The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, April 19, 1988- Page 3, Israelis convict Nazi war criminal JERUSALEM (AP) - Retired Ohio autoworker John Demjanjuk was convicted yesterday of Nazi war crimes by an Israeli court that said there was no doubt he was "Ivan the Terrible," a death camp guard who ran gas chambers that killed 850,000 Jews. The three-judge court convicted Demjanjuk of the four counts against him: war crimes, crimes against the Jewish people, crimes against humanity and crimes against persecuted people. Demjanjuk, 68, listened to the guilty verdict from a cot in a cell next to the courtroom. Six police officers had carried him there feet first after he said he was unable to sit down because of a back injury. HE WAS the second person to be convicted of war crimes in Israel. Adolf Eichmann, architect of Adolf Hitler's "final solution" for the ex- termination of European Jewry, was hung in 1962, the only person to have ben executed in Israel's 40-year history. The Ukranian-born Demjanjuk, who lived in suburban Cleveland before his extradition to Israel in 1986, could face the death penalty when he is sentenced April 25. Ob- servers have said it was more likely he would receive a life prison term. "We determine decisively and without hesitation or doubt that the accused John Demjanjuk who is on trial before us, is Ivan, known as 'Ivan the Terrible,' the operator of gas chambers," said presiding judge Dove Levine. DEFENSE attorneys have said they would appeal the verdict, which came after the court spent 11 hours reading the 450-page summation. ~' Police Notes Attempted abduction Ann Arbor police are investigat- ing an attempted abduction which occurred at 2:00 a.m. Monday morn- ing in a University parking structure in the 100 block of Hill Street, said Sgt. Jan Suomala. Suomala said a 22-year-old female University employee was working late at the School of Business Ad- ministration when she returned to her car and was surprised by a man hid- ing in the car. The woman said in the police re- port that the suspect placed a knife to her throat, tied her up, covered her eyes, and put paper into her mouth. He then put her in the back seat and tried to start the car. When the car would not start, the suspect ran away. Suomala said the woman was not able to identify the man, and the police were not able to apprehend the suspect. -By Melissa Ramsdell CORRECTION Yesterday's men's tennis story contained a number of factual errors. Ed Nagel is Michigan's No. 1 sin- gles player. Both Indiana and Michi- gan decided not to play the doubles matches because the contest already had been decided after the singles matches. Also, Michigan had played Big Ten doubles matches before Ohio State. This was the first time, however, that the outcome of a con- test against a Big Ten opponent had not been decided before the doubles £ matches. Delegation returns from two weeks in Nicaragua By MOLLY FINLEY Though the Nicaraguan and United States governments don't al- ways see eye to eye, the third Ann Arbor sister city delegation to Jui- galpa, Nicaragua, discovered that people can still get along on a per- sonal level. And the seven Ann Arbor dele- gates who returned from a two week trip to sister city Juigalpa, Nicaragua last week say their encounters with Nicaraguans are a testament to this. WHILE comparing the results of the relationship between Ann Ar- bor and Juigalpa, sister cities for the last two years, the Sister City Task Force provided Juigalpa with a garbage truck and a public toilet fa- cility to take care of the city's poor sewage system. Juigalpa, with a population of 33,000, is located 85 miles from Managua. The group brought in the first sanitation tank from the United States. The task force plans to help local residents build toilet units, possibly out of concrete, so Juigal- pans won't have to import them, said Ann Arbor resident Gregory Fox, a member of the task force. While attempting to "get to know the sister city," the task force is planning a number of new projects that include sending aid to the mildly retarded in the city, and a delegation of educators from Ann Arbor to Juigalpa next November. T H OU G H the task force does not receive funding from the city of Ann Arbor, it raises money through the Guild House's monthly rice and bean dinners. The group also sends out mailings and holds bucket drives. The programs implemented by the task force are "very much appre- ciated by the citizens," said Ron Bishop, a retired doctor and professor at the University's Medical School, who took part in the delegation for the first time. Bishop traveled to Juigalpa "to get first-hand experience in Nicaragua and to learn as much as I could by participating. I'm not a political expert in two weeks, but it's a first step. And... to make a statement to my own political feel- 'The (U.S.) administration sends people here for 48 hours and they think they know what's going on,' -Sister City delegation leader Phyllis Ponvert ings and the mistaken (U.S.) foreign policy." THE delegation spent time in the homes of Juigalpan residents in an attempt to form a "people-to-people" relationship with the Juigalpans, ac- cording to a statement released by the task force. The delegation also met with Witness for Peace, a group that is documenting atrocities committed by the Sandinistas and the contras. Bishop said his experience was emotional. He carried a banner, with a dove of peace connecting maps of Michigan and Nicaragua, from the Memorial Christian Church of Ann Arbor to the Christiana Mission in Juigalpa. Many delegates said they came back from the trip with a perspective of Nicaragua different from the ne- dia's portrayal. ANN ARBOR resident Phyllis Ponvert, head of the delegation, said she was impressed by "the freedom of how people can move around given the amount of money they're putting into the war." "The (U.S.) administration sends people here for 48 hours and they think they know what's going on," Ponvert said. Ponvert said she made the trip to "see what the revolution was like. I learned something more specific and can see what the Nicaraguan gov- ernment is trying to do. It's absurd to me that the (U.S.) administration uses terms like 'Marxist-Leninist' to describe Nicaragua's mixed econ- omy of private, cooperative, and na- tional companies. Though many think religious freedom does not exist, Ponvert said she attended three church services, including one "straightforward Catholic mass." "WE SAW plenty of evidence of religious practice and celebration in Managua on Good Friday and in Juigalpa on Easter," said Bishop. Though "this is not a political venture, we do make political obser vations," he said. Ponvert said she admired the Juigalpans' ability to separate the delegation members from U.S. gov- ernment officials. She .said she was "incredibly struck by the warmth and intensity of the kind of welcome anywhere (the delegation) went. The people said, 'We understand you comeri peace and aren't your administra- tion.' After the tenth time I heard it I had trouble responding because we are our government." Daily Photo by DAVID LUBLINER MIT Physics Prof. Vera Kistiakowsky voices her opposition to President Reagan's SDI plan last night at Rackham Amphitheater. Her father was a member of the team that developed the atomic bomb in WWII, and later became a strong advocate for ending the arms race. MIT "e e MITprof. criticizes Reagan, Star Wars By LIZ ROHAN A Massachusets Institute of Technology physicist attacked Pres- ident Ronald Reagan's 1983 Star Wars plan yesterday, claiming the American people have been misled into believing Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative. MIT Prof. Vera Kistiakowsky, an experimental, and particle physi- 'The first big "if' is if you can build (the missiles) at all, and the second big "if is if you can make them cheap. And neither of these "ifs" have been an- swered,' -Vera Kistiakowsky, MIT physics prof. cist, called SDI "unworkable" to a 40-member audienceat Rackham Amphitheater last night. "The first big 'if' is if you can build (the missiles) at all, and the second big 'if' is if you can make them cheap. And neither of these 'ifs' have been answered," she said last night. In a recent poll, 55 percent of the people supported the SDI plan, Kis- tiakowsky said. "There is not a good understanding of what it involves. It depends on the next administration to clear people's ideas about SDI. If people understand what the system is it will change their minds about their opinion." In 1983, Reagan asked the coun- try's best physicists with the idea to create a completely safe defense sys- tem, said Kistiakowsky. To fund the research, the government responded by appropriating funds to create the system. But the scientists, all from the top 20 national University physics departments, found that the weapons needed for a perfect defense system were impossible to perfect and felt pressured to demonstrate something they could not represent. In 1985 about 1,600 scientists wrote to Congress, outlining their belief that a decade more of research would be needed to complete the project safely and effectively, she said. As a result of the research, Congress became increasingly reluc- tant to appropriate funds for defense projects, Kistiakowsky said. Any plans proposed since SDI, like Ki- netic Energy Weapons, have been both costly and technically flawed. Kistiakowsky, who spoke on "The Strategic Defense Initiative: Where Is It Headed?" is the daughter of a physicist who was an official advisor to Eisenhower during World Wai1. Her father, she said, was part of the Manhattan Project, which created the atom bomb and he later lectured throughout the country inhopes of ending the arms race. She said her father did not influence her choice to be a physicist but he inspired her during the '70s when she lectured on the woman's science movement. Kistiakowsky's lecture was sponsored by Woman in Science, a University organization funded by the Warner Lambert Foundation. Confident "great vic NEW YORK (AP) - Michael Dukakis predicted yesterday he would post a "great victory" in the New York primary that would place him firmly on the road to the Democratic presidential nomination, but Jesse Jackson and Albert Gore exhorted their supporters to deliver a poll-de- fying upset. In its final 24 hours, the cam- paign was nothing if not blunt. New York Mayor Ed Koch, a Gore sup- porter who has sharply criticized Jackson in recent days, was branded a "lunatic" by Jackson's campaign manager. Dukakis, the leader in all the pre- election polls, steered well clear of the Jackson-Gore-Koch hostilities. "Just don't forget to vote tomor- row," the Massachusetts governor told an audience in Buffalo as he barnstormed through the final day of a costly, contentious primary cam- paign marked by racial and religious divisions. Jackson, running second to Dukakis in the polls, staged three get-out-the-vote rallies in soggy Harlem. "If you will stand in the rain today you will vote in the rain Dukakis predicts tory' in NY primary " f Jackson, Gore seek to upset frontrunner tomorrow. ...We've come too close: nothing can stop us now," he said. Gore, struggling for survival in the Democratic race, made the final roundshof a million-dollar campaign through New York City with Koch at his side. Gore endorsed President Reagan's decision to take military action against Iran in the Persian Gulf, saying the administration has "every right" to do what it did. Koch was asked repeatedly about his weekend comments criticizing Jackson. "I'm not saying he's a liar, I'm saying he can't stand stress, and then he lies under stress," he said. In a speech to the non-partisan Association for a Better New York, Jackson never mentioned Koch by name but referred to "those who are inclined because of their fears bent toward hysteria." He went on, "Leaders must set a3 high moral tone. I will not surrender, that tone to diversions." His campaign manager, Gerald Austin, was less diplomatic. "Koch is a lunatic. By New York standards he is a lunatic," he said._t While most eyes were on New York and the 255DemocraticNa- tional Convention delegates at stake in the primary, Delaware Democrats began the process of selecting 15 delegates to the party convention next summer., On the Republican side, nominee for sure George Bush spent the day campaigning in Ohio, which holds its primary on May 3. CLASSIFIED ADS! Call 764-0557 Panda tour faces opposition WASHINGTON (AP) - A pro- empt from a treaty governing endan posed exhibition in Michigan of two gered-species imports. giant pandas from China would un- "The imported wildlife will b dermine international laws governing used for commercial purposes, an imports of endangered species, the the import will neither serve scien World Wildlife Fund said yesterday tific purposes not enhance the prop in urging denial of an import permit. agation or survival of the species However, Michigan United Con- said the World Wildlife Fund. servation Clubs, an exhibition Such use of the pandas would v sponsor, said the permit may be un- olate both U.S. endangered specie necessary, since Chinese officials laws and the Convention on Intern have agreed to provide pandas ex- tinal Trade of Endangered Specie n- be id n- p- vi- es a- s, I LOOK YOUR BESTI! If your hair isn't becom- ing to you-You should be coming to us! DASCOLA STYLISTS Opposite Jacobson's Maple Village N..,, 7.2733 I THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today the letter said. Speakers. Chemical Dependency Lec- ture - "Alcohol and Other Drugs: Killers Among- Us," 7:00 p.m., Education Center at McAuley Health Center. Call 572-4300 for info. Bernard Wood - from North- western University speaks on "Phase Transformations and the Chemical Composition of the Mantle" as part of the Turner Lec- 296 Dennison Bldg. Furthermore Hopwood Awards Ceremony - 4:00 p.m., Rackham Audito- rium. Admission is free and open to the public. Lecture by Donald Justice. University Symphony Or- chestra Concert - 8:00 p.m., Hill Auditorium. For up-to-date Spring $1 Days Lease any apartment between April 1 and April 30, 1988 for $100. (Applied to September rent) a Lmms6?5S~gG 12 1 L387554900H TO ALL PERSONS GRADUATING AT SPRING COMMENCEMENT Spring Commencement Exercises at The University of Michigan will be held on Saturday, April 30, at 1:00 p.m. The Exercises are scheduled for the Michigan Stadium. In case of rain, they will be held in Crisler Arena. It will be announced on the local radio stations (WUOM, WPAG, and WAAM) at 11:00 a.m. on April 30 whether the Exercises will be held at the Michigan Stadium or in Crisler Arena. ,Are ou confused by CRISP?!? Do you feel lost in the chaos of registration? We are here to help!""'Y! THE CRISP ADVICE TA BLE (April llthD191h) i