Page 10-thursday, May 8, 1980-The Michigan Daily Pentagon sends 500 Marines to Florida to maintain order in Cuban refugee camps to KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) - U.S. yesterday afternoon. Marines were called in yesterday as UNDER A STATE of emergency thousands more Cubans jammed declared by President Carter, 500 shelters short on space and food in a Marines were sent by the Pentagon to quickening tide that has brought over -ssist 700 Florida National Guardsmen 22,000 "Freedom Flotilla" refugees to trying to keep order in the refugee the United States. camps. Immigration officials processed 4,005 Gen. K.C. Bullard, guard comman- refugees Tuesday, the third straight der, said the state troops would remain record day, plus another 2,000 by on duty temporarily to "insure an or- derly transition." Meanwhile, he said, officials were seeking additional holding areas for the refugees who have been crossing the 90- mile Florida Straits for 2 and one-half weeks. ONE ABANDONED Navy air hangar housed some 3,800 refugees yesterday. About 5,000 refugees have been taken to a tent city at Eglin Air Force Base in Ulrich's Te Calculator Center. We stock the complete lines in' Hewlett-Packard, Texas Instruments, and Sharp calculators. Whether you need the most basic or the most sophisticated calculator, we have it. We understand what we sell, so we can assist you in selecting just what you need. We're competitive. In-fact, we'll match any deal or refund your money Don't be disappointed. Come in and get your calculator early V9J9S MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E, University at the corner of East U. and South U 662 -320 1 the Florida Panhandle. Meanwhile, the office of Rep. John Paul Hammerschmidt of Arkansas said the White House planned to send some refugees to Fort Chaffee Army Reserve base near Fort Smith. The base was used for Vietnamese refugees in 1975. At Key West, facilities, were packed and sometimes so short of food that refugees received only a single meal a day. ARGUMENTS BROKE out when cots and food ran short at the hangar. "It was terrible over there, just chaos," said Carlos Alphonzo, a paramedic who spent the night trying to calm refugees and treating them for sunburn. "These people. are coming over here and being put back into a prison. See MARINES, Page 11 Chrysler reports losses,. again DETROIT (UPI) - Chrysler Corp. reported first quarter losses yesterday of $448.8 million, slightly better than some analysts expected but the second largest quarterly deficit in its history. Chrysler's losses in the same period last year amounted to $53.8 million. THE COMPANY, strugging to qualify for the $1.5 billion in federal loan guarantees it needs to stay in business, has lost money in the jast five and in seven of the last nine quarters. The battered No. 3 automaker's sales in the first quarter declined to $2.3 billion, down 28.9 per cent from $3.3 billion the first quarter of 1979. General Motors Corp. alone among the Big Three automakers was profitable in a January-March quarter darkened by high interest rates, tight credit and continuing consumer rejec- tion of big cars. GM PROFITS declined 88 per cent in the quarter to $155 million, while Ford Motor Co. lost$164 million. Some auto industry analysts had ex- pected Chrysler to post first quarter losses in the range of $475 million. But rigid cost-cutting helped keep losses below the $460.6 million deficit it showed in the third quarter of 1979. Chrysler has reduced executive salaries, laid off more than 30 per cent of its white collar staff and40,000 hourly workers, severely curtailed car and truck production and closed four plants. Further cost-cutting steps that could includeadditional plant closings are under consideration. The company already has projected 1980 losses of more than $750 million. It lost $1.1 billion in 1979 and $205 million in 1978. "None of these reductions, however, will affect the introduction of the new 1981 models, particularly the front- wheel drive K-cars, Plymouth Reliant and Dodge Aries, which are designed to meet the extraordinary continuing demand' for small, fuel-efficient vehicles,' Chrysler Chairman JLee A. °:lcoc'Iaaidi'i 'Ba'lmet. t, a , . I 0 6 0 0 a