Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, July 28, 1983 Police clear Union after bomb threat By HALLE CZECHOWSKI Ann Arbor Police evacuated the third and fourth floors of the Michigan Union for nearly half an hour Tuesdaymor- ning, after a group with an office on the top floor received a bomb threat. Members of the Spartacus Youth League (SYL) called the Ann Arbor Police at 10:48 a.m. Tuesday, saying that their New York office had received an anonymous telephone call Sunday night. The caller warned that a bomb .was planted in the group's Union office. POLICE CHECKED out the office with dogs trained to sniff out bombs, but found nothing. However, they evacuated the Union's upper florsa and warned SYL members to stay away from the office for a few days. Emily Tanner, national secretary of SYL, said the group waited until Tuesday to call Ann Arbor police because "we thought it was a crank call." But Tanner said they became alar- med when they found out that the anonymous caller had also contacted offices in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Tanner said that the man only iden- tified himself as a member of the "people's mobilization." Nude campers bare all at summer resort SARANAC (UPI) - "The only dif- ference between us here and people at any other camp is we're doing it without clothes on." Julie Erlenmeyer was right. She was nude. So was everyone else lounging around their Winnebagos, Airstreams or Pop-up campers. Big people, small people, thin people, fat people. None clothed. They traveled to the Forest Hills Club in this tiny West Michigan community from all across the nation's midsection - Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Ken- tucky, Tennessee, Ohio and elsewhere Stats lab may (Continued from Page 1) ersity, such as the economics depar- tment and the sociology department, have their own programs for perfor- ming statistical research. BIO-STATISTICS Prof. Richard Landis, a member of the review panel, said these smaller labs wouldn't be eliminated if the recommendation goes through, but said the new institute would help centralize the University's statistics research. William Ericson, director of the SRL, said demand for the program's services has increased 20 percent per year lately, forcing the unit to request more money. Ericson said former Vice-President for Research Charles Overberger commissioned the review as "am- munition for increased funding." HOWARD Finkbeiner, assistant to the vice president for research, said a decision on whether to restructure SRL and boost its funding would probably be made in the fall. Under the panel's recommendations, the new Institute of Applied Statistics - to attend the annual convention of the Midwest Sunbathing Association. "Basically, we do everything everyone else does, we just do it without clothing more often," said Erlenmeyer, a 36-year-old secretary for a State Farm Insurance Co. office near Cleveland. "For us, sexuality is here and nudity is here," she said, holding her arms wide apart to indicate the separation between the two. "We are not out here wife swapping. I've been in it for 10 years and I've never been to an orgy yet. It's a family affair - someplace where you can bring your kids." be replaced would receive $87,500 a year, and the institute would spend $175,000 on its computing unit. The cost of new com- puter and printing equipment would be a one-time expenditure of $18,000. The panel also recommended that a "users group" oversee the computing unit and the consulting center to "weigh competing options against scarce resources, and make reasonable choices." THAT PROSPECT angers Daniel Fox, associate director of SRL "The creation of an executive committee (in a unit which has directors) is un- paralled," he said. "There is no unit at the Univeristy that has such a commit- tee.' "The current arrangement has been a successful arrangement," Fox added. Fox is the man largely responsible for SRL's current structure. He designed the MIDAS and TEXTEDIT data analysis and text processing systems the lab uses. Ed Rothman, chairman of the statistics department said the lab "has been doing a pretty good job generally and we're looking at a step forward." IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Senate confirms Voicker WASHINGTON - The Senate, told that "no one can do a better job," voted 84-16 yesterday to confirm Paul Volcker as chairman of the Federal Reserve Board for another four-year term. First appointed by President Carter in 1979 to combat double-digit in- flation, Volcker imposed a tight money policy that is credited with slashing inflation, but is also blamed by some for causing high interest rates and a recession. Despite harsh criticism of the Fed chairman by some conservative mem- bers of Congress, especially Rep. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.), President Reagan recently nominated Volcker, 55, to a second four-year term in the $69,800-a- year post.- Of the 16 senators who voted against the nomination, eight were democrats and eight were Republicans. A few liberals, such as Sens. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), and Alan Cran- ston (D-Calif.), joined conservatives, including Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), in opposing him. Turkish embassy attacked LISBON, Portugal - Five Armenian suicide terrorists shot their way into the Turkish ambassador's residence yesterday, then blew up themselves and a top diplomat's wife ina fiery "sacrifice to the altar of freedom." A sixth terrorist was killed by security guards when the raiders leaped out of a car and began their assault with machine pistols on the modern two- story building in the suburban outskirts of the Portuguese capital. Interior Minister Eduardo Pereira said the five remaining terrorists blew themselves up deliberately in an explosion that also killed the wife of the Turkish charge d'affaires. She was identified as Cahide Mihcioglu. The charge and his 17-year-old son were slightly wounded by the explosion and a policeman was shot several times in the legs. Polish bishops appeal new laws WARSAW, Poland - Polish bishops formally asked parliament yesterday to alter tough new legislation slated to be passed this week dealing with law and order and censorship, a church spokesman said. The planned provisions include three-year jail terms for foreign reporters convicted of sending "false information" abroad and three-year terms for Poles who take part in an outlawed organization or illegal demonstration. The new censorship law, if passed, will authorize censor offices to inter- vene in scientific publications, trade union bulletins and exhibitions. The bishopa submitted their remarks to parliament on the amendments," the church spokesman said. He refused to reveal details of the letter, but said it was filed yesterday and concerned the proposed amendments to the penal code and the censor- ship law. He said the bishops hoped the amendments would be altered before ap- proval is voted, but did not disclose if the bishops were critical of them. The letter was the second church intervention with parliament this month. House debates cutoff of covert aid to rebels in Nicaragua WASHINGTON - The chairman of the House Intelligence Committee said yesterday that Congress should cut off secret aid to rebels in Nicaragua because "it doesn't work, because it doesn't serve the interests of the United States and because it is illegal." Some members of the Senate, meanwhile, said Secretary of State George Shultz and National Security Adviser William Clark had failed in a special briefing for lawmakers to answer key questions over the administration's latest moves in Central America - including whether a naval blockade or quarantine is in the works. Rep. Edward Boland (D-Mass) opened the House debate on legislation which would drastically reshape a major element of President Reagan's Central America policy by barring any support "directly or indirectly, to military or paramilitary operations in Nicaragua by any nation, group, organization, movement, or individual." FCC to raise telephone bills WASHINGTON - The Federal Communications Commission, seeking to end the subsidy of local telephone rates by long-distance profits, decided yesterday to boost monthly bills $2 for residential customers and $6 for businesses starting Jan. 1. The ruling, on a 4-0 vote, reaffirmed the FCC's policy that telephone users should bear more of the costs for local service, whose rates have been kept artificially low for years by long-distance charges. But the formula approved yesterday will cost residential users less initially than they would have paid under the FCC's original plan, voted in December, which would have required a $2 fee plus a surcharge for each long-distance call, or else a flat monthly payment of about $4. The fees for residential and business users will rise in stages over six years. The residential fee will rise to $3 a month in 1985 and to $4 monthly in 1986. The business fee will remain at $6 a month through 1986, compared with the $4 monthly fee they originally would have been charged. MEDICAL SCHOOL OPENINGS Immediate Openings Available in Foreign Medical School Fully Accredited ALSO AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL AND VET SCHOOL LOANS AVAILABLE For further details and/or appointment call Dr. Manley (716) 832-0763 / 882-2803