Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom t olI E l tt ~Ia4IQ CHILLY Not quite as cold today with a chance of snow flurries. Mostly cloudy all day. High in the 20s, low near 5. XCI. No. 108 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, February 5, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages Adam and Eve were By HOWARD WITT Take Inherit the Wind and read it hrough a looking-glass and you might come close to appreciating the con- troversy. In 1925, a public high school biology instructor was brought to trial for teaching Darwin's theory of evolution instead of the sacred biblical account of Genesis. In 1980, a public high school biology instructor was prosecuted for teaching the biblical version of creation instead f the sacrosanct Darwinian account of natural selection. TTHE CREATION/evolution dis- pute has been simmering for the last 20 years; today, with a new power- evangelism -sweeping the country, it threatens to boil over in dozens of state legislatures and even the U.S. gongress. The result, quite possibly," could be radically altered public school science curricula. * * * Creationists battle evolutionary theory Wilbert Henry Rusch, Sr. would be the first to admit that Adam and Eve may not have looked like the famous Renaissance painters depicted them. In fact, he says, "I don't think Adam and Eve looked like WASPs at all." But whatever the pair looked like - and Rusch will concede they might have resembled Neanderthal beings - he is sure they were the first, the product of a creation, and Darwin be damned. RUSCH IS hardly the Bible-waving fanatic one might expect to find cham- pioning the cause of "creationism." To be sure, he is a deeply religious Missouri Synod Lutheran. But he is also a biologist, with degrees from the Illinois Institute of Technology and The University of Michigan. And he can be pretty convincing. "Darwin's theory of natural selection turned out to be a tautology in the min- ds of many evolutionists," Rusch ex- plains. "A tautology is A equals A - it's true, but it doesn't convey any infor- mation. Natural selection says the fit- test will survive. Well, why do they sur- vive? Because they're fit. How do you know they're fit? Because they sur- vived." RUSCH IS THE membership secretary of the Creation Research Society, a creationist publishing first organization of about 2,600 members. The society, headquartered in Rusch's small Ann Arbor home, boasts of pastors, business executives, and scien- tists among its members from as far away as India, Tanzania, and Ireland. They are Baptists, Methodists, Seventh Day Adventists, Lutherans, and Catholics. And, Rusch believes, there are even some Orthodox Jews. Rusch is also the editor of the third edition of Biology: A Search for Order in Complexity, a high school biology textbook prepared by the society. More than 55,000 copies are in use in parochial schools across the country. The book is not unlike most other basic biology texts - until you get to the section on "Theories of Biological Change." There, where you might ex- pect to, find explanations of natural selection and evolution, Darwin is sub- jected to a 70-page attack. There is no See CREATIONISTS, Page 2 D ily Photo by HOWARDWITT for the Creation Research WILBERT RUSCH is membership secretary Society, which publishes a quarterly journal. 'U' Extension Service faces near elimination By BARRY WITT faculty members, students, and ad- credit courses toward graduate degrees Nin t tf th Un i ity E ministrtors-and the Committee on through the service's Flint and Dear- AP Photo l necy percent of teuniversit yx- tension Service's $1.96 million budget could be slashed next year as part of the University's efforts to trim an ad- ditional $3 million from its reduction- ridden annual budget. A 90 percent cut-amounting to more than $1.75 million-in the Extension Service's budget "would eliminate all off-campus credit programs and main- tain 25 percent of the administrative staff for operation of non-credit and non-instructional programs," accor- ding to Vice President for Academic Af- fairs Bill Frye's memo to a Budget Priorities subcommittee charged with studying the proposed cuts. IF THE UNIVERSITY were to cut the Extension Service budget by 90 per- cent, "it would eliminate the service as we know it now," said Alfred Storey, Extension Service director. The Extension Service operates six centers around the state that offer courses for University credit and provides non-credit programs as well in the Ann Arbor area. The service also directs seminars and conferences at various locations in the state using University faculty members as lec- turers. Before any cuts are actually made, the proposals must be reviewed by the subcommittee, the whole Budget Priorities Committee-composed of Budget Administration, a group of top- level administrators that will make the final decision. ACCORDING TO Storey, the sub- committee is looking at possible cut- backs of 90 percent, 75 percent, and 50 percent. "We're trying to get the ad- ministration to take a minimum amount of reductions," Storey said. . The subcommittee is scheduled to report its findings by the end of this month. In its review, the subcommittee is asking deans of schools that would be affected by a decrease in services. to submit their views on a reduction. Many of the.University's professional schools offer credit courses through the Extension Service. Dean Phillip Fellin of the School of Social Work said students can earn up to an entire term of credit toward a degree at one of the service's centers-located in Dearborn, Detroit, Flint, Saginaw, Grand Rapids, and Ann Arbor-before enrolling at the Ann Arbor campus. FELLIN SAID his staff has not finished its analysis of the effects of a reduction. If off-campus credit were eliminated, Fellin said it could be replaced by programs around the state funded by the School of Social Work. The School of Library Science offers born centers. Library Science Dean Russell Bidlack said he believes his school should offer courses outside Ann Arbor. "As a professional school in a state university, we feel we have obligations beyond Ann Arbor," he said. IF THE EXTENSION Service is for- ced to eliminate credit course offerings, Bidlack said his school would still try to offer both credit and non-credit courses outside of Ann Arbor, probably using the University's Flint and Dearborn campuses. Noting the small size of his program, he said he does not think the adjustment would be too difficult, but added he was not certain if such a shift would save the University money. Storey echoed Bidlack's- concern about the possibility of .reducing the geographic area of Extension Services. "The cut would markedly alter the University's function as a public state institution," Storey said. HE SAID HE bases his beliefs on the notion that one purpose of the Univer- sity "is to accommodate part-time students who can't matriculate in Ann Arbor." Storey said any reduction in general fund allocations to the service would af- fect the credit course offerings, but the JOHN DWYER, husband of freelance writer Cynthia Dwyer who has been held in Iran for nine months on spy charges, awaits word on the outcome of his wife's trial. The Swiss Foreign Ministry said a verdict is expected Mon- day. ran tries Amnerican Storey -.. hopes for the best j ournai: From UPI and AP BERN, Switzerland - An Iranian Revolutionary Court tried American free lance journalist Cynthia Dwyer on espionage charges yesterday and a verdict - and possibly sentencing - was expected as early as Monday, the Swiss Foreign Ministry said. The surprise move came only two weeks after 52 American hostages were released from 444 days of cap- tivity in Iran and at a time when the Reagan administration was reviewing terms of the agreenent with Iran that freed the hostages. Simultaneously, Iranian author- ities released on $1 million bail Mohi Sobhani, an Iranian-born U.S. citizen who had been held on un- specified charges since Sept. 6. DWYER, WHO defied then- President Carter's travel ban to Iran, has been held in Iranian prisons for nine months. A Swiss diplomat who attended the one-day trial said she appeared "nervous but in good condition" and was able to 'speak freely" during the trial. In Washington, State Department spokesman William Dyess said in- formation the department had received reported Dwyer had a JA a sT asspy hearing and not a trial and that "we are not aware of any specific charges." ;Dyess refused to define the dif- ference between a hearing and a trial. But asked if Dwyer had been tried on espionage charges, he said, "Our information is different." The Swiss, who represent. American interests in Iran, did not specify the exact nature of the espionage charges against Dwyer, who was arrested on May 5 at her Tehran hotel by Revolutionary Guards. ESPIONAGE carries a maximum penalty of death.I John Dwyer, who said his wife was arrested when she went to Iran to write articles about the Iranian. revolution, withheld comment "until I hear-a little more officially." President Reagan, asked his reac- tion, said: "I don't know of any news about her but I do feel we have an obligation to bring her home and the others we have there." DWYER, A 49-year-old mother of three from Amherst, a suburb of Buffalo, N.Y., and Sobhani, 44, whose family lives in southern See IRAN, Page 5 non-credit courses are somewhat more stable. "The credit-free program is largely self-supporting," he said. The director was reluctant to com- ment on what effects budget cuts would have on staffing, saying he would prefer to wait until he is certain of the level of the reductions. Vice President See EXTENSION, Page 3 MORE CREDITS THAN UCLA, BERKELEY, STANFORD, HARVARD: 'U' leads in advanced By MARK GINDIN The University of Michigan is number one again. This time, the University leads all other American colleges and universities in the number of entering freshpersons applying for advanced placement credit. The number of AP examinations taken by Univer- sity students is also the highest in the nation, accor- ding to the College Entrance Examination Board, which administers the tests in high schools across the country. WITH 1,427 CANDIDATES for AP credit and 2,222 examinations, the University led the nation, sur- passing the University of California at Berkeley, Stanford University, and Harvard-Radcliffe. AP examinations are usually offered in May of a student's senior year in high school. Depending on his or her score in any of 24 subjects, a student can be exempted from and receive college credit for in- troductory level courses. About two-thirds of the University freshpersons applying for advanced placement credit came from high schools within Michigan, according to Donald Swain, University assistant director for un- dergraduate admissions. "THERE ARE A lot of good high schools in the state," Swain said, "and the people who take AP tests 'The University's size is a factor in the high number of AP applications, but the figures are also a testimony to the University's educational quality. ' -Donald Swain, assistant admisions director are the top students from the high schools." The tests allow students to avoid taking material over again that they have already mastered, he said. The AP candidates appear to do as well or better than students who do not take the tests, said Prof. Frank Casa, chairman of the romance languages placement department. "AP students come in many shapes," he said, but they are usually as prepared for advanced college courses as the students who took the introduc- tory material at the.University. According to Swain, virtually all undergraduate programs at the University admitted AP candidates, with the largest proportion entering LSA. Every geographical area of the state was represen- ted, including the Upper Peninsula, Swain added. He also said the AP program was expanding into more schools and encompassing such unconventional sub- jects as art history. The University regained the top spot in the rankings from the University of California at Berkeley, which had claimed it for the past couple of years, according to Casa, who works closely with the program. Berkeley is now third, with the University of California at Los Angeles in the second spot. "Obviously, the University's size is a factor in the high number of AP applications, but the figures are also a testimony to the University's educational, quality," Swain said. TODAY 'U'fix-it WORK BEGAN yesterday on the renovation of the Cashier's Office in the LSA building. According to University Cashier James Gribble, the renovations are being made primarily for security purposes. Plans call for installing bullet-proof glazing on all of the glass fronts of the tellers' ona -at fr npw namnltt rz.teller facilities. Gribble Wheezing siren Anyone walking within ear-shot of the LSA building yesterday may have been somewhat startled by sputters and groans coming from the roof of the building. According to University Safety Director Walt Stevens, the noises should have resembled a vocal message identifying the broadcast as "only a test," followed by a short siren and another vocal reassurance. The siren and public address system is one of many around town, installed last summer as part of the city's disaster-preparedness program. The cvarm is tested on the first Wedna'uv of eaeh month at 3 body flopping and his mouth frothing. They rushed him to a local veterinarian who placed the animal on the floor to ob-. serve it. Jake promptly walked into a wall and keeled over. "Is he dead?" the owners asked. "He sure is," replied the vet. "He's dead drunk." While Jake slept it off at the vet's overnight, the couple returned home to solve the mystery: A bottle of bourbon was found broken in the kitchen. The episode cost the couple $77 for the vet's fees and transpor- tation to the animal hospital-and Jake one, dandy hangover. n :taS D av although it is a standard practice in zoos," explained the park's biologist High Berry (no joke). Killing excess lions is highly criticized, Berry said, and "There just isn't any market for live lions any more." In May, Rangers will select about 20 percent of the female population, administer the contraceptive (it's actually an injection for lions), and mark the treated lionesses. The idea of vasectomies for male lions was thrown out because it is irreversible and would spoil the gene pool, Berry said. Berry explained the creation of permanent water holes and game fences has made the lions' life much too easy in the park and less time is spent on hunting than normal. "They have become fat ! i I