Page 4 --The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, July 19, 1983 NASA chiefforsees U.S. space station WASHINGsOr(A)-NAS'sc Beggs said. 'The space station is the WASHNGTN (A) -NASAs cief next logical step for long-duration predicted yesterdsy that President work. Reagan soon will give the go-ahead for "WITHOUT A station, I can envision an American manned space station, a much different world several years saying, "If the United States does not from now," he said. "If the United take this step, we will lose our pre- States does not take this step, we will eminence in space." lose our pre-eminence in space. James Beggs, administrator of the Because the Soviets will not stop, the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- Europeans will not stop and the ministration, said there have been en- Japanese won't stop. couraging signs from the White House "there would be no impact at first, recently and he expects an approval but in five years we would begin to fall within 12 months. back, and in 10 to 15 years, we would BEGGS SPOKE at a Space Station 'ert htwdint a e wouldx Symposium attended by several hun- regret that we didn't take that next dred industry, government, foreign logical step," Begga said.. and military planners gathered t' He said a station would enhance provide~NASA with final ideas before America's economic well-being by presenting its case to the White House providing new aress of technological in the fall. research. "It will open up commercial He said NASA hopes to gain approval opportunities we have not dreamed of; from both the administration and it should improve our national security; Congress for start-up money of about provide more sophisticated science, $200 million in the fiscal 1985 budget to and be a source of international be submitted in September. The agency cooperation,'' he added. has estimated it will cost $6 billion to $8 Beggs said the most encouraging billion to havea permanent station with White House signal comes from four to six persons on board in orbit by presidential science advisor George 1991. Keyworth, who recently dropped his "The space shuttle is moving ahead long-held opposition to a space station well, and while it is truly impressive, it and called for NASA to come up with a allows only a short time in space," "grand vision" for the future. City Council _mem__ber fills MSA position (Continuedfrom Page1) and more importantly the University committed itself to that." Despite many programs designed to recruit and keep black students here, enrollment is only 5.2 percent of the total student body now. IN HIS NEW part-time post,- Hunter said he wants to try to come up with an- swers for the difficulties blacks ex- perience financially, academically, and socially when they come to the Univer- sity. "I think we're at a point in time where there are a lot of rumors and in- nuendos. I hope to research those and go back and share my information with groups and organizations," Hunter said. "There are a lot of resources on cam- pus," he said, but the information is not getting out to the students who need it. Hunter, a black 31-year-old, will receive $1,000 for his term which ends in December. He graduated. from Eastern Michigan University with a degree in social work. MSA Vice President for Minority Af- fairs, Salene Hitchcock, said the position will not end when Hunter makes his final report to MSA. "One big report is not what we're working for. It's an ongoing thing," she said. Hitchcock said she was originally BOB DASCOLA and staff South U & East U are now at DASCOLA STYLISTS 668-9329 opposite Jacobsons skeptical of the minority researcher plan, but she now thinks it can be suc- cessful if Hunter can have contact with students. Hitchcock said that with only one term to work in, Hunter will probably have to limit his activity somewhat. "With the time that he has, it might be best if he stuck with just one area (of minority concerns)," she said. Hunter hopes that much of his ac- tivity will come from resonding to direct student complaints and questions, a plan that MSA President Mary Rowland agrees with. "I hope he's working with people. I don't see him working in a little office on his report, and then he will turn it in and we will all applaud," she said. MSA hired a student minority resear- cher in November, who quit two weeks later because the job demanded too much time. Rowland said she thinks Hunter's appointment is a step toward helping the problem, but said that there will be no solution until the University makes it a priority. "It's not an insurmountable problem, it's just never been a (University) priority," she said. Although Hunter will probably con- centrate on the problems of blacks at the University, Rowland said he will also work with other minority groups. Read and Use Daily Class if ieds IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Differences divide OPEC HELSINKI, Finland - Bickering broke out over oil pricing and production violations at the OPEC summit yesterday despite an unprecedented effort by the cartel's 13 ministers to play down their bitter differences. A senior OPEC delegate said Nigeria, Iran and the United Arab Emirates - a Gulf moderate - have flouted their individual output quotas. A UAE of- ficial hotly denied his country was overproducing. The delegate, who asked not to be identified, said he would ask the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to ban barter deals under which Iran, Iraq and Libya have covertly discounted their oil to boost sales. Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani said his kingdom, OPEC's most influential member, favored keeping the cartel's $29 a barrel base price unchanged through 1985. He said a "significant" number of OPEC members supported the Saudi stand. But insiders said several OPEC dissidents vowed to fight any Yamani-led move to freeze prices until a clearer picture of world oil demand emerged in the next few months. Mondale leads in campaign cash WASHINGTON - Walter Mondale, while losing ground to John Glenn in polls on who will win the 1984 Democratic presdential nomination, keeps his commanding lead in one area - campaign cash. Finance reports released yesterday said the former vice president has gathered contributions totaling more tha $5 million this year, while Glenn, Ohio's senior U.S. senator, has raised just over half that amount, $2.6 million. Sens. Alan Cranston and Gary Hart, who are trailing the two frontrunners in the polls, are also behind in the battle for money. Cranston has raised about 1.1 million this year, while Hart has collected $823,204. Campaign finance reports for April through June, due last Friday at the Federal Election Commission, were made available yesterday. Hart's figures are from a news release since his report- though it may have met the commission deadline of being postmarked by midnight Friday - was not available from the FEC. Debate continues over MX WASHINGTON - Republican Senate leaders have given up trying to force a decision on whether to build and install the MX missile before the issue is settled in the Democratic House, where the vote is expected to be extremely close, congressional sources said yesterday. Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker said he would not move to limit debate on the MX, while across Capitol Hill there were growing indications that the House might reverse itself and vote to block production of the multiwarhead nuclear weapon sought by President Reagan. House Majority Leader Jim Wright (D-Texas) said yesterday he has not decided whether to shift a previous pro-MX vote cast in May when the House decided ?45 to 176 to free funds for test-flying the missile. In May, Wright and all the House Democratic leaders except Speaker Thomas O'Neill supported Reagan and voted for the MX, so a change by Wright would influence some Democrats. End of Poland's martial law may involve Solidarity protest WARSAW, Poland - Polish military leaders yesterday agreed to end martial law, the official news agency reported, but a senior Parliament of- ficial said fears of pro-Solidarity protests may delay the move. It was not clear if the decision by the 21-member Military Council for National Salvation meant martial law would end on Friday, Poland's national holiday. The Parliament official, who spoke on condition he not be identified, said differences still exist and that the decision could be delayed. The military council set no date or conditions during a session led by Communist Party chief Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, said the news agency PAP. The parliamentary official said lifting of the 19-month-old state of emergency could be temporarily blocked because of concerns over possible demonstrations by backers of Solidarity on the outlawed union's third an- niversary next month. CIA fails in halting arms WASHINGTON - The CIA's 18-month-old covert action to prevent arms from reaching leftist Salvadoran guerrillas has failed to capture a single weapons shipment, officials say. But its supporters contend the effort has succeeded in disrupting supply lines. The degree of success achieved by the CIA's support for Nicaraguan coun- ter-revolutionaries operating from Honduras is likely to be a central issue in a closed-door House debate today. The debate's focus will be a bill to cut off the covert aid and replace it wil an $80 million open fund to help friendly governments stop leftist gun-running in the region. In interviews with officials familiar with the no-longer-secret covert ac- tion, opinions on its worth varied sharply. 4 I I