I Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Frida Baker wair From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Saying the loser in a trade war may be the United States, Treasury Secretary James Baker tried yesterday to quell congressional demands for trade sanctions against Japan. "We do need more access to Japanese markets for beef and agricultural products and telecom- munications and a lot of other things," Baker told the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on foreign operations. "I'm just not sure that the way to get there is to have an all-out trade war." "I'M NOT sure we'd win that," he cautioned. However, the senators appeared un- moved by Baker's comments. Baker testified as officials from both countries continue talks aimed at easing trade tensions between the two countries. Reishi Teshima, Japan's deputy foreign minister for economic affairs, arrived in Washington yesterday for ay, April 5, 1985 7ns against talks with administration and congressional officials to brief them on Japan's view of the situation. In ad- dition, Japanese Foreign Minister Shin- taro Abe has scheduled a meeting April 13 with Secretary of State George Shultz. TESHIMA MET in the afternoon with Rep. Don Bonker (D-Wash.), chair- man of the Foreign Affairs inter- national trade subcommittee, but had no comment for reporters. Bonker later said he told the envoy that if changes in Japan's trade prac- tices are not forthcoming, "the pressure will mount (in Congress) and we will have to take stronger actions." ALSO, THREE senators introduced legislation that would restrict the im- ports of foreign telecommunications equipment from countries that do not buy enough U.S. telecommunications products. And in the House, Democratic leaders announced the formation of a 22-member party task force to study Japanese. trade deficits and to recommend way of dealing with them. Baker, meanwhile, told the senator President Reagan is eager to secure a agreement at the May sumjnit of tl major industrial nations to set up a ne' round of international trade talk; Congressional action restricting impoi ts from Japan would make that in possible, he added. At the White House, spokesma Larry Speakes indicated the presider would veto the Finance Committe measure if it reaches the president' desk. Afterwards, reporters asked Baker I speculate about the effects of a trad war. "We'd have no market for ou products," he said. "We'd be foreclose from exporting. And it would have very deleterious effect on the wor economy." The U.S. trade deficit with Japan wa $37 billion last year. trade war IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Baker ...opposes trade sanctions I- UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE KENTUCKY DERBY HOSTEL Reagan, GOP compronse (Continuedfrom Page 1) A1 1 li-.. . n...... f h 1o WHEN: WHERE: HOW MUCH: It May 2, 3, 4 and 5 U of L's Campus (a.k.a. Tent City) $5.00 per person per night. So ... Embark on a road trip to the great Bluegrass State and experience the 111th running of the Kentucky Derby! For more information contact Karyn Foye or Dave Baugh at (502) 588-6691 in the Student Activities Department. most ambitious budget reduction plan in post-war history" and said the president "is committed to this package and he intends to fight for passage in both houses" of Congress. uutLIing the various elements of the proposal, Regan said it would eliminate 17 federal programs and reduce 30 others, ranging from farm price sup- ports to highway construction to Coast Guard operations. RHA proposal questioned *1 j I ' " Y ' 1 ! j ! , - . . - , r 1985 ANN ARBOR ANTIQUARIAN BOOK FAIR AND SALE MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM SATURDAY, APRIL 6 10 A.M. - 6 P.M. 30 DEALERS Admission Free _-w _ '-F (Continued from Page 1) "I THINK A contract like that is more effective than just letting them buy their way out of it," Buckley said. "I respect RHA's intention of decreasing vandalism, but I think fines are very punitive." "We stress that vandalism may con- ceal a larger problem like alcohol or substance abuse, and you can get at the person's underlying problems better with a behavioral code than by just dealing with the vandalism itself,'' Buckley said. According to Dennis Swayne, assistant to the building director in Mary Markley, the residence hall is plagued by repeated vandalism but charges fines only in isolated cases. MARKLEY ASSESSES a $50 fine to student who "habitually take the screen out of their windows and walk onto the roof and ledges, which are not architec- turally-designed to support someone," Swayne said. He said he supports the proposed system of fines and rewards because it is "beneficial to have guidelines." South Quad began offering rewards and assessing fines for pulling fire alarms after a rash of false alarms in the past, according to Building Director Mary Antieau. PULLING A false fire alarm will lead to automatic lease termination, An- tieau said, and the residence hall assesses a $10 fine for breaking the glass that covers the alarms. Antieau said South Quad offers a $25 reward to informants of false alarms, and has occasionally offered rewards for other acts of vandalism - including a $100 reward last year for information about a vandalized pinball machine. For the four trash can fires that struck the dorm on Feb. 4, South Quad Council offered a $100 reward, and the state arson control unit offered up to $2,000. Neither offer produced a respon- se. Ann Arbor Fire Marshall Wesley Prater said the city code imposes up to 90 days in jail and up to a $500 fine for pulling a false fire alarm in any city building. Although he couldn't cite specific instances, he said the city has prosecuted University students for this offense in the past. Air Force waste investigated WASHINGTON - The Air Force, while producing joint radar jam- ming equipment with the Navy, is wasting $3 billion by also developing its own system for some combat aircraft, congressional investigators said yesterday. "It's simply a proliferation of jammers," Frank Conahan, director of the national security and international affairs division of the General Accoun- ting Office, told a House Government Operations subcommittee. Committee Chairman Jack Brooks (D-Texas) said the military services' "do as they please" after getting their money and contended the Pentagon philosophy is, "We make money the old fashioned way - we put it in cost overruns." Brooks also held up an outer covering from a current Air Force jammer, which he said had buckled in flight and was indicative of serious problems with the equipment. Iraq bombs Iran, kills 25 BAGHDAD, Iraq-Iraq fired surface missiles into two Iranian cities yesterday and Iran said dozens of people were killed. An Iraqi military spokesman said the missiles were fired at Bakhtaran and Hamadan at midday, about an hour after a deadline Iraq had set for Iranian civilians to evacuate cities within range. Iran issued\ its own evacuation warning after the attacks, telling Iraqi civilians to leave Baghdad so they would not "burn in the fiery wrath of our combatants." It said later that "destructive missiles" would hit the Iraqi capital within a few hours. Iran fired more than half a dozen surface-to-surface missiles into Baghdad in the past few weeks. President Saddam Hussein's government in Baghdad has vowed to "im- pose peace" in the 4%-year-old conflict with its Persian Gulf neighbor, and said last week he might use missiles to do it. Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency said 25 people were killed and more than 70 injured in Bakhtaran, formerly known as Kermanshah The toll in Hamadan was 11 dead and scores injured, according to IRNA reports monitored in Nicosia, Cyprus. Reagan calls for Nicaraguan ceasefire, more aid to rebels WASHINGTON-President Reagan called yesterday for a ceasefire and' .peace negotiations in Nicaragua and warned that the United States will resume sending military aid to rebel forces if the ruling leftist regime does not agree to a settlement within 60 days after opening negotiations. At the same time, Reagan urged Congress to release $14 million in aid t the rebels. Congress refused last year to appropriate any more money to support them. - "While the ceasefire offer is on the table, I pledge these funds will not be used for arms or munitions," Reagan said. He said the money would pay for food, clothing, medicine, and "other support for survival." His proposal represented a new strategy in the face of overwhelming congressional opposition to military aid for the rebels fighting the Nicaraguan government. But one 'Democratic congressional leader called Reagan's statement "old wine in new bottles." A ceasefire proposal by Nicaraguan opposition groups sets April 20 as the deadline for the government to agree to peace talks. The Sandinistas have rejected the offer, and Reagan asked the rebels to extend it until June 1. Three federal judges to rule on comparable worth case SEATTLE-Three federal judges yesterday took up a case in which secretaries, and nurses claim they should be paid as much as janitors and truck drivers working for the state of Washington. The outcome could cost Washington state more than $400 billion. Before the appeals court was a U.S. District judge's 1983 precedent-setting comparable worth ruling against Washington that sparked similar lawsuits by women in several other states who assert their jobs should pay wages matching those of male dominated jobs. A three-judge panel from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals came from San Francisco to consider the issue at a hearing yesterday. Lawyers for both sides have indicated that whatever the appeals judges decide, the issue eventually is likely to reach the Supreme Court. Chrysler to pay pollution fine WASHINGTON-Chrysler Corp., in one of the largest fines ever imposed under the Clean Water Act, will pay $1.5 million to settle an anti-pollution suit, it was announced yesterday. In a proposed consent decree to resolve a civil complaint brought by the Justice Department on behalf of the Environmental Protection Agency, the nation's No. 3 automaker did not admit violating any laws. But under terms of the decree entered in U.S. District Court in Detroit yesterday, Chrysler agreed to pay the fine and to bring waste water discharge systems at three plants into compliance with the law by July 15. The civil suit brought by the Justice Department's Land and Natural Resources Division alleged that three Chrysler auto assembly plants discharged "excessive amounts of metals" into public sewer systems. The consent decree will become final after a 30-day public comment period and approval by the federal court, the department said. Vol. XVC - No. 147 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) 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: through April - $4.00 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 outside the city. Second class postage paid 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 Times Syndi- cate, and College Press Service. M 14 Z. -- , . 0 pm r 0 Editor in Chief......................NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editors.......... ..JOSEPH KRAUS PET R WILLIAMS Managing Editors.........GEOR EA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor................... THOMAS MILLER Features Editor................LAURIE DELATER City Editor................... ANDREW ERIKSEN Personnel Editor................ TRACEY MILLER NEWS STAFF: Jody Becker, Laura Bischoff, Dov Cohen, Nancy Driscoll, Lily Eng, Carla Folz, Rita Gir- ardi, Maria Gold, Ruth Goldman, Amy Goldstein, Ra- chel Gottlieb, Jim Grant, Bill Hahn, Thomas Hrach, Sean Jackson, Elyse Kimmelman, David Klapman, Debbie Ladestro, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Levine, Jerry Markon, Jennifer Matuja, Eric Mattson, Amy Min- dell, Kery Murakami, Joel Ombry, Arona Pearlstein, Christy Reidel, Charlie Sewell, Stacey Shonk, Katie Wilcox, Andrea Williams. Magazine Editors............... PAULA DOHRING RANDALL STONE Associate Magazine Editors....... JULIE JURRJENS JOHN LOGIE Arts Editors...................MIKE FISCH ANDREW PORTER Associate Arts Editors... MICHAEL DRONGOWSKI Movies...................BYRON L. BULL Music.................... DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor... ............... TOM KEANEY Associate Sports Editors ............... JOE EWING BARB McQUADE ADAM MARTIN PHIL NUSSEL STEVE WISE SPORTS STAFF: Dave Aretha, Eda Benjakul, Iark Borowsky, Emily Bridgham, David Broser, Debbie de- Frances, Joe Devyak, Chris Gerbasi, Rachel Goldman, Skip Goodman, Jon Hartmann, Steve Herz, Rick Kap- lan, Mark Kovinsky, John Laherty, Tim Makinen, Scott McKinlay, Scott Miller, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth, Adam Ochlis, Mike Redstone, Scott Salowich, Scott Shaffer, Howard Solomon. Business Manager................LIZ CARSON Sales Manager ...............DAWN WILLACKER Marketing Manager ............... LISA SCHATZ Finance Manager..............DAVE JELINEK Display Manager............. KELLIE WORLEY Classified Manager ................ JANICE KLEIN Nationals Manager:........JEANNIE McMAHON Personnel Manager.............MARY WAGNER Ass't. Finance Mgr............. FELICE SHERAMY Ass't. Display Mgr......:........ LIZ UCHITELLE Ass't. Sales Mgr............ MARY ANNE HOGAN Ass't. Classified Mgr .............BETH WILLEY ADVERTISING STAFF: Carla Balk, Julia Barron, Amelia Bischoff, Diane Bloom, Stella Chang, Sue Cron, Monica Crowe, Melanie Dunn, Richard Gagnon, Men Gallo, Susan Gorge, Tammy IHerman, Betsy Hey- m