OCR Text |
Show The Daily. Utah Chronicle, Monday, March 23, 1983 Page Two rcor.i ,f:.;", IMTGnnATCOCJAL L Walesa predicts victory; GDANSK, Poland Speaking near the birthplace of his Solidarity union and flashing the victory sign, Lech Walesa told about 600 cheering supporters labor leader Sunday that "the time will come when we will win." It was the largest public gathering to hear Walesa speak since he was released last November following 11 months of martial now-outlaw- law ed internment. K".-- The former union chief leader raised his hand in a salute and said, "The time will come when we will win."- - The eight words were his only remarks to the crowd, which gathered shortly after a Palm Sunday Mass in St. Brygida's, the parish for workers at the Lenin shipyards. It was in the shipyards that Solidarity gained strength and emerged in 1980 as the only union in the Soviet bloc independent of Communist Party control. Occupation proving costly A spring blizzard bullied its way across the Plains on Sunday after burying eastern Nebraska and shutting down most of Iowa, where police in one county had to use snowmobiles to get around. Three deaths were attributed to the storm. The heavy snow made winter wheat farmers happy by dumping a moist, protective blanket over the crop, but die ice and blustery winds of up to 30 mph made the going difficult if not impossible by car. Scores of churches cancelled Palm Sunday services. Alleged hoax uncovered A man who authorities say held teaching BALTIMORE positions at six universities under false names was caught because he was unable to supply proper identification for a campus parking sticker, a newspaper reports. Authorities became suspicious of Paul A. Crafton when he . failed to supply campus police at Shippensburg State College in Pennsylvania with a car. registration and other information required for a faculty identification card and a parking sticker, The Baltimore Sunday Sun reported. The "director of the campus police said some further checks were needed" when the man, known on campus as Professor John B. Hext, could not supply the'Verification college spokesman Ray Burd told the newspaper. Suspicion also was aroused because of complaints by engineering students about his teaching methods and the publication of an article by the real Hext, a professor in Australia. Crafton, 60, of Potomac, was charged Friday with theft by deception, four counts of tampering with official records and four counts of forgery in connection with alleged deception at another Pennsylvania school, MillersviHe State College. ' Authorities said he used the names of academicians who live outside the United States, r . The storm belted eastern Nebraska, western Iowa, guerrilla attacks, an uneasy truce among Lebanese factions and friction with U.S. peacekeepers as they patrol hazardous territory stretching 60 miles north of IsraefS border. Western diplomats say there are 25,000 to 30,000 Israeli of the troops in Lebanon, spread out over about country. They are as far north as Monte Verde in the central ' highlands east of Beirut. Israeli army spokesmen say 470 soldiers have been killed and 2,592 wounded since the invasion began last June 6 to push out the PLO. Since Sept. 1 alone, 125 soldiers died, 209 were wounded and eight have been kidnapped, an Israel spokesman in Lebanon told The Associated Press. The financial burden of maintaining troops and heavy arms far beyond Israel's borders has also been high. An Israeli spokesman in Tel Aviv estimated that by the end of March the figure would be roughly $1.6 billion. Diplomats say they feel the high human and material costs are a major deterrent to further conflict between Israel and Syria in with Lebanon, even though the latter is being advanced Soviet weapons. er Army morale deteriorating , WASHINGTON The Salvadoran government's military position has deteriorated so severely that leftist guerrillas could launch major attacks into El Salvador's capital by October unless dramatic action is taken, according to the head of a U.S. conservative group. . F. Andy Messing Jr., executive director of the Conservative Caucus and a former member of the Green Beret special combat force, said in a report on El Salvador that the morale of the . who has visited EI Salvador five times since last August. His organization lobbies for legislation on a wide range of issues. Messing warned that the increasing desperation of the military position will lead to soldiers executing innocent people, "As the deterioration occurs at a quantum rate, the human rights violations by not only the left, but the right, curve upward." In an interview last week, Messing said President Reagan's proposal for $110 million in increased military aid to El Salvador, coupled with a new emphasis on using smaller fighting units, could turn the tide if the aid is approved by Congress. ."If El Salvador goes down the tubes, it's Congress that will be at fault," Messing said. , southeastern South Dakota and southern Minnesota on Friday and Saturday. By Sunday, it had moved into Wisconsin and Michigan. The storm wasn't growing or shrinking, "It's just moving, but getting pretty bad," Nolan Duke of the Severe Storms forecast Center in Kansas City, Mo., said Sunday. It was classified a blizzard because of the wind gusts and snow depths, he said. "We've got it blowing 35 to 40 mph in Nebraska and into Kansas, but it's beginning to slacken," Duke said. . The storm, he said, was heading for the northeast, where it would bring "rain and snow in the mountains" Tuesday. Israeli soldiers in Lebanon face one-quart- Salvadoran military. ,. "El Salvador is corrupt from top to bottom," said Messing, hit-and-r- un slow-movi- ng , - BEIRUT, Lebanon government soldiers has eroded and corruption plagues the The long stay in Lebanon while U.S. mediators try to work out a withdrawal agreement has proved frustrating for the Israelis. There have been persistent attacks on Israeli supply lines, political unrest in the central mountains and southern Lebanon, and a growing coolness between Israelis and their pre-w- ar : allies, the Christians. NATIONAL Blizzard dumps on Plains ; v-' th: accociated Pu:co , Cloudiness to porsist . WEATHER English Language Institute i ; 4 $ t Science Majors . , , n ? ' by Eric Gurnoy and Robert Long - . 5-1- f. What do you know about j English for Speakets of other Languages, Beginning and Intermediate, fAfo conversation classes f 8. Pharmacy? Would you like to know V more? Consider Survey of Pharmacy ; (1 credit) Index 4168 Thrusday, 1 1 :00-- 1 1 :50 a.m. '. ; W : For Information Call Betty Fife 581-69- 70 Chronicle staff Meteorologists Today's Forecast: Variable' cloudiness will persist across northern Utah today as cold, moist air brushes to heorth,of the Intermountain Region. Winds ly will be between 0 mph as afternoontamperatures reach near 44-4Chance of precipitation will be near 40 percent for the day. : ; Area Ski Total V Resort New 1982 1983 :182" Alta 14" 216" Snowbird 11" 200" : 12" 166" 177" Brighton j; ;, Solitude 11" 176" 160" Park City 05" 131" 133" - 102": 09" 110" Brighton Ski ; Center ': Touring - 7 New snow totals are projected values forecasted for area ski resorts. v. Division of .Continuing Education Annex For information, 4 call 6731 I7ant to nco youx nE$(5)IRAkJSiE si ax9roor?i v: : Eraser 2 mate v IntoxiistiGa Especially when it has to do with sexuality and physical disability, a painful topic for those who don't know die (ads. Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 560ft-1-, "Sexuality and Physical Disabilities" is intended for disabled persons and their significant others, professionals, paraprofessionals and students interested in working with disabled persons. The course provides current information about the psychological, social and psychological effect of disability as they relate to urv, .: Global Responsibilities" will be; shown on : ; sexuality. :,j Class meets Wednesday, 6:00-8:0m Occupation' p.m., Therapy at the Medical Center, beginning March 30. Register for two hours credit (560.1-1- ) or fornoncredit (56R-1- , fee $30) at the Division of Continuing Education, Annex Building, East Wing. 0 1- : Tuesday, March 29th at 8: 30 am and repeated at 1:18 pjn. In Rm 2180 Annex, Panelists are from the (Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International " the Woodrow WUson Sohoor International and 8t-udle- Pub-Af&- irs 'ia- s, Rrtncton,l)ue Georgetown Unlversltgr School of Tonga Sarvlce and the Monterey Institute of International Studies. For further Information, contact the Placement Office at 881-818- 6. ; Reg.; WOW BUY 1 - hour videotaped panel discussion on "International ACEalrs and Education for A Med.'Pt. Blue .. " GET 1 FREE : 980 each ' . |