Page 4- Thursday;Moy 6, 1982,-TheMichigan Daily Britain reacts to, casualties in Falkiands From AP wire reports Grief and courage and opposing calls for revenge and retreat mingled in Britain yesterday as the reality of war came home-a destroyer and a war- plane lost in the South Atlantic, husbands and sons perished and thousands more at risk. Newspapers, politicians, and people in the street had sharply divided opinions. Some said it just isn't worth it, a real warwith a new generation of war dead in a conflict with Argentina over the remote Falkland Islands, a small colony 8,000 miles from home. FOR OTHERS, including some of those most deeply hurt, the Falklands dispute remained a symbol of patriotism and duty. "I'm proud to have a son who died doing the job he loved, for the country he loved," said Harry Taylor, whose' pilot son Lt. Nicholas Taylor, 32, was shot down in his Harrier fighter- bomber Tuesday over the Falklands' Goose Green airstrip. In Portsmouth, the south England naval base from which the British ar- mada sailed on a wave of patriotic fer- vor one month ago, anxious relatives jammed the Royal Navy information center. For some families, there was relief. To others; chaplains broke the bad news. IN SHEFFIELD, the northern steel town that gave its name to the destroyer, flags hung at half-staff for the crewmen drowned or burned to death after an Argentine missile scored a deadly hit. - At Sheffield's Cherry Tree Children's Home, a city-funded hostel for 18 or- phans "adopted" by the Sheffield's crew, the children wept, said superin- tendent Jean Hodgkinson. With its headline: "Too High a Price," the mass circulation Daily Mirror echoed the feelings of those from left-wing opposition Labor Party members to half the callers on a radio call-in show. "NOW IS THE time for the politicians Tavlor ...mourned by Britain to risk their reputations and make peace. Their biographies should not be written in the blood of others," the Mirror said. In Argentina, citizens braced for the tough economic times ahead, as the government took action to finance the Falkland Islands war effort against Britain. The Argentine government devalued the peso yesterday, trying to stimulate exports and stem the drain of hard currency. Meanwhile, sailors from the tor- pedoed cruiser General Belgrano began arriving at Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, the first of 68 men the junta says have been plucked from the wintry South Atlantic by rescue ships. The newspaper Conviccion, which has close naval ties, buoyed hopes of the seamen's families yesterday with a report that 820 of the 1,042 aboard had been rescued. There was no official confirmation. Banner headlines in Argentine newspapers heralded the attack on the British destroyer, carrying foreign press accounts from London. In Brief Israeli troops wound two youths TEL AVIV, Israel- Israeli troops wounded two Palestinian youths yesterday as hundreds of stone-tossing demonstrators tried to storm an ar- my camp in the occupied Gaza Strip, the military said. A 12-year-old Palestinian girl shot Sunday by an Israeli civilian on the oc- cupied West Bank died in Jerusalem's Hadassah Hospital, Israel Radio and Palestinian sources said. The military said two people were wounded after Israeli soldiers fired at the legs of the demonstrators near the Jabalya refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. Palestinian sources claim seven were wounded. The incident was the latest in a wave of Jewish-Arab violence in the oc- cupied territories that has killed 12 Palestinians in the last seven weeks and wounded at least 93. Israeli casualties in the protracted strife stand at two soldiers killed and 71 injured-33 soldiers and 38 civilians. Budget amendment criticized WASHINGTON- Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said yesterday a constitutional amendment requiring balanced federal budgets might not work, and he complained the push for one by President Reagan and others diverts attention from more pressing needs. The chief of the nation's central bank urged Congress to approach the question of such an amendment with "great caution." "One of the difficulties I have with this amendment is it could be viewed as a substitute vote for doing something about the budget here and now," he told the House Judiciary subcommittee on monopolies and commercial law. The day after the collapse of bipartisan negotiations over his 1983 budget, Reagan went on nationwide radio and television to call for an amendment requiring balance. Even by the most optimistic projections, it would be 1986 or 1917 before suchfa measure, requiring ratification of three-fourths of the states, could take effect Hinckley hijack plan revealed WASHINGTON- An airliner hijacking note saying "I have a bomb with me ... a companion is with me with a firearm" was found in John W. Hin- ckley Jr.'s hotel room on the day he shot President Reagan 13 months ago, his jury was told yesterday. Also in the room was a picture postcard addressed to actress Jodie Foster in which Hinckley said "one day you and I will occupy the White House .. . please do your best to remain a virgin." And there were 38 pages of Hinckley's writings, mostly poems, one of which began "Criticize you may this act of mine, I trust you'll appreciate the romantic reasons. One final stand and the poet shall die, a moment to pour out my feelings. We all abhor the end result." There was no testimony to indicate what, if anything, Hinckley planned to do with the hijack note or when it was written. Polish'bishops condemn riots WARSAW, Poland- Roman Catholic bishops yesterday condemned the wave of riots that swept more than a dozen Polish cities and appealed for reconciliation talks between martial law authorities and the suspended Solidarity union. The government, reverting to a tougher line, reimposed curfews and other restrictions in several cities because of the disturbances Monday and Tuesday. Poland's Roman Catholic bishops, after meeting Monday and Tuesday at the Jasna Gora monastery in the southern shrine city of Czestochowa, issued a statement Wednesday. "With pain and concern for the fate of our nation and state," they said, "the new disturbances shaking the country are delaying social accord, halting steps towards normalization and misguiding the youth." The statement renewed the church's previous calls for talks in an at- mosphere of peace. The church, a powerful force in Poland, has called repeatedly for negotiations between Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski's regime and Solidarity, most of whose leaders were interned when the army imposed martial law to stem the union's challenge to Communist authority. Sirhan's conments on Kennedys revealed at parole hearing SOLEDAD, Calif.- Sirhan Sirhan said two months ago he hoped nothing would happen to Sen. Edward Kennedy, but claimed he had the power to in- cite his assassination by appealing to misfits and mentally sick people, an investigator testified yesterday. The remarks were quoted by chief parole board investigator Richard Washington at a board hearing to determine whether a 1984 parole date should be rescinded for Sirhan, convicted of killing Kennedy's brother, Sen. Robert Kennedy, in 1968. "That isn't me. I'm not an animal, an irresponsible thinker that the world and everybody thinks I am ... I wish to God that nothing would happen to the Kennedys," Washington quoted Sirhan as saying in a March 4 prison inter- view. Sirhan discussed with Washington the accusations that he planned to kill Edward Kennedy, which he denied, and referred once to his murder of Robert Kennedy, but mostly he talked of his frustration at being imprisoned and his 9ger a he arole boad. 4 I 6 U .0 Argentina accepts Peruvian proposal for (Continuedfrom Page1) No new fighting was reported since the Tuesday air and sea battles when the Sheffield was hit by a French-made Exocet missile fired from 18 miles away by an ArgentineSuper Entendard jet dispatched from an aircraft carrier. BUT BRITISH officials disclosed that two Argentine submarines were inside the 200-mile blockade zone around the islands, playing a cat-and-mouse game with the British fleet. Defense . ecretary John Nott said ships from the Britain vessel war fleet "are still engaged in operations" in the blockade zone around the Falklands, whereweather satellite information in- dicated a new storm front was ap- pr~ophtng,..~, , -- cease -fire In Buenos Aires, military sources said Argentine warplanes patrolled the skies over the Falklands, 450 miles from the Argentine coast, but reported no incidents. Argentine rescue planes continued to criss-cross the icy South Atlantic sear- ching for more survivors from the General Belgrano, torpedoed by a British submarine Sunday. However, little hope was held out for the 362 sailors missing. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily