., N , . M .... «.-., " : a a,, ,,.,,+a..n.. «. .,... aa:,,..a,. , -".-r.-ay .w.,;,.. ..-.. w...a 0 Page 2-Friday, March 19, 1982-The Michigan Daily Creationist, evolutionist square off IN BRIEF 1 4 1 ; - By CHRIS SALATA Before a charged audience of 2,000, a creationist and an evolutionist, both recognized authorities in their fields, squared off for debate in Hill Auditorium Wednesday night. Both men, University anthropology Prof. C. Lorin Brace and Dr. Duane Gish of the California-based In- stitute for Creation Research, came prepared to give the audience an abundance of documented evidence supporting their respective positions. BUT IN -THE end, it seemed, few minds were changed. Brade drew almost all of his evidence for evolution from studies of the pre-historic human fossil records. He cited his own field work in China as well as that of other noted and respected anthropologists. Gish reached into different areas of science for evidence in support of creation theory. He said the laws of thermodynamics, molecular biology, scien- tific probability and anthropology all show that "evolution theory is untenable." GISH ARGUED "there is no natural law that sup- ports the evolutionary process of self-transformation from disorder to order, from chaos to cosmos." The laws of nature support just the opposite, he said. "It is totally irrational to believe the same laws that are working toward entropy and randomness are the same laws that suggest an ordered universe," he said. Brace presented a series of slides, with commen- tary and interpretation, showing a progression of fossil records from around the world to support the theory of evolution. He said the observable evidence of the fossil recor- ds is "pretty continuous" and not full of the "huge gaps" that Gish and other creationists claim. He said the fossil records show living beings evolving at a rate of "1 percent change every 1,000 years.' "This evidence is as effective as anything available at demonstrating why evolution has to be considered a fact," Brace said. GISH SAID molecular biology could not be used to support evolutionary theory. The probability of the more than 2,000 enzymes known to be crucial for life becoming arranged in the proper sequence is "the probability of one in 10 with 40,000 zeroes at the end," he said. Gish called this irrefutable proof that the universe was not created in a natural, mechanical way. "It had to be created by a supernatural being," said Gish. Gish disagreed that the fossil records support evolutionary theory. He said, it is full of "huge gaps" that can not be explained away. . GISH SAID fossil records show "no evidence of an- cestors for worms, jelly fish, or sea urchins. There is not a single transitional form betweeninvertebrate and vertebrate forms of life. Fish just appear- com- plete," he said. Brace contended, however, that "the evidence is there; we have the transitional forms in the fossil records; all one has to do is look," he said. Both Brace and Gish called the theory of the other un-scientific. They accused their opponent's theory of being based on faith and not open to verifiable scien- See CREATIONISM, Page 5 Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Purolator robbed of $2 million BRENTWOOD, Pa.- Two men posing as FBI agents overpowered an ar-" med guard at a Purolator Armored Inc. center and escaped with more than $2 million in cash, the FBI said yesterday. Special Agent Jeff Kimball said the men, dressed in trench coats and snap brim hats, ducked into the building in suburban Pittsburgh about 11:30 p.m. Wednesday as an electric garage door was closing. "They identified themselves as agents, showed some form of ID, and were able to get close enough to the guard to grab him," said Kimball. "They did not show any weapons." Kimball said the guard's hands were handcuffed behind his back and his eyes and mouth were taped. The guard was the only person in the building. No one was hurt in the robbery, he said. "They brought in a vehicle. We have no idea what kind it was," Kimball said. "They proceeded to hit the vault, which was open." Senate passes tough .1 I- FLIPPER IUNNIS T G PPR BYKEVIN K IRISH-1982 *qz YcGu N0'JOIA 5E7NlIAJ6, rlIKE ? No, WArA? CHEgp' TV'. vlrD CGar1s .. 7C' J Ti ThE GLQ6A U A 'LIDFr- . \-Ef;o , - FLIP)> i f / /BU,~LT A5'K ,/ }- / ATNDAT WN / % I r 1 E CAN (y-F.&Some. HE 14NO-S . - / W TLL! k5 TH& MIMTES PNnN) 4OV2SI WE FIND TwJo 6IL.)S E?'JoYiNi fl ST / 6'-ON MIAKE, - _ CZA(~TN~tti~~yq5 ozor P QUIET, 27igPl \\ --Ya oL~l z P!ooK! I o IF YoJR SIMPLY FED-UAP w Tvv mc' HP -r.V. V iDEOLME- S CfR PoNr OwN oNE, c~t A GxI iA--J2 N1 Y SF/IS/,' 46o U'/ &v "'ScvuAI)-S rvs77 N" ,'ajc J504 Purchase , gets you $04 worth of FREE1 GAMES with this coupon.5 Exp. 3-25-82 A£,OOO Ft V RF14EE c.LNBE7.T ANt"A 'P 1 LNG^1 COPoNPE tv-rt ~wFE EAS~r PAID ADVERTISEMENT rules on naming spies WASHINGTON- The Senate passed 90 to 6 yesterday a bill making it a. crime for journalists to publicly identify U.S. covert intelligence agents,. even if the information comes from open records. The Agent Identities Bill was strongly supported by the Reagan ad- ministration and the CIA, both saying it was needed to protect undercover., agents from public exposure and possible attack by terrorists. "I am afraid it is going to be declared unconstitutional," said Joseph Biden of Delaware, who voted against the measure, despite general support for the need to block publication of agents' names. Biden led an unsuccessful fight over, several months to make it more dif- ficult to prosecute individuals, including journalists or authors, unless it could be proved they deliberately set out to disrupt intelligence operations. The bill now goes to a House-Senate conference committee. The House had7 passed an even tougher version. The American Civil Liberties Union and other groups are expected to.,,, challenge the legislation as a violation of free press protections of the First. Amendment. OPEC defends base price VIENNA, Austria- As oil ministers gathered for an emergency meeting,.", two OPEC leaders said yesterday that the cartel should resist pressures to'. cut its base price of $34 a barrel. Mana Saeed Oteiba, chairman of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting countries and oil minister of the United Arab Emirates, told reporters his country was "willing to go all the way to defend the $34 benchmark" at the OPEC meeting opening here today. OPEC's price structure is under pressure from the worldwide oversupply of oil and from price cutting by non-OPEC producers such as Britain and'-" Mexico. Analysts say production and prices should be cut to correct the imbalances on the world oil market. Fort Wayne flood threatens dike FORT WAYNE, Ind.- Volunteers struggling to save their city from a wall of water yesterday reinforced a soggy 15-foot-high dike that leaked flood- water during the night, chasing hundreds more people from their homes. With heavy rains in the forecast, work began on a secondary dike along a critical area of the Lakeside subdivision, part of the eight-mile system of dikes protecting this river city of 170,000 people. Mayor Winfield Moses said the old dike, built after the flood of 1913, was as soft as toothpaste from the flooding which began last weekend. "It's like rebuilding the pyramids," Moses said. "But if we lose the dike and do not have a secondary line of defense, a wall of water will sweep through the area, causing the destruction of hundreds of houses. "We would have a flash flood the likes of which this city has never seen." The three rivers that converge in Fort Wayne dropped overnight from a level of 25.93 feet to 25.57 feet, but no one would predict if the high level reached at 1 a.m. was the crest. .6 M I * l 4 Iii Vol. XCII, No. 132 Friday, March 19, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send - address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar-, bor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International. Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Sundicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY, Sports desk, 764-0562; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising. 764-0557; Display advertising, 764-0554: Billing, 764-0550. ~~~1K HTRC I'm gonna teach you a coupla things that'll 1) impress your friends, and 2) maybe lose some friends. All you need is good eyesight, a little dexterity, and three essentials: a pool table, pool cue, and some, Lite Beer from Miller. CHEAP SHOTS Here's a goodie. I call it the "Cheap Shot' Place a ball on the edge of the corner pocket. Then, take a half-dollar and lean it against the side rail at the other end of the table. (if you don't have a half-dollar, you can always write home to your parents: they'd love to hear from you.) Tell your friends you're gonna supposed to lose money doing trick shots-just win Lite Beers. drTuE COIN TRICK his one drives people nuts. Place a ball on the head spot. With the chalk, make a circle around it, approx- imately 8" in diameter. Then put a quar- ter or half-dollar on top of the ball. (Yes, you can use the same one from before, or you can write home to your parents again.) Place the cue ball behind the foot line and have your friends by Steve Mizerak try to knock the coin out of the circle. Chances are, they won't be able to (this is a good time to work on your Lite Beer and act smug). When you shoot, do one of two things: hit the object ball head-on with follow-through so the cue ball knocks the coin out, or hit the cue ball very, very slowly so the coin rolls off the object ball. TABLE MANNERS Now for simple table etiquette. After you've "hustled" your friends, you gotta keep 'em. So do what I call "Clearing the Table'' Simply offer to buy the next round of Lite Beer. They'll all clear the table fast and Editor-in-Chief ...................... DAVID MEYER Managing Editor ...... ...........PAMELA KRAMER Executive Editor ...............,CHARLES THOMSON Student Affairs Editor ........... ANN MARIE FAZIO . University Editor .................... MARK GINDIN Opinion Page Editors,......... ANDREW CHAPMAN JULIE HINDS Arts Editors .............. ... RICHARD CAMPBELL MICHAEL HUGET Sports Editor .................... BOB WOJNOWSKI Associate Sports Editors .............. BARB BARKER MARTHA CRALL LARRY FREED JOHN KERR RON POLLACK Chief Photographer...............BRIAN MASCK PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell. Kim Hill, Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas. Jeff Schrier. ARTISTS: Norm Christiansen, Robert Lence. Jonathan Stewart. Richard Walk. LIBRARIANS: Bonnie Hawkins, Gary Schmitz. NEWS STAFF: John Adam, George Adams, Jason Adkins, Beth Allen, Perry Clark, Poe Coughlin, David Crawford, Lisa Crumrine, Pam Fickinger, Lou Fintor, Steve Hook, Kothlyn Hoover, Harlan Kahn. Indre wLiutkus, Nancy Malich, Mike McIntyre, Jenny Miller. Amy Moon, Anne Mytych, Nancy Newman. Dan Oberrotman, Stacy Powell, Janet Rae, Lauren Rousseau, Chris Solata, Jim SchreitmueHer, Susan Sharon, David Spok, Lisa Spector, Bill Spindle, Kristin Stapleton, Scott Stuckal, Fannie Weinstein, Barry Witt. OPINION PAGE STAFF: Don Aronoff. Linda Balkin. Kent Redding. Nathaniel Worshay. ARTS STAFF: Tonio Blanich, Jane Carl. James Clinton, Mark Dighton. Adam Knee. Gail Negbour. Carol Poneman, Ben Ticho. SPORTS STAFF:. Jesse Barkin. Tom Bentley. Jeff Bergida. Randy Berger. Mork Borowski. Joe Chapelle. Laura Clark. Richard Demok. Jim Dworman. Lauri Fainblatt. Mark Fischer, David Forman, Chris Gerbosi. Paul Heigren, Matt Henehan, Chuck Joffe, Steve Kamen, Josh Kaplan, Robin Kopilnick. Doug Levy, Mike McGraw, Larry Mishk-. fon Newman, Andrewo Oakes, Jeff Quicksilver. Sarah Sherber, George Tonosijevich. James Thompson. Karl Wheatley. Chris, Wilson, Chuck Whittman. BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager JOSEPH BRODA Sales Manager........ KATHRYN HENDRICK Operations Manager .. . SUSAN RABUSHKA Display Manager . ..ANN SACHAR Clossifieds Manager MICHAEL SELTZER Finance Manager . SAM SLAUGHTER Assistant Display Manager......... PAMELA GOULb Nationals Manager...............LINDSAY BRAY Circulation Mno"ger................KIM WOOD Sales Coordinator............ E. ANDREW PETERSEN SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Wendy Fox, Mark Freeman, Nancy Joslin, Beth Kovinsky, Caryn Notiss, Felice Oper, Tim Pryor, Joe Trulik, Jeff Voight. BUSINESS STAFF: Ruth Bard, Hope Barron, Fran Bell, Molly Benson, Beth Bowman, Denise Burke, Becki Chottiner, Marcia Eisen, Laura Farrell, Sandy Fricke, Meg Gibson, Pam Gillery, morcikGittlemon, Jomie Goldsmith, Mark Horito, Laurie Iczkovitz, Karen John- son, Ada Kusnetz, Gito Pillai, chantelle Portes, Dan Quandt, Pete Rowley Leah Stanley, TracySummerwill. 0 PUBLICATION SCHEDULE [ r ~1982 ____ 5 UW ~ I- - I