4 Rage 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 25, 1984 DeLorean I I IN BRIEF associate gets 10 ,.years. LOS ANGELES (AP)-William Morgan Hetrick, the admitted drug smuggler who was indicted with John De Lorean, was sentenced yesterday to 10 years in federal prison after prosecutors said he had-"cooperated handsomely" with the government. U.S. District Judge Robert Takasugi, who presided over De Lorean's trial, imposed a series of concurrent senten- ces on charges that include conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine, cocaine possession with intent to distribute and income tax evasion. Takasugi also ordered Hetrick, 53, to serve five years of special parole to be added to normal parole often- he is released from prison. De Lorean was acquitted on Aug. 16, and many jurors said they believed he had been entrapped by the government. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports UAW members return to jobs I DETROIT - United Auto Workers members returned to their jobs yester- day at all but one of 17 General Motors Corp. sites pending ratification of new contract that GM's chairman "saidwill benefit the entire auto industry. The UAW struck 16 assembly plants plus the GM Technical Center after its contract with the automaker expired Sept. 14. A new agreement including -the union's chief goals of pay hikes and job security was reached early Friday, but production at the plants was not scheduled for the weekend. The UAW's 300-member GM council, made up of local presidents and plant representatives, meets tomorrow to consider the new pact. Approval by the council clears the way for ratification by 50,000 GM workers nationwide. A spokesman for Ford Motor Co. said Ford and the UAW have decided to hold off discussions until after the council meets. Spokesman Tony Fredo said talks are likely to resume in about a week at the No. 2 automaker. Although some analysts say Ford cannot afford to match the new contract, GM Chairman Roger Smith thinks Ford and other automakers should welcome the settlement. Florida halts citrus harvesting WINTER HAVEN, Fla. - Florida, already under a federal ban against shipping citrus out of the state, ordered severe restrictions on the shipment of fruit within the state yesterday in hopes of stopping the spread of citrus canker. State Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner urged growers to be patient and cooperate with federal-state efforts to eradicate the bacterial disease, which could seriously cripple even kill Florida's $2.5 billion-a-year industry. All previously issued permits for harvesting and shipping were nullified. The only groves seriously affected the new harvesting ban are those producing early-season varieties for the fresh-fruit markets. The start of the How this will affect consumers is uncertain, but Conner told a press con- ference it "will have a temporary inconvenience as far as supply and price is concerned." Mine found near Suez Canal . Yodel-ay-hee-hooDaily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL Josef Suminnen, a wandering minstrel from West Germany, entertains students with his folk songs as they pass through the West Engineering Building arch yeserday. Suminnen will be in Ann Arbor for another week and will then move on to Dallas, Tex. Ione barry bagel's placer Economists predict early '85 recession. 8 delicious fresh baked varieties HELP WELCOME US To CAMPUS -- w... ......................-..... ... . FREE BAGEL 16 BAGELS -1 .00 Buy 1 Bagel, Get 1 Free 8 varieties of bagels LIMIT 1 DOZEN Baked Fresh Daily 1 good through Oct. 31 3 good through Oct. 31 FREE BAGEL AND I FREE SANDWICH CREAM CHEESE Buy 1 Bagel w/Cream Cheese, *uy any sandwich, GET 1 FREE GET 1 FREE ET1FE GE FE (of equal or lesser value) LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 good through Oct. 31 good through Oct. 31 S. State St. next to Pizza Bob's 994-1300 WASHINGTON(AP)-High interest rates and giant federal budget deficits are flashing warning signals that another recession could begin as early as the second half of next year, an economists' group said yesterday. The National Association of Business Economists said the rapid slowdown the economy has experienced since July is only a "temporary lull," with the recovery continuing for at least another nine months.X BUT AFTER that, the economists grew pessimistic. A majority of those surveyed-53 percent-predicted the next recession would begin in either the last half of next year or the first six months of 1986. More than two-thirds of the edonomists blamed high interest rates and record budget deficits as the primary culprits that will end this recovery earlier than normal for ex- pansionary periods since World War II. The predictions, compiled from questionnaires completed by 205 association members, were far more pessimistic than those being made by the Reagan administration, which projects steady growth with no recession through the rest of this decade. ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS from time to time have accused the Federal Reserve Board of keeping too tight a grip on the money supply,, thus driving up interest rates. But 85 percent of the economists en- dorsed the central bank's monetary policies--the highest approval rating in the 10-year history of the association's poll. While 82 percent said the gover- nment's large budget deficits were stimulating the economy too much, they split on the best way to trim the deficits. The respondents were equally divided as to whether the budget should be cut without raising taxes, as President Reagan says, or whether some sort of tax increase will be required. U.Club relocates show CAIRO, Egypt - British navy crews have confirmed that a device found in the Gulf of Suez was a modern mine and have taken it apart to try to deter mine its origin, a British Embassy source said yesterday. A series of explosions in the Red Sea, including the Gulf of Suez, began July 9 and damaged 19 ships. British divers found the cylinder - nearly 10 feet long and about 1% feet thick -- nearly two weeks ago under about 125-165 feet of water, about 15 miles south of the entrance to the Suez Canal adjacent to the southbound shipping channel. "We have now established that the object is indeed a mine," said the well- placed source, who spoke on condition he not be identified. "We have cut the mine in two, separating the instrumentation part from the part containing the explosives." The explosive part of the mine remains submerged in more than 30 feet of water, he added. Ogama el Baz, chief political adviser to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, told reporters that Egyptian and British experts have not yet determined who laid the mine. U.S. Syria discuss withdrawal BEIRUT, Lebanon - A senior U.S. envoy yesterday conferred with Syrian President Hafez Assad in Damascus about security arrangement necessary for an Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon, then flew to Jerusalem. Lebanese Prime Minister Rashid Karami, expressing confidence about. the diplomatic effort of U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Murphy, was quoted by Beirut newspapers as saying,."It has been detected from the talks with Murphy that he was bringing the good tidings of an early breakthrough." Israel has indicatged a readiness for the United States to negotiate with the Syrians on a plan to secure Israel's northern border in exchange for -an - Israeli pullout from Lebanon. The official Syrian Arab News Agency said the two-hour talks in the Syrian capital between Murphy and Assad focused on Lebanon and "ways to bring about an Israeli withdrawal from occupied Lebanese territory." It did not elaborate. In Washington, State Department deputy spokesman Alan Romberg ap- peared to minimize the significance of Murphy's visit to Damascus. He said that while the Lebanon issue came up in Murphy's discussions, it would not be correct to describe his visit as a negotiating mission. Nations assail U.S. interest rates WASHINGTON - Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, ducking complaints about high U.S. interest rates, declared yesterday that the world economy is "back from the brink" and urged foreign finance ministers to keep their economies growing without rekindling inflation. .1 "As much as you may want to erase the memory, don't forget the pain of the past nor allow yourselves to lose sight of the better times on the horizon," Regan told his foreign colleagues at the start of week-long meetings of the, International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. "With a little courage, a little determination and a little patience, we can do it," he said. Regan made no mention in hi§ speech of recuiting protests from the finan- ce ministers that high U.S. interest rates were threatening the world economic recovery and worsening the plight of poor nations struggling to repay a heavy burden of foreign debts. Jacquest de Larosiere, managing director of the IMF, said the United States needs to "relieve pressures on interest rates" by reducing its federal budget deficit, which is expected to total about $175 billion in the fiscal year that ends Sunday, down from the record $195.4 billion of last year. 4 By GEORGEA KOVANIS In an effort to prevent violations of its liquor license, the University Club bar has moved the location of an Eclipse Jazz show from the bar to the Union ballroom, an Eclipse spokesman said. The U-Club operates under a special "club license" which allows it only to sell drinks to members of the U-Club which include students, staff, and alumni. THE BAR was cited for violating state law by serving a drink to a liquor control officer who was'g a "non- member," on July 18. By moving the show, starring Abbie Lincoln, into the ballroom, the Union can sell alcohol to concert-goers because the Union has a special "con- vention" license which allows alcohol to be served at special events. Eclipse director Al Hadouk said he isn't sure how the U-Club crackdown will affect future shows. He said Eclip- se would like to continue to hold per- formances in the U-Club. Complaints from local bar owners sparked the investigation of the U-Club which resulted in the July citation. Ac- cording to liquor control official Walter Keck, another citation will probably be issued for an identical violation that took place on September 18. THEREARE TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NUSINTHE ARMY And they're both repre- sented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you're part of a health care system in which educational and career advancement are.the rule, not the exception. The gold bar on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you're earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713, Clifton, NJ 07015. ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALLYOU CAN BE. LIm a 171mom rI ME Mondale rails Reagan's Soviet policy (Continued from Page 1) ces, there's every reason why we should do all that is possible to shorten that distance. And that's why we're here." Gromyko, impassive as ever, did not join in the clapping at that point or at the conclusion of Reagan's speech. REAGAN TOLD reporters later that he and Gromyko had exchanged pleasantries during their five-minute encounter at a reception Sunday night, but refused to predict the outcome of their talks at the White House on Friday. The talks will represent Reagan's first formal meeting with a top Kremlin official during his presidency. Mondale, campaigning yesterday in Texarkana, Texas, wondered whether Reagan's decision to sit down with Gromyko for the first time less than six weeks before the election amounted to a "deathbed conversion." He said he was glad Reagan had im- proved "his rhetoric." On Friday he has Vol. XCV - No.17 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: September througli April - $16.50 in Ann Arbor; $29.00 outside the city; May through August - $4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second-class postage pdid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Tires Syndi- cate and College Press Service, and United Students Press Service. Editor in chief................ . BILL SPINDLE Sports Editor .............. , ....... MIKE MCGRAW: I BUJ E THE JOURNE Y HAS BEGUN An impressive technological journey began over three decades ago at Hughes Aircraft Company. Today, with more than 90 diverse technologies ranging from sub-micron electronics to large scale systems, you'll find Hughes people forging new discoveries, new futures. Become part of the Hughes tradition of technological firsts, if your degree is in: Electrical, Mechanical, Manufacturing or Industrial Engineering, Computer Or contact Hughes Corporate College Relations, Dept. NC, Bldg. C2/B178, P.O. Box 1042, El Segundo, CA 90245. Equal Opportunity Employer Proof of U.S. Citizenship Required Hughes representatives will be on campus October 9 (See your placement office for an appointment.) Managing Editors ...............CHERYL BAACKE NEIL CHASE Associate News EditorsD....... LAURIEKATER GEORGEA KOVANIS THOMAS MILLER Personnel Editor .................. SUE BARTO Opinion Page Editors .JAMES BOYD JACKIE YOUNG NEWS STAFF: Marcy Fleischer, Mario Gold, Thomas Hroch, Rachel Gottlieb, Sean Jackson, Carrie Levine, Eric Mattson, Tracey Miller, Kery Murakami, Allison Zousmer. Magazine Editor .................... JOSEPH KRAUS Associate Magazine Editor ..... . ...BEN YOMTOOB Arts Editors ................. FANNIE WEINSTEIN PETE WILLIAMS Associate Arts Editors .............. ... BYON BULL ANDY WEINE Associate Sports Editors.......... JEFF BERGIDA KATIE BLACKWELL' PAUL HELGREN# DOUGLASB. LEVY STEVE WISE; SPORTS STAFF: Dove Aretha. Mark Borowski, Joe Ewing, Chris Gerbosi, Jim Gindin, Skip Goodman, Steve Herz, Rick Kaplan, Tom Keaney, Tim Mokinen. Adam Martin, ScotthMcKinlay, Barb McQuade, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth, Phil Nussel, Mike Redstone, Scott Solowich, Randy Schwartz. Susan Warner. Business Manager ................STEVEN BLOOM Advertising Manager ........... MICHAEL MANASTER Display Manager ........... .........LIZ CARSON Nationals Manager ..................... JOE ORTIZ Sales Manager . .. .... ...DEBBIE DIOGUARDI Finance Manager ...:......... ID KAFTAN' I I I L