40 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 30, 1985 - Sakharov's wife to be released from exile MOSCOW (AP) - Yelena Bonner,' wife Nobel Peace Prize laureate An- Airei Sakharov, will be released from exile in the Soviet Union and allowed to go to the West for medical treat- 'ment, a Soviet journalist said yester- day. If the report is true, it could signal a reversal of Kremlin policy toward Sakharov, the country's best known dissident, and his wife. THE WEST German newspaper Bild reported Monday that Bonner, 60, would be allowed to leave the Soviet Union immediately. Soviet journalist Victor Louis, who has close ties with Soviet officials, said he believed the report was authentic and that the United States was her likely destination. : The Sakharovs were exiled in porky, 250 miles from Moscow, in the '1980 and have been isolated there sin- e last year, when Sakharov went on hunger strike to try to get permission or his wife to be treated abroad for ye and heart ailments. **Bonner had been allowed to make )rips to Moscow until last year when he reportedly was sentenced to five dears' exile on a charge of spreading anti-Soviet slander and forced to remain in Gorky. IN NEWTON, Mass., Bonner's son-in-law could not confirm the reports, but said, "If she is about to leave, I would expect this to happen today or tomorrow." Efrem Yankelevich, who is married to Bonner's daughter, added that if Sakharov remained in Gorky, "as soon as she has finished medical treatment she will go back to him." Since Bonner was reported senten- ced in August 1984, Louis has been almost the only source of information about the Sakharovs. Louis has sup- plied media in the West with videotapes of the Sakharovs in Gorky. ASKED ABOUT the West German newspaper's report, Louis said, "As far as I am concerned it is authentic, that she will be allowed to go, that it will not be a one-way ticket, that it is up to her when and where." Asked where Bonner might go, Louis said she may go to the United States, or to Italy, where she under- went treatment for glaucoma in 1975 1977, and 1979. Tatiana Yankelevich, Bonner's daughter, said Monday night that next month's summit meeting between Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and President Reagan could be a factor in Bonner's situation. MOSCOW JEWS refused per- mission to emigrate and Soviets denied exit visas to join their spouses in theWest have voiced hope that the summit meeting may yield progress in their cases. But there has so far been no sign of change in Soviet human rights policies, or of an imminent exodus of thousands of Soviet Jews, as suggested in some reports from Israel. Sakharov, 64, was an honored physicist in the Soviet Union and helped develop the country's hydrotgen bomb. He later began to question the arms race and in .the early 1970s began to campaign for human rights in the Soviet Union. IN 1975 he was named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for his activities on behalf of human rights. The Soviet Union exiled him to Gorky in 1980 after he criticized Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. In 1983, when rumors swept Moscow that Sakharov was prepared to emigrate if the Soviets would let him go, the official news agency Tass said he would never be allowed to leave because he knew state secrets. Sakharov had always said he did not want to leave his country and reiterated it in statements Bonner brought from Gorky to Moscow on monthly visits. Students plan to rally on Shapiro's lawn GOING PLACES? o' .O ' '::.. (Continued from Page 1) do anything -" said students should have contact with all of the Univer- sity's top officials, and should par- ticipate in University decision- making. The assembly also unveiled last night a new plan to publicize itself to the campus through information tables in the fishbowl and the UGLI, the MSA newspaper, and a new phone line for students to express concerns to the assembly. The line can be reached by dialing 76-GRIPE. "It's time to pump hands, and kiss babies," Josephson said in a memorandum to assembly members. He was referring to the assembly's plan to "get out among our con- stituents." JOSEPHSON said afterwards that the purpose of the publicity campaign is to show students "that even though by reading the Daily it seems like all MSA does is sit around a table every night and discuss world issues, there are other issues we're working on that aren't reported in the Daily. These issues, Josephson said, in- clude the assembly's work in establishing a rape prevention center on campus, its role in opposing the code, and its concerns with minority recruitment and retention. In addition, he added, the assembly wants to inform students about the. more mundane things we do - like sponsoring Student Legal Services." DESPITE Josephson's comments, however, the assembly postponed un- til next week its decision on which specific issues it will prioritize for the rest of the term. The assembly then decided to hold two hour training sessions to educate representatives about the assembly's future direction. Last night's meeting also featured a debate about the MSA's controversial role in endorsing recent political demonstrations on campus. DURING the assembly's con- stituents time, two students criticize these endorsements, and said the assembly should focus more on cam- pus issues. "No matter how much you publicize yourself, endorsing bad policies is not going to help," said LSA senior Bill Clemens. LSA junior Scott Siler pointed out that there are many other groups on campus that focus on world political issues, and he urged MSA to "rise above this and stick to campus issues.' Assembly members reitered that the non-political issues MSA ad- dresses are not sufficiently covered in the media. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS French discover AIDS drug PARIS - A drug used to prevent rejection of transplanted organs ap- pears to stop the AIDS virus from destroying victims' immune systems and potentially may be used to treat the deadly disease, French resear- chers said yesterday. Theresearchers from Laennec Hospital in Paris said experimental treatment with the drug cyclosporin-A kept alive two AIDS victims who likely would have died from the disease, acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Professors Jean-Marie Andrieu and Philippe Even and Dr. Alain Venet, speaking at a news conference, said cyclosporin-A cannot cure the disease but appears to stop the virus from destroying the cells of the im- mune system that are prime targets for the AIDS virus. "Without our treatment, the man would be dead today. As for the woman, the growth of the disease was stopped. It is the first time in the world that this has happened," the researchers said in a statement. Americans' income rises 1.1% WASHINGTON - Americans' personal income rose 1.1 percent from April through June with Wyoming and Indiana enjoying the biggest gains while residents of Delaware, Alaska, and Montana suffered declines, the government said yesterday. The biggest force propelling wages upward was a strong increase in construction payrolls which offset sluggish activity in the manufacturing sector, according to the Commerce Department. The 1.1 percent second-quarter gain followed an even larger 1.7 percent increase in non-farm personal income during the first three months of the year. Commerce Department analyst Rudolph DePass said the income gains were spread fairly evenly throughout the country with about half of the states in every geographical region posting income gains that either mat- ched or surpassed the national average. "It was a period of moderate economic growth, typified by high import penetration, declining farm prices, and declining oil and gas prices," he said. "There are a lot of imbalances in the economy with basic industries like manufacturing growing slowly compared to the service sectors." Hurricane stalls on La. shore MORGAN CITY, La. - Unexpected Hurrican Juan wobbled ashore and then stalled again yesterday, knocking down a third oil rig as its heavy rain and 85 mph wind whipped offshore waves 20 feet high and drove tides up to 10 feet above normal against inland levees. At least three people were dead and nine were missing, including three believed trapped in a drilling rig that toppled in a marsh and two teen- agers who went for a ride in a small boat. The Coast Guard said about 160 people had been rescued from drilling rigs and boats in the Gulf of Mexico and adjacent waters over three days. "It's the most water we've had in 35 to 40 years," said Civil Defense spokesman Don Gary in low-lying Terrebonne Parish, on the coast southwest of New Orleans. Displaced snakes, including poisonous water moccasins, and balls of stinging fire ants floated through some flooded streets. The storm, which surprised forecasters when it strengthened into a hurricane Sunday and then stalled for a day just off the coast, came ashore and then stalled again yesterday near Lafayette, about 100 miles west-northwest of New Orleans at 3 p.m. CST. Soviet Union offers to accept small-scale tests of 'Star Wars' WASHINGTON - The Soviet Union has offered to halt construction of a suspicious Siberian radar and to accept small-scale tests of the con- troversial U.S. "Star Wars" program, Reagan administration officials said yesterday. But the offer to halt work at the Krasnoyark site, which President Reagan branded as illegal in a report to Congress, is drawing a skeptical U.S. response because it would depend on the United States not going ahead with the modernization of early-warning radar in Greenland and Britain. The Soviet gesture on Star Wars, however, is considered a positive move in dealing with the main impediment to progress on a new nuclear arms control treaty. Reagan's $26 billion program to develop a high- technology anti-missile shield has slowed arms negotiations in Geneva, Switzerland. Both proposals, through diplomatic channels in Geneva, appear to be part of a concerted public relations campaign by the Soviets in advance of Reagan's Nov. 19-20 summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gor- bachev. Sailor to return to USSR NEW ORLEANS - A Soviet sailor who jumped ship twice near New Orleans in what appeared to be an attempt at defection will return to Russia, an official in Washington said yesterday. The official, declining to be identified, said the State Department plan- ned to issue a detailed statement on the case later. The sailor, Miroslav Medvid, described as exhausted and nauseated six days after the ordeal began, was at the Naval Support Activity center here, State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb said in Washington. Officials had reported earlier that the sailor was too sick to be inter- viewed any further. But Kalb said yesterday that another interview had been scheduled. Medvid was taken Monday afternoon from the 120,000-ton Marshal Koniev to the Coast Guard cutter Salvia, where a State Department of- ficial who speaks Russian and other U.S. representatives began inter- viewing him, said State Department spokesman Peter Martinez. Vol XCVI- No. 40 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in Ann Arbor; $35.00 outside the city. One term - $10.00 in town; $20.00 out of town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and Sub- scribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. Weisel addresses issues of humanitarian concern "GOING PLACES" is a new Michigan Daily classified advertising column. Run a FREE NE-DAY AD FROM NOVEMBER1 - DECEMBER 11 " Announce a ride needed Announce a ride offered " Look for special package trips " Look for air, rail and usline rates Ad limited to 21 words for one day. Place your ad on Wednesdays at the Fishbowl or weekdays between 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. at The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard. (Continued from Page 1) WIESEL ASKED the audience if it was concerned about nuclear weapons, saying that he was. "I believe that this planet is in ORIENT SPECIALIST DETROIT to TOKYO From SEOUL 798 TAIPEI $9 0 HONG KONG Round Trip Call Toll Free 1-800-952-8999 Maybe you're thinking about a career in Communications Careers in... New Product Development in Video, Film, and Sound Communications Law and Policy Marketing Media Services Cable and Satellite Advertising and Public Relations Designing Media Campaigns for Politics, Health, and Other Areas Research on Media Markets and Audiences Computer Management and Office Automation Communications Consulting Journalism, Cinema, Broadcast Management Software Publishing Organizational Communication Human Resource Training Systems If you're interested in any of these, come to a talk and Q&A about professional oppor- tunities in communications and graduate programs you can consider. Speakers from the Annenberg School of Communications, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. ALL MATORS ARF WFCOME danger," he said. Wiesel suggested Hiroshima as an appropriate alternative to Geneva for the November US-USSR summit on arms control, so that the leaders "Can see what (the dropping of the bomb) meant," to which the audience spotaneously applauded. Wiesel interspersed his comments on political issues, with Talmudic stories, relating the biblical struggles of Noah, Isiah and Elijah. He said that he spoke from a Jewish perspective because he is a Jew, but that he didn't believe in demoninations. "I BELIEVE in the entire human sphere. I don't believe that Jews are any greater or worse. Christians should speak as Christians, Moslems as Moslems, Buddists as Buddists... I ask them to be as tolerant of our beliefs as we are to theirs," he said. Wiesel said that Jewish history is one of suffering, but primarily one of responses to suffering. "This is probably the essence of Jewish tradition. Some times you're ready to give up on humankind, but you open the Talmud and see so many, outcries of rebellion and revolt - you cannot believe such courage and determination," he said. "There are no answers, but that doesn't stop man from asking questions . . . the most important principle of the Torah is to love thy fellow man in the way that you love yourself," Wiesel told the audience. WIESEL WAS born in 1928, in the town of Sighet in Transylvania. As a child he was taken from his home, sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp, and later to Buchenwald. After surviving the Holocaust, he was brought to Paris, where he lived and worked as a journalist and a writer. He is now an American citizen, but divides his time between New York, Paris, and Israel. WIESEL HAS written more than a dozen books, of which the most recent won the 1984 Grand Prize for literature in Paris. This past spring, President Reagan awarded Wiesel the Congressional Gold Medal of Achievement, the nations highest civilian honor. Wiesel did not mention the Holocaust directly, which surprised some members of the audience. "He talked about current things ... he didn't just dwell on the past," said 1.. nn rincaraa.fir ,A ennhm--... Editor in Chief .................. NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editors .........: JODY BECKER JOSEPH KRAUS Managing Editors.......GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor .............. THOMAS MILLER Features Editor ..........LAURIE DELATER City Editor.............ANDREW ERIKSEN Personnel Editor ...........TRACEY MILLER NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Joanne Cannella, Philip Chidel, Dov Cohen, Kysa Connett, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle, Rachel Gottlieb, Stephen Gregory, Linda Holler, Mary Chris Jakelevic, Vibeke Laroi, Jerry Markon, Eric Mat- tson, Amy Mindell, Kery Murakami, Jill Oserowsky, Christy Riedel, Michael Sherman, Jennifer Smith, Jeff Widman, Chery Wistrom. Associate Opinion Page Editor .. KAREN KLEIN OPINION PAGE STAFF: Jonathan Corn, Gayle Kirshenbaum, David Lewis, Henry Park, Peter Mnnnv S-a -eSkum ale...it.. 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