The Michigan Daily-Saturday, October 10, 1981-Page 5 Local judge OKs printing of Shroud o Turin book From AP and UPI As a three-day symposium of scien- tists began yesterday on the controver- sial Shroud'of Turin issue, a ban was lif- ted by Detroit Judge Horace Gilmore allowing an Ann Arbor printing firm to publish a book on the much disputed subject. Servant Publications Inc. of Ann Ar- bor will now be able to release its book Verdict on the Shroud at its originally scheduled time next week. Washtenaw County Judge Ross Campbell had prohibited the book's publication con- tending it might jeopardize delicate negotiations with the Roman Catholic Church to allow a'carbon 14 dating test of the shroud. THE IMAGE ON the shroud is that of a "scourged, crucified man," scientists who examined the cloth for three years said yesterday at the symposium. But they added that science cannot decide whether the image is Jesus Christ's. The findings were announced at the start of a three-day conference in Con- necticut where 45 scientists will pore over the study results. The study, called the Shroud of Turin project, concludes the image is that of a human form of a crucified man and is. not the product of an artist. BUT, THE study summary says, "Until further chemical studies are made, perhaps by this group of scien- tists, or perhaps by some scientists in the future, the problem remains un- solved." The science team report said chemical and X-ray tests determined that no pigments, paints, stains or dyes were used to create the image. It also determined that the image was not caused by spices, oils, or any "biochemicals" produced by body in life or death. The scientists said the image was, however, produced by "direct contact with body, which explains certain features." "HOWEVER, while this type of con- tact might explain some of the features of the torso, it is totally incapable of ex- plaining the image of the face with the high resolution that has been amply demonstrated by photography," their report said. The report also said the scientists were unable to create a similar image through experiments. "At the present, this type of solution does not seem to be obtainable by the best efforts of the shroud team," the report said. "THERE ARE no chemical or physical methods known which can ac- count for the . . . image, nor can any combination of physical, chemical, biological or medical circumstances explain the image adequately." The scientists said conclusive evidence of the cloth's age could be gained via carbon 14 dating, which has not yet been permitted by the Roman Catholic Church. A 5~cop°eG~j W00e m o ato a ht ce s.h mv ce a OCTOBER 16,17 -M IHGNTHETRE Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAS Creatures of the night A weird assortment of creepy characters waits to come to life on Halloween night in the window of Campus Bike and Toy on E. William St. .............. . . . . ...................... . . ...... . . .......... . ... .....:........ . . ..... "::::. {}" ... .... ...*. ,., .....n.*.. .. ........ ,. **.*....*.. .. . . . . .......*...:n: a :." .. '$ .. . . f'** ,f. ..17 ..r..JII :...i.,,.*. t*.. S.... . . . . . . . . . ........... 0 LANSING (UPI) - Sens. William a scaled-down version of the sub- but later ones said it would be located Faust, (D-Westland), and Mitch Irwin, marine communications antenna to be "near" the installation on "public e n a t'S (D-Sault Ste. Marie), vowed yesterday built near K.I. Sawyer *Air Base at land." A spokesman for Gov. William to revive and 'push legislation banning Marquette. The project, which has Milliken said it now appears there may Project ELF from Michigan, but aides stirred opposition for years in the U.P., be some state land involved. conceded some questions need to be will consist of 84-miles of underground -m- 0 v e to resolved, cable in Michigan and Wisconsin. "If it was built totally on federal land Faust and Irwin, whose Upper Penin- The bills would amend the state law I don't know whether this would do it or, sula constituents have been up at arms that provides for transfers of state land not," a legislative aide conceded. b a n E L F over Project ELF, said the program is to the federal government. Under A spokesman for Attorney General I~~~an E L F ~~~a threat to the environment and public them, no land or buildings could be AsoemnfrAtre eea health in the U.P. and a waste of defen- acquired by the federal government for Frank Kelley, who.was involved in the se dollars.the purpose of constructing a com- drafting of those measures, said state THE TWO MADE their move less munications grid for the U.S. Navy. lawyers are uncertain at this time 'r oje ctthan a day after President Reagan en- Initial reports suggested the grid whether the same legal principles can ded months of speculation by calling for' would be built entirely on the air baseprovide a basis for stopping ELF. :........... ..,. ..... ......... . ... . .-.. .... . ................-........ ........,....... ..:... ....i "?? tt?.;.v? . .: . .. . . . v,:::::v;............. . . . . ... ~... ..... ....... n.. .. r....r Experts debate global security issues GALLIPOLI DISCOVERED" "A gorgeous film of glowing scenes. Transcends the ordinary." -Gene Shalit, NBC-TV "Today Show" "Absorbing, moving, deepty felt. Brilliantly photographed. The battle sequences rank with those in Kubrick's 'Paths of Glory'." -Jack Kroll, Newsweek "Could well be the movie of the year. As colorful as 'Raiders of the Lost Ark: Exciting, involving and splendidly acted." -Dave Sterritt, Christian Science Monitor "Can take its place with pride next to another World War I classic, 'All Quiet On The Western Front. Poignant, vividly told. -Edwin Miller, Seventeen i A Peter Weir Film (Continued from Page 1) DeGrasse and Denoon was Marc Ross, a university}, physics professor specializing in industrial energy ef- ficiency. He stressed the importance of U.S. self-sufficiency in energy resour- ces instead of dependingon the Persian GuIdcountriess fr oil fb d 'Mother three-speakbr panel at- tacked the problem of defining what shbuld be considered "intervention" in- to other nations' business. MSU Is University Prof. Allen Whiting said he did not want to pass judgement on any intervention actions of any country because the question of good and bad is "in the eye of the beholder." Instead, Whiting said intervention today is a "standard policy" of world politics, and that-political meddling in other countries is not a "superpower disease" limited strictly to the most powerful countries. David Wurfel, a political science professor atthe University of Windsor, Ontario, said one of the U.S.'s greatest future obstacles is its unwillingness to believe that the American empire is dead, and that continuing current in- tervention policies will only cause more problems. Wurfel saidcurrent U.S. policies havethe potential to "make the U.S. look ridiculous." THE THIRD panelist, Gretchen Eick of the United Church of Christ, outlined the situation in El Salvador and urged the audience to write their legislators and get involved in the many "grass root organizations" protesting U.S. military intervention abroad. The final session on the Middle East focused on. recen eV nt& involving Egypt, Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Iran and led to questions on the future for these nations. a~olPIWEIE ER u R OET 1I NMgandPRIA [RE [ PETWEIR__ Copyhi"l CMCMLXXXi y Panomnl Pctues Corpo.tIo\ PG NTAI 6UIDAN SUGGSEAn i Rse P f,*" flMAMOM PICIIR NOW'' HlOWING MON-TUE-THUR-FRI 7:15-9:15 SAT -SU N-WED 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:15-9:15 cal woes hurt campus morale (Continued from Page 1) ministration because programs they believe are central to the school's pur- DWIe, such as nursing, were nearly eliminated. "I'm thinking of going here for two .years then going somewhere else," said ,freshman Jim Nickoff. "The name of Michigan State is going down." Some students said they were upset because Mackey and . top ad- ministrators received salary hikes this summer. Others wornited about the school's* declining enrollment. "THEY USED TO triple people up in rooms meant for two," said Paanamen. "gut this year there are only two to,a room and they are advertising for people to come back to the dorms."' Off-campus apartment; owners have slashed their rates on still-vacant units that are usually filled to capacity. Predictions indicate that MSU's enrollment has dropped 6.3 percent from a year ago. But administrators caution against misinterpreting the declining numbers of students. ASSISTANT PROVOST -Dr. Kissinger said although freshperson enrollment is down by about 1,000 this year, that figure can be misleading. "We say a bulge in enrollment in the last two years, so if you went by the figures from before that, this is the natural trend," he said. The declining enrollment may ac- tually be a blessing in disguise, Kissinger said. "WE'VE HAD A lot of trouble in the business and engineering colleges, because so many students are entering these fields. This may help alleviate some of that," he said. Some members of the university community say the whole financial crisis may have been a disguised' blessing. "I don't think the spirit is gone," said junior Kathy Ulrich. "They'have to get back to the basic reason ' M SU was established in the first place - to educate people." CRISES BRING OUT the best and worst in people, said Judith Lanier, dean of the college of education. The education college was hit hard by the budget cuts, losing, eight un- dergraduate, six masters and seven Ph.D. programs. "When we weren't sure what was going to happen, tensions were high," Lanier said. "But morale is up now. Things are better." Lanier said she believes MSU's ac- celerated approach to reduction is bet- ter than cutting slowly, bit by bit "If you do it a little at a time that can brng you to your knees and when more cuts have to be made," she said. o.Afl EU