The Michigan Daily Vol. XCII, No. 58-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, August 10, 1982 Ten Cents Twelve Pages U' FUNDS REDUCED BY $250,000 Hundre4 By FANNIE WEINSTEIN Several hundred University students will be out of work-study jobs this year due to cuts in the federally-funded financial aid program, University of- ficials said last week. Originally, the University was scheduled to lose about $370,000, a 17 percent cut in its work-study budget. But earlier this summer, the Depar- tment of Education allocated an ad- ditional $44 million to the program, which will restore up to $150,000 for the University, according to Harvey Grotrian, director of the University's Office of Financial Aid. IN ORDER to offset the federal cuts, 1 U.S. peace plan sent to Israel; bombing continues From United Press International Israeli invasion forces pressuring the Palestine Liberation Organization to leave Lebanon bombarded guerrilla positions in and around war-battered west Beirut yesterday amid reports of an imminent U.S.-negotiated peace plan. Former Lebanese Prime Minister Saeb Salam, acting as go-between for U.S. Middle East envoy Philip Habib and the PLO, said Habib finalized his evacuation plans for the Palestinians and submitted the package to the Israelis. IN PARIS, PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat said in an interview published in the daily newspaper Le Monde that a definitive evacuation agreement was reached. "We have reached a final agreement with the Lebanese government and with the American emissary Philip Habib on the details of the departure of our forces towards several Arab coun- tries-Syria, Iraq, Jordan and Egypt,' Arafat was quoted as saying. In Tel Aviv, reliable sources requesting anonymity confirmed that a plan poten- tially acceptable to all sides concerned in the 64-day-old Israeli invasion was completed and being delivered to Prime Minister Menachem Begin. A SENIOR government source said yesterday that Israel was willing to allow an international peace-keeping force into Beirut before the complete withdrawal of Palestinian fighters from p the city. Israeli warplanes staged a series of See PLO, Page 5 ds to lose work-study jobs the University will be reducing work- ts will be closer to 2,400. home and work enough (during the study awards, said Nancy Longmate, a The remaining positions will then be summer), so they have to work during senior financial aid officer. open to any applicant-regardless of the school year," she said. "All of the work-study awards have student financial needs. An education department spokesman been decreased a little. That way we Although in recent years, federal defended the reductions. "The can try to spread the money around a funds have not been decreased, the work-study program is not being little more," she said. "We're going to work-study program has suffered severely cut at all," said William channel the money to the neediest because more students have been ap- Moran, branch chief for campus-based students." plying for a accepting work-study jobs, programs at the Department of During the 1981-82 academic year; Longmate said. Education. there were about 2,900 work-study jobs "AS MORE and more students accept ACCORDING to Moran, the program available and about 2,800 students were work-study, there's less to go around .. is losing $22 million in funds nationally, awarded work-study grants, Longmate There's more demand than there is a cut of four percent. said. supply," she said. He said however, that individual THIS YEAR, she said she expects the Longmate said she believes the He soer thatin al number of jobs on campus to remain economic situation in Michigan has also the funds for the work-study program the same but estimated the number of had an effect on students and the work-study awards available to studen- program. "They're not being able to go See HUNDREDS, Page 2 Sust whistle Dr. Louis Cohen and his wife Darlene of Macon, Ga., look on as their eight-month old daughter Carrie puckers up and whistles. The child will whistle at the slightest suggestion, a feat that even her mother cannot duplicate. Anti-nukedemonstrators arrested From United Press International enforcement desk and then released to Elsewhere, in activities that capped Dozens of anti-nuclear militants were the Marquette County Sheriff's office. five days of demonstrations also arrested yesterday in demonstrations In Washington State's Puget Sound, marking the bombing of Hiroshima, around the country commemorating waterborn activists stalked a nuclear groups conducted peaceful marches, the anniversary of the 1945 atomic sub, sit-ins and silent vigils. bombing of Nagasaki. Police arrested 60 anti-nuclear In Atlanta, about 20 people represen- In Marquette, Michigan, a group of militants in New York City when they ting four peace groups entered three cross-carrying protestors, including tried to blockade doorways to a nuclear fallout shelters at 11:02 a.m. EDT - the three Catholic clergymembers were research firm. time of the Nagasaki bombing. taken into custody after they crossed a AT OFFUTT Air Force Base, Neb., 50 In another peaceful demonstration, a barbed-wire fence surrounding the K.I. protesters were taken into custody handful of protesters walked through Sawyer Strategic Air Command base. when they entered the Strategic Air the plant gate at a Goodyear atomic THE 13 demonstrators, Air Force of- Command's main gate, sat down in the uranium-enrichment plant in Piketon, ficials said, were taken to the base law street and blocked traffic. Ohio, and knelt in prayer.