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Show Th Dtfrf Utah Chronic!, Monday. February 22. 1C32 .1 TK3 ASSOCIATE) Leahy said in an interview on ABC's This Week with David Brinkley. He said Congress would not support the commitment of U.S. troops in El Salvador, where leftist guerrillas are trying to topple a military-civilia- n junta. Robert White, former U.S. ambassador to El Salvador, called for negotiations to Officials mull El Salvador NEW YORK Sen. Patrick Leahy. t. back from a recent trip to El Salvador, said Sunday that without U.S. troops there can be no military solution to the civil dispute D-V- that has gripped the Central American 'The Salvadoran government forces are not winning now" and will not do so without in two days." He said the primary impact of the elec- tions would be to weaken moderates and strengthen the extreme right. Like White. Leahy called for negotiations and a major reassessment of U.S. policy including military aid after the election participation by leftist candidates who are supported by 20 to 30 percent of the population. "basic changes in the opinions of the people" or the aid of U.S. ground forces. with an eye toward encouraging talks between various factions in El Salvador. Also during the program, the secretary general of the Organization of American States urged the United States to "show interest" in El Salvador events but "not FRONTIERS OF SCIENCE presents J. Robert Schrieffer r" super-conductivit- WASHINGTON The nation's governors gave a mixed and often skeptical reaction Sunday to administration arguments that there will be "no winners, no WARSAW, Poland just abandon any political "ambitions" and must use strikes only as the "ultimate measure" in labor disputes. The statement coincided with an announcement in Moscow that Polish martial law chief Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski will visit the Soviet Union in early March. No date or agenda was set for the trip, reported by the official Soviet news agency Tass, but Jaruzelski was almost certain to meet with Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev. The trade union guidelines came as the WITHOUT INJURING QUANTUM THEORY" be divided into two Traditionally, it has been believed that an elementary particle cannot When particles, termed quarks, pieces but can only be observed as an undivided particle. in having fractional charge I 3 were introduced a decade ago elementary particle physics, is fractional. It now even undivided theircharge conceived as though particles, being they were the property of of exhibiting appears that certain one dimensional conductors having fractional electron number. and fractional which have charge excitations termed solitons will be discussed. These peculiar twists of quantum theory 7:00 P.M. The military govern- ment outlined guidelines Sunday for reactivating trade unions, declaring they y. 103 J,C. Fletcher (North Physics) Building Monday, 22 February 1982 policy-settin- Communist Party Central g Committee prepared to meet for the first time since martial law was declared last Dec. 13. At the same time, Roman Catholic bishops from across Poland were expected to meet in Warsaw to forge church policy toward martial law authorities following . , Primate Jozef Glemp's return from the Vatican, where he recently met with Pope imposed by Salvadorans, he said." In Rome, an Italian newspaper which had been granted an exclusive interview with the Polish-bor- n pope on Sunday quoted John Paul as saying that as a Pole, he "cannot AppliCATiONS NOW AVAiUblE f OR ChRONidE f losers" under President Reagan's "new Poland reactivates unions "SOLID STATE 'QUARKS': HOW TO SPLIT AN ELECTRON EdiTOR-iN-chiE- Governors mixed on plans participate directly." "The Salvadorans must find the solution to their own problems." Alejandro Orfila said. "No solution will be final" unless it is imposed by Salvadorans, he said. Center for Theoretical Physics. University of California at Santa Barbara. Prof. Schrieffer shared the Nobel Prize in 1972 for the theory of "Bardcen-Coopcr-Schrieffc- activists were interned, among them Solidarity chief Lech Walesa. PAP said the rules would be offered for discussion in plants and institutions and officials would listen "carefully" from "honest working men." but not to "determined enemies of socialism." The guidelines restrict the right to strike, won by workers during August 1 980 protests that led to formation of Solidarity in the Gdansk shipyards. The government said walkouts will be permitted only as the' "ultimate measure." While said that because of the strength of the right wing, "any candidate who campaigned on the basis of peace and reconciliation . . . would be shot down by the military replace next month's "flawed election" there. He said the election would not allow nation. FX3 miss-- ' visiting his' homeland in August for the 600th anniversary of the Black Madonna shrine! A papal aide said the Vatican had received no word from the military on whether an invitation issued before martial law was still in effect. The government's union guidelines were published by the Polish news agency PAP. They are the first official indication of what shape military rulers want trade unions to take. All unions were suspended in the crackdown, including the independent labor federation Solidarity, and many union . . federalism" proposal. "The truth of the matter is the states are already the losers," said Gov. Scott Matheson of Utah, referring to cuts in federal aid to the states in the administration's budgets for fiscal 1982 and 1983. Although budget director David A. Stockman contended that the budget is a separate and distinct issue that "really has no bearing" on "new federalism." many of the governors disagreed. "Are you saying to me . . that this deficit is not important?" New Hampshire Gov. Hugh Gallen. a Democrat, asked Stockman during a session of the National Governors' Association. "I have not suggested anything of the kind,'' Stockman responded. Stockman and Richard Williamson, assistant to the president for intergovernmental relations, appeared at the opening winter day of the association's three-da- y a of and also at meeting state meeting legislators. While nearly all governors support the concept of giving states authority over programs now run by the federal government, they are questioning whether the financial resources also will be made available. "If we're going to be partners, we can't come into the partnership in an anemic position," said Matheson, a Democrat. Williamson responded, "The greatest losers are not any state, but all Americans," a reference to the current economic conditions.' "With respect to the budget," he added, "we're open to discussion." Two Republican governors, James Thompson of Illinois and Christopher Bond of Missouri, urged their fellow governors to accept "new federalism" as the basis for achieving the kind of shift of responsibilities governors have long advocated. Bond urged the administration "not to delay just because we're in tough times." ANd West QuARTERly EdiTOR ThE ChRONidE SPRING 1982 is REspoNsiblE EdiTOR-iisichiE- f foR iUe dAily publicATioN of tNe ChRONidE. WORk EXpERiENCE ON A STudENT publiCAliON is helpful bUT NOT REQUREd. QuARTERly West is ThE UNiVERSiTy Of UTAh. Uterary maqazine of ThE ExpERiENCE IN WlwiNq CONFIRMED CLASS SCHEDULES Can be picked up at the OLPIN UNION AUDITORIUM ANdoR EdiTiNq coNTEivipoRARy poETRy ANd fie- TiON REQUiREd. AppliCATiON MATERiAls AVAlUblE NiSTRATiVE OffiCE dEAdliNE is April UNiON 2. IN 255. UNiON AdlVli' AppliCATiON February 221:00;- - 5:00 pm February 23; 8:00 a.m. 12:00 noon -- |