Mail foul-up snags GEO contract vote The Michigan Daily - Saturday, April 6, 1985- Page 3 Reagan accuses Sandinistas of breaking oaths/ By BARBARA LOECHER Members of the teaching assistants' union are having a hard time ratifying the tentative contract proposed by their union and the University because they have not been receiving the ratification .ballots in the mail. "Some of the address labels that we used were not up to date," said Stephen Grossbart, a member of the Graduate Employees' Organization's bargaining team. "They listed TA office addresses when they should have listed depar- tment addresses where TAs' mailboxes are." Grossbart added that he did not know how many TAs had not received a ballot. If enough TAs complain about the missing ballots, he said, the deadline for voting may be extended. The current deadline is April 19. Ballots will be available to those TAs who have not received them in the. Fishbowl from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on April 10 and 11, Grossbart said. A final. decision on extending the deadline will be made on April 20, he said, based on the number of ballots that have been returned. Mexican drug outfit Sprofits from U.S. MEXICO CITY (AP)-Planes, boats and tanker trucks cross the border to supply an eager U.S. market with tons of drugs from La. Familia, a Mexican traffickers' alliance in which Rafael Caro Quintero is said to be a leader. Caro Quintero, a prime suspect in the murder of American narcotics agent Enrique Camarena Salazar, was arrested Thursday outside San Jose, Costa Rica. MEXICAN POLICE burn the marijuana crops and many cargoes are lost to the U.S. Coast Guard, border ;police and Customs agents. But the border and the coast are long and not, every mile of them can be watched, so most of the contraband gets through. Profits in the drug business are enormous and the traffic has made many millionaires in La Familia-The Family-a network of dealers who stopped killing each other and united for mutual profit. Camarena was seized Feb. 7 within sight of the U.S. consulate in Guadalajara, a center of the drug trade ,320 miles northwest of Mexico City. His body was found March 5 with that of a Mexican pilot who worked with him. A CARO QUINTERO, 33, was born to a poor farm family in the drug-growing region of Sinaloa and now is a rich man with hundred of properties. He was last seen before his arrest giving a high Guadalajara police official a farewell embrace before boarding his private jet Feb. 9: A U.S. official who demanded anonymity for protocol reasons said it *was believed that Caro Quintero was involved in the slaying. And U.S. Am- .bassador John Gavin has called Caro Quintero "one of the intellectual authors" of Camarena's murder. The U.S. attorney general, Edward Meese III, called Caro Quintero "one of the major drug traffickers in the world." DRUG TRAFFICKING in Mexico is nothing new, but in recent years the drug barons have developed it into a multibillion-dollar industry. Their boats are fast, their planes get bigger and better, and methods of hiding drugs in vehicles become more ingenious. U.S. officials estimate up to 30 per- cent of the marijuana and 38 percent of the heroin used in the United States comes from Mexico. They also say 30 percent of the cocaine passes through this country en route fromhSouth America. Much of the marijuana is grown in the Sierra Madre mountains in Sonora, Sinaloa, and Durango states, and stored in warehouses near the border until it can be moved across. MOST goes overland. Tanker trucks are becoming popular because each can carry up to 10 tons of the weed, which is profitable only in large ship- ments. The vehicles that get through are those in which the contraband is exper- tly concealed or that cross into uninhabited and infrequently patrolled areas of Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. Boats are used to move marijuana up the coast, especially to points in the San Diego area, and nearly everybody uses aircraft. "The bigger the operator, the bigger and fancier the planes," the U.S. of- ficial said. "They have everything from single-engine aircrafts to private jets." Demand for Mexican heroin has in- creased in recent years, largely because the traffickers' chemists have developed techniques of refining the brown "Mexican mud" heroin into a white powder that is 80 percent pure. From AP and UPI) WASHINGTON-President Reagan is accusing Nicaragua's leftist gover- nment of betraying solemn promises to the Organization of American States to uphold democracy, but the Sandinistas say what they outlined are objectives, not promises and that they are meeting them. There is little doubt that the San- dinistas have so far fallen short of doing what they told the OAS in 1979 they planned. The issue is whether goals are promises and whether it is up to the United States, acting alone, to interpret and enforce them. The Sandinistas insist they are fulfilling their goals at a pace that suits Nicaraguan needs. The 31-member OAS, which was established in 1948 to settle disputes among its members peacefully, has taken no position of its own. A 1979 STATEMENT by the San- dinistas to the OAS has become central to Reagan's argument that they betrayed their revolution and must either surrender to American-backed demands, or face further warfare with U.S.-supported guerrillas who seek to overthrow them. Reagan said Thursday night-in disclosing a new strategy for providing aid to the contras-that one of the American demands is Nicaraguan "implementation of its commitment to democracy made to the OAS." He said "part of the agreement that must be reached" between the gover- nment and the guerrillas is a "return to the democratic goals which they them- seles told the OAS was what they were fighting the revolution for." AT A NEWS conference on Feb. 22, Reagan said the Sandinistas "violated their own promise to the OAS... that their revolutionary goal was for democracy, free press, free speech, free labor unions and elections and so forth, and they have violated that." Reagan's plan, adapted from a Mar- ch 2 proposal made by the Contras and already dismissed by the rebels, would impose a cease-fire until June 1, set up talks between the two sides to be mediated by the Roman Catholic Chur- ch and provide U.S. aid to the rebels, but only for humanitarian purposes. The rebels are fighting to overthrow the Sandinista government in Managua. Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Miguel D'Escoto said yesterday that Reagan's peace plan is nothing but a threat to "continue to finance his thugs"-the Contras- unless the Sandinista gover- nment agrees to a cease-fire. D'Escoto in a series of television in- terviews from Managua, dismissed the peace plan offered by Reagan to end the fighting between the leftist Sandinista government and the U.S.-backed rebels. MEANWHILE, IN MOSCOW, a government newspaper said yesterday that President Reagan's proposal for a cease-fire and negotiations in Nicaragua is "a dangerous new step toward unleashing an undisguished armed conflict in Central America." - The Soviets' officla news agency Tass said Reagan interfered in Nicaraguan internal affairs by issuing what it called an ultimatum. Horny? Associated Press This "unicorn," the latest attraction for the Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey Circus, is just a goat with a surgically implanted horn, says the ASPCA. The group is asking New Yorkers to boycott the circus. Reagan sees fight in Congvress over budget SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP)-President Reagan acknowledged yesterday that he faces a fight in Congress over the budget com- promise he struck with Senate Republicans, but said Democratic critics "will be lying in their teeth" if they charge he went back to a pledge not to cut Social Security benefits. "How is adding a 2 percent raise each year cutting it?" Reagan asked as he spoke with reporters before flying by helicopter from the White House lawn to Andrews Air Force Base, MD., and boarding Air Force One for a flight to California. REAGAN plans a 10-day stay at his ranch, high in the Santa Ynez moun- tains near Santa Barbara. Aides said he would return to Washington on April 14. The president announced agreement with Senate GOP leaders Thursday on a budget that provides for less growth in military spending than he proposed in- itially and limits costs-of-living in- creases for Social Security recipients. "DO YOU THINK the Democrats are going to beat up on you on that Social Security?" Reagan was asked. He replied, "Well, if they do, they'll be i ng in their teeth, as they did in 1982' in a previous debate over Social Security. Reagan had opposed any decrease in Social Security benefits, saying he would accept such a move only if there was an overwhelming bipartisan demand for it in Congress. BUT he accepted a formula that limits cost-of-living increases over the next three years to 2 percent if inflation was 4 percent or less. If inflation clim- bed above 4 percent, recipients would get the 2 percent hike plus any ad- ditional percentage points above the 4 percent. Reagan said this was not a reversal of position because "they were talking about totally canceling it; that regar- dless of what inflation might be, that there would be no increases." "We're providing a guaran- teed-more than 6 percent, because it's compounded over a three-year period-regardless of what inflation is." Reagan met with Senate Majority Leader Robert J. Dole, (R.-Kan)., and Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.), just before leaving. "We all agree; it's going to be a fight," he said. "It's been a fight since 1981. There are factions in there that just want to keep on spending in the Congress." But he said he and the GOP senators were "very optimistic and hopeful." 1985 , + , M 1t I , (_ . 1 Fv,,;,, ANN ARBOR ANTIQUARIAN BOOK FAIR AND SALE -. 1 MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM SATURDAY, APRIL 6 10A.M. - 6 P.M. 30 DEALERS Admission Free J Students observe holidays, rites NOT ENOUGH ROOM IN YOUR TRUNK? (Continued from Page 1) cost of the Hillel service. Because she does not feel strongly about the seder 'ceremony, she too will not attend ser- vices. Several Christian students not able to make it home for the holiday made other arrangements. .,Patrick Burchell, an LSA freshman, could not return to Ironwood, Mich. So, his parents are coming down to visit him. Though the setting of his Easter Sunday will not be the same, Burchell says he intends to do more or less what he usually does at home: Go to mass and have a big family dinner. TAMMY DETLOFF, a Markley Resident Advisor, is spending her third straight Easter in Ann Arbor. As in past years, the Saginaw native says course work has forced her to forego the trip HAPPENINGS Highlight. The Latino Studies Program is sponsoring "The Labor Movement in Nicaragua: Is It Democratic" with lecturer Carlos Santiago. The lecture is at 7 p.m., in the Kuenzel Room, Union. Film Alt Act-The Sterile Cuckoo, 7 p.m., Cabaret,9p.m., MLB 4. CG-The Sound of Music, 7:30 p.m., MLB 3. C2-The Seven Samurai, 8 p.m., Angell Aud. A. MED-The Natural, 7 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Michigan Theater-Monty Python & the Holy Grail, 7:30 p.m., Jabber- wocky, 9:15 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performances School of Music-Recitals, saxophone, Kevin Burner, 4 p.m., trumpet, Roberto Gandara-Barnett, 6 p.m., voice/piano, Jill Pierce/Wendy Stofer, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, dance students, 8p.m., Studio A, Dance Building. Performance Network-Dance Concert, Peaceworks, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington. The Ark-Lost World String Band, 8 p.m., 637 S. Main. Brecht Co-Don Juan, 8 p.m., Residential College Aud. Meetings Ann Arbor Go Club-2 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Michigan Gay Graduates-9 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. home. She says she celebrates by going out with friends. Meanwhile, in Jerusalem, Christian pilgrims from around the world, some bearing wooden crosses, yesterday retraced the steps of Jesus through the narrow streets of Old Jerusalem to Calvary in a Good Friday procession. Five thousand pilgrims followed the procession led by Franciscan monks along the Via Dolorosa, the Street of Sorrows, venerated since the Middle Ages as the route taken by Jesus after he was condemned to die. Rabbis in the Holy Land supervised the ritual sterilization of cooking uten- sils in vats of boiling water, and small fires dotted the streets in the orthodox neighborhood of Mea Sh'arim as families symbolically burned pieces of bread in preparation for the observan- ce. Correction East Quad Administrative Director Cynthia Buckley said the residence hall uses "behavioral contracts" to discipline students who commit van- dalism. A story in yesterday's Daily in- correctly reported that she called these measures "behavioral codes." N.: 1 Advertise in CLASSIFIEDS Sell your lofts, furniture, carpets and other white elephants before you leave. YEAR END SALE April 17 ______________________________ Iwant my ad in: _____________________I0 April 17 :4 V Va \\\ '// ,; w r I i Rlnma