon,,., stration to the neighboring town, where the protest spread to three other schools. Some 3,000 people attended two Masses in the Roman Catholic Church of the Transfiguration in Garwolin to protest the removal of the crosses and the decision by authorities to close Stanislaw Stazik agricultural school in the. nearby village of Mietno, 40 miles south of Warsaw. More than 400 young people gave up their occupation of the Stazik school yesterday morning when authorities brought in units of the feared "Zomo" riot police and threatened to clear the building. The students eluded police and made their way to the church. A local priest, the Rev. Stanislaw Binko, delivered a fiery sermon at mid- day, proclaiming "There is no Poland without a cross!' New version told of Aquio death 4 Senate committee delays vote on aid to Salvador 4 THE UNION GRAND PRIZE Round trip airline ticket to Europe from ICELANDAIR First class Eurail Pass FIRST PRIZE = RA6N ,Miyata Ten Speed Spot Bicycle FridayApril 6 frm Great Lakes Cycling Cent in The Michigan Union SECOND PRIZE Students and employees of $150.(X) of Michigan sportswear /(x The University (if Michigan arc and acces soies po w eligible to win (except permanent staff members of The Michigan Union). ENTER at The Michigan Union as often as you like till out an entry form at any of the listed locations in The Michigan Union MUG Eateries & Commons Stroh's Dairy Bar- ice cream The Corner Market - salads, healthIfoods, and gourmet cojies Parcheezies - pizza and other ltalianfxxs The MUG (Michigan Union Grill) - hamburgers and french fies Dagwood's -= sandii'uhes Variety -speciadty ethnic menu The University Club - restaurant and bar The Emblem Shop - Michigan sportswear and gifis The General Store - convenience itemts The Michigan Union Ticket Office - concert, bus. imousine tickets The Candy Counter - candy, tobacco, newspapers The CampusGaime Center-billiards, table tennis, darts, etc. (Continued from Page 1) battling leftist guerrillas. "We want the matter considered by Congress promptly," Speakes said. "We attach national importance to the situation in El Salvador." At the State Department, spokesman John Hughes said the Salvadoran army is running low on supplies ranging from ammunition to medical equipment. "The need for this assistance is now," Hughes said. He said there is evidence that the guerrillas will try to disrupt the Salvadoran presidential election, which is less than three weeks away, and that it could take months for Congress to approve the administration's proposed Central American assistance package. Leftist leaders in El Salvador have promised not to disrupt the elections. The White House plan met stiff op- position among House Democrats, and a source close to the Senate Intelligence Committee said chairman Barry Gold- water (R-Ariz) was irate over the at- tempt to bypass the intelligence over- sight panels in providing more money for the CIA covert action against the leftist Nicaraguan government. Last fall, the House and Senate in- telligence committees agreed to provide $24 million for the anti-gover- nment rebels this year, but insisted that the administration return to the com- mittees if more money was needed. 4 MANILA, Philippines - Two witnesses yesterday contradicted the official version of Benigno Aquino's assassination, saying he was shot on a plane stairway instead of on the ground. The testimony suggested that a soldier might have been the killer, because official accounts of the murder said that only soldiers were on the stairs when Aguino was shot in the back of the head. Andres Narvasa, chief counsel panel investigating the slaying, called the testimony "direct" evidence that Aquine was shot on the stairs. The government says none of the six military officials who escorted Aquino from the plane carried weapons. Nitrate tests have shown that two of them might have fired guns. Aquino, chief rival to President Ferdinand Marcos, was assassinated at the Manila airport on Aug. 21, 1983, moments after he returned from a three- year voluntary exile in the United States. Marcos has said a communist agent,,.Rolando Galman, shot Aquino to discredit the government, and that government security guards killed Galman. Committee delays Meese vote 4 r Y W r i M I t a it f A r i 6 4" S JUST GOT BETTER 540 E. Liberty St. 761-4539 Corner of Maynard & Liberty 4 ft E -Stems continues the tradition of the world's great problem solvers. Steinmetz was one of solutions to some o the few geniuses concerned world's toughest pr with the practical aspects in electronics. of electrical engineering. E-Systems is His pragmatic analytical nized as one of the approachled to the de- leading problem-so velopment of efficient companies in the d electrical power grids as and production of c we know them today. munications, data,c Scientists and en- intelligence and rec gineers at E-Systems are naissance systems carrying on in his tradition. often the first-of-a-k Through the combination of the world. sophisticated analytical and For a reprintc simulation techniques, they Steinmetz illustratio are evolving optimal system f the oblems recog- world's lIving esign Dom- antenna, con- that are ind in of the n and information on career op- portunities with E-Systems in Texas, Florida, Indiana, Utah or Virginia, write: Lloyd K. Lauderdale, V.P., Research and Engineering, E-Systems, Corporate Headquarters, P. 0. Box 226030, Dallas, Texas 75266. ' E-SYSTEMS The problem solvers. An eua opporlun1t employer M F H V Charles Proteus Steinmetz ' 1865-1923 WASHINGTON - A Senate committee agreed yesterday to delay for one week the vote on Edwin Meese III's nomination as attorney general after new questions were raised about his role in the 1980 Reagan presidential campaign's use of documents from the Jimmy Carter re-election campaign; "There is,.... evidence he was very, very much involved in that," Sen. Howard Metzenbaum (D-Ohio) told a stormy session of the Judiciary Com- mittee. Meese "might like to be heard.. . that he had no involvement in the campaign concerning the Carter documents," he said. Following the committee's decision, Meese repeated earlier denials of in- volvement in the transfer of Carter materials. "I have no knowledge of any effort by the 1980 Reagan-Bush presidential campaign, or anybody associated with that campaign, to obtain.. . any private material or information" from the Carter camp, Meese stated in a terse response to written questions posed by Sens. Howard Metzenbaum, D- Ohio, and Carl Levin, D-Mich. Bartender's life threatened in barroom rape, witness says FALL RIVER, Mass. - One of six defendants in a barroom gang rape case threatened to kill a bartender if he told police "it was just me alone" who at- tacked a woman on a pool table, a witness testified yesterday. Valdimiro Pacheco, a customer in Big Dan's bar in New Bedford on March. 6, 1983, said he heard Daniel Silvia make the warning to bartender Carlos Machado. "I heard him say, 'Don't tell them it was just me alone or I'll kill you,' " Pacheco testified. He said he was sitting at the bar when he saw a group of laughing men hold a crying, struggling young woman down on a pool table. He said Silvia was on top of the woman while at least one other man triedl to force her to perform oral sex. The witness said another man unbuttoned his pants as he talked to thy woman. Pacheco said the man then shoved the woman's leg. f He said-he turned to the bartender and asked: "You let that go on in here? I said, 'Would you like them to do that to your daughter?' " Earlier yester- day, jurors heard testimony that the woman told an emergency room docto she had been raped by 14 men. Friday; March 9, 1984 Vol. XCI V-No. 125 - (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 bg mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Anil Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER:: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Anil -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; 14 4 4 I 'C a'- U'l I-' fit T i Fr.: A ' ': ... 5,' eANDF _ 2i Co °Y 4 (: Y 7y: f2 / - N, .~ _4~ iis r j i i. . _ 1 i ' . { - E { ' i%' l ,. . 14 A I i 4 -A Billing, 764-0550. Editor-in-Chief................... BILL SPINDLE Managing Editor ............... BARBARA MISLE News Editor ....................... JIM SPARKS Student Affairs Editor.........CHERYL BAACKE Opinion Page Editors..............JAMES BOYD - JACKIE YOUNG Arts/Magazine Editor. ........MARE HODGES Associate Arts Editor............ STEVEN SUSSER Chief Photographer...........DOUG MCMAHON Sports Editor.................MIKE MCGRAW Associate Sports Editors..........JEFF BERGIDA KATIE BLACKWELL PAUL HELGREN DOUGLAS B. LEVY STEVE WISE NEWS STAFF: Susan Angel, John Arntz, Sue Barto, SPORTS STAFF: Randy Berger, Sue Broser, Joe Bower, Dan Coven, Jim Davis, Scott Dimetrosky, Tom Keaney, Ted Lerner, Tim Makinen, Aoam Martin' Scott MKinlay, Barb McQuade, Brad Morgan, Phil Nussel, Sandy Pincus, Rob Pollard, Mike Redstone; ScottSalowich, PaulaRSchipper, Randy Schwartz; Susan Warner, Rich Weides, Andrea Wolf. Business Manager .......... . . .....STEVE BLOOM Sales Manager...............DEBBIE DIOGUARDI OperationsManager.............KELLY DOLAN Classified Manager......... MARGARET PALMER Display Manager..................PETER LIPSON Finance'Manager .................LINDA KAFTAN Nationals Manager................ JOE ORTIZ Co-op Manager.................JANE CAPLAN Assistant Display Manager ......... .. JEFF DOBEK 3 1 . A I I I