University Daily Kansan, September 30, 1983 Page 13 WASHINGTON — Margaret Thatcher, prime minister of Great Britain, bids President Reagan goodbye. Thatcher left the United States yester day after a two-hour nuclear-arms discussion with Reagan. Thatcher hails Reagan plan for nuclear missiles By United Press International WASHINGTON — British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, warning "our nerve is being tested," voiced unwavering support yesterday for plans to deploy nuclear missiles in Europe in lieu of an arms agreement with the Soviet Union. Thatcher endorsed President Reagan's arms policies after two hours of meetings in which agreement on nuclear weapons negotiations over trade and economic policy. "It it takes two to negotiate, and the president has constantly put forward detailed proposals to the Soviet Union," Thatcher said. Reagan and Thatcher, kindred conservative political spirits, both stressed the need to balance a desire for arms and security, in order to resolve to strengthen NATO defenses. IN THE CURRENT Intermediate Nuclear Force talks in Geneva, the United States has offered to scale back its scheduled deployment of 572 nuclear warheads in Europe to conform to a global limit on warheads suitable to Moscow. With deployments set to begin in December, including the placement of cruise missiles on British soil, Thatcher expressed hope that concessions outlined by Reagan this week in a speech to the U.N. General Assembly "will be seriously discussed" by the Soviets. "Our nerve is being tested," she said. "We must not falter now." In the event they are rejected, she said, deployment — viewed by some U.S. officials as the step needed to push the Soviets closer to agreement on a warhead ceiling — must proceed as scheduled. Soviet President Yuri Andropov Wednesday dismissed Reagan's latest offer and accused Washington of pursuing "a militaristic course." THE U.S. REACTION was summarized by a senior administration official: "We're not going to take this as the final word. It's obviously in the Soviet propaganda interest to publicly turn down these initiatives." The Thatcher-Reagan talks dealt extensively with East-West relations in the chilly aftermath of the Korean airliner affair, the situations in the Middle East and Central America, and contentious economic concerns. While Thatchor praised Reagan's efforts on a range of foreign policy Former KU student seeks support for refugees in El Salvador By LAURE JONES Staff Reporter The most serious problem for the Salvadoran refugees in Colomocagua, Honduras, is the constant threat of relocation to Olanche in order to clear the border zone, Laurie Bretz, a founding member of the KU group Latin American Solidarity, said last night. Bretz recently returned from seven months in Honduras where she was sponsored by the National Council of Churches to educate 7,000 refugees. While in Honduras working with the refugees, Bretz said she observed the Salvadoran governments attempts to rescue the refugees so they would not continue to rebel. About 50 people attended yesterday's Rice and Beans Dinner at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, where Dr. John Byret and Brite's slide presentation and talk "FOR ME, WORKING with the refugees was a very inspirational experience. They are a very resourceful and energetic people very dedicated to overcoming their situation," she said. The population of El Salvador is about five million, including more than one million refugees, she said. For the refugees, the flight from El Salvador to Honduras is dangerous, but necessary, to attempt to restructure their lives. Bretz said that a lack of education among the refugees has kept them in poverty while in El Salvador. Out of 6,600 refugees, she said, about 5,000 participate in the educational programs provided by international workers. One of the main problems of being relocated from Colomoncagua to Olanche is the potential destruction of all the work that has been done. The move would encourage invasions into Honduras, because border zones are less defended, and Olanche is a wild area with a history of being repressed, Brezé said. "THE UNITED NATIONS High Committee of Refugees, which is responsible for the security and protection of refugees and their relocation, has been working with freedom with the move, but we do not think that this will happen," Bretz said. "We lived every day with helicopters and airplanes," she said. "Soldiers did rounds within 20 yards of the camps. The psychological tension in the camps is very high and you can just see it in the faces of the children. "The best thing that we can do here in the United States is to bombard the Nations with desert-leaf trees and with discerning, disinterested relocation of the refugees." Brezid said. Bretz graduated from KU in 1978 with degrees in both Spanish and radio, TV and film. She spent four years in the Kansas City area after graduation, teaching English to Spanish and Indo-Chinese immigrants. AFTER HER RETURN from Honduras, Bretz spent two months in Mexico with the Human Rights Commission developing her slide presentation. She receives financial support from the Share Foundation. TIN PAN ALLEY Applications Are Now Being Accepted For KU AMBASSADORS For More Information Contact: The Office of Admissions, 126 Strong Hall The Student Senate Office B 105 Kansas Union Your Organized Living Group President Half price for KU Students Applications Due by October 3,1983 the Chamber Music Society of LINCOLN CENTER Sunday, October 9, 1983; 3:30 p.m. Monday, October 10, 1983; 8:00 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office for reservations, call 913/864-3982 Student ID cards must be presented at the time of purchase and at the door Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, KU Endowment Association, Swarthmore Society, Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment THE MUSICAL SUCCESS STORY OF THE GENERATION The New York Times Public: $8; KU Students with ID: $4; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 VII He's thinking about the test he's going to take today. 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I am a ___ Graduate Student, ___ Undergraduate Student Name Address City State Zip GS Companional, 141 W. 8th St, Ft. Myrtle 3357, DE, U.K. Chicago, US 69027 --fronts, she also adunished him on the issue of high U.S. interest rates and the controversial taxation of mutilational corporations by some states. NEITHER MATTER WAS resolved. Thatcher discussed the unitary tax issue in greater detail with Treasury Secretary Donald Regan earlier in the day and in her departure statement stressed "the importance of trying to secure lower interest rates" to assure worldwide economic recovery. At a news conference at the British Embassy, Thatcher said she's "not assured at all that there will be any action to reduce the deficit." Implicit in her comment on interest rates was an appeal to reduce huge budget deficits forecast by the Reagan administration." Although Thatcher's government increased taxes to the ailing British economy in the black, she reiterated her argument that it is in keeping up the high interest rates." THING THAT because the United States has a big deficit the interest rate is a great deal higher than it would be," Thatcher said. 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