The Michigan Daily-Friday, July 11, 1980-Page 13 Carter shakes up diplomatic lineup in Latin American states WASHINGTON (AP)-Just four months before the presidential election, the Carter administration is planning a major diplomatic shakeup in Latin America, with new envoys slated for eight countries. U.S. officials acknowledged yester- day that tenure of some of the new ap- pointees could be limited to a few mon- ths if President Carter loses his -re- election bid and his successor decides to appoint his own ambassadorial team early next year. 'ON THE OTHER hand, unlike some ambassadorial appointees, none of'the prospective candidates for the Latin American posts has political ties to Carter. All are career diplomats. A Senate source called the ad- ministration plan "bizarre." But the of- ficials said the shakeup is prompted by an unusual set of circumstances. Only in one case, Guatemala, is a change being made because of dissatisfaction with the current am- bassador, the sources said. THE ADMINISTRATION is removing Ambassador Frank Ortiz from Guatemala as a signal to Guatemalan authorities of its unhan- piness with their inability to curb polit- cal violence. Ortiz is being replaced after only a year on the job by the U.S. ambassador to Chile, George Landau, whose style, officials say, is "more appropriate" for dealing with the task at hand. Ortiz is being reassigned as a diplomatic adviser to the U.S. Southern Command in Panama while Landau will be replaced in Chile by John Bushnell, currentlya,deputy assistant secretary in the State Department's Latin America bureau. ANOTHER CHANGE prompted by unusual circumstances involves the transfer of Diego Asencio to the post of assistant secretary for consular affairs. While serving as ambassador to Colombia, Asencio was kidnapped and held hostage with a number of other diplomats for two months earlier this year. The administration decided it would not be appropriate for Asencio to return to Colombia because of his or- deal. Among the possible candidates to succeed Asencio is Samuel Eaton, a deputy assistant secretary of state with long experience in hemispheric affairs. HOWARD "BUDDY" JACOBSON, WHO ESCAPED FROM A New York City prison last spring while awaiting start of a sentence for a murder conviction, was apprehended Wednesday in a Manhattan Beach California restaurant. He was escorted by police Wednesday night to a Los Angeles County jail. Convicte fled to seek new evidence LOS ANGELES (AP) - Back behind bars, Howard "Buddy" Jacobson claimed yesterday he escaped from jail and fled across the country to try to find evidence to vindicate himself in the murder of his rival for the affection of model Melanie Cain. His attorney, Jacob Evseroff, said Jacobson told him he was looking for drug traffickers who, the convicted killer maintained during his trial, were responsible for killing restaurateur Jack Tupper. JACOBSON, 50, once a nationally known trainer of thoroughbred race horses, was convicted last April 12 after an 11-week trial ip New York City. He escaped from a Brooklyn jail May 31. Brooklyn District Attorney Eugene Gold said Jacobson escaped by swit- ching places with a man who posed as an attorney to visit him in jail. He said Jacobson then drove west, stopping in Wyoming, where he asked a friend for money, and in Thousand Oaks, Calif. Following his escape, he was senten- ced in absentia to a maximum term of 25 years to life for the brutal slaying of Tupper, 34, whose shot, stabbed and bludgeoned body was found in a bur- ning crate in a dump in the Bronx on Aug. 6,1978. COUNSELING SERVICES is offering a six week group on PROFESSIONALISM and the SUPERWOMAN This group is designed for women in professional or pre-profes- sional programs who are struggling with the tensions between career and personal choices. Is it possible to have it all- demanding professions, important relationships, families. suo- port systems? How to cope with these stresses, pressures, and conflicts will be explored in an atmosphere of comradery, openness, and insight. Meeting Time: Thursdays 3-5 Dates: July 17-August 21 Place: Counseling Services, 3100 Michigan Union To Register: Please call 764-8312