Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 10, 1987 Nicarguan abuses condemned 4 WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.- backed rebel forces in Nicaragua carry out "selective but systematic killing" of perceived Sandinista government sympathizers and routinely kidnap civilians, including significant numbers of children, a human rights group said yesterday. The Nicaraguan government, meanwhile, although it generally respects the laws of war, mistreats prisoners, does not guarantee due process, and has imposed unwarranted limits on press and religious freedom, the group reported. The 166-page study was prepared by Americas Watch, a liberal New York-based human rights monitoring group, on the basis of a series of fact-finding missions to Nicaragua last year. It is the 10th report by Americas Watch on Nicaragua since 1982 and covers from February to December 1986. Americas Watch, which often has drawn sharp criticism from U.S. officials during its six year existence, accused the Reagan administration of unfairly portraying the Sandinista government in the most negative terms while turning a blind eye to the abuses of the rebels, known as the Contras. "No attempt whatsoever is made to moderate such portrayals in the light of actual performance," the report said. State Department spokesman Charles Redman had no comment on the report saying department officials had not seen it. The administration's own annual human rights report, which assesses all nations of the world, is expected to be released in a few days. Americas Watch Vice Chairman Aryeh Neier told a news conference the report did not specify whether the Sandinista government or the Contras were responsible for the most abuses. To take such a stand, he said, would tend to diminish the abuses of the side deemed less guilty. But the report leaves the impression that the most serious rights abuses were committed by the Contras. Last week, Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams, who has frequently clashed with Neier in the past, said the Sandinista government is carrying out a "reign of terror" on Nicaraguan citizens. The Americas Watch report calls for an end to U.S. funding of the rebels on grounds that such support "associates the U.S. government with a pattern of gross human rights abuses that, to date, the Contras show no signs of curbing." { New bar will open (Continued from Page 1) The Honey Tree in Tally Hall, thinks the mall needs a bar. "A lot of people ask for it," he said. "What we need here are students... Hopefully, the bar will help us," he said. Before Mennicotti can begin construction, the bar must secure a license from the State Liquor Control Commission. The long, involved process begins with approval from the City Council's special liquor committee. City Councilmember Larry Hunter(D-First Ward) said the if official committee may meet next Monday, and he hoped to bring the issue of the license before the council within the next two weeks. If the council recommends the license, the LCC investigates the proposed licensee and the funding source, said Dan Sparks, director of Executive Services of the LCC. W H EN the LCC approves, local police will then investigate and fingerprint the applicant. If the applicant clears both hurdles, Sparks said, he must then be approved by the Board of give ok Commissioners. Despite the intricacies of this process, Mennicotti, who has held liquor licenses before, and is backed by Tally Hall management, should be approved to build within 30-45 days after being recommended by by the City Council, Sparks said. Conlin said Tally Hall's owners originally planned to include three or four businesses on the license, but only Mennicotti could afford the insurance liability of serving- liquor in his establishment. GRAND OPENING SALE. kinko s® ii 1220 S. UNIVERSITY COPIES 8 1/2 x 20# auto-ted 2!60 FEBRUARY 9 - 13 No matter how large or small your copying needs are, KINKO'S on South U. is there to help you. Open till midnight 7 days a week. COPIES - BINDINGS- PASSPORT PHOTOS cY po /8~ V ATTENTION U of M DEPARTMENTS! If you have advertised fewer than 75 inches with The Daily in the past year, and you are interested in boost- ing participation and public relations at a 30 % savings, get involved with The Michigan Daily/U of M De- partmental Co-Opportunity Program. This exclusive Co-Op Program is only available to U of M Departments. The funds are limited and allocated on a first-come, first-serve basis - SO CALL NOW!! 764-0554 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Kidnappers extend deadline BEIRUT, Lebanon - Moslem kidnappers said at their deadline last night for killing three American hostages and an Indian that they had extended it "until further notice." A handwritten statement in Arabic signed by the Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of Palestine described the decision as a response to pleas from the hostages, their families, Lebanese organizations, and the: Indian government. But the statement also said the group would retalliate for the "insult" by U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz, who said the people of kidnapping-beset Beirut "have a plague." It did not indicate what form the action might take, or whether it could involve the hostages. Soviet prisoner release praised MOSCOW - Dissidents and the West have praised the release of dozens of political prisoners but those freed are only a small fraction of the total held and it remains unclear whether Kremlin policy toward dissent is changing. The action in the past week may have been a gesture to deflect accusations of human rights violations as the Soviets prepare for an international peace conference in Moscow later this week and seek to host a human rights meeting in the spring. Those said to have been freed by the decree of the Supreme Soviet, the nominal ntional parliament, represent the range of Soviet dissent from a Latvian nationalist to a teacher of Hebrew and a Catholic activist. 15 die in Beirut bombing BEIRUT - Police said a car bomb killed at least 15 people yesterday and sparked an inferno at a gas station in a Shiite Moslem neighborhood of Beirut. They said the bomb went off at 2:45 p.m. in a white Mercedes-Benz parked near the filling station in the Roweiss district on the southern outskirts of the capital. Dozens of people were wounded by the blast, police said. Ambulances and fire engines raced to the scene with sirens wailing. Radio reports said Shiite militiamen fired automatic rifles in the air to clear the way for ambulances and cars evacuating the wounded, witnesses reported. The car bombing was the first in the Moslem sector of Beirut this year. There have been two car bombings in 1987 in East Beirut. A car bomb exploded in the Christian east Beirut's Zalka district Jan. 30, killing five people, including two children, and wounding 37. Proposed rule would give credit for sign language LANSING - High school students who've been frustrated by French or stymied by Spanish ought to be able to learn sign language, a state senator said yesterday. Such an option could benefit students who don't easily pick up foreign languages and help the hearing impaired communicate with classmates, said Sen. James Barcia (D-Bay City). Barcia has introduced a bill that would give local school districts the option of granting academic foreign language credit for courses in American Sign Language. The proposal is new to Michigan, but already is law in Maine and Texas, said Christopher Hunter, director of the Michigan Commission on Handicapper Concerns' division of the deaf and deafened. EXTRAS Ezzie the emu returns home SAGINAW - Ezzie the emu is back in its pen after it jumped the fence and spent three days wandering around the countryside, spurring a flurry of sightings of the Austrailian bird. "It's skinned up a little bit. It's tired and it's hungry. It's laying down now," said Kenneth Kalenak, owner of the male emu, a relative of the ostrich. Kalenak said Saturday about 30 people called him saying they had spotted the bird, which escaped from its backyard pen early Wednesday. Ezzie was caught Saturday morning on the farm of Mark Walter, who; lives about 10 miles west of Kalenek's home. Ezzie, who eats corn, wheat and bird food, could honly have survived about two more days outside its pen because of the lack of available: food in rural Saginaw County, Kalenak said. The six-foot-tall emu, which can run about 35 mph is one of several exotic birds that Kalenak, an antique auto upholsterer, said he raises as a: hobby. Kalenak said he will build a taller pen for Ezzie. Apparently the bird, scared by a dog or raccoon, hurdled the pen's five-and-half-foot fence,: Kalenak said. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. uthe Mict-igan BuaILI Vol. XCVII --No. 93 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. 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Business Manager........MASON FRANKLIN Sales Manager.............................DIANE BLOOM Finance Manager .......REBECCA LAWRENCE' Classified Manager .............GAYLE SHAPIRO Assistant Sales Manager........ANNE KUBEK Assistant Classified Manager............AMY EIGES DISPLAY SALES: Karen Brown, Kelly Crivello, Irit Elad. Missy Hambrick, Ginger Heynan, Denise Levy, Wendy Lewis, Jason Liss, Laura Martin, Mindy Mendonsa, Scott Metcalf, Carolyn Rands, Jimmy Ringel, Jackie Rosenburg, Todd Samovitz, Julie Slakter Jennifer Siee $ This Spring Break, catch a Greyhound® to the beach, the mountains, or your hometown. For just $89 round trip, you and your friends will have a great time wherever you go. 4 -m - m