MI gas price surge lacks repercussions The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 11, 1989 - Page 5 North defends Iran-Contra fund BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gasoline dealers, braced for verbal abuse from customers watching the digital counters on gas pumps roll higher and higher, can't believe their ears. It's still quiet. Tense, but quiet. "Nothing like I expected." Jerry Festerling, who owns Festerling's Marathon Service in Petoskey, said yesterday. "I haven't had a comment except, 'Boy, it went up."' The gasoline price surge after the Alaskan oil spill sent gasoline prices spiraling nationwide, up as much as 18 cents a gallon in some parts of Michigan. "Last Wednesday was probably the worst day that you could think of," said Dan Loepp, director of the Service Station Dealers of Michigan. Stations raised prices in response to wholesale price increases, Loepp said. "I felt very sorry for the cash register attendants that worked that day," he said. In a state-wide survey, AAA Michigan said the jump apparently was partly a reaction to reduced sup- plies to West Coast refineries due to the Alaskan oil spill. Some industry analysts also blamed cuts in crude oil production by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Some called the jump a tempo- rary reaction, without real shortages to justify it. Loepp said yesterday there was no sign of any decline in whole sale prices. At New Five Shell in Livonia, the price increases came at the end of last week. "Friday was a rough night," said Lisa Bucalo, daughter of owner Phil Bucalo, though she said questions had abated by yesterday. Customers at Cole Sunoco Ser- vice in Eggleston, 10 mile east of Muskegon, took it in stride when gas prices went up 14.5 cents last week, owner Don Karchinski said. The new price of $1.059 a gallon for self-service unleaded regular drew a few questions, but Karchinski said most customers seemed to attribute the increase to the beginning of the warm-weather travel season. "I still pump just as much gas," he said. Loepp said cashiers at many De- troit-area stations reported angry re- marks from customers about the price increases. "Their scorn was directed at the wrong spot because dealers don't set the wholesale price," he said. WASHINGTON (AP) - Oliver North, seemingly struggling to keep his temper, yesterday defended his stewardship of an Iran-Contra cash fund and insisted the money he paid for a used car came instead from a $15,000 family cache in a metal box bolted to a closet floor. At the start of cross examination at his trial, North said he kept track in a spiral-bound notebook of every penny he disbursed from the Iran- Contra fund which totaled between $240,000 and $300,000. "The ledger is still around?" asked prosecuter John Keker. "It was destroyed," North said. "Do you know who destroyed it?" "Yes," he said. "I did." Earlier yesterday, North testified that former President Ronald Reagan and his attorney general, Edwin Meese, concealed U.S. involvement in a November 1985 shipment of Hawk missiles from Israel to Iran. In a meeting on Nov. 12, 1986, Reagan clearly "had made a decision not to disclose" the shipment, North said. The president told a news confer- ence on Nov. 19 - a week after that meeting - that the government had not been involved with other nations in shipping weapons to Iran and that the United States had shipped none before he signed a January 1986 au- thorizing document. Immediately af- terward, the White House put out a statement in which Reagan said a third country had been involved. North testified that he assumed Reagan had known of the diversion of Iran arms sale funds to the Con- tras, a contention Reagan has denied. The former National Security Council aide was asked by his own lawyer about NSC documents North and his former secretary, Fawn Hall, smuggled out of the White House complex about the time North was fired. North, who destroyed stacks of other documents around that time in November 1986, said he wanted the papers so "that I would have some- thing to show if necessary, to show I had authority from my superiors for activities that I was engaged in." The papers, some taken out by North in the days before the Iran- Contra affair became public and some by Hall after the firing, totaled 196 pages. Asked about one note, which he had written to superiors on Dec. 9, 1985, North said it "clearly articu- lates what process the United States was up to" - the process North was involved in - in approaching Iran in. hopes of gaining release of hostages. WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 Have we fusion?A Billy Livesay and James Mahaffey, research scientists at the Geor- gia Tech Research Institute in Atlanta, show off equipment they be- lieve confirms that nuclear fusion actually happens. Last month, the University of Utah announced that fusion does, in fact, take place. Federal government begins battle against drugs in the nation's capital WASHINGTON (AP) - He announced plans calling for dozens of American cities. But here ., William Bennett, slapping at the city government's attempts to battle a drug problem which he said "is so glaring - so out of control," an- nounced yesterday a multi-million dollar effort to combat drugs in the nation's capital. Bennett, director of the national drug control policy office, said that "the plain fact is that, for too long, and in too many respects, the D.C. government has failed its citizens." S~ i oviet ContinUed from Page 1 of the Helsinki Watch group. "The military stood there with their tanks and frightened the people off," he said. Sergei Dancurov, a nationalist, said troops jumped from armored personnel carriers and fired into the air. The delegation from the ruling Politboro was led by Shevardnadze, a Georgian who displayed sympathy to nationalists in his 1972-85 tenure as the republic's Communist Party building new pretrial detention and prison facilities, expanding a local law enforcement task force, an effort to rid public housing of drug users and dealers, expansion of drug treat- ment facilities, and an increase in job-training programs. Washington was the nation's murder capital last year with 372 slayings, most of them drug-related. "Drugs and demand for drugs sorely test the responsive abilities of where the problem is so glaring - so out of control - serious ques- tions of local politics and gover- nance can no longer be avoided or excused. They must be answered," said Bennett. A Washington-area drug task force will get an additional 57 fed- eral, state and local investigators under the plan, including 11 Drug Enforcement agents and five Defense Department intelligence analysts. A I N CLAS L IN E 1 9 chief. As party chief, Shevardnadze re- peatedly called for mutual respect and tolerance between Georgians and the ethnic Abkhazians, a minority living in the western part of the republic. In 1978 he supported a law making Georgian the republic's official lan- guage,a demand offending national- ists. On April 4, demonstrators began protesting calls from Abkhazians to break away from the republic be- cause of alleged discrimination by Georgians. Others demanded Georgia secede from the Soviet Union be- cause of alleged interference by Moscow in their political, eco- nomic, and cultural affairs. Shevardnadze had just returned from London, and had postponed a trip to East Germany because of the unrest, Gerasimov said. He arrived in Tbilisi over the weekend and met with intellectuals and media execu- tives to discuss how to resolve the dispute, according to the Tass news agency. Shevardnadze also met with Georgian officials who called the "moral-political situation" in Tbilisi and other cities "extremely tense," Tass said. Seniors - Please come to the Wrap-Ul for the 1989 Senior Pledge Program! Free food, fun and live entertainment: Master of Ceremonies: Comedian Peter B * Music by "Big Box of Nines" * Much more! 9 *a " . S ACT M 8 9 p Party .6 *0 erman'° c::s i 00 On Palmer Field (by Alice Lloyd Hall) Thursday, April 13, 1989 4:00 to 9:00 p.m. (Rain date: Friday, April 14, 3:00 to 7:00 p.m.) You must bring your invitat and your student I.D. for ad Questions? Call 763-7420 ion mission. MSU Continued from Page .3. suitable. But pointing to his civil rights record, he said dismissal would be excessive. According to Larrowe, his civil rights record extends to 1959, when a group of Black students asked him WANTED Any Quantity Used Michigan Bell "CASHCARDS" Paying $1 for Blue Cards $3 for Yellow Cards Prompt Payment A. Rendon P. O. Box 323 Massapequa Park, NY 11762 DON'T SEND YOUR CLOTHES HOME- STORE THEM FOR THE SUMMER! to be faculty advisor to the newly- formed campus chapter of the Na- tional Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People. Since then, Larrowe said he has participated in sit-ins and pickets in support of civil rights. Larrowe has denounced apartheid in the State News column he has written since 1971, making him one of the most visible faculty members at MSU. MSU officials are currently "reviewing what's legally, techni- cally and morally appropriate," Den- bow said. _ - -- a..cnavVT v j -r----------------------------- - .L a A ot, ' W&, , -.-z -.<~V - .I 37 1 *t It took Galileo 16 years to master the universe. YOU hve One night. It seems unfair The genius had all that time. While you have a few short hours to learn your sun spots from your satellites before the o/ /. !:._ m '.e. I