Daily mass meeting tonight, 7:30 See Today column Blowing their chance See Editorial, Page 4 Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom ti Relief Sunny skies, for a change, today, with a high in the mid 60s. Vol. XCIII, No. 13 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 23, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages Begin refuses t resign over B eirut From AP and UPI JERUSALEM - Saying Israel's hands were "clean," Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Defense Minister *Ariel Sharon yesterday rejected dem- ands that they resign to take respon- sibility for the massacre of Palestinians in west Beirut. Meanwhile Lebanese in Beirut awaited the return of the multi-national peacekeeping force. In a raucous Parliament session, Begin also won backing for his refusal to form a commission to probe the massacre-sparking resignations by a Cabinet minister and the administrator f the Israeli-occupied West Bank. 4NOT ONE of our soldiers took part in it--their hands are clean," Sharon said of the Palestinian massacre during a heated debate in Parliament. "They mainted their purity of arms." Begin said, "I am willing to stand before anyone in Israel and the world with my head held high and my back erect, and tell him the whole story, of how the intention was good ... and how *this tragedy occurred. Although one of his Cabinet members - -0 crisis resigned and joind another member of his coalition in voting with the op- position, Begin's bloc in Parliament defeated the motion for a formal inquiry by a vote of 48-42. HE ALSO defeated, by a 47-40 vote, an opposition Labor Party motion con- demning Israel's takeover of west Beirut last week. The Israelis said they were trying to keep the peace following President-elect Bashir Gemayel's assassination. Israel has been the target of inter- national outrage for not preventing the slaughter blamed on Gemayel's militiamen. The parliamentary session was tumultuous and the debate over the Beirut massacre was bitter. Sharon's speech was interrupted repeatedly by shouting deputies. One Arab deputy, Communist Toufik Toubi, was carried from the hall for repeatedly shouting against what he called "the murder of innocents under the patronage of Israel." A group of protesters was ejected from the public gallery for displaying placards deman- ding Begin and Sharon resign. See ISRAEL, Page 5 Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Herbert Grossman (left), director of the Institute for the Study of Mental Retardation and Related Disabilities, and Carol Mayer (right), a concerned parent, voiced their disapproval of the recommended fate of the troubled institute at a public hearing yesterday. Ins tilule " profs charge review panel-wi bas By BILL SPINDLE Inteflex program expands to add diversity By JIM SPARKS "Flexies" - students in one of the University's least flexible programs, In- teflex - will have a little more breathing space next year. The fast-paced program combining undergraduate work and Medical School requirements for select students will last seven years instead of six, allowing more liberal arts study. "THERE WAS never a concern of not having technically competent doctors," said Prof. Nicholas Steneck, acting In- teflex co-director for LSA classes. "The question was, can you expand time in the liberal arts with hopes of turning out a different type of doctor." The new program will be only one year shorter than the standard un- dergraduate/Medical School curriculum. Inteflex was becoming "too rigid" with the six-year format, according to former director Dr. Robert Reed. Reed was director of the program during the two-year review which fostered the ex- pansion of LSA courses and a reduction of basic science courses that were duplicated in the Medical School. "OVER TIME, more and more students were voluntarily choosing seven years in order to take more variedclasses or pursue double majors, Reed said. Ann Wallace, a third-year Inteflex student, said the six-year program also hindered emotional development. "My belief is that we may be as good academically as the Medical School students," Wallace said. "But in a lot of ways I feel Inteflex puts you through really fast and it never gives you a time to grow up," she said. DR. LESLEY Rocher, a Fellow in the University Hospital's Division of Nehrology and a 1978 Inteflex graduate, agreed that the program was "emotionally constraining. "I worked very hard and didn't get a chance to pursue all I would have liked to," Rocher said. "I don't regret it, but you never know what you missed." There isn't as much agreement, however, about the wisdom of cutting out science classes that are duplicated in the Medical School. "I WAS really shocked when they told us, because they'd never asked us," said third-year "flexie" Wallace. "I felt we'd had an oral contract. I felt we'd See INTEFLEX, Page 5 University professors charged yester- day that bias and poor methods of in- vestigation resulted in the recommen- dation that a campus medical institute be eliminated. The professors, part of the Institute for the Study of Mental Retardation and Related Disabilities (ISMRRD), argued that the panel which reviewed the institute was biased and ineffective, and for this reason its results should be ignored. THE INSTITUTE faced the cold realities of the University's budget cut- ting plans when a special review com- mitee recommended this summer that ISMRRD be eliminated. The angry charges leveled at the ad- ministration came at a public hearing for ISMRRD held yesterday in the Regents' Room. "(The review) did not provide for the careful consideration that we expected from the University," said Eugene Handley, director of the institute's con- tinuing education division. HANDLEY also said the review, con- ducted during the spring and summer of this year, was unfair because some of the institute's staff members felt '(The review) did no t provide for the that we expected careful consideration from the University.' -Eugene Hadley, director of ISMRRD's continuing education division. they would be better off if ISMRRD was closed. "There are some staff members who said they would rather return to their department of appointment," he said. "The closure of the unit would facilitate that for the tenured faculty." Much of the institute's staff holds teaching positions in other University schools or colleges. JULIUS COHEN, deputy director of the institute, said that many members of the review committee recommended that ISMRRD be eliminated to spare their own units future budget cuts. After the hearing, Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye said he would investigate Cohen's charge, but he believed it was based on "inuendo." The institute's spokespersons, however, agreed that ISMRRD had some problems in its present condition, but they urged the administration to keep it open until more money becomes available for improvements. THERE ARE federal and state gran- ts earmarked for the study of mental retardation that the University can get if it improves ISMRRD, but will never get if the institute is shut down, Cohen said. The recommendation to close the in- stitute was based on losses of staff since 1979, lack of any nationally known research projects, and mixed, rather than overwhelmingly positive remarks about the unit from people the commit- See INSTITUTE'S, Page 5 New 15-story high-rise proposed for city By DANIEL GRANTHAM The Michigan Theatre may have a new, 15-story neighbor soon, if two private developers have their way. Ann Arbor developer Dennis Dahlmann and the Royce Company of Farmington Hills want the city to approve and help finance the building, which will bring new restaurant, housing, parking, and office space to the area. THE PROPOSED building-to be named Tally Hall-would tower over the other buildings on the block bordered by State, E. Liberty, Thompson, and E. Washington streets, filling the spot now taken by a 40-space public parking lot. Southfield architect Daniel Tosch recently presen- ted plans for the proposed Tally Hall, which would have its main entrance on Washington Street, to the city's Downtown Development Authority. City Coun- cil should hear the authority's recommendations on the multi-million dollar project some time next mon- th, according to City Planner Martin Overhiser. The building is part of a series of projects designed to "stimulate private investment and private im- provement, and (to) develop the area," said Overhiser, a member of the development authority. TALLY HALL'S ground floor would hold several ethnic food booths and a large dining area, Over- hiser said the booths might also provide restaurant areas served by waiters. The city's main interest in the building focuses on a six-story public parking garage, which would be built directly above the restaurant area. The 550-space garage, which Overhiser estimates would cost the city, $5 million, would alleviate the area's severe parking problem. A study made earlier this year by the mayor's Blue Ribbon Parking Committee showed a need for 600 additional spaces. Two floors of office space and six floors of apar- tments would top the building off, Overhiser said. The Royce Company and Dahlmann would pick up the tab - between $3 million and $5 million, he estimated - for these floors and for the ground floor. In the past, plans for high rises have run up against heavy opposition from neighborhood groups that feel the buildings would destroy Ann Arbor's charm. But Overhiser said that so far, he hasn't heard any com- plaints about Tally Hall. Daily Phcto by DEBORAH LEWIS Sign of support Participating in a rally in the Diag protesting the Israeli presence in massacre of Palestinian refugees. yesterday, a marcher displays a sign Lebanon and the Christian Militia's r TODAY Wanna write? HEY'VE BEEN trickling in for weeks already. But now we're ready for the masses. It's the beginning of the term, and once again The Michigan Daily wants new staff members. If But Assistant Athletic Director Will Perry said yesterday that the stadium gate keepers have been instructed to allow smaller containers into the stands. Containers such as soft- sided six-pack case, a quart thermos, or a camera case will be permitted past the gates. "We'll allow any object that can fit easily under your legs," Perry said, adding that backpacks and seatbacks, as usual, will not be allowed. The Athletic Department will be mailing postcards to season ticket holders that spell out the new rules. Perry also added that the stadium passout system has been revised-fans A.. A ... _U A- A .. _ L ._ .. AU - --.._ New Testaments are actually professional businessmen from the Detroit area, and members of Gideons Inter- national. The Gideons distribute the New Testaments nationwide to college campuses, prisons, hotels, and motels, according to officials in Nashville, where the group is based. The men are volunteers and pay a membership fee to belong, according to Wendell McClinton, assistant to the executive director. "We are not interested in publicity," McClinton explained, "We are just there to make the books available to those who want them." Students seemed tolerant to the swarm of hih1e finding the Gideons low-key Also on this day in history: + 1969-The University said it would prosecute anyone it could identify in videotapes of a takeover of the ROTC. " 1963-The Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association announced they would set up a joint committee under the supervision of the Student Government Commit- tee to investigate sex discrimination in the Greek system. " 1961-The Michigan Supreme Court ruled that the University is not protected by governmental immunity from lawsuits. E