4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 8, 1986 , Peace March leaves AnnArbor (contbiUedfrom Page 1) continued walking through the bodies. ROBYN WATTS, the ]Michigan Student Assembly's Military Research Advisor, said the EECS building was chosen as the site of the protest because Department of Defense funds have been used to pay for laboratory supplies and equipment. She said that Pentagon funds are only given to projects doing "mission- -orientated work" Wild Womyn for Peace, a band composed of march members, enlivened the crowd with a performance of the --. . . "Missile Envy Rap," a song criticizing the arms buildup and how aggression relates to a male-dominated society. Friday night the march participants held a women's- only campout, and along with numerous other women pitched tents on the Diag. CONTROVERSY had arisen earlier as to whether the marchers had permission from the University to stay on the Diag or if they would have to use Elbel Field, a location the University preferred because of better lighting and toilet facilities. The marchers who camped on the Diag provided their own security, and whenever late night partiers wandered by, marchers greeted them and explained what they were doing. Watts spoke of the power she felt working a security shift at the Diag camp. She related her experiences trying out for a space in the Air Force ROTC program which she said taught her that "women have been and always will be strong. We are powerful, significant, intelligent. We fight to preserve the very existence of earth. Compassion, intelligence and understanding are our inner strengths. The more we use these tools, we can change this to our world." - Members of the Great Peace March plan to conclude their trek in Washington, DC, on November 15, when they will present petitions calling for nuclear disarmament to Congress. 94J; j 4 4,, ,l / Hello .. , is that right? The Daily? The Michigan Daily? Carries Bloom County ... THE BLOOM COUNTY? C01 le' t-0-ounE HIvg rae e ECM it w St. George's Univer; offers a rigorous, In January 198 which ranked St. G rate on the ECFMC 70 medical scl with advanced star St. George's h Jersey subject to re A Loan Prograi applicants. F S C (5 ST.GEORGE'S UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE GRENADA, WEST INDIES sity School of Medicine, with more than 1050 graduates licensed in 33 states, nine-semester program leading to the degree of Doctor of Medicine. B5, The Journal of the American Medical Association published a report 3eorge's number one of all major foreign medical schools in the initial pass G Exam. hools in the United States have accepted over 630 St. George's students nding. has received probationary approval to conduct clinical clerkships in New egulations of the State Board of Examiners. m for Entering Students has been instituted for a limited number of qualified or information, please contact the Office of Admissions: t. George's University School of Medicine Y The Foreign Medical School Services Corporation )e East Main Street, Bay Shore, N.Y.11706, Dept. C-2 516) 665-8500 Peace Marchers - N camp ot By BETH FERTIG Party-goers may have noticed an unusual gathering on the Diag Friday night as they passed by en route to their events. A circle of about 15 brightly colored tents was pitched there by the Women's Collective ' of the Great Peace March. THE WOMEN's Collective is I -oor on Diag just one of several "delegations" within the Great Peace March, the national demonstration which left California in March and will arrive in Washington on November 15th. The nearest stop along the march is Toledo, Ohio. Forty women from the Collective were brought to Ann Arbor by Marjorie Winkelman, a University student who took time off from school to participate in, the march. Members of the Great Peace March have led workshops and rallies at many universities along their route, including The University of Boulder, Colorado, Grinnell College, in Iowa, and Notre Dame, in Indiana. Many marchers commented on the favorable reactions by the Ann Arbor community. "IT'S BEEN really, really good, surprisingly so," said Nancy Scialla, "You find apathy in most college students, they're concerned with classes and studying. It's hard to show what we're doing." IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Pinochet unhurt by attack SANTIAGO, Chile - Leftist guerrillas ambushed President Augusto Pinochet's motorcade in a bomb and gunfire attack yesterday, killing five bodyguards and wounding 10 others, the military government reported. Gen. Pinochet was not injured in the assassination attempt that: occurred on a bridge in Maipo Canyon 25 miles southeast of Santiago, the state-run ORBE news agency and government television reported. They said he arrived safely at his official residence in Santiago. A man identifying himself as a spokesman for the Manuel- Rodriguez Patriotic Front telephoned news agencies 90 minutes after the attack and said it had been carried out by members of th Communist guerrilla group. "We failed, but we won't fail next time," he told The Associated Press. However, a Front spokesman with a recognizable voice later called the AP to deny that the rebel group had made any claim. The attack came four days before the 13th anniversary of the coup led by Pinochet, the army commander, that ousted the elected government of the late President Salvador Allende. It was the first known attempt on Pinochet's life since the coup. Jet hijackers may be hanged KARACHI, Pakistan - President Mohammad Zia ul-Haq said yesterday that four young Palestinians who hijacked a Pan Aqi jumbo jet will be hanged if convicted of hijacking and murder. : - The hijackers had demanded to be flown to Cyprus where they wanted to free jailed Palestinian terrorists. The four now are being held at an army camp near Karachi. Zia said he strongly supported the Palestinian cause, but did not see the need for actions such as hijackings. "They will receive the punishment that such a crime deserves," Zia told a news conference at' Karachi airport. The gunmen seized the plane at the airport, with nearly 400 people aboard, early Friday. The hijacking ended 17 hours later when the lights went out aboard the . plane and the hijackers fired on passengers. Pakistani commandos were in control half an hour after the shooting began. Tutu installed as archbishop CAPE TOWN, South Africa - Desmond Tutu was installed yesterday as archbishop of Cape Town, the first black to lead the Anglican Church in southern Africa, and promptly used his new pulpit to assail apartheid as evil and unchristian. Tutu was formally installed as leader of 3 million Anglicans in South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, South-West Africa and parts of Mozambique. The 1984 Nobel Peace Prize winner, mopping his brow as he spoke, condemned violence from both sides in South Africa's political conflict. He contended that "the primary violence in this country is the violence of apartheid. " Synagogue gumen may have Lebanese link, official says ISTANBUL, Turkey- Premier Turgut Ozal said yesterday that two terrorists who killed 21 worshippers and wounded four at Istanbul's main synagogue may have been linked to Lebanon, not Libya. Conflicting claims of responsibility were made on behalf of Palestinian, Shiite Moslem and Arab unity groups, but police could say only that the attackers were Arabs. After locking the synagogue's main door and firing on the Jewish congregation Saturday with submachine guns, the gunmen killed themselves with hand grenades. Officials said they entered the synagogue about 1 1/2 hours into the prayer service, secured the main door with an iron bar and fired into the congregation . Rafi Saul, who survived by hiding under a chair, said the gunmen poured a flammable liquid on some victims and set them on fire. They then set off hand grenades, blowing themselves apart,. Only nine people at the service survived, including the wounded, said Mehmet Agar, Instanbul's deputy police chief. Pope speaks on jet hijacking COURMAYEUR, Italy - From an alpine peak beside Mount Blanc, Pope John Paul II yesterday said bloody terrorist attacks on a jetliner in Pakistan and a synagogue in Turkey had turned hopes for peace into anguish. "It is necessary, without delay, to do everything possible to put an end to the incessant escalation of hatred and terrorism," the pontiff' said during his noon blessing from the 7,687-foot-high rocky peak of Mount Chetif. He spoke of his intense sadness and offered his strongest condemnation of Friday's hijacking of a Pan Am jumbo jet in Karachi and Saturday's attack on a synagogue in Istanbul. The pope said the terrorists took the blood of innocent victims, "blood of traveling brothers, blood of brothers gathered in a place of prayer." rI 14 I I4 I HGUE C ;5;s tdo+s I SIl- A rm Hi aaNny Ert .H !RII FIER HENERE1IP R.N'HcIIEIM LEAv. Oun cfCshm ,±ie IP Eb Chas+ian ffls C See MARCHERS, Page 3 "A 3 "Atone level, this unique book makes a strong statement about mans relationship to nature ... the exquisite full page color photography relays that message in moving ways .. . At another ievel, the book speaks to an awakening of our intuitive selves and our own endless search. I S1