4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, November 4, 1984 FREE TRIP TO THE ROSE BOWL (RESTAURANT) 333 E. Huron (across from the Ann Arbor News) U .U Daily 8-8; Sun. 9-5 . This ad is redeemable for a complimentary vegetable or dessert. . Sandinistas hope vote will legitimize regime IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports HILLEL'S BEIT MIDRASH PROGRAM announces the 1st session of the mini-course series - GENESIS THROUGH THE EYES OF MIDRASH taught by Prof. Aaron Twersky, visiting professor at U-M Law School MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5 - 7:00 P.M. 1429 Hill MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) - The leftist Sandinista government,;assured of winning today's elections, pushed hard for a strong turnout to back up its claim that the vote is legitimate, despite the lack of substantial op- postion. Officials predicted that 80 percent of the 1.58 million eligible voters would go to the polls today. Some residents said Sandinista militants were pressuring them to vote. THE OFFICIAL Sandinista newspaper, Barricada, carried a headline quoting Mariano Fiallos, president of the Supreme Electoral Council, as saying, "The citizens will turn out massively at the polls." The elections for president, vice president and a 90-member national assembly, to serve six-year terms, are the first since the Sandinistas came to power five years ago in a bloody revolution that ended 42 years of rule by the rightist, pro-America Somoza dynasty. Today's election will be the first here since 1974, when Anastasio Somoza Debayle was elected to a second, six- year term that was cut short by the revolution. The Sandinista National Liberation Front is campaigning against five small parties. All of them are leftist or have cooperated with the government to some degree. A SIXTH small party, the Liberal In- dependent Party, remained on the ballot, but its presidential candidate, Virgilio Godoy, announced two weeks ago he would not campaign. Godoy gave the same reasons as the major opposition coalition, the Nicaraguan Democratic Coordinate, for not participating in the elections. The coalition said the Sandinistas did not allow conditions for a free and open election. They complained of press cen- sorship and restrictions on assemblies. Although there were no expectations that the opposition coalition of four political parties, two labor unions and the leading private enterprise group would have won, there were estimates that it could have taken as many as one- third of the seats in the assembly. A WIDE-open race would have helped the Sandinistas in their effort to im- prove their prestige abroad and deflect criticism that they are moving toward totalitarianism. It would also have im- proved their status domestically. An estimated 75,000 people turned out for a final Sandinista campaign rally Thursday night, but there were few other visible signs of the election other than the usual black and red adver- tisements of the Sandinista Front. At a news conference, Daniel Ortega, the Sandinista presidential candidate and current junta coordinator, reiterated his claim that American in- vasion was imminent. Interior minister Thomas Borge told reporters he had learned from sources close to the American government that a direct intervention is planned in the months after the election. U.S. officials have denied repeatedly that any such plans exist. The Reagan administration supports Nicaraguan rebels fighting the Sandinistas in nor- thern and southern Nicaragua. PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE BETWEEN NAT'L REPS OF COLLEGE DEMOCRATS REPUBLICANS DVOTE VOTEDVOTED VOTED VOTE MONDAY NOV 5TH AT 4:00, KUENZEL ROOM, UNION SPONSORED BY: MSA, COLLEGE DEMS, COLLEGE REPS, LSA-sg, VP STUDENT SERVICES, UAC et al. Campaign nears end, taxes still the issue NOW HIRING UM students only Part - time work available in all Food Service areas. Apply in Person, Rm. 2400, Michigan Union From AP and UPI Walter Mondale and President Reagan are ending the 1984 campaign the same way it began, with Mondale accusing Reagan yesterday of planning a "tough, rough tax" increase and the president saying heatedly it just wasn't so. Both men were crisscrossing the Midwest - Reagan pushing toward the possibility of an unprecedented 50-state sweep next Tuesday, Mondale striving to win what would be the biggest presidential upsetin memory. MONDALE, barnstorming across four states, told several thousand sup- porters in Mount Clemens, Mich. that Reagan "talks a good game about trade and taxes but it's all talk and no jobs." With aides seeing an upturn to Mon- dale in key Democratic strongholds, the Democratic presidential candidate set out on a swing through Michigan, rural Illinois, St. Louis, Mo., and Memphis, Tenn., in a last-ditch wooing of the par- ty's key constituents. Mondale promised the audience in Mount Clemens, which included many union members, that he would support domestic content legislation and multi- year quotas to help restore prosperity to the ailing auto industry. REAGAN, speaking yesterday at a rally in Little Rock, Ark., declared that taxes would be raised in a second term ''over my dead body." "There's been some rumors floating around about suspected tax increases on our side," the president said. "Don't you believe it." He apparently was referring to published reports that as part of its ef- fort to reform the tax system, his ad- ministration will propose eliminating the deductions many federal taxpayers now claim for state and local income- tax payments and also will propose taxing unemployment benefits and workers' compensation. "You can't trust Ronald Reagan, the surprise president," said Geraldine Ferraro in Dayton, Ohio, contending that he would wipe out tax breaks for the middle class and attack Social Security if returned to the White House. If taxes go up, she said, "let's raise them fairly. If this president won't level with us about it, then let's replace him with one who will." Vice President George Bush, cam- paigning in Maryland, said a second Reagan administration would have as its objective a continuation of the economic recovery and a verifiable reduction in the pace of the arms race. Baby Fae passes crucial days LOMA LINDA, Calif. - Baby Fae, in the most critical period since her historic baboon heart transplanteight days ago, was reported "right on track" yesterday with no signs of rejection of the animal organ. The baby, now 3 weeks old, underwent the transplant Oct. 26 at Loma Lin- da, 60 miles east of Los Angeles. Doctors at Loma Linda University Medical Center had another baboon on standby should the tiny infant reject the primate heart and a human donor cannot be found during the weekend. The weekend was described as the most critical period - seven to 10 days following the surgery - when rejection of transplanted human hearts nor- mally occurs. Doctorswere optimistic about the transplant because the infant is too young to have a fully developed immune system and he body may not recognize her new heart as foreign. Youth held in Do yski mlurder DETROIT - Police said yesterday a 16-year-old youth was the primary suspect in the slaying of a man outside a downtown restaurant during the World Series celebration. A police spokesman said investigators believe the suspect shot Raymond Dobrzynski, 27, or Ypsilanti, while trying to steal his car. "He wanted a car to get home" after he was separated from his friends, a police source told the Detroit News. The newspaper reported the source said the youth apparently used his father's pistol. Dobrzynski was found in his car parked outside a restaurant about a mile from Tiger Stadium where thousands of people swarmed into the streets af- ter the Tigers beat the San Diego Padres to win the World Series. He had been shot once in the back and was dead on arrival at Detroit Receiving Hospital. Irish fear revenge from Brits DUBLIN, Ireland - An IRA political leader predicted Saturday that Britain will seek revenge for last month's hotel bomb attempt to kill Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her Cabinet members. "The British government is not going to sit back and allow the situation where the cabinet was almost wiped out and not take reprisal action," Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams said in an interview as the Irish Republican Army's political branch opened its annual convention. The IRA is outlawed in both the Irish Republic and in Northern Ireland, but its political arm, Sinn Fein, is legal. Adams said he expected that the British, either using their own agents or Protestant gunmen, "are going to execute people. We have no doubt about that at all." The two-day Sinn Fein conference began amid tight security sparked by fears that pro-British Protestants from Northern Ireland would seek to avenge the Oct. 12 bombing in Brighton on England's south coast. Priest's death revives Solidarity WARSAW, Poland - An estimated 250,000 Poles attended the funeral of a slain pro-Solidarity priest yesterday, and thousands of them then marched three miles through Warsaw, cheering Lech Walesa and chanting "There is no freedom without Solidarity!" They bore Solidarity banners, and shouted Walesa's name. Walesa atten- ded the service along with many other Solidarity leaders and spoke at the funeral. Walesa, his voice thundering through a bank of loudspeakers, told them, "We shall never forget this death." The crowd repeated his words, then broke into a deafening chant of "Solidarity!" It was the largest audience Walesa had faced since before the December 1981 imposition of martial law, which banished Solidarity. Dozens of police with trucks and water cannon accompanied the marchers along their route. Some police wore full riot gear, but they did not interfere and no incidents were reported. The restraint showed by police was a sign that communist authorities did not want a confrontation on the day of Jerzy Popieluszko's funeral. The body of the 37-year-old priest was pulled from a reservoir last Tuesday, 11 days af- ter he was kidnapped. Ethiopian relief airlift begins ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - British Royal Air Force cargo planes carrying trucks, trailers and tents began arriving in Addis Ababa yesterday as part of an international airlift to ferry food to millions of Ethiopians faced with death by starvation. The Ethiopian government has refused to give a potential death toll for the famine, but unofficial figures have said more than 250 people are dying daily in the worst-hit northern provinces of Eritrea, Tigre and Wallo. Fifty-two other aircraft from the United States, the Soviet Union, Bulgaria, Libya and South Yemen will also arrive within the next few weeks. Two U.S. transport were scheduled to arrive tomorrow as were the first planes from the Soviet Union. Three Libyan Hercules transports arrived Friday. I4 I4 r 4 14 I UNIVERSITY CLUB EATERIES & COMMONS THE CLUB A NON-DISCRIMINATORY, AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER I The Department of Philosophy THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, ANN ARBOR presents RICHARD M. HARE White's Professor of Moral Philosophy UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD in a Public Lecture "PATRIOTISM AND PACIFISM" NOVEMBER 5, 1984 - 8:00 P.M. THE MICHIGAN UNION - KUENZEL ROOM Admission is Free Focus on America's Future Help Prevent Birth Defects SSupport the March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION Candidates tackle deficits (Continued from Page 1) The political science professor said the real strength of a nation like the United States lies in the fact that the American workforce, stability of the government, and the health of our existing systems is being maintained. Organski suggested that it is here where Mondale finds his best argument against incumbent Reagan. If the United States is doing well in these three areas, as Republican rhetoric suggests, a nuclear arsenal should be unnecessary. If U.S. -Soviet negotiations are successful, Organski said, the threat which leads to defense spending might be diminished. The political scientist added that "Mondale, in effect, is saying to Reagan, you've used (Russian) un- willingness to negotiate as an excuse." POETRY READING with ALAN CHEUSE and DIANE RAPTOSH reading from their works Monday, November 5 8 p.m. at GUILD HOUSE - 802 Monroe ADMISSION FREE Read 4 THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER Vol. XCV - No.52 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 through April - $16.50 in Ann Arbor; $29.00 outside the city; May through August - $4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. 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