The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 6, 1985 -Page 3 y.....**..........}*..***..**........" {"..... :if........... .::LV:L"..::S .....S..V. R:". 1: 4 "'1a6..1. ....A.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......:'.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... u "..".... . .'N.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .}A1C. Mexican Sdiplomat killed in USSR MOSCOW (AP) - A Mexican diplomat who was a Soviet-trained scientist and his maid were found shot to death in the diplomat's Moscow apartment, the Mexican Embassy said yesterday. The incident was a rare and unexplained case of violence involving foreigners in Moscow. Manuel Portilla Quevedo, 43, a counselor at the Mexican Embassy since 1981, and his Mexican maid, Maria del Carmen Cruz, were found Oct. 31 when diplomats from the em- bassy went to investigate why Portilla had not shown up for work, the embassy's statement said. DR. PORTILLA had received a blow with a blunt instrument and then (was) shot in the head," the statement said. "Miss Cruz was severely beaten and shot twice in the head." An embassy official, who spoke on condition he not be identified, said the two apparently died the night of Oct. 30. No explanation was given for the deaths. Embassy officials refused to discuss whether they involved a premeditated attack, random violence or possible suicide. CASES OF VIOLENCE involving foreigners are rare in Moscow. The last known foreigner in Moscow who died violently was British businessman Dennis Skinner, who fell to his death from his 12th-floor apartment in June 1983. In that case, Soviet authorities concluded no criminal activity was involved, but a coroner's inquest in Britain determined there was an unlawful death but did not accuse anyone. The embassy statement said word of Por- tilla's death had not been released until yester- day to avoid obstructing investigations by Soviet police. A man who answered the telephone at the police station nearest Por- tilla's apartment said investigations were con- tinuing and refused to give details. PROTILLA STUDIED chemistry in Moscow in the early 1960s, graduating from Patrice Lumumba Friendship University for Foreigners in 1965. He gained a doctorate in biophysics from Moscow State University in 1972 and had many Soviet friends and contacts. Mexican Embassy second secretary Eusevio del Cueto said Portilla was married and the father of four children but apparently lived alone at the time of his death. A Latin American journalist, who asked not to be further identified, said Portilla had been married to a Russian woman but recently divorced her after a long separation. The embassy statement said the maid came from Mexico to work for Portilla, but gave no further details about her. A Mexican journalist who knew Portilla said the woman was A Mexican Indian in her mid-20s who lived in the apartment and cooked well. Hernan Rodriguez, Moscow correspondent for the Mexican newspaper Excelsior, said he was with Portilla Wednesday morning, the last day he was seen alive, and "he seemed nor- mal." "It was a big surprise. I knew him well because he was going to become the embassy press attache," he said. .' 11i" 5 -1 :VJi. ' i . iii T Y"i .1V:::i ":.ViiiJ:i " 11'1" -.111 . v.. r ".iLVNNiiiiN.V:: ili. iiiiii iiNl."."::: " il' 1'ii. : h". l: i.:1". 1... !.. .:1.222:. : :::.:.. :. :.:. ".. ::::. . . " "::.::.,....::::::::. :. :: " ":.:.":::."::::.":."::::::::.': ":::."::::: "::::::::::::: '1.... .. A.. ...1 .... . '.V2.1'll:y . . ..1 ...... :":1.1..12. }._u1.. n :.."..1...................v...........1 ... :..:....1 .... ... 1{.ti: { .. :..:. :....... ].........................wti .........ti .............._t.......::. v..:..:.::::::v1 _...: _v _.::::..1.::a.::::::::.1 ::::: _11 i. 1.: _... :..........v......1. ........ .11::::1._1.:11._ ..... * Guatemalan army won't hinder future talks Fp U Guatemala City (AP) - The head of Guatemala's military regime said yesterday the armed forces would not object if the new civilian government opens talks with left-wing rebels who have been battling for power for 20 years. "Our system has been one of dialogue with all who want to have it," Gen. Oscar Humberto Mejia Victores told a news conference. HE IS TO be replaced on Jan. 14 by the winner of a Dec. 8 runoff election between the top two presidential can- didates in Sunday's balloting. They are Christian Democrat Vinicio Cerezo and Jorge Carpio of the conservative National Centrist Union. There were eight candidates, all civilians, running for the presidency. None received a majority, forcing the runoff between the two front runners. WITH ABOUT three-fourths of the vote counted, Cerezo held 39 percent and Carpio 21 percent. Jorge Serrano, the candidate of a coalition of the Democratic Party of National Cooperation and Revolutionary Par- ty, was third with 14 percent. About 2.7 million people in the population of nearly 8 million were registered to vote. Both Cerezo and Carpio have said they would open negotiations with the rebels to end the guerrilla war that has taken thousands of lives. Mejia Victores said that if the rebels decide to enter talks "with the next government, we don't have any objection to them doing that." POLICE MOUNTED regular patrols during the election, but stayed away from polling places. Military units were noticeably absent. The election and restoration of democracy is one of several con- ditions that must be met if $10 million in U.S. military aid is to be received for fiscal 1986. Another is for the government to crack down on human rights abuses by the military and police. Mejia Victores was asked if the ar- my would accept those conditions and he said that decision would have to be made by the new government. MEJIA VICTORES, who seized power in a coup against another general on Aug. 8, 1983, has said he will retire from the army when the civilian government is installed. Military or military-controlled governments have ruled Guatemala for 30 years, with the armed forces candidates winning the 1974, 1978 and 1982 elections amid accusations of fraud and intimidation. In another development Monday, about 120 protesters ended their six- day, peaceful sit-in at Metropolitan Cathedral. THEY HAD SAID they would not leave until the government gave an accounting of 775 of their relatives who they said disappeared after being picked up by security forces. As the men, women and children left the building, a leader of the group called Mutual Support said Cerezo and Roman Catholic Archbishop Prospero Penados del Barrio had "of- fered to help, but they did nothing," 'M' hoop tickets released -HAPPENINGS- Highlight The 13th Automotive Materials Conference, a two-day event, begins today at Rackham Amphitheatre. It is sponsored by the Materials and Metallurgical Engineering and the American Ceramic Society. Films School of Art - Antonia, Frankenthaler: Toward a New Climate, Street, Excerpts from Light Fantastic, 7:30 p.m., Aud. B, Angell Hall. MED - The Man with the Golden Gun, 7 p.m.; The Spy Who Loved Me, 9:15 p.m., Nat Sci. Performances Laughtrack - Stand up comedy with comedians Darwin Hinez, Owen Davis, and KT Klipfel, 10 p.m., U-Club. ARK - Cris Williamson with Tret Fure, 8 p.m., 637 S. Main St. Speakers Urban, Tech and Environmental Planning - Yi Tingzhen, "In- vestment and Trade in China," 7:30-9:30 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham. Russian and East European Studies - Giovanni Graziani, "Economic Issues in East-West Relations," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. Psychiatry - Barbara Smuts, "Sex Between Consenting Adults: Long- Term Bonds Between Male and Female Baboons," 10:30 a.m. to noon, Children's and Adolescent Psych Hosp. Aud. Germanic Language and Literature - Herbert Zeman, "Goethe Und Die Musik: Zum Wechselspiel Von Dichtung Und Music In Der Goethezeit," 4:30 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham. Communication - James Buckley, "Cost Benefits of the 19th Century Political Press," noon, Marsh Sem Room, Frieze building. Meetings Nursing Council - 4:30 p.m., 5101 School of Nursing. Baha'i Club - 5:30 p.m., Union. Michigan Gay Union -9 p.m., 802 Monroe St. Dissertation Support Group -1:30-3 p.m., 3100 Union. Science Fiction Club - Stilyagi Air Corps, 8:15 p.m., League. Ensian Yearbook - 7 p.m., 420 Maynard, Student Publications Building. (Continued from Page 1) sidered to be those in the "blue" sec- tion, right around the perimeter of the court. Students are eligible for about one-fourth of the blue section. The remaining three-fourths goes to alumni and other people who have been buying season tickets for years. Everyone else is seated in the upper or "gold" section. This is where most of the students will be this year and it is because of this that some students are grumbling. Ray Macika, an engineering student, said that students should have priority over alumni. "Students are the people who make the school's image," said the senior. "It's always complained that the crowds at Michigan are dull and don't make the team get enthusiastic. They should put the students down in the blue since they're the ones that are active." Many other schools give their students better positioning within the arena, but not many can match Michigan for seeing that the most deserving students get the best student seating-even though it may not seem like it. INDIANA University, for instance, puts a limit on its student ticket sales. Students there can buy tickets for two of three sessions of games (but not all three), and the university decides which games they get, according to Right to Know Policy gains county endorsement (Continued from Page 1) formal working session. "I am hoping that by late this year or early next year, there will be a community 'Right to Know' rule," Murray said. THE PROPOSED regulation, known as the "Right to Know" rule, would force small, non- manufacturing companies to provide information to the country health department about the types of chemicals used, where they are located, and how the chemicals are disposed. The rule would generally cover companies not requird to comply with federal regulations. The proposal is strongly backed by the Ann Arbor Firefighters Association, members of the United Auto Workers Local 849, and the Washtenaw County Health Depar- tment. "I'M ALL in favor of the rule ... because you can't separate the quality of life in the community from the quality of life in the workplace. If the workplace deteriorates, the com- munity does also," said Bob Bowen, president of UAW Local 849. Bowen said that even some non- unionized workers have recently complained about unsafe working conditions. Although Bowen would not name the companies involved, he did describe a paint. shop in Ypsilanti where "the workers came out looking like they worked in a coal mine." THE RULE is needed to enable the fire departments to preplan and coor- dinate firefighting tactics when com- hbttin emerencie which involv Hoosier ticket manager Bill King. Furthermore, students at most schools are not ranked in any way. "A student's a student," said Alice Wood, ticket manager at University of Ken- tucky. "We can offer all our students tickets, but there's no priority." Renfrew's job of distributing tickets hasn't always been as tough as it is now. "Four years ago we didn't even have 400 students buying season tickets," he said. "We put everybody that bought them in the blue. That's the way it goes sometimes." People who find themselves up by the scoreboard in Crisler this season can take Renfrew's phrase to heart. That's the way it goes sometimes. RENT A REFRIGERATOR C.M Phone: 429-5672 or 815-895-2443 FREE DELIVERY BUSINESS LEADERS of Tomorrow... If you are considering management studies, let us tell you about THE MICHIGAN BBA & MBA Come to an informational session presented by the Business School Place: Mary Markley-Angela Davis Lounge Date: Wednesday, Nov. 6 Time: 6:30-7:30 Rackham Student Government Speaker Series presents Paul Sweezy on 'The Casino Society: Where Does It Lead?". Mr. Sweezy is co-editor of Monthly Review, an independent social- ist journal, and co-author (with Paul Baran) of Monopoly Capital. Thursday, November 7, 7:00 p.m. Michigan Union Ballroom free co-sponsored by Michigan Student Assembly, LSA Student Government, Vice- President's Office on Student Affairs, the Economics and Sociology Departments, CRSO, and the institute for Public Policy Studies. x I Miscellaneous Physiology - Seminar, Thomas Roth, "Daytime Sleepiness," 4 p.m., 7745 Med Sci II. Printing Svcs - Seminar, "How to Order Printing," 1-5 p.m., 1919 Green Road. Microcomputer Education Center - Workshop, The Macintosh as a UMnet Terminal, Pt I, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., 3001 SEB. Biological Science - Seminar, Richard Wrangham, "Ecological In- fluences on Primate Social Organization," 4 p.m., Room 2, MLB. Computing Center - Workshop, Ellen Hoffman, Using the Autologic APS-Micro 5 Phototypesetter, 3-5 p.m.; Sem, TeXnicians and TeXexper- ts, "TeX Users," 7-9 p.m., 1013 NUBS. Interdept. Prog. in Genetics - John Coffin, "Replication of Tetroviruses: Functions of the Ltr," 4-6 p.m., West Lecture Hall, Med Sci II.. HRD - Workshops, Page Baxter, "Values," 1:30-4:30 p.m.; 2-day Per- formance Planning and Appraisal, 8:30-noon, 130B LSA. Farm Labor Org Committee - Slide Show, Dorothy Diederichs, "Mich Farmworkers: A Legacy of Poverty and a Struggle to Change," 5:30 p.m., Wolverine Room, Union. CRLT - Workshop, Geo Williams, "Overhead Transparencies," 7- 10:30 p.m., Michigan Media, 400 Fourth Street. Chemistry - Seminar, Dee Brooks, "Aplications of Enzymes in the Total Synthesis of Natural Products," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem. Blood Donor Clinic -11 a.m.-5 p.m., League and North Campus Com- mons. Guild House Campus Ministry - Beans and rice dinner, 6-7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe. Muslim Student Association - Islamic coffee hour, noon, Room 3, 3rd floor, League. Universities Activities Center - Workshop, Impact Jazz Dance, 7-8:30 p.m., Ballroom, Union. Latin American Solidarity Committee - open forum, 8 p.m., Room 130 Business Administration Building. 41 E lm A ~~~~PARAMOUNTPITRSRENS ArAm i VRITI IRFS, NC. N LNBLKNPOUTO