4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 17, 1986 Inquiring Photographer By Jae Kim "How do you feel about the end of this year at the University of Michigan?" Aydin Bengisu, jpol. sci. junior: Being a transfer sudent from Flint, I find Ann Arbor much more diverse with a whole lot mbre to offer than Flint. This is true socially, aCademically and in general, with everything. Michigan has a cosmopolitan atmosphere which is just incredible. Lisa Dennia, natural Julie Hall, Engin. fresh- John Gardyiak, pharmacy Liz Haas, LSA freshman: resource junior: I had a man: I'm glad it's finally grad. student: It's been For me, it's sad since many great year, but I have to here, because I need time to good, but I'm glad the end is of my older friends are admit that I'm glad it's just relax and have some fun. near; too much of a good leaving. But I'm looking about over. I'm looking for- The studying and academic thing can get boring. Unfor- forward to next fall. There's ward to a relaxing summer, pressure gets to you so I'm tunately, the academics and so much to do in Ann Arbor away from the pressure of looking forward to the end. the strain of finals puts a that I wish I could stay over the University. damper on enjoying the spring and summer. great spring weather. Mimi Fox, pol. sci. senior: Since this is my last gemester I'm excited to go on to bigger and better things, even though I love Ann Ar- bor and had a great time here. The University has a diverse student body which I love; you can find so much culture in Ann Arbor. , John Bonmevich, natural sci. senior: Graduate school is next, so it's not really the end for me. But now is my senior year, I'm taking it easy with breeze courses and a relaxing time. It even gets boring sometimes. Claudia Herman, comp. lit. masters candidate: Well, I feel very relieved because I'm finishing a degree now. I'm looking forward to get- ting another degree, but right now surviving the next two weeks is my current goal. Ed Anderson, comp. science senior: I'm really glad, since hopefully I'll graduate and relax. It's been so comfortable being here that it's scary to be leaving this place and going into a foreign environment; I guess I've just become so close to Ann Arbor. John Cho, LSA freesh- man: I'm sorry that this year came to an end so quickly; my freshman year was awesome. Since I'm staying spring and summer, I can enjoy Ann Arbor to it's fullest potential. It was just a great year. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Libya linked to disco bombing BONN, West Germany - Chancellor Helmut Kohl said yesterday West German intelligence had concrete proof that Libya orchestrated the West Berlin nightclub bombing that triggered the U.S. air raids on Libya. A government spokesman said West Germany's proof consisted of in- tercepted and decoded radio messages between Libya and its embassy in East Berlin. Before the U.S. attack early Tuesday, Bonn had said its evidence in the bombing was not conclusive. "We have incontrovertible intelligence sources that the Libyan Peoples Bureau (embassy) in East Berlin was responsible for the bloody terror attack on the West Berlin discotheque in which two died and more people were injured than in the American attack on Libya," Kohl told parliament. "These clearly amount to proof," Kohl said in an address on the U.S. bombing attack on Libya that triggered angry mass protests in more than a dozen West German cities and a rock-throwing, window-smashing spree in West Berlin Tuesday night. House refuses to split aid package that may go to rebels WASHINGTON - The House dealt President Reagan a setback in his effort to win money for Nicaraguan rebels by refusing to split the $100 million aid package from an unrelated spending bill that Reagan may veto. In two votes Tuesday evening that went largely along party lines, the Democratic-controlled House decided to keep the rebel aid package tied to a bill providing $1.7 billion for a range of government programs. House Minority Leader Bob Michel, R-Ill., warned that Reagan might veto the spending bill and told Democrats, "What you have done here by your procedure is kill aid to the Contras." The House was scheduled yesterday to vote on a series of amendments - and perhaps final passage - for the plan to provide $100 million in aid to the Contra guerrillas fighting Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista gover- nment. Among the amendments are one which limits aid to only Nicaraguan refugees and Latin nations trying to negotiate an end to the fighting, and another which would temporarily limit Contra aid to non-lethal items such as clothes and medicine. State Senate supports SDI LANSING - After long and heated debate, the Senate voted 18-13 in favor of a resolution yesterday urging the U.S. Congress to support President Ronald Reagan's so-called Star Wars defense program. The resolution, sponsored by Sen. Doug Cruce, called for the Congress to "endorse the concept of mutual assured survival and to pursue the concept of High Frontier Technology" as a way to end the threat of nuclear war. Cruce, a Troy Republican, successfully fought several attempts to refer the resolution to a committee for revision or to delay it for a day on- ce the debate ran well into the senators' lunch hour. "The doctrine we have operated under in the past is mutually assured destruction," Cruce said. "The doctrine we will be replacing it with is mutually assured survival." State House okays funding for Michigan National Guard LANSING - The House approved yesterday a bill giving the governor the authority to create a volunteerstate defense force for use if and when the Michigan National Guard is called up to active duty in a national emergency. The legislation sponsored by Rep. Rick Sitz, (D-Taylor), was approved after amendments were added requiring that the House and Senate ap- propriations committees approve the size andexpenditures of the force. "Right now the budget implications are zero," Sitz said. "No state fun- ds are currently programmed to be spent." But he said salaries will have to be earmarked for coordinators of the force and the cost of training may be picked up by the state - as it is in 41 other states which have similar defense forces. Sitz said he expected the federal government to supply military surplus uniforms and equipment for the up to 30,000 Michigan residents he estimated will apply for the force. He speculated many may be Vietnam War veterans. U.S. warplanes patrol island ABOARD THE USS AMERICA (UPI) - Warplanes from the U.S. 6th Fleet patrolled the skies above the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa yesterday in the wake of an unsuccessful Libyan missile attack on a navigational installation there. Despite the U.S. naval presence, Rear Adm. Henry Mauz, commander of the 6th Fleet's Battle Force 80, said defense of the island in the event of another attack would be Italy's responsibility. Mauz said U.S. patrol planes and ships were dispatched to the island, about 135 miles south of Sicily and 300 miles north of Libya, as a precaution after the Libyan attack Tuesday on a joint U.S.-Italian navigational facility. The Soviet-made Scud surface-to-suface-"missiles were fired at the island 15 hours after the U.S. air raid on Tripoli and Benghazi but fell into the sea short of their target. The missiles were initially believed to have been launched by a Libyan navy vessel but Italian authorities said later a U.S. satellite determined they were launched from a base on the Libyan mainland. 1Jhe tItgn tig Vol. XCVI - No. 135 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. Protesters rally against U.S. attack on Libya (Continued from Page 1) One is that he's an Arab, and the other is that he's African," said LASC member Richard Cleaver. "If you're a person of color wanting an individual voice, the U.S. will .make sure that you are never heard," Cleaver said. Ali Al-Hash, a member of the Association of Arab American Uriversity graduates, agreed that, the U.S. will dehumanize anything related to Africans and Third World Nations. Before terrorism can stop, he said, the U.S. government must treat Third World nations on an equal basis. HE CITED as an example of American discrimination the ad- ministration's publicized belief that some civilian damage in Tripoli oc- curred from Libyan missiles fired at U.S. airplanes that missed their targets.' He called this explanation "a Walt Disney analysis of war." Al-Hash and other demonstrators also condemned President Reagan's consistent description of Khadafy as a "madman," saying this has been used as an excuse to justify the United States bombing. The United States is "painting Khadafy as something less than human, which then justifies the United States bullying him," Cleaver said. If Khadafy is a madman, the demonstrators insisted, then Reagan is equally crazy for supporting the Contra rebels attempting to over- throw the Nicaraguan government. They said Reagan had used the at- tack as a smokescreen to mask the administration's ultimate goal - $100 million in Contra aid. The LASC members said the bom- bing was also intended to make the American public forget about the controversial Central American issue. Recent polls show that three fourths of Americans disapprove of sending aid to the Contras. A similar example, the protesters said, oc- cured in 1983, when the United States invaded the island of Grenada to distract attention from an explosion at a Marine barracks in Lebanon that killed 241 Marines. Some students at yesterday's rally found different motivations in the U.S. actions. Seth Klukoff, editor of the Michigan Review, a conservative campus newspaper, said he agrees with Reagan that Khadafy is insane. He said he supports the bombings because they "sent a message to terrorist groups saying that the United States will not sit back and take attacks upon U.S. citizens passively." TRAVEL. SPECIAL. $1.00 off Instant passport photos xI kinko'r limit one per customer Expires 4/30/86 OPEN 24 HOURS 540 E. Liberty Presenting 64 b66 66 6 6 4 6 66 b a 46 6 6 b b b6 b 6 4 0 6 6 d 0666 666646 666 6 6666666666 44464446664 a6e4444 S4666666 b 6 COME IN , MEET HIM- WATCH HIM WORK! creator ofoe 12:00-2:00 Autographing his new book * ** * The Greatest Shoe on Earth" <; - I .. t. _- I Editor in Chief ..............ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor ......... 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