Page 4-Tuesday, June 9,1981-The Michigan Daily Reagan, PortiLlo meet; agree to economic policy 4 THURMONT, Md. (UPI) - President Reagan and Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo agreed yesterday to pursue a new policy for Central American economic develop- ment to stabilize the region and diminish the potentialfor outside inter- ference. The two leaders met alone, except for interpreters, for an hour and 10 minutes' at Camp David. Afterward, officials described the meeting as "spirited and very amiable." REAGAN AND the Mexican leader will conduct two days of discussions on issues including immigration, trade and Mexico's emergence as an oil power, as well as differing policies on the Caribbean and Fidel Castro's Cuba. Judging from the comments of a senior U.S. official who attended the expanded talks between the two leaders and their aides, Reagan and his guest agreed Mexico can act as "a com- municator" of a new policy toward Cen- tral American nations. A JOINT policy for the Caribbean basin is still being developed, the of- ficial said, but it basically calls for in- creased economic aid from the United States, Canada and Mexico to the region's underdeveloped countries. Ac- cording to the official, there was no discussion of a military component to the plan. Lopez Portillo, who strongly opposes U.S. intervention in El Salvador, has close ties to the governments of Nicaragua and Cuba. But Reagan, ac- cording to the official, told the Mexican president of U.S. concerns over com- munist arms shipments to Nicaragua and El Salvador and the necessity of an American response. ON THAT POINT, the official said, Lopez Portillo told Reagan a realistic appraisal of the region must include consideration of "both the internal and the external causes of destabilization." "There are no solid solutions to economic problems" that spawn political unrest, Lopez Portillo was quoted as saying. "Therefore, a plan that would address some of the fun- damental problems of the region would be most welcome." The U.S. official said the Reagan plan would spur economic development, Portillo ... pursues new policies jobs and markets for countries with economies that have been too narrowly focused in the past. REAGAN, THE official said, told Lopez Portillo he wants a plan that will "prove that our way of economic freedom can be an example for the rest of the world." The United States, the official said, sees the Mexican president as "central in the success of any program that in- volves the Caribbean region" because he maintains a dialogue with countries unfriendly toward the United States. The talks will continue briefly today before both men return to Washington for a state lunch at the White House. In his official welcome to Lopez Por- tillo at the White House earlier yester- day, Reagan said, "The relationship we've built as individuals is indicative of a new dimension that we are bringing to the friendship between our two coun- tries." Support the March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Miners strike ends with ratification of new contract WASHINGTON-Picking up their tools and hardhats, miners returned to work yesterday after a 10-week strike by the 160,000-member United Mine Workers union that depleted coal stockpiles and cut national production more than half. The miners' strike ended with ratification of a new, 40-month contract by a 2-1 margin Saturday, but 16,000 construction workers who also belong to the United Mine Workers remained off the job pending a settlement in their con- tract dispute. The ratification vote-with 69 percent of the miners voting approval, en- ded two months of personal hardship for the strikers. No major impact was reported on the nation's economy, but some states were hurt by the walkout. Asked about the status of the construction talks, Jonathan Williams of the union's international headquarters staff in Washington said, "I really do think you can look for some movement." Japanese guerrillas set off bomb; protest U.S. carrier TOKYO-Leftist guerrillas yesterday damaged a government building with a flame thrower to protest the return of the U.S. aircraft carrier Mid- way to its Japanese port. The incident followed weekend demonstrations by more than .100,000 people protesting the return of the Midway and visits by American warships suspected of carrying nuclear weapons. Police said no one was injured in the flame thrower attack in downtown Tokyo by a group calling itself Chukaku, or Middle Corps. The action capped a weekend of the largest anti-nuclear rallies since 1968. The guerrillas left a banner at the building with their group's name on it and a slogan which read: "Crush the Military Airport at Narita and Prevent the Return of the Midway." Soviets request crackdown; Walesa calls off strike threat WARSAW, Poland-Solidarity leader Lech Walesa returned to Poland for secret talks with government officials yesterday and agreed to call off a threatened two-hour strike, a member of the union's delegation said. The agreement came after daylong talks between Solidarity and the government were adjourned amid reports the Soviet Union was mounting pressure on Polish authorities. The Soviet Union, ins aletter to Poland's Communist leaders, has called for a crackdown on political and labor reforms launched by last summer's strikes and a purge of communist leadership, Polish offical sources repor- ted yesterday. Police lack evidence to make arrest- in slayings ATLANTA-Authorities lack sufficient evidence to arrest a man who says the FBI called him a suspect in some of the slayings of 28 young blacks, a prosecutor said yesterday. But he said police will not be rushed by public pressure into either clearing or arresting him. "We're not prepared to make any arrests at this time," Fulton County District Attorney Lewis Slaton said as he left a closed-door meeting with top police officials investigating the killings. "An arrest is not imminent," he said. Police officers, FBI agents and a score of reporters maintained a stakeout yesterday at the northwest Atlanta home of 23-year-old free-lance photographer Wayne Williams, who has been the focus of publicity since he was questioned by authorities for nearly 12 hours last week in connection with the killings. Authorities have kept the man under surveillance since May 22, when they heard a splash on the Chattahoochee River, sources say. FBI agents moved toward the sound, stopped the man and questioned him. The strangled body of Nathaniel Cater, latest victim in the string of un- solved slayings, was pulled from the Chattahoochee two days later. Former cop indicted in police shooting CHICAGO-A former Iowa policeman said to be "in love with guns-all types of guns" was indicted yesterday for the murder of Chicago's No. 2- ranking policeman. Leon Washington, 35, was charged with two counts of murder and one count of armed violence in the fatal shooting Saturday night of First Deputy Superintendent James Riordan. Washington's attorney noted that the death penalty would apply to the case only if it could be shown Washington knew when he shot Riordan that he was a policeman. i -f PHONE: (313) 662-3149 VM'AN 211 EAST HURON STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 E ATONAL CENER ForInformationA tter Centers PTESTPREPRATION OCtA d NY Stt e SPECIALISTS INCE 1938 CALLITOLL FREE: 800a22172J