0m i chigan DAILY Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 15-S Tuesday, May 23, 1978 Sixteen Pages I -.0 Belgian troops exit Zaire; French KOLWEZI, Zaire (AP) - Belgian paratroopers who helped evacuate nearly 2,500 white foreigners pulled out of this battle-ravaged African city yesterday. French legionnaires patrolled the dusty streets strewn with corpses bloating in the sun. The French and Belgians made separate airborne assaults into Kolwezi Friday and Saturday, ending a week- long orgy of killing, rape and pillage by rebel invaders. Some 1,200 Belgian soliders boarded C-130 transport planes and were flown to a military base at Kamina, 130 miles north of this copper-mining center. IN BRUSSELS, Belgian Premier Leo Tindemans said one battalion would "stay at Kamina to guarantee the safety" of Belgians remaining in Zaire's southeastern Shaba Province. Several thousand Europeans are still in mineral-rich Shaba, with many living 4 ~~~~~~in Likasi and Lhmahes n L ,southeastof Kolwezi. An estimated 800 troops of the French Foreign Legion remained in Kolwezi. Commanders said their mission is to pacify the province, known as Katanga when Zaire was the Belgian Congo and a Belgian colony. Zairean troops began arriving in large numbers Sunday. FRENCH OFFICIALS in Paris reported the rebels killed at least 170 AP Photo whites after invading Zaire and cap- Bound for Venus turing Kolwezi May 13. Some survivors The first of two spaceprobes blasted off for Venus Saturday. Professors from the said 200whites wre killed. University's Space Physics Research Laboratory built some of the spacecraft Frebels also killed some 150 black- devices. See story, Page 3. ERROR TO BE CORRECTED: MCATs scored too low remain Zaireans-both civilians and gover- nment soldiers. They said around 200 rebels were slain by the legionnaires. The legionnaires lost two killed and 14 wounded, they said. Belgian officials said that the Belgian paratroopers suf- fered no casualties. IT WAS REPORTED in Paris that 50 French civilians and six French soldiers who served as advisers to Zairean army units were missing and might have been taken as hostages by the rebels. President Mobutu Sese Seko, furious at a Belgian government suggestion he should have tried to negotiate with the Angola-based rebels, said the Belgian paratroopers were "the last to arrive and the first to leave." He spoke to See REBELS, Page 2 Berkowitz sentencing postponed NEW YORK (AP) - "Son of Sam" killer David Berkowitz, kicking and biting guards who half-dragged him in- to court, had his sentencing postponed yesterday after he called his final vic- tim "a whore" and told her anguished mother: "I'd kill her again." "You animal!" the mother shouted back. Others who were close to the vic- tims wept and shouted in outrage. THlE DARK-HAIRED 24-year-old killer had kicked, bitten and injured three court officers and lunged toward a window in a security office where he was being kept not far from the seven- th-floor courtroom in Brooklyn. He was subdued quickly, his arms were shackled, and, after a two-hour delay, he was half-dragged by a horde of uniformed officers into the cour- troom of Supreme Court Justice Joseph Corso. Berkowitz' behavior was in sharp contrast to two weeks ago when, in the same courtroom, he calmly pleaded guilty to all the murders and attempted murders. IN PUTTING OFF sentencing until June 12, Corso read into the record data that indicated Berkowitz may have planned his outburst well in advance. Later, Berkowitz was taken back to Kings County Hospital, where he has been held since his arrest last Aug. 10. See SENTENCING, Page 14 From staff and wire reports Medical colleges said yesterday that a scoring error on their entrance exam resulted in too many low scores-only three months after law schools discovered that a change in their admissions test had produced a rash of high scores. As a result, scores will be raised for 90 percent of the 27,300 persons who took the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT) on April 15, said James Erdman, director of testing for the Association of American Medical Colleges. No one's score will be lowered. UNIVERSITY MEDICAL School Director of Admissions Colin Campbell yesterday said he was not aware of the scoring error. "I assume it will not be significant for the class we are admitting this summer," said Campbell, explaining that those applicants took the MCAT last year. Campbell said he hopes the scores will be corrected by the time the admissions office begins reviewing scores for next year's candidates. "We are not going to use an incorrect score," asserted Campbell. "In the past, when an MCAT has been scored incorrectly, it has been up to the testing service to make corrections and send them to us. In the past, they've done that." For most, the scores will go up one point on several of the six sections of the exam, which is graded ona scale of 1to 15. THE MEAN SCORE, normally set at 8.0, varied from 7.0 to 7.9 on the latest exam because the test makers used the wrong formula for equating the results with previous MCAT tests, Erdman said. The test and the formula were prepared by the American Institutes for Research in the Behavioral Sciences, Palo Alto, Calif., Erdman said. The test, given twice yearly, is ad- ministered by American College Testing of Iowa City, Iowa. The nation's 122 medical schools, all of which use the exam to help select students, have been told to throw out the original results, which were released about 10 days ago. New scores will be sent out by June 10 or earlier for those seeking to enter medical schools this fall, Erdman said. Most of those who took the April test were college juniors applying for admission for the fall of 1979, he said. A CHANGE IN the Law School Admissions Test (LSAT) produced an unusually high number of top scores on the forms of that exam given last October and December. Students who took it then may have had an edge over those who take the LSAT earlier in the year. When this came to light in February, the test maker, Educational Testing Service of Princeton, N.J., instruced law schools not to try to adjust the scof downward because See MCATs, Page 14