Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 6, 1986 Inquiring Photographer By A ndi Schreiner "What comes to mind when you think about The Univer- sity of Michigan?" Interviews took place in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida INBRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Aquino releases leftist leader MANILA, Philippines - The Aquino government released the im- prisoned founder of the Communist Party and three guerrilla leaders yesterday despite U.S. and military warnings the move could assist the leftist insurgency. The government, which took power last week after a military-led revolt toppled the 20-year regime of President Ferdinand Marcos, also moved toward opening peace talks with rebel forces. President Corazon Aquino visited the presidential palace for the first time yesterday after military officials declared it safe of booby traps left by Marcos forces and formally swore into office two Cabinet ministers and the Central Bank governor. The four political prisoners freed yesterday were the last of 517 Filipinos arrested by the Marcos regime to be ordered released by Aquino in a program of national reconciliation Swedes find new lead in killing I Richard P. Martin, Ft. Lauderdale patrolman: Girls with fair complexions wearing turtleneck sweaters come to my mind. They have to come down here to get red. I also think of Bo and the Wolverines. Slater Kirby, graduate of Boston University: The Wolverines, of course. I never really thought about it that much. I have a friend from Grosse Pointe. Trish McMahan, Eastern Michigan University sophomore: I go there for the football games and Dooley's. Bill Curry, Loyalist College sophomore: I think of a girl I'm having a great time with, just joking! It's sup- posed to be a cool place. Sam Shapiro, resident of Toronto: The University of Michigan has a great reputation for sports, scholastics and student in- volvement. STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Police intensified the search- for Prime Minister Olof Palme's assassin yesterday and called in a special West German team to put the finishing touches on a portrait of a suspect. Stockholm Police Chief Hans Holmer said a 22-year-old woman artist who saw a man believed to be the killer gave police a key new lead - a portrait of the suspect's face. "This is the first witness who has given us a face," Holmer said. The drawing is detailed, but Holmer said he did not want to release it until a team of West German identity specialists had a chance to examine the sketch and talk to other witnesses. The specialists from the Federal Criminal Police Command in. Wiesbaden, West Germany, were to arrive in Stockholm last night with an identity kit to "flesh out" the portrait, the police chief said. r , , " Cynthia Cooner, Miami Stewart Martin, Broward Dade Community College Community College freshman: Sports? Cold sophomore: I think of my weather? Why would friend Ray, who is a junior. I anybody go to Michigan? also think of the cold What's in Michigan? weather. Deanna Erickson, Oakland University freshman: I think of the football players and my friends. I tried so hard to get into U of M. David Mitchell, Head Boun- cer at The Candy Store: The students are very good drunks. They have a super reputation because they are not wild and they don't start fights. The students from Calgary University are rowdy because they don't handle booze well. The boun- cers in Ft. Lauderdale think very highly of U of M studen- ts. Maria Corder, Southern Illinois University senior: I don't know much about it ex- cept that all the students have to spend Spring Break in Ft. Lauderdale because it is so cold up there. A defense against cancer can be cooked up in your kitchen. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY UAC MUSKET presents March 6,7,8 8:00 pm, Power Center Tickets available at the Michigan Union Ticket office Panel says colleges are behind (Continued from Page 1) federal government spend more "We think this is the best invest- formed in May money on higher education although ment the country can specifically, David Packard, was rmno overall figure would be specified, make for its future," Bromley said. I(OA Then-presidential science adviser George Keyworth requested that the panel determine whether relations between the federal government and universities should be changed, paying particular attention to scien- tific and technical concerns "needed to sustain America's leadership in in- dustry and defense." BROMLEY provided an outline, but not a copy, of the panel's report during an interview Tuesday. He said he had decided to talk about the report before its release because portions of it had already become public. The panel will recommend that the he said. Among the panel's recommen- dations is one to set up a $5 billion federal "catch-up" fund for updating college facilities. Under the proposal, federal funds could be used to cover only 50 percent of the costs of any remodeling project, with the rest of the money coming from state or private sources. THE PANEL is also calling for a new scholarship fund, which Bromley estimated to cost $120 million a year, to be awarded to the top 1 percent of undergraduates in mathematics, engineering, and the natural sciences. Other recommendations by the panel would give university resear- chers more discretion in spending government grant money and reduce paperwork requirements. The panel also wants universities and gover- nment to encourage the establishment of interdisciplinary research and technology centers, Bromley said. He said the panel found that "the universities themselves have to take a lot of the blame for their state of health." Daily reporter Kery Murakami filed a report for this story. 7-' IPl~ 802 MONROE ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 H i]JE NOON FORUM FRIDAY, MARCH 7 WIL CUMMINGS who recently returned from a trip to Europe and the USSR will talk about his observations from a history teacher's perspective. LUNCH AVAILABLE FOR $1 For info call 662-5189 Nazi hunter acquits Waldheim VIENNA, Austria - Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal is convinced Kurt Walkheim was never a Nazi but believes the former U.N. chief must have known Greek Jews were being sent to death camps during World' War II, the West German news agency reported yesterday. Wiesenthal, whose Vienna-based operation for tracking down Nazi war criminals has earned world recognition, said there is "nothing at all in- criminating" against Waldheim in new charges made by newspapers and the World Jewish Congress. In an interview with the German news agency DPA carried by the Austrian Press Agency, Wiesenthal said Waldheim never belonged "to the Nazi Party or one of its branches." Waldheim, 67, has previously been cleared of ties to the Nazi Party by the Austrian government and later by the U.N. Security Council before he became secretary-general. In Vienna, Waldheim, who is a candidate for the Austrian presidency, called the accussations "nonsense," saying they were an effort to discredit him before the May 6 election. House Connuittee will say no' to Contra aid question WASHINGTON - The House Intelligence Committee, ignoring President Reagan's plea that the United States must be spared having to send "our own American boys" to Nicaragua, voted yesterday to recommend against giving $100 million to rebels fighting the Sandinista government. Despite the committee's opposition, however, the request for $70 million military aid and $30 million logistical aid must still go to the House floor. Reagan earlier had told a White House audience that "if we give them the aid they need, the Nicaraguan people can win this battle for freedom on their own. American troops have not been asked for and are not needed." "But if the members of Congress hide their heads in the sand and pretend the Nicaraguan threat will go away, they are courting disaster and history will hold them accountable," he said. Nothing less than the security of the United States is at stake." Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger argued that the leftist Nicaraguan government was becoming a "second Cuba on the American mainland (meaning) the Warsaw Pact will have effectively outflanked us." Reagan may cancel sumnit WASHINGTON - President Reagan served notice on the Kremlin yesterday that he will not go to Moscow for a summit until Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev first comes to Washington for similar talks. At their first summit last November, Reagan and Gorbachev agreed to two more meetings - in the United States in 1986 and in the Soviet Union in 1987. However, the two sides have not been able to agree on a timetable. The United States has proposed June or late July, while the Kremlin suggested September. "We've explained we can't have it in September" because that would be fall too close to congressional elections in November, Reagan said. "I've got news for them," the president was quoted as telling a group of reporters at the WhiteHouse. If Gorbachevrefuses to go along with a U.S. timetable for this year, Reagan said, "there won't be any '87 summit in Moscow." Elaborating later, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said, "The president's viewpoint is the next summit will be held in Washington. 0he Michigan Uaig Vol. XCVI - No. 105 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. 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