Page 4-Wednesday-June 16, 1982-The Michigan Daily Brezhnev sa ys Soviets will not' us nue is Fromstaffandwirereports The Soviet Union announced yester- day that it would not be the first to use nuclear weapons in Europe and invited the United States to assume "an equally precise and clear obligation." "Should a nuclear war start, it could mean the destruction of human civilization and-perhaps the end of life itself on earth," Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko said delivering a dramatic message from President Leonid Brezhnev to a special U.N. session on disarmament. WHILE THE Soviet Union had proposed a renunciation of the first use of nuclear weapons, Brezhnev's an- nouncement is the first formally com- mitting his government to the policy, Sovietsources said. The message, read by Gromyko, elicited sustained applause. Brezhnev said the Soviet Union was "guided by the desire to do all in its power to deliver the peoples from the threat of nuclear devastation" The Soviet leader said if other coun- tries took the step "that would be tan- tamount in practice to a ban on the use of nuclear weapons altogether." PRESIDENT Reagan, who ad- dressses the special session tomorrow, said at a news conference last month that no "useful purpose is served in makingsuch a declaration." In April, Secretary of State Alexan- der Haig said the North Atlantic Treaty Organization has consistently rejected such Soviet proposals "Which are tan- tamount to making Europe safe for conventional agression." Adopting a policy against using nuclear weapons first "would effec- tively withdraw the American nuclear umbrella over Europe," the State Department said at the time. UNIVERSITY experts on interna- tional affairs agreed that the Soviet an- nouncement would draw negative reac- tions from the Reagan administration. Political science Prof. Harold Jacob- son said that U.S. officials may be op- posed to a first-strike ban. "The policy is likely to be viewed as restraining to us, but not to them, in the sense that our military strategy (in Europe) depends on first strike,'' he said. DAVID SINGER, a political science professor who teaches several courses in Soviet affairs, said that "Americans want to be able to use tactical nuclear weapons in the event of Soviet success with conventional forces (in Europe)." Singer, however, called the announ- cement "exciting, interesting, and promising." "I think it is a very important move symbolically," he said, "if it is followed up by a Soviet move to redesign their forces you have really got something." He said that the Soviet statement would not be effective unless it was backed up by Soviet efforts to disman- tle first-strike weapons. Singer said that serious arms reduc- tions would only come very slowly unless the U.S. "picked up on the prin-- ciple" of a first-strike ban and began.to dismantle first-strike weapons. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports High court upholds illegal aliens' right to free public education WASHINGTON- States must provide free public education to children of illegal aliens, a divided Supreme Court said yesterday in a decision that ex- tended many of the constitutional rights enjoyed by American citizens to families that live illegally in the United States. By a 5-4 vote, the court ruled that a Texas law allowing "undocumented" children to attend public schools only if they paid tuition was uncon- stitutional. The decision was hailed as a civil rights victory for the millions of people who illegally live and work in this country. Woman dies in train derailment EMERSON. Iowa- The Amtrak passenger train San Francisco Zephyr rounded a bend at 76 mph just outside this flooded city yesterday and hit a "wall of water,"killing one woman as it jumped the tracks. Sixteen people were hospitalized and 150 suffered minor injuries, mostly cuts and bruises. Mills County Sheriff Ed James said 400 volunteers, some of them in boats,. helped rescue the 200 passengers inside the 12 cars of the train that derailed after the tracks were washed out by floodwaters 3 to 4 feet deep. Terri Thomas, 19, of Santa Maria, Calif., was dead on arrival at Mon- tgomery County Hospital in nearby Red Oak, according to Allen Pohren, assistant hospital administrator. Zephyr engineer Joe Schwartz of Omaha, Neb., a 30-year railroad veteran, said he and another crew member had been talking about the water along the railroad right-of-way just before the train bound from Chicago to Denver jumped the Burlington Northern Railroad tracks about 3 a.m. Volcker reaffirms tight money WASHINGTON- Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, vowing to stay on a tight-money course to combat inflation, told Congress yesterday, "I don't see any place for those interest rates to go but down." But he wouldn't predict when the drop might come. Resisting mounting calls in Congress for an easier money and credit policy to lower interest rates, the head of the nation's central bank insisted such a move would only send interest rates higher in the long run as lenders braced for a new burst of inflation. Volcker told the Joint Economic Committee of Congress, "we are making remarkable progress" in lowering inflation and that interest rates will fall once lenders come around to believing inflation will stay down. "I think these interest rates are extraordinarily high," he said. "If we do the right things"-namely keep a tight rein on credit growth and reduce huge budget deficits-interest rates have nowhere to go but down, he testified. ."But when?" demanded Rep. Lee Hamilton (D-Ind.). "I won't attempt to be more precise," Volcker replied after a long pause. Whistleblower wins court suit WASHINGTON- Pentagon whistleblower Ernest Fitzgerald, fired from the Air Force for telling Congress about multibillion dollar cost overruns, won a promotion yesterday and $200,000 in legal fees in a settlement of his suit against the federal government. U.S. District Judge William Bryant approved the settlement which had been agreed to by Fitzgerald and the Justice Department. It resolves a suit filed in 1976. In a telephone interview, Fitzgerald said, "I'm very happy" to be able to get back into major weapons acquisition matters from which he said he has been "exiled" since 1968. "I'm essentially going to pick up where I left off when I was so rudely in- terrupted when I committed truth on the C-5."said Fitzgerald, who got into trouble for blowing the whistle on a $2 billion cost overrun on the giant tran- sport plane project. Pope defends 'solidarity' during speech in Switzerland GENEVA, Switzerland- Pope John Paul II, using the word "solidarity" 47 times in a 65-minute speech, spoke out in defense of workers' freedom yesterday, condemning attempts to block formation of worker-run unions. Addressing the U.N. International Labor Organization at the Palace of Nations, he called for "a new social order of solidarity without frontiers" to promote workers' well-being. He asserted workers have a fundamental right "to freely form or join an association of their own choosing and to run it." An ILO official who requested anonymity said the pope's frequent use of the word "solidarity" was a thinly-veiled reference to his native Poland and "a nice tactic." The pope spoke in French from the same podium where Lech Walesa. the interned leader of Poland's suspended Solidarity labor movement, ad- dressed the ILO conference a year ago. In an apparent reference to the government-labor confrontation that led to martial law in Poland six months ago, the pope condemned attempts to outlaw unions, but also spoke against "uncompromising opposition" to government authority. 4 4 rOrdinary pizza, paces can't measuirep -- ; ,-, ; j s A J"- ' 1321 S. Daily 11:30-2a.m. University HAPPY HOUR Mon.-Sat. 4-6 769-1744 10p.m.-I a.m. q