Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 13, 1985 4 Prince Charles leads polo team to victory IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS From AP and UPI WELLINGTON, Fla. - Prince Charles, the man who would be, king, chipped in a goal yesterday that helped his team defeat the All Stars 11-10 in a spirited polo match at the Palm Beach Polo and Country Club. Princess Diana, who watched from a specially-built royal box, gave the silver and porcelain victor's trophy to her husband's teammate and president of exclusive club, William Ylvisaker. THE PRINCE, an avid polo player who has a four-goal rating on a scale of minus one to 10, thundered across a well-manicured greensward with some of the world's finest players. Earlier, Gov. Bob Graham and children bearing roses and Christmas ornaments greeted the royal couple at the airport. Charles and Diana also planned to attend a $4 million benefit dinner in one of the capitals of U.S. high society. Charles shrugged off an errant shot that hit him from behind in the right shoulder to make th econd-half goal for the Palm Beach polo team, which defeated an all-star squad 11-10. Early in the match, he barely aver- ted a spill when his horse buckled, but the British prince recovered and pulled his mount upright. AT HALFTIME, many in the sellout crowd at the Palm Beach Polo and Associated Press Country Club stadium in suburban Wellington chanted, "We want Di! We want Di!'' Princess Diana, watching from a special stand, wore a blue chiffon blouse and a white, blue and pink- patterned skirt. Early in the game, a single-engine plane flew overhead trailing a banner asking, "Charles and Diana please help to free Ireland." The plane was chartered by the Irish American Unity Conference, a group based in San Antonio, Texas, that supports unification of British-ruled Northern Ireland with the Irish Republic. CHARLES AND DIANA were to be guests last night at a $10,000-a-couple dinner at the Breakers Hotel in the upper-crust enclave of Palm Beach. Publicists for industrialist Armand Hammer said the dinner would raise some $4 million for the United World College in Montezuma, N.M. Bob Hope and Victor Borge headed the entertainment for the dinner. Such celebrities as actor Cary Grant, ac- tress Joan Collins, media and sports magnate Ted Turner, talk-show host Merv Griffin, U.S. Sens. Paula Hawkins (R-Fla.) and Sam Nunn (D- Ga.) and several other members of Congress also were invited. Princess Diana listens to a rap session with Mike Kirsch of Annadale, Va., a member of Straight, Inc. during her tour of the drug center Mon- day in Springfield. THE FUTURE IS IN INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS A representative will be on campus TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1985 to discuss GRADUATE STUDY THUNDERBIRD ~~AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT GLENDALE, ARIZONA 85306 Interviews may be scheduled at CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT Soviet propaganda targets 'Star Wars' program TWO EVENINGS WITH YEHUDA AMICHAI Israel's Greatest Poet Thursday, Nov. 14 Poetry Reading (in English) 8:00 p m. (adm. $2. Sponsored by. Hillel 00) llfl Sunday, Nov. 17 The Contemporary Mood in Israel As Seen By Its Writers 8:00 p.m. Hillel (adm. $3.00 students/ $5.00 general) " i 1429 Hill St. 663-3336 (Continued from Page 1) States believes such research is clearly permissible under the 1972 An- ti-Ballistic Missile treaty. THE OFFICIAL, who briefed repor- ters at the White House on the under- standing he not be identified, in- dicated the open laboratory proposal would be part of an understanding on Star Wars that could clear the way for a comprehensive new arms control agreement that also would include sharp reductions in strategic offen- sive nuclear weapons. The official said the proposed guidelines were being discussed through the American ambassador in Moscow, Arthur Hartman, and the Soviet ambassador in Washington, Anatoly Dobrynin. Another official said yesterday that it was a Soviet refusal to agree that the United States can engage in research into missile defense technology that is blocking a potential compromise that could lead to guidelines at the summit. In anther attack on the United States, the Communist Party newspaper Pravda dismissed U.S. concern with regional conflicts and accused Washington of threatening "outright armed intervention in pur- suit of its goals." "Washington experts in psychological warfare obviously miscalculated when, trying to disc- tract world public attention from the pressing problems of struggle against the arms race, they decided to give priority to the problem of regional conflicts." Pravda said. Navy spy gets life sentence NORFOLK, Va. - Arthur Walker, a retired Navy officer convicted of supplying secrets to a Soviet spy ring run by his brother, was sentenced to life in prison yesterday by a judge who refused to "treat this as a slap-on- the-wrist case." Walker, a 51-year-old retired Navy lieutenant commander, told U.S. District Judge Calvitt Clarke that he wished to "apologize to all the citizens of this country for what I did." "I dishonored myself. I devastated my family. Nobody could be any sorrier," he said. Clarke then sentenced Walker, of Virginia Beach, to the maximum of three life terms and four 10-year terms on seven counts of espionage, with the sentences to run concurrently. Walker, who was also fined $250,000, will be eligible for parole in10 years. Walker's wife, Rita, the only witness at the sentencing hearing, testified that he became suicidal while he was spying and had an affair with his brother's wife in the late 1960s and early 1970s. His brother, John Walker, 48, a retired Navy chief warrant officer, and John Walker's son, Navy seaman Michael Walker pleaded guilty to espionage Oct. 28. In exchange for his cooperation with authorities, John Walker is to receive a life sentence and his son is to serve 25 years. Liberian rebels attempt takeover MONROVIA, Liberia - A former military commander attempted to top- ple President Samuel Doe in a coup yesterday but Doe said he crushed the revolt 13 hours after it began in this west African Nation founded by freed U.S. slaves. Doe called on rebel holdouts to lay down their arms and proclaimed a dusk-to-dawn curfew. "I take this opportunity to inform the nation that the coup has failed," Doe said in a "special statement" broadcast on a Monrovia radio station that had been taken over by rebel forces 13 hours earlier. "I am still the commander in chief of the armed forces of Liberia and Head of state." Diplomats in Monrovia had reported fierce fighting between loyal for- ces and rebel troops led by former military commander Gen. Thomas Quiwonkpa that left at least 16 people dead but it was not known if the fighting had ended. "It is not yet clear what forces are in control," the State Department in Washington said late Yesterday. Doe said in his broadcast he was in firm control of the country and he called on the army, police and "all Liberians" to stand firmly behind him. Bomber kills four in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon - A suicide bomber crashed a pickup truck loaded with explosives into a monastery where six senior Christian politicians were meeting yesterday. The bomber, two army guards and a woman were killed and 26 other people were injured, police said. They said a 2 -foot-thick stone wall shielded the politicians from the main force of the blast, which gouged out a 20-foot-wide crater. Three bombs exploded overnight in various parts of Moslem west Beirut, killing four civilians and wounding eight, police reported earlier in the day. The meeting in the Christian suburb of Aukar in east Beirut was to discuss opposition to a draff Syrian-sponsored armistice agreement reached last month by Lebanon's three strongest militias in an effort to end the 10-year-old civil war. The six politicians gathered at the monastery belong to the Lebanese Front, a Christian political coalition which was excluded from the negotiations. An anonymous caller claiming to speak for the hitherto unknown "Vanguard of Arab Christians" accused Christian leaders of seeking to align Lebanon's Christian community with Israel and said, "This (the bombing) is the end of everyone who is in Israel's lap." Snow blasts Arizona, Utah Up to two feet of snow fell yesterday over northern Arizona and Utah as a storm turned eastward after piling up huge drifts in the Sierra Nevada, stranding hunters and hikers and breaking records for cold tem- peratures. At least 17 deaths have been blamed on a series of winter-like storms since last week. Trucks slid off roads and power lines fell in Utah, and schools were closed in northern Arizona. Winnemucca, Nev., posted a record low of 8 degrees below zero yester- day. Eureka, Calif., on the northern coast, had a record low of 31 for the second day in a row. To the east, Caribou, Maine, had a record low of 6 degrees. The heaviest snow yesterday moved into northern Arizona and Utah. Ten inches of snow fell during the night in northern Utah at the Alta ski resort, after up to 14 inches fell in the state's mountains Monday. The Alta, Snowbasin and Snowbird resorts had accumulated 22 to 24 inches. Tank contract raified by UAW DETROIT - The United Auto Workers union ratified yesterday a con- tract with General Dynamics Corp., ending a three-state, 7-week-old strike by 5,000 workers that cut tank production in half, the company an- nounced. The contract was ratified by 53 percent to 47 percent, said General Dynamics spokesman William Sheil. He said he did not know the exact numbers. He said plant operations would resume beginning with the third shift last night. UAW Vice President Marc Stepp said the union's bargaining council had recommended approval of the pact. The workers build M1 and M1Al Army tanks under a contract scheduled for completion by 1991. I- Vol XCVI - No.50 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. I4 i 14 [4 Union of Students for Israel, Progressive Zionist Caucus Minority retention survey addresses quality of life' THE BLACK LAW STUDENTS' ALLIANCE of the University of Michigan Law School Presents A PRB4JAW SYMPOSIUM All Black students interested in attending the University of Michigan Law School, receiving information on the admissions process and finding out what it's like to be a Black student at Michigan's Law School SHOULD ATTEND. DATE: Sunday, November 17,1985 Time 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. PLACE: The Lawyers Club Lounge (S. State St. at S. University) LIGHT REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED (Continued from Page 1) results will help efforts currently un- derway at the University to increase recruitment and retention of minority students by identifying "an environ- ment that's supportive of their cultural diversity." GOBIRIT SAID the "quality of life" at the University is a major factor not only in the enrollment of minorities but in encouraging them to remain in school. "The goal is not simply to enroll, but to graduate," he said. The ideal environment for achieving this goal would include "a set of services and programs, a whole set of institutional supports that will permit the minority students, for in- stance, to integrate their ethnic background into th' academic ex- perience," Gobirit saTd. The survey contains questions about housing, academics, social life, and background information of the students participating. GOBIRIT SAID that the questions concerning background information THE WARNER-LAMBERT LECTURE SERIES PRESENTS AN EVENING WITH TOM WOL-FE"~ Mr. Wolfe the author of The Right Stuff will speak Weduesday, November 13 :00 P.M. were included to "give us a better sense of the diversity and complexity of what we call the minority groups." He said a major problem some minority students encounter at the University is finding that other people are not sensitive to their needs. To make sure students know that there is a support network at the University willing tohelp them, Gobirith said that a step will be to emphasize the personal. "WE WANT to be sure that the whole process (recruitment and measures taken to improve retehtion) is personal," he said. Gobirit would not identify any par- ticular areas that he feels need im- provement in order to better serve the needs of minority students. "We're waiting for the results of the survey," he said. Sudarkasa's report will also contain recommendations on how to improve minority retention. Those recommen- dations will be based on more than just the survey results, Gobirit said. Sudarkasa's report will follow one recently released by Roderick Linzie, minority researcher for the Michigan Student Assembly. In his report, Lin- zie said that the University has not focused enough attention on retention programs in the past. Allied Health Professions The Air Force can make you an attractive offer - out- standing compensation, plus opportunities for professional development. You can have a challenging practice AND time to spend with your fam- ily. We are nowaccepting applications.i ?k ,- I i nI , n.;i/ 11f. e a s I t e. 'i K s. : r1 Editor in Chief................NEILCHASE 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 PageFEditorn.. KAREN KLEIN OPINION PAGE STAFF: Jonathan Corn. Gayle Kirshenbaum, David Lewis, Henry Park, Peter Mooney. Suzanne Skubik, Walter White. Arts Editor .................. CHRIS LAUER Chief Photographer..............DAN HABIB PHOTO STAFF: Jae Kim, Scott Lituchy, John Munson, Matt Petrie, Dean Randazzo, Andi Schreiber, Darrian Smith. Sports Editor ................. TOM KEANEY Associate Sports Editors..........JOE EWING BARB McQUADE, ADAM MARTIN, PHIL NUSSEL, STEVE WISE SPORTS STAFF: Dave Aretha, Mark Borowsky, Debbie Frances, Liam Flaherty, Steve Green- baum, Rachel Goldman, Jon Hartman, Darren Jasey, Phil Johnson, Rick Kaplan, Christian Mar- tin, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth, Adam Ochlis, Chris Parker, Mike Redstone, Duane Roose, Jeff Rush, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan. Business Manager. DAWN WILLACKER Sales Manager.......... MARY ANNE HOGAN Assistant Sales Manager...........YUNA LEE Marketing Manager........CYNTHIA NIXON Finance Manager............ DAVID JELINEK Classified Manager ..GAYLA BROCKMAN DISPLAY SALES: Lori BaronSheryl Biesman, Eda Benjaku, Diane Bloom, Cindy Davis, Cathy Ellman, Debbie Feit, Brady Flower, Mason Frank-