The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 26, 1984 - Page 5 Thousands in Manila march for Aquino MANILA, Philippines (UPI) - Thousands of protesters demanded President Ferdinand Marcos' resignation yesterday as special prosecutors drew up charges against top military officials accused in the murder of opposition leader Benigno Aquino. Led by Aquino's widow Corazon Aquino, some 5,000 people marched through Manila to protest a report by a special commission that named the armed forces chief in a wide-ranging military conspiracy to kill Aquino but made no mention of Marcos. "We've not gotton to the real mastermind," said Aquino's younger brother, Agapito, as protesters carried "Marcos resign" signs through the capital. SPECTATORS jammed overpasses and sidewalks to cheer the demon- strators as they marched along a 3 mile route to the Central Post Office, where anti-Marcos speeches were made for several hours. Riot-equipped police SWAT teams were deployed in jeeps but the police presence was minimal and the march peaceful. A survey by the state news agency conducted in Manila and 11 other cities said 32 percent of Filipinos interviewed felt the fact-finding commission did not probe Quino's murder "far enough," implying it should have implicated Marcos. THE FINDINGS of the five-member civilian commission, reached after a 10- month inquiry, were turned over to a Marcos-appointed ombudsman who formed a team to draw up specific charges. "We are using the Agrava Board legal panel's familiarity with existing evidence to help us take a short cut in formulating the charges," said former Judge Bernardo Fernandez, who heads a prosecution arm called Tanodbayan or Ombudsman. He said the three-man team would decide soon if evidence justifies filing of murder charges in the Sandiganeayan or Peoples Court, which tries cases in- volving abuse of official functions. MURDER carries the death penalty. The five-member commission rejec- ted government claims Aquino was killed on his return Aug. 21, 1983 from three years of self-exile in the United States by a communist hit man who himself was shot by soldiers. The majority report Wednesday by four members said Armed Forces Chief Gen. Fabian Ver, 24 other military men and a civilian were "indictable" for the assassination. But the findings by its chairman, retired Justice Corazon Agrava, issued separately a day earlier absolved Ver. FRI. PAUL McCARTNEY'S SAT. MIDNITE e .npL When the music stops, the mystery begins. U MON, TUE, THUR, FRI, 7:00, 9:10 SAT, SUN, WED, 1:25, 3:40, 7:00. 9:10 MON, TUE, THUR, FRI. 7:00, 9:15 SAT, SUN, WED, 1:30, 4:00, 7:00, 9:15 Associated Press Capitol Hill Captain Bob eeshan, a.k.a. Captain Kangaroo, looks on as twin sisters Courtney and Crystal Snowdon, five, testify before a Senate Judiciary committee yesterday. The committee is studying the alleged connection between television violence'and childhood behavior. U Deficit drops from record WASHINGTON (AP) - The federal government ran up a $175.3 billion budget deficit in fiscal year 1984, down from the all-time record set last year but still the second-largest flood of red ink in U.S. history, the Treasury Depar- tment announced yesterday. The deficit total for the fiscal year which ended on Sept. 30 was $1 billion higher than the Reagan administration had predicted in August but was down considerably from what both the ad- ministration and private economists had feared at the beginning of the year. The $175.3 billion deficit was 10 per- cent below the $195.3 billion record set in 1983, the year that Ronald Reagan had pledged while campaigning in 1980 that he would balance the government's books. You know she's a beauty, You think that she's nice, A DAILY PERSONAL is a great way to help break the ice. g t1Jtr tI gsnI U IQ PERSONAL ADS 2 lines / $1.00 Call 764-0557 P i ..J A" 0101 4* ohn Labatt took over a brewery in and began to make Canadian bee 1827 r his r P f1 .nTt Kcr Wt, rt rrnrotfi+ t, ant " - McAtttAltCritC2 d n rii'" xrt A n rte- i .. , way. It was the beginning of Canada's Beer. Brussels U.S.A. 1964 Exposition 1894 Columbia 1892 London 1890 Pan American Exposition 1901 France 1878 BY LE Discover Canada's best kept secret. The perfectly balanced taste between robust European lagers and lighter American beers. 0 f Europeans, with more character than the Americans. And more purely drinkable than either. Labatt's. The taste that S , has won over 100 gold medals in international 's competitions. The The perfect beer. Labatt's. . born of a dual heritage combining the hearty characteristics of European brewing tradition and ZBJAER"BIERJE ~v - -f fresh, crisp taste of the number one beer in all of Canada. Labatt's. the mellow taste of finer American AA. beers. A perfect, taste . . . less Canada's Beer. The perfect beer is here. A A T A Th A Ti""""7 N