INTERFAITH LECTURES
Last Lecture Series
BARRE TOELKEN
Professor of English, Director of FOLKLORE and ETHNIC STUDIES, University of
Oregon
“AFRO-TURF: Racism and
Contemporary Oral Tradition”
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22
7:30 p.m. • EMU FORUM
The first of a series of lectures, sponsored by Campus Interfaith Ministry, called
"last lectures". The speaker will share basic thoughts and feelings, as though
this were the speakers last opportunity to do so publicly
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
no Kan
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Reagan set to announce
location for ‘dense pack’
WASHINGTON (AP) — Pres Ronald Reagan's announcement
of a basing plan for the blockbuster MX missile is certain to launch a
new round of military and political arguments that already have
stretched on nearly a decade
Reagan, scheduled to reveal his long-awaited decision today
is expected to endorse an Air Force plan known as "dense pack
which calls for clustering 100 missiles close together in super-har
dened silos.
Returning to the White House after a weekend at Camp David
Reagan confirmed he had reached a decision on the basing mode
but told reporters he would not disclose it until today
The missile decision is slated to be announced only hours
before the president makes a nationally broadcast speech on arms
control to propose steps the United States and Soviet Union should
follow to guard against accidental nuclear war
Speaking from the Oval Office, Reagan is expected to call for
improving the hot line between Washington and Moscow and call
for a program of advance notification of planned missile tests
Even before Reagan announces his decision, opponents of the
MX are trying to line up votes to kill it.
Sen Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., says there already are enough
votes in the Senate to stop production of the missile, whose 10
warheads each pack more than 10 times the destructive power of
the Hiroshima bomb.
And there's trouble in the House, as well. "Well, I don't want to
minimize the difficulty with MX,” House Republican Leader Robert
Michel said last week. “That's going to be a tough one."
Rep Joseph Addabbo, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Appro
priations subcommittee on defense, came within one vote in tvs
own panel of denying money for the MX He pledged to fiqht the
missile in the full committee and on the House floor.
Opponents argue the MX could wind up costing twice the
pricetag the Pentagon has put on the program — $25 billion. They
S?V Vs® was,e of money, with some saying the United States
already has enough nuclear firepower and others arguinq that
improved guidance technology has made all land-based missiles
vulnerable
Soviets sift hopefuls to fill
seat of the party president
MOSCOW (AP) - The new
Soviet leadership, acting swiftly
after the death of Leonid Brezh
nev, is expected in the next few
days to name a new president,
fill vacancies in the ruling Com
munist Party Politburo and set
out the plan for next year's
economy
Yuri Andropov, 68, already
named to succeed Brezhnev as
the party’s general secretary, is
Cash
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Mon.- Fri.
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widely believed poised to as
sume the largely ceremonial
presidency, consolidating his
hold on power
Other leading candidates for
the job of head of state are
thought to be Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko, 73,
and Brezhnev protege Kon
stantin Chernenko, 71.
Today, the party's Central
Committee is expected to hold
its second meeting in 10 days to
fill up to three positions in the
ruling Politburo, to sign off on
reports about last year's
agricultural and economic out
put and to endorse the plans in
those sectors for next year
Although the task of naming
the new president lies constitu
tionally with the leadership of
the Supreme Soviet, or national
Parliament, the Central Com
mittee is thought to decide the
question In fact, the issue may
already be settled
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