Guerrilla input key to S. Africa peace talks The Michigan Daily - Sunday, November 11, 1984- ,Page 3 India's capital fires police commissioner, JAMBA, Angola (AP)-Bush fighter Jonas Savimbi says regional peace talks involving South Africa, Angola, and the United States will fail unless his anti-Marxist guerrillas get a seat at the negotiations. Savimbi summoned 45 reporters to his remote headquarters of thatch and reed huts Friday and told them that he will throw thousands of additional soldiers into the war again'st Angola's pro-Soviet government if his group, the National Union for the Total Indepen- dence of Angola (UNITA), remains excluded from talks. "THERE IS no settlement without UNITA," he said. Savimbi said UNITA welcomed the re-election of "sympathetic" President Reagan. "At this camp there was jubilation," he said. But he accused the U.S. State Department of ambiguity concerning UNITA's role and the presence of Cuban troops in Angola. "We want a strong position concer- ning the Cubans. They are invaders in our country and must leave," Savimbi said. "We want the State Department to clarify its attitude. We have not under- stood what they are doing in four years." Savimbi said he wants to make his first visit to the United States since late 1981 to explain his views. THE UNITED States has been trying for five years to undercut Soviet in- fluence and ease the complex racial ideological conflicts in southern Africa. It wants a withdrawal of the 30,000 Cuban troops in Angola supporting President Jose Eduardo dos Santos. Other U.S. goals for the region in- clude: " An end to the Angolan civil war. " Withdrawal of white-ruled South Africa's troops from southern Angola. " Restraint by South-West Africa People's Organization guerrillas based in Angola. . " Independence for South-West Africa, also called Namibia, under a United Nations-sponsored plan to remove it from South African control. NEW DELHI, India (AP)-The In- dian capital's police commissioner was fired yesterday, and his successor vowed to restore public confidence shaken by police failure to quell four days of deadly rioting. Thousands of Sikhs, meanwhile, con- tinued to leave the refugee camps where they fled during the spree of murder, arson and looting by Hindu mobs following the Oct. 31 assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, allegedly by Sikh members of her own bodyguard. THE NEW COMMISSIONER, Suryakant Jog, said the public lost faith in the 30,000-man New Delhi police for- ce after Hindu policemen stood by or in some cases joined in the carnage by revenge-seeking mobs. More than 1,000 people, most of them Sikhs, died in the rioting. "We will regroup the police to win back the confidence of the people," Jog told the United News of Ihia news agency in Bombay, where he had been special police inspector-general for Maharashtra state. Jog replaces Subhash Tandon, who is being transferred to the desert state of Rajasthan. Jog led the Indian forces. that took control of the Portuguese territory of Goa near Bombay in 1961. CALCUTTA'S POLICE COM- MISSIONER, Nirupam Som, was removed from his post on Friday following allegations of police negligence. A night curfew was lifted yesterday in Calcutta, India's largest city with 9.2 million people, but army and paramilitary troops still patrolled tense areas there. Also yesterday, the Indian Police Service Association expressed "anguish and shame" that two policemen had killed the prime minister. The association urged the government to fix blame for "the grave security lapse. By official count, more than 600 people were killed in the capital alone, but many Sikhs and some leading newspapers say the figure should be much higher. ALTHOUGH THOUSANDS of Sikhs are leaving refugee camps, many say the memory of last week's slaughter is still too strong for them to return to the homes where their loved ones died. "I only came back for the photo," said 25-year-old Hukmi Bai, clutching a snapshot of her husband, one of the more than 1,000 Sikhs killed by Hindu mobs following the Oct. 31 assassination of Indira Gandhi. "My husband was so young and loved me so much," she mumbled in a voice that seemed drained of spirit. "No family will ever return to this cursed place." THE YOUNG WIDOW was among 30 Sikhs, most of them women, who retur- ned yesterday with an army escort to retrieve what was left of their belongings in this New Delhi suburb, scene of one of the bloodiest confron- tations between Sokhs and Hindus. Indian officials say 98 people, all Sikhs, died in the neighborhood. -HGAINPSPENNGS Highlight Sunday Catch dinner and a movie at The University Club tonight. Buffet dinner starts at 5:30 p.m., followed by the movie Being There at 7:10 p.m. Films Cinema Guild - Los Olvidados, 7 & 8:45 p.m., Lorch Hall. Hill St. Cinema - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, 7 & 9:20 p.m., 1429 Hill. Performances School of Music - John Scanlon, viola recital, 4 p.m.; Gloria Gibson, double bass recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; Jerome Rose, faculty piano recital, 8 p.m., Rackham. Ark - Judy Gorman-Jacobs, 8 p.m., 637S. Main. First Presbyterian Church - Rossini's Messe Solennelle, 4 p.m., 1432 Washtenaw. Ensemble Theatre Company - one-act plays, 8 p.m., Trueblood Theater. Rudolf Steiner Institute - Musicale, Nathalie Dale, violin, Janet Ber- nrider, piano, 3p.m., 1923 Geddes. Miscellaneous His House Christian Fellowship - Dinner, 6 p.m.; Bible study, 7 p.m., 925 E. Ann. Performance Network - Video Festival, 6:30 p.m., 408 W. Washington. Canterbury House - Episcopal Workshop service, 5 p.m., 218 N. Division at Catherine. Museum of Art - Tour, 2 p.m., Museum. Hudson's - Ann Arbor Symphony Benefit, reception, 6 p.m.; concert, 7 p.m.; auction, 8p.m.; Briarwood. Monday Highlight Leading Jewish mystic Rabbi Meir Fund delivers a public talk entitled "A Map of Jewish Consciousness: Jewish Understanding of the Spiritual Experience" today at 7:30 p.m. at the Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill. Films Cinema Guild -Sounds from the Mountains, 7 p.m., Lorch Hall. Performances School of Music - Lynne Richburg, viola recital, 8p.m., Recital Hall. Ensemble Theatre Company - One-act plays, 8 p.m., Trueblood Theater. Speakers Near East, North African Studies - Brown bag, James Stewart-Robinson, "Thoughts on Recent Turkish Literature," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Macromolecular Research Center - Raphael Ottenbrite, "The Synthesis & Biological Characterization of Some Polycarboxylate Polymers," 4 p.m., 3005 Chemistry Bldg. Ecumenical Campus Center - Rhoads Murphey, "Gandhi: Affect on In- dia Today," 7:30 p.m., 921 Church. Burroughs Wellcome Fund - Edwin Cadman, "Pharmocodynamics & Biochemical Modulation in Cancer Chemotherapy," noon, Pharmacy Lec- ture Hall, 7412 Medical Science I. Neuroscience - Richard Neubig, "Studies on Alpha-2 Adrenergic Recep- tor Mechanisms," 4 p.m., 1057 MHRI. Computing Center - Bob Brill, "Introduction to dBASE II & III," Part I, 3:30p.m., 177 Business Adminstration Bldg. Faculty Women's Club - Michael Oksenberg, "China & U.S. Relations," 11:30 a.m., Michigan Room, League. CAEN - Brice Carnahan, "Computer Aided Engineering Network," 7 p.m., Chrysler Center Auditorium. Chemistry - Ian Rothwell, "Synthetic & Mechanistic Aspects of Early Transition Metal Activation of Carbon-Hydrogen Bonds," 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry Bldg. Communicators ForUM - Jeanne McClaren, "Image Projection in Print," 7p.m., Hale Auditorium, School of Business Administration. Meetins Asian American Association - 6:30 p.m., Trotter House. Turner Geriatric Clinic - Intergenerational Women's Group, 10 a.m., 1010 Wall St. Research Develop & Administration - Wang PC users group meeting, 2 p.m., 3026 Rackham. Miscellaneous Health Services - Free screening for diabetes, 8 a.m.-noon, 207 Fletcher. School of Business Administration - "Strategic Human Resource Plan- ning," "Managing for Performance Improvement," Negotiating & Admin- stering the Labor Contract," "Management of Managers," "The Instruc- tional Development Workshop." For information call 763-1000. ACS/Student Affiliates - Tutoring in 100 or 200 level chemistry courses, 6- 9 p.m., 3207 Chemistry Bldg. CEW - Workshop, "Step Before the Job Search," 10 a.m., 350S. Thayer. Guild House - Poetry reading, Andrew Carrigan & David Stringer, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe. Psychiatric Nursing - Fourth Annual Conference, "Psychiatric Nursing Research: Today's Ideas ... Tomorrow's Practice," Ann Arbor Inn. For in- -... . -.,. ..1 ew M Associated Press Wargames Fran DiPersio from Newark, Del., checks his C02 powered paint gun yester- day as his team, the Delaware Delta Dogs, gets ready for their round in the National Survival Game North American Championships in Suwanne, Ga. Finalists with military fatigues and their faces smeared with camouflage paint took to the woods for the two day championships. 'Shades of Black'gives HOMAS M. COOLEY LAW SCHOO - academic excellence in a practical legal environment - *January, May or September Admission *Morning, Afternoon or Evening Classes *Part-time Flexible Scheduling in a Three-Year Law School - fullu nccredited hu the American Bar Association - support to bi (Continued from Page 1) They say they have no problems with the University counseling programs for minorities. But a support group formed of peers is "more comfortable," O'Garra said. "YOU GET more accomplished, you know the people, it's a much more in- timate way, more individual," she ad- ded. The group, which currently has about 15 members, held a fund raiser earlier this month. In December, the members will hold an "Evening of Song and Dan- ce" featuring the University Gospel Choir. They also hope to attend a per- formance of Sophisticated Ladies. The group's leaders plan to write other college campuses in the Midwest and encourage black female students to establish similar support groups. lack women The group meets on Wednesday evenings at 8 p.m. in the Nikki Giovanni Lounge at Mosher Jordan. Although Holloway acts as president and O'Garra as vicespresidentmeetings are run on the input of everyone present. The group's motto is "Join together as one." Holloway said the slogan reflects the group's purpose. "We need to come together as one as opposed to being split," she said. Black women on campus face double. discrimination, said Eunice Royster, director of the Comprehensive Studies Program. "If you're a woman, you have a problem in how the rest of the world perceives women. If you're a woman and a minority, you have a double concern. There are two things going on. If one isn't a factor, the other one is," she said. THE THOMASM. For information, write: COOLEY Thomas M. Cooley Law School LAW SCHOOL Admissions Office P.O. Box 13038, 217 S. Capitol Ave. Lansing, Michigan 48901 (517) 371-5140 2nd Annual Pryor Entrepreneurial Award $2,500 .w..will be presented to the University of Michigan Students who create the most INNOVATIVE BUSINESS PLAN ... detailing the start-up strategy for a new enterprise which could be implemented by the contestants. Here's an Opportunity ... * to acquire practical experience in tackling marketing, production, financial and organizational issues. " to gain exposure to venture capitalists serving as award judges KICK-OFF SEMINAR - November 14, 4:00 p.m. " Learn how to prepare an Effective Business Plan " Meet others interested in forming a group to develop new business ideas Conducted by Professor LaRue Hosmer, Business Administration, Kresge Library, Room K1320 Submission Deadline: March 15, 1985 FURTHER !NFORMATION CALL ROXANNE JACKMAN 434-9668 LSA prepares for election (Continued from Page 1) concerned with improving the visibility of LSA-SG and presenting forums and speakers to discuss liberal arts education. "THE LSA-SG is an academic: organization which should show the use for a liberal education," DeGraff said. The SPOCK Party formed last April for the Michigan Student Assembly elections to prove that student apathy was so rampant that anyone could win with a flashy advertising campaign. DeGraff aumits that if they would have won, the group would have refused the position. But now DeGraff and his slate have decided to make a serious run at elec- ted office to offer students "an alter- native viewpoint due to all the campus organizations which are so liberal." According to DeGraff the LSA Student Government is "an invisible gover- nment whose only purpose' is to spend money." Voting will take place Tuesday and Wednesday in various locations around campus. In addition deciding between the two slates for president and vice president, LSA students will chose 15 representatives from among the 13 SAID candidates, one SPOCK can- didate, and 8 independent hopefuls on the ballot. YL02f Children's Bookweek §ALLOON November 12-17 On Everything in the Children's Dept. HERE'S HOW THE SALE WORKS Just make your selection of any quantity of books, records, posters and gifts from the children's book department. Before paying for your purchase, pick out one of the celebration balloons. Every balloon contains a discount slip worth 1 0%, 20%, 40%, 50%, and, yes - even 100% off the price of your purchase. i i i I