0 tiFage 2 -The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 15, 1987 Ford may M hike most new auto prices Detriot (AP) - Ford Motor Co. ntatively plans to increase prices J most of its 1988 cars by nearly 6 {rcent, an auto industry journal ported yesterday. Chrysler Corp. , meanwhile. annouced tentative prices on four all- new, front wheel-drive, large luxury models being built at its Belvidere, Ill. , assembly plant. Price adjustments on 1988 Ford od-els ranged from no change on the Escort GL two-door hatchback to i4.6 percent on the Mercury Sable G8 four-door sedan, Automotive News reported. But the Sable, tentatively priced at $14,145, offered air conditioning, tinted glasss, interval windshield wipers and digital clock as standard equipment for 1988, the publication Ford Mustang model prices would be 4.8 percent to 6.1 percent higher than 1987 levels; Ford Thunderbird increases ranged from $538 to $965; Mercury Marquis prices were to rise between $841 and $991; and the Ford Taurus L station wagon was to sell for $13,380, an increase of 12.7 percent, or $1,510, Automotive News said. -Associated Press Reagan meets Woo President Ronald Reagan chats with South Korean ruling party leader Roh Tae Woo at the White House Oval Office yesterday. Lenil tops Wilander in Open IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports UAW nears strike deadline DEARBORN - Ford Motor Co. workers waited with picket signs ready yesterday as the automaker and the United Auto Workers union neared an 11:59 p.m. expiration to their labor contract. Negotiators talked all night and into the day as they sought an agree- ment that would keep 104,000 union members from striking the nation's second largest auto manufacturer. As the deadline approached, Ford and the UAW remained at odds over several critical issues, including the union's demand for greater job secur- ity and wage increases. UAW President Owen Bieber told reporters Sunday evening that "job security has indeed been the main area that we've been wrestling with, and our differences there are still very serious." Iraq demands U.N. punish Iran, implement sanctions BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz urged U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar yesterday to take "punitive measures" against Iran for failing to respond to a Security Council res- olution calling for a cease-fire in the 7-year-old Persian Gulf war. Baghdad radio said Aziz demanded that the Security Council imple- ment its July 20 resolution which calls for sanctions, including an arms embargo, on whichever country fails to comply with the provisions. The resolution calls for an immediate, unconditional cease-fire, with- drawal of troops to internationally recognized borders, and an exchange of prisoners. The day before, Iraninan President Ali Khamenei had told Perez de Cuellar in Tehran that the United Nations had to brand Iraq as the agressor and punish it before there could be a settlement of the war. Ferris State faculty strikes Professors struck Ferris State College but some students attended classes yesterday, while the Michigan college sought a court order to send striking faculty members back to work, officials said. The 476-member Ferris Faculty Association voted to strike after negotiations broke off Sunday night, said union president Tom Turcotte. College spokesperson Tricia Coyle said students were encouraged to attend class, some new and part-time faculty members were at work, and some classes were meeting. College attorneys filed a motion yesterday in Mecosta County Circuit Court for a temporary injunction to send the striking faculty members back to work, she said. Teachers also went on strike yesterday in the 1,568-student Iron river public schools in the Upper Peninsula, and walkouts continued in six other districts, including Detroit, where a strike went into its third week yesterday. Pope talks with Am. Indians PHOENIX, Ariz - Pope John Paul II held a tiny premature baby in his arms yesterday, then denounced the "great evil of abortion and euthanasia" and repeated his condemnation of any form of test-tube fertil- ization. He also reserved time during his one-day stop in this Southwestern state for a talk with the original owners - American Indians. The meeting with the Indians was the first of its kind - a gathering of 16,000 from 195 tribes and officials of dioceses that minister to them. There are 285,000 indians among the nation's 52.9 million Catholics. The pontiff's first stop after arriving from San Antonio, Texas, was at St. Joseph's Hospital, where he visited 13 children. NEW YORK (AP) - Ivan Lendl won his third straight U.S. Open title yesterday, rallying after losing his first set of the tournament to beat Mats Wilander in a lengthy baseline battle. Lendl downed the Swede 6-7 (7- 9), 6-0, 7-6 (7-4), 6-4 in a 4-hour, 47 minute match at the National Tennis Center. The United States Tennis Association does not keep time records on Open matches, so it was THE Uof M BUSINESS INTERN PROGRAM unable to say whether the Lendl-Wilander match was the longest final in Open history. Lendl, who joined John McEnroe as the only man to win three consecutive Open singles titles, closed out the match . with a backhand service return down the line. Both players had held serve in the final set until the 10th game. The match, postponed Sunday because of rain, started under sunny skies at 2:11 p.m. EDT. When it ended at 6:58 p.m., the sun had set and the stadium lights were on. It was Lendl's second victory over Wilander this year in a Grand Slam final, the first comingaat theFrench Open. Wilander, who was more emotional than usual during the match, won the first-set tiebreaker after saving one set point with a forehand passing shot. The set, which lasted one-and- one-half, ended when Lendl hit a forehand that landed inches wide of the sideline. Lendl- argued briefly with chair umpire Richard Kaufman, who declined to overrule the line official's call. That broke Lendl's 25-set winning streak at the Open. He hadn't lost a set at the Open since losing the third set in his quarterfinal victory over Henri Leconte last year. The last player to win the U.S. men's singles title without losing a set was Neale Fraser in 1960, eight years before the tournament was opened to professionals. Wilander broke Lendl in the fifth game of the first set when he ran down a Lendl drop shot and hit a forehand cross-court winner. But Lendl broke back in the eighth game to even the set at 4-4 and both players held serve to force the tiebreaker. Trailing for the first time in the tournament, Lendl began to attack more aththe net and stormed back to even the match in 28 minutes. Wilander won only five points in the entire set, including one off Lendl's serve. In the third set, both players reverted to long baseline rallies and neith could hold his serve in the first four games. Lendl broke again in the seventh game to take a 4-3 lead, but Wilander broke back in the next game after Lendl saved four break points. After the players held serve to 6- 6, Lendl won the first four points of the tiebreaker. Wilander closed the gap to 6-4, but Lendl ended the 1:40 set with a forehand winner and an ace. MASS MEETING: Sept. 16,6:00 pm Rackham Auditorium Application Deadline: Sept.24 Summer Internships for Sophomores, Juniors & Seniors ALL ACADEMIC BACKGROUNDS a L imf111 * r 1I. p* i". R.a i .t v b J 9 rq W4 SA v4 w4 * "4 *4' M. 4. Career Planning & Placement A Unit of Student Services EXTRAS U - If you've ever dreamed of being behind the controls of an airplane, this is your chance to find out what it's really like. A Marine Corps pilot is coming to campus who can take you up for trial flights. We're looking for a few college students who have the brains and skill-as well as If you're cut out for it, we'll give you free civilian flight training, maybe even $100 a month cash while you're in school. And someday you could be flying a Harrier, Cobra or F/A-18. Get a taste of what life is like 1 at the top. The flight's on us. 'Ask Ollie,' Detroit rocker says DETROIT (AP) - Singer Mitch Ryder says he respects Lt. Colonel Oliver North despite his new song, "Good Golly, Ask Ollie." "It's definitely not a novelty record," said the veteran Detroit rock-n- roll musician. Ryder said the song was inspired by the recent Iran-Contra hearings, and reworks his 1966 hit tune, "Good Golly, Miss Molly." "I agreed to do it only after the lyrics were read to me, and it semed sufficiently pointed enough to put Oliver North in his place. I'd prefer to call it satirical, a collector's item," Ryder said. "I have the greatest respect for North as a soldier, and we have a disclaimer on the record apologizing to the Marine Corps if we offended anyone," he said. "We tried to do a number of things to save m y credibility." Ryder said the opportunity to work with Paul Shaffer and the band from NBC's Late Night With David Letterman show also inspired him to participate. He said the 12-inch single from SOS Records, written by advertising agency copywriter Marc Block, is expected in stores Oct. 1. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. 0hc 3Ai citan gatl Vol. XCVIII - No. 4 The Michigan Daily (IS SN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$25 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$13in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Editor in Chief...............................ROB EARLE Managing Editor .... ........AMY MINDELL News Editor.....................PHILIP I. LEVY City Editor....... ........MELISSA BIRKS Features Editor.................MARTIN FRANK University Editor .............KERY MURAKAMI NEWS STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Vicki Bauer, Eve Becker, Steve Blonder, Jim Bray. Hampton Dellinger, Stephen Gregory. Edward Kleine, Steve Knopper, Carrie Loranger, Michael Lustig, Alyssa Lustigman. Andrew Mills, Eugene Pak, Lisa Pollak, Melissa Randell, Martha Sevetson, Steve Tuch, David Webster, Rose Mary Wunumel. Opinion Page Editors.................PETER MOONEY HENRY PARK Assoc. Opinion Page Editor...CALE SOUTHWORTH OPINION PAGE STAFF: Muzamnil Ahmed, Rosemary Chinnock, Tim Huet, Josh Levin, Neal Mohan, Jeff Rutherford, Steve Semenuk, Mark Williams. Arts Editors...............................BRIAN BONET BETH FERTIG Books,.......................LISA MAGNINO Walter Kopf, Slick Levine, Ian Ratner, Adam Schefier, Adam Schrager, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steiner% Douglas Volan, Pbter Zellen, Bill Zofla. Photo Editors..........................SCOTT L1TUCHY ANDI SCHREIBER PHOTO STAFF: Karen Handelman, Dana Mendelssohn, John Munson, Grace Tsai. Weekend Editors.........REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN ALAN PAUL Business Manager.............REBECCA LAWRENCE Sales Manager............................ANNE KUBEK Assistant Sales Manager..............KAREN BROWN SALES STAFF: Gail Belenson, Sherri Blansky. Julie Bowers, ValeieBreier, Pam Bullock, Stephanie Burg, Milton Feld, Kim Feuerstein, Lisa George. Michelle Gill, Jeff Grant, Missy Hambrick, Ginger Hayman, Mary Johnson, Matt Lane, Denise Levy, Jodi Manchik. Mindy Mendonsa, Eddy Meng, Jackie Miller, Jaunic Parsells, Jackie Rosenberg. Jennifer Rowe, Jim Ryan. Laura Seblanger. Jennifer Sicipl, Michelle Slavik, Mary Snyder. NATIONALS: Michelle Ketchamn Finace Manager .................RYAN TUTAK Assistat,.Finance, Manger........ANNE KARLE 0