Page 10-Thursday, May 13, 1982-The Michigan Daily FARMERS SUPPOR T RURAL SOLIDARITY Poles mark union WARSAW, Poland (AP)- Ignoring hundreds of riot police, 3,000 Polish farmers prayed and sang yesterday at a mass marking the first birthday of their Rural Solidarity union, now banned under mar- tial law. "Let us pray to God for the revival of rural Solidarity to uplift life in the courftryside and improve Polish agriculture," Warsaw Bishop Wladyslaw Miziolek said during the mass at St. John's Cathedral in the old city. THE MASS ended without incident despite the ten- se atmosphere as Poland completed its fifth month under military rule. Political and labor demon- strations are illegal under the Dec. 13 decree, but religiouf gatherings are stilll Industrial Solidarity's leaders have c minute strikes today. An underground culating in the capital said 11 of the unio interned under martial law would b strikes the same day at Warsaw's Bialole About 3,000 peasants, many wearing Solidarity pins, crammed into the cath Mass or stood in the cobblestone streets structed old town. Nearby, police checke and guarded entrances to the area. BUSLOADS OF police backed by we anniversary martial law arrived at the nearby Victory Square parade ground permitted. about 30 minutes before the mass and took up ailed for 15- positions at several points around the cathedral. I leaflet cir- It was the second massive display of police power n's directors in as many days, underscoring the government's egin hunger concern about a recurrence of the rioting that erup- ka prison. ted in the old town May 3 during an unauthorized green Rural Solidarity rally. edral for the Rural Solidarity is the agricultural branch of the of the recon- 9.5 million-member Solidarity movement formed in d documents August 1980 as the first independent union in the Soviet bloc. It was officially registered by a Warsaw court on May 12, 1981 at the height of the 16-month ater cannons liberalization period that preceded martial law. E I New rating endangers state schools (Continued from Page1) as crucial as the note rating, because the state has already sold $101 million in Building Authority bonds, after buying a $3 million insurance policy to guarantee repayment. The state's overall general obligation bond rating went to "BAA-1," which is slightly better than officials were fearing. Milliken, speaking with reporters during an Ottawa County Republican Party luncheon, did not appear to be surprised that the state's bond rating dropped despite efforts to improve the state's precarious financial status. "We knew that it was going to be an uphill battle all the way," he said. "They have downgraded us, but not as far as we expected them to if we hadn't taken action ... the best thing now is to continue to operate the state on a sound basis." a a I 6 Doily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS, You can 't win Michigan fans get their comeuppance yesterday. A foul ball hit by a Wayne State player during a baseball game cracked the window of a parked car. Michigan, nevertheless, won both games of the double-header. Education Art (Continued from Page 3) (Continued from Page 3) puese topics forms framework for the committee's relationship between the school and other University review of the school and its ability to survive budget units, such as the art history department and the cuts in the order of 15 percent to 50 percent. Museum of Art. School of Education Dean Joan Stark declined to The question of whether to realign the art school's talk about the specifics of the charges. Stark did design department with those in the architecture and comment, however, on the school's selection for engineering colleges, or revert back to a School of Art review, saying, "I've asked the Budget Priorities and Architecture-formally split in 1974-will be Committee for material comparing the School of examined. Education with other schools and I was told there Options such as limiting visual arts programs to wasn't any, that none was used (during selection for the undergraduate level, and reducing or eliminating review)." professional degree programs are also ideas under' -George Adams consideration. -Fannie Weinstein Nat. Res. Wsantinued frons Page 3) classes, such as biology, Preston said the school's thrust in its courses is "very different." He added that elimination of these courses would "waste the specialized background of some professors." The problem of lower natural resources admission standards stems from the decreasing number of ap- plicants, Preston said. "We have the same criteria (for admissions) as LSA, just fewer applicants," he added. Preston said the school and its students will ac- tively participate in the review process by giving the committee any information it wants "to help under- stand the school." -Scott Stuc,, I Minimum Ag. 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