4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 4, 1986 Contratto cites experiences for council seat (Continued from Page 1) are wherever their hom ning experience," Middleton said. "It may vote there instead takes a long time to learn about city referring to the Greeks' government." in the ward. But neither Middleton nor Contratto Both candidates ar are relying on previous experience to Proposal A, which win this race. Both are actively cam- messages to Washingto paigning door-to-door because they bor citizens do notv predict the election results will be military aid to Central close. would also set up at THE THIRD ward is traditionally establish a sister city the "swing ward" where either party Central America, will a can win. Two years ago, Middleton votes. won by about80 votes. Contratto supports the Although both candidates need as Middleton will not revea many votes as they can get, neither "I AM supporting are counting on the ward's student America issue and am population to vote. Instead, they are students will vote for Ce directing their campaign at the and associate it with n numerous single and two-parent said. moderate-income families. The ward She condemns the Ur also contains University faculty and a tervention in the troub few cooperative housing units. supports the proposa In the February 17 Republican reasons. primary between Middleton and Don- "I believe as a taxpa na Richter, a large student turnout bor that I can say whatt was anticipated from a sizeable money," Contratto said Greek population that lives in the She also likes the ex ward. Panhellenic director Mary Beth of the proposal. "It Seiler had endorsed Middleton believe the propaganda because she voted for Collegiate going on down there if Sorosis' controversial plan to pur- sonal contact. chase a house on Lincoln Avenue and "HOW CAN you mak add an addition. Richter, who was neighbors? This is a p serving on the Ann Arbor Planning helps us understand na Commission, vetoed the plan, causing much more complex wa many Greek organizations to accuse Last year some are her of being anti-Greek. students went to one o MIDDLETON did win the primary, sister cities in Hikone but without the student vote. "The Hiroshima memoria student vote did not materialize," she Gallop Park last summ said. "That segment of the voters are boys described his trip. transient in Ann Arbor. Their votes "Exchange has a pr Police arrest 100 in (Continued from Page 1) he was a student. Neiti by university workers with to be affiliated with theu sledge hammers while at least 100 Cooper was holding police officers remained nearby. with gasoline and a cl Two masked men were arrested for DeGennaro had an emp alleged possession of Molotov cia said, adding that B cocktails after officers spotted them received information near California Hall, said Berkeley night there would bea Police spokesman Marc Garcia. He burn down California Ha said William David Cooper, of Debley said police Oakland, and Jeffrey DeGennaro, of charred strips of paper Emeryville, were being held on gas tanks of three unive $11,000 bond at the Berkeley jail. Gar- Campus police said cia said Cooper listed his occupation threats had been receiv as teacher and Degennaro said but they said evacuatio me is and they d," she added, who do not live e hoping that would send n that Ann Ar- want to send America and task force to somewhere in attract student e proposal, but al her stand. the Central m hoping that entral America me," Contratto nited States in- bled area and i for several yer in Ann Ar- happens to my 1. change aspect is harder to about what is you have per- e war on your rogram which tionalities in a ay," she said. a high school f Ann Arbor's , Japan. In a i service in ner, 'one of the ractical value. apai her is believed university. a bottle filled oth wick, and ty bottle, Gar- erkeley police n Wednesday an attempt to all. e also found stuffed in the rsity cars. several bomb ved yesterday, n of university I'm sure that boy has a whole dif- ferent sense of Japanese culture than before he went," Contratto said. Although Middleton will not reveal her stand on this issue, she speaks freely about other issues, like down- town development. MIDDLETON said the city should help find ways to bring people down- town. She supports the city's effort to build new housing because she thinks this will increase traffic downtown. One North Main, currently under construction, will contain retail, office and housing space. Although this project lacks low-income housing, another project which will be built on city-owned land at First and William, will contain some low-income housing. Middleton also supports downtown development because she said it will increase the city's taxybase. "I DON'T think anybody would disagree that for the city to broaden the tax base, it must have new development," Middleton said. "No one wants to bear the burden of noisy traffic or the impact of higher density though," she said. Middleton voted for the city's proposed Huron Plaza hotel and con- ference center because she felt it would add to the tax base and bring people into the city. On March 24, however, city council defeated the site plan for the 400-room hotel and con- ference center which would have housed 1,500 people. The center was to be located at the corner of First and Huron. Contratto said she would have voted Middle ton ... is incumbent against the plan, thinking the con- ference center would have a negative impact on the city. "I have serious reservations about the size of the building," she said. "It might have a serious impact on the housing and the adjacent small businesses." SHE IS also worried about traffic safety problems that may arise from the added flow of people. The candidates also disagree on Proposal B, which would allow the city to borrow 3 million dollars for road repair. Contra tto supports the proposal because she does not "see where the money for street repair will come from." Middleton said that since roads are a basic service repair costs should come from the city's general fund. eru td& S rtheid protest buildings was voluntary. ON TUESDAY, 61 protesters, in- cluding 21 students, were arrested af- ter refusing to remove 14 shanties in front of California Hall. Those shan- ties were destroyed. Demonstrators demand that the university pull out about $2.4 billion it has invested in companies doing business in South Africa. The confrontation strategy of the anti-apartheid groups did not have universal support among students Correction: One man pleaded guilty and another pleaded no contest at Tuesday's arraignment of 20 protesters arrested at Senator Carl Pursell's (R-Ann Ar- bor) office. The Daily incorrectly stated that all 20 pleaded not guilty. Rick Frenkel, an engineering representative for the Michigan Student Assembly, did not run for of- fice in the recent MSA election. The Daily incorrectly reported yesterday that he ran on the Meadow Party ticket.- ... ........- ......--- --------- - --..... I-YI SNIGHT OWLS TAKE A STUDY BREAK! I Buy 2 or more of Mrs. Peabody's cookies v or brownies after 9:00 p.m. and get a FREE beverage Open till ii p.m. daily COUPON MUST BE I 715 N.UniversityPRESENTED WITH PURCHASE I7615 NI. ieriyOFFER VALID THROUGH 761.CHiP FEMAY 2,1986 . .... .....- ... - ..... . . ..... I 0-" 'El' II AREHOUSE UIDATION SA LE FINAL WEEKEND w SALE ENDS TUESDAY, APRIL 8 CO Oi 10 a.m. It to 6 p.m. OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. I TUES. If wa tu] th saN WA LIC BELOW Slio RETAIL PRICES e have just returned from hina with a large collection of riental Furniture and Decor ems hand picked directly from ctories at distressed prices. EVERYTHING MUST BE MMEDIATELY LIQUIDATED you don't mind shopping in a arehouse, this is your oppor- nity to buy rare treasures from ,e orient at extraordinay vings. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHUR CH 120 S. State 662-4536 Sunday - 9:30 & 11:00 Worship and Church School 9:30 broadcast on WNRS 1290 AM 11:00 broadcast on WAAM 1600 AM Sun. sermon title, "Making Gods Out Of Leftovers" by Dr. Donald B. Strobe. Sundays 9:30 a.m. in Calkins Hall - Parents of Adolescents Class taught by Rev. Thomas Wachterhauser. April 6, 13, 20, 3-5 p.m. in Green Room: Membership Orientation Classes. Fri. 7:30p.rr. Dr. Strobe's Adult Class WESLEY FOUNDATION 602 E. Huron St. (at State) United Methodist Campus Ministry College class - Sundays 10:45 a.. Sunday Evening Supper & Fellowship - 5 p.m. Bible Study - Mondays 6 p.m.. Fridays noon. Holy Communion - Wednesdays 9:30 p.m. Rev. Wayne Large, Chaplain. Telephone: 668-6881. ** * UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL, 1511 Washtenaw 663-5560 Dr. Paul Foelber, Interim Pastor LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Sunday Worship 9:15 and 10:30 Bible Study 9:15 Sunday Sunday Supper 6:00 * * * COVENANT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday Service: 9:30 a.m..at Mack School 920 Miller, Ann Arbor 10:45a.m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Study Philip H. Tiews, Pastor For more information call 761-1999. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave., 662-4466 (between S. University and Hill) Sunday 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Coffee Hour - 10:30 social hall Adult Education Classes during both services Campus Group: Coordinator - Jamie Schultz Meets for Communion 7 p.m. Wednes- days. Program follows at 7:30. Dr. William Hillegonds - Sr. Minister AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Huron St. (between State & Division) Sundays: 9:55 worship, 11:25 Bible Study groups for both Undergrads and Graduate Students. Thursdays: 5:30 Supper (free) and Fellowship. CENTER OPEN EACH DAY for information call 663-9376 ROBERT B. WALLACE, PASTOR IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Police hunt TWA bomber ATHENS, Greece - Police are hunting for an Arab woman suspected of planting the bomb that exploded on a TWA jetliner over southern Greece, killing four Americans, police sources said yesterday. The sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a woman called May Elias Mansur, a known terrorist, flew on the TWA Boeing 727 from Cairo to Athens Wednesday morning. The plane went on to Rome and the bomb exploded during its return flight from Rome to Athens Wednesday afternoon. "We have launched a search around Athens and other cities and also put out a signal to trace this person through Interpol," one police source said. Earlier yesterday in Rome, Italian Interior Minister Oscar Luigi Scalfaro said, 'It is certain that a suspect person, who is on file as a terrorist, got on in Cairo and got off in Athens, occupying in the airplane the exact seat where the explosion occurred." The pilot. Capt. Richard Peterson, told reporters yesterday at Athens airport, "I think the explosive device was placed at floor level near the cabin wall . . . in row 10F. But the crew didn't see anyone acting suspiciously." Astronaut says Challenger rocket seal defects known WASHINGTON - Astronaut Robert Crippen, who has flown more space shuttle flights than anyone else, told the presidential Challenger com- mission yesterday he once was told about a problem with a booster rocket seal but he did not consider it "that big a deal." But, said Crippen, he was not aware that a waiver had been issued that, in effect, acknowledged that catastrophe could result if the seal failed. "If I had been aware of the change," he said, "I would have taken the problem much more seriously." A leaking seal in the right booster rocket is believed to have caused the explosion that destroyed Challenger and killed its crew of seven on liftoff Jan. 28. Crippen and three other astronauts who appeared today testified that no escape system could have kept the astronauts alive in that situation. However, astronaut Henry Hartsfield said he would like to see some sort of low-altitude survival capability, such as one that would allow astronauts to bail out. Crippen, however, said a bailout might not be feasible. Pentagon to push for MX WASHINGTON - Despite the certainty of a new confrontation with Congress, the Pentagon will continue fighting for 100 MX missiles, a top Defense Department official said yesterday. Donald Hicks, the under secretary of defense for research and engineering, also said the Pentagon will delay development of a new mobile missile until it's certain the right design has been selected. Hicks, who is responsible for overseeing the development of new weapons, said he was not concerned about resurrecting the supposedly dead issue of deploying a second group of 50 MX missiles or disturbing any political consensus on the mobile missile, which has been dubbed the Midgetman. "I'm going to make another run on the MX," Hicks said during a break- fast meeting with reporters. "I think they're terribly important and an incredibly cheap.investment for what they do for us in terms of deterren- ce and helping us with arms control." As for the Midgetman, which is now in the early stages of development, Hicks said there are still too many unresolved money and technical questions to hope for deployment by 1992. Aquino, rebels discuss peace MANILA, Philippines - President Corazon Aquino, responding to a proposal by communist insurgents for cease-fire talks, announced yesterday she will appoint a special emissary to begin negotiations with rebel forces. Presidential spokesman Rene Saguisag said the decision came after the government received a two-page statement from the underground National Democratic Front declaring its readiness to enter a dialogue aimed at ending armed hostilities. Saguisag said Aquino "is in the process of selecting an emissary to get in touch with the opposite numbers, so to speak, of the National Democratic Front." The National Democratic Front is the political wing of the outlawed Communist Party of the Philippines. The Communist Party's military arm, the New People's Army, has an estimated 16,000 armed troops operating in most of the country's 74 provinces. Filipino official: U.S. keeping papers on Marcos' wealth MANILA, Philippines - A government minister yesterday charged the United States is withholding key documents the Philippines feels it is en- titled to have in its bid to recover deposed ruler Ferdinand Marcos' "hid- den wealth." Minister Jovito Salonga, head of the Good Government Commission, returned Wednesday from a 19-day mission to the United States and reported to President Corazon Aquino that he brought back evidence detailing how Marcos had illegally stashed away assets during his 20 years in power. Salonga said the bulk of Marcos' allegedly ill-gotten wealth - described in the billions of dollars - was deposited in bank accounts in Switzerland by the deposed president, close associates and subordinates. Salonga declined to estimate the total amount of assets sent abroad by Marcos and his "cronies," saying documents turn up almost daily. He said the commission has evidence linking Marcos to properties in the United States, England, Austria, Switzerland and Canada. 0Ie £Mict-gan Baig Vol. XCVI- No. 126 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. N 75% SAMPLE ITEMS Editor in Chief ...............ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor ......... RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor ................ 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