Ninety- Two Years of Editorial Freedom ol be LIE 43U IE aIQ ANEMIC Increasing cloudiness with a chance of showers. Today's -high will be in-the mid-50s.j Vol. XCII, No. 26 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 9, 1981 Ten Cents Fourteen Pages Spartan fans *fight apairhy By DREW SHARP Special to the Daily r EAST LANSING - While everyone seems to be talking about the apathy' pervading here prior to tomorrow's- gridiron tussle versus intra-state rival, Michigan, MSU partisans attempted to- dispel that image with a "Blow Blue". pep rally last night at Dooley's. With the Wolverine-Michigan State kickoff slightly more than 24 hours away, Spartan head coach Muddy Waters and several MSU players added fuel to the students' fight songs and various melodies directed at their Ann Arbor counterparts. The scene was reminiscent of Michigan-Michigan* State pre-game festivities of the past. But more importantly, it was a refreshing change of attitude. THROUGHOUT GAME WEEK,the atmosphere around Michigan State was See MSU, Page 11 The word Preachers provide between-class gospel By FANNIE WEINSTEIN It's 2:30 p.m. About 50 people are standing in a slow drizzle on the Diag. Some are studying, others are gossiping. But over near one of the stone benches about 15 students are listening to an evangelical debate. "THE BEST thing I can do for these guys," says the preacher standing on the bench and pointing to two seedy looking street people, "is not to give. them $15, but a new heart." "I got a big heart, I don't need one," shouts back 30-year-old Wayne Allen, waering a huge cowboy hat and holding a bottle of Popov Vodka, which he comically refers to as God. "The basic problem is . . ." the preacher starts. "THE BASIC problem is that everyday you come out and preach," Allen interrupts. "The problem is that everyone is doing their own thing," the minister counters. The man preaching in the black leather blazer from atop the park bench is not Jerry Falwell, but Michael Caulk, co-director of the Maranatha Campus Ministries Inter- national. Caulk and his co-director, Hunter Fite, a senior at Eastern Michigan University, are out on the Diag everyday, wielding their Bibles, preaching the word of God and fen- ding off the relentless heckling of Allen and his 47-year-old sidekick, Charlie Wade. "WAYNE'S BEEN yelling at us since the very first day we've been sharing," says Caulk, who came to Ann Arbor about three months ago af- ter helping to establish ministries at several other universities. See PREACHERS, Page 9 Daily rPoto by KIM MILL DIAG PREACHER HUNTER Fite (left) and heckler Wayne Allen exchange words over Allen's interruption of Fite's performance. Both Fite and-Allen appear in the diag daily where their evangelical debates have become commonplace. E___________________________y 'U' stargazers probe unknown By MARK GINDIN The discovery of the largest void ever found in outer space has focused renewed attention on the field of astronomy and its practical ap- plications. While conducting a survey of the galaxies, University Associate Professor Robert Kirshner and three colleagues recently discovered a region of space about 200-300 million light years in diameter that contains vir- tually no detectable matter. THE GALAXY survey, originally done to study the clustering of galaxies, -is-only one part of the involvement of University personnel and University facilities in current astronomy resear- ch. Initial stages of the survey were done using the McGraw-Hill Observatory on Kitt Peak in Arizona, Kirshner said. McGraw-Hill is partially owned by the University and is one of three. telescopes currently owned or operated by the University, he added. Kirshner is the director of McGraw-Hill. Another of the University's telescopes is located beside the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory on a mountain 300 miles north of Santiago, Chile. The telescope is a 24-inch Curtis- Schmidt camera useful for making sur- veys of space. It is used extensively by Astronomy Professor Gordon McAlpine in the research of quasars. "QUASARS ARE 160,000 times fain- ter than the naked eye can see," McAlpine said. Quasars are easy to find with the Schmidt telescope, he said. Quasars are believed to be the forerunners of galaxies and further study could have "universe-shaking" implications, McAlpine said. "The laws of physics are at stake and the understanding of black holes is at stake," he said. Black holes are believed to be collapsed stars with gravity so strong that even light cannot escape. "The universe is a giant physics lab," McAlpine said. BECAUSE THE University owns the telescope in Chile, it gets one third of the time assigned for researchers to use the telescope, Kirshner said. "I wish we had more people" to send down and get experience, he said. The other of the University's three telescopes is a radiotelescope located on Peach Mountain outside Dexter, Michigan. Hugh Eller, a professor working at Peach Mountain is doing projects nobody else in the world is doing, Kirshner said. The Peach Mountain observatory is the only one specializing in watching extragalactic objects over time, Eller said. The 85-foot telescope was one of the forerunners of the radiotelescopic 'field, and its discoveries surprised many of its former critics. ORIGINALLY located on Peach Mountain, the McGraw-Hill obser- vatory was moved to Kitt Peak in Arizona in 1975. The observatory is currently co- ovned by three universities-Dar- tmough College, the Massachusetts In- stitute of .Technology and the Univer- sity, William Hiltner, chairman of the astronomy department, said. The three institutions were originally cooperating See 'U', Page 9 i_ Doily Photo by KIM HILL Twirling toddler Kimberly Donahue, 14 months old, tries out her baton routine during the Michigan Marching Band practice at Elbel Field, in hopes of twirling at a Rose Bowl game someday. WILLIAM HILTNER, astronomy department chairman, displays a photographed model of a new telescope he hopes to have financed by the time he retires. He said that if the telescope is constructed, grants to the .-University will increase. .................. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .................:......... . . . ..,... . . .... ... . . ... .. .. _ ..... .. .. .. ... . . .. .. .. . .. .. ......... . a::" . .. . ..:......;:.. ....v............... ...-.-..............--.... .......... .......... ..........................n............r.......?n......n f....o. .... . . «.. . . . . . ......:.......¢.,...... . ...r':s. . : C <.:.f . a. ..:.:il:.,' ..... ... . . ..\"....... ........:....... . . . . .......;;RC.... Reagan policies .may bring war, admiral says By BETH ALLEN Present U.S. defense policies will lead to nuclear war with the Soviet Union unless the two superpowers begin negotiations on limiting arms, retired Rear Admiral Eugene Carroll told an audience of more than 200 last night. Carroll, the deputy director for the Center for Defense Information, a private agency in Washington, said Reagan's support of the MX Missile and B-1 Bomber, and the president's belligerence toward the Soviet Union demonstrates a willingness on the part of the U.S. to fight and win a nuclear war, rather than deter it. "IF THERE'S ONE way to get out of this trap, it's through negotiations on limitations of arms," Carroll said. For practical purposes, Carroll said, the U.S. should focus its efforts on achievable goals, such as establishing a comprehensive nuclear test ban treaty, rahter than total nuclear disarmament. The Reagan administration, he said, believes it should "Talk tough and spend a lot of money." Carroll, who was commissioned as a naval officer in World War 11, said he cannot recall a time when an administration has been' more belligerent with the Soviets. He added that the Reagan administration's tendence to blame the Soviets for all the worlds problems creates world ten- sions. CARROLL WAS THE keynote speaker in a' two-day forum entitled "What is National Security," sponsored by LSA Student Government, the Michigan Student Assembly, and other local groups About 15 members of the Spartacus Youth League picketed last night's speech outside Rackham Auditorium. SYL spokesman Jeff Shomer said SYL believes the forum is "basically a cynical public relations front" and that the military doesn't have any place on this campus. Carroll also said the Reagan ad- ministration has not formulated or defined its foreign policy objectives carefully. REAGAN'S PLANS to deploy the MX missile in silos around the country and to build the B-1 Bomber, a long-range aircraft capable of carrying nuclear payloads anywhere in the world, are costly and unnecessary, Carroll said. In an interview earlier in the day; Carroll said the MX missile project was a "poor solution made for political reasons" and it had no clearcut military validity because the project See ADMIRAL, Page 6 ........................I n.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .c...¢Y..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.".#... TODAY Charity run T 4:30 SATURDAY morning members of the Sigma fraternity of the University and Michigan State University will start their third annual run from Ann Arbor to East Lansing. The mem- bers of the fraternity will run, one at a time, 72 miles to the and shoot every TV news spot on us. Why? Because they're all the same," the 38-year-old English rock star said in an interview with the Los Angeles Herald Examiner prior to a concert in Denver this week. The Stones are on a two-month tour of the United States and will be in Detroit in early December. "If I had to be on stage for 365 days a year, I would go really mad. The personal attention is too much," he said. He said the qudstions he gets from reporters are the same, the coverage is full of cliches and his bad-boy image, especially in America, persists. "He's bad, he's the devil, that growling," said Mitchell Brown of the state Depar- tment of Justice. "We don't normally run into tigers on this job." The cats were found caged outside a farmhouse. Four dogs, two Doberman pinschers and two German shepherds lurked among the 12-foot marijuana plants, and one of them bit Brown on the leg. Officials spotted the plants while flying over the San Mateo County coastline, Brown said. Of- ficers used mountaineering equipment to reach the steep ravines where the pot was growing. The cats, which were registered with the state department of Fish and Game, provide live coverage of the Sadat assassination Tuesday. And that didn't sit well with those who have a daily soap habit. "The ones who called about the soap operas wanted to know why we had something on that didn't pertain to our country," Lana Minor, a receptionist for NBC affiliate WV- TM-TV said Wednesday. "They were asking, 'Who was Sadat?' Two or three didn't even call him by his right name." Minor said the station received about 25 calls. At WBRC, Birmingham's ABC afffiliate, a receptionist said about 40 soap opera addicts called. At WMBG, the CBS ,I i I