RO FOOTBA L Is B C See story, Page 8 S Progress i~j u aiI on registraion Getting better Mostly sunny and warmer today, See Editorial, Page 4 with a high around 50. Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. XCIII, No. 60 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 17, 1982 Ten Cents Eight Pages oseling review, hits high gear Activists say ruling may stop registration for draft LOS ANGELES (AP) - Draft op- ponents said yesterday a federal judge's decision could force the gover- nment to scrap its registration program, but Selective Service warned young men they must sign up or face prosecution. Barry W. Lynn of the group Draft Ac- tion said in Washington, D.C., that '"the death knell for draft registration" was sounded when U.S. District Judge Terry Hatter Jr. dismissed the case against a 21-year-old admitted draft resister Monday in Los Angeles. Hatter said the registration rules had been put into effect in 1980 "a mere 21 days" after they were published in the Federal Register, instead of 30 days as See OPPONENTS, Page 2 By BILL SPINDLE The administration's review of the University's counseling services will enter a new phase next month, in which special committee will decide what rtions of the service can be cut back or eliminated, administrators announ- ced yesterday. The University's academic and per- sonal counseling services have been under review for a year. But ad- ministrators said the time was needed just to collect information 'about the, services. NOW THAT the information has been gathered, the administration-through special faculty-student commit- ee-can take a hard look at the ser- vices with -an eye toward making bud'get cutbacks. tThe faculty-student committee will try to determine how well the coun- seling services work, what their pur- pose should be, and where budget cuts could be made, officials said. The committee's inquiry will cover 40, counseling and advisory centers across the University including Psychological *nd University Counseling, as well as the separate counseling centers each of the University's schools and colleges maintains. PREPARING for the upcoming budgetary review, another committee spent nearly a year interviewing coun- selors and gathering preliminary data to provide a lengthy and detailed description of the counseling services on campus, said Robert Sauve, an assistant to the vice president for academic affairs. That committee is now finishing up its research. Next month, an expanded versioin of the committee will use the information and descriptions it gathered as a base for a budgetary review of campus-wide services. The second committee will first at- tempt to describe the objectives and functions it feels the counseling units should have, Sauve said.. THE COMMITTEE will ask "what type of counseling should we be providing for the students at this cam- pus," and to decide which of the coun- seling services the University deems most important, Sauve said. The committee's other major goal is to look for places to save money in counseling services while still preser- ving adequate quality and quantity of services. The committee will explain what ef- fects certain cuts-1Q percent, 15 per- cent, or 30 percent-would have on the quality of the units involved. COMMITTEE members will also in- vestigate how money is currently allocated to different counseling units, and if across-the-board or selective cuts would produce the most efficient savings, Sauve said. Sauve, however, said the review was now set up specifically to look for budget cuts, and that no precise savings are expected from the review. "We are in a budget-cutting mode (at the University) these days," he said, See CUTS, Page 5 Columbia astronauts Joe Allen, Bill Lenoir, Bob Overmeyer, and Vance Brand celebrate the completion of the shuttle's fifth flight. Columbia landed smoothly in California yesterday after launching two communications satellites. See story, Page 3.- Samantrai wins in LSA election Panel calls for close scrutiny of "DNA research by DAN GRANTHAM Final vote tallies late last night showed that the new president of the LSA Student Government would be Rajeev Samantrai, who garnered 815 votes to his nearest competitor's 277 votes. Samantrai and vice presidential can- didate Tammy Goldman, who ran un- der the banner of Students for Academic and Institutional Develop- ment (SAID) said last night that their victory was due to hard work on the part of the group. "WE WERE all very committed. Everyone worked extremelyhardon the campaign. We felt we could do a good job on the council," Samantai said after the votes had been counted. Winners in the contest for seats on the council were SAID members Rob Cohen, Michael Hansen, Jodie Levey, Brian Sher, Elise Sosnow, and Carol. Wiener. Winners under the banner of Legislative Efficiency for our Educational Demands (LEED) in- cluded Mark Greenleaf, Deborah Hor- ness, Gretchen Morris, Barry Powers, and Mark Wolf. Independent winners were Steve Apolinsky, Winston Lee, Ron Weiner, and Dayne Myers. ALL THE ballot proposals passed in the election. Proposal A, which would call for investigation of dropping See SAID, Page 5 WASHINGTON - A presidential commission, citing the danger of "at- tempting to perfect human beings," called yesterday for a new body to scrutinize genetic engineering techniques. Alexander Capron, executive direc- tor of the commission, told a House *cience and technology subcommittee that his panel discovered "well- founded" concern that no government body was adequately looking at and ad- 4ressing ethical questions surrounding Ngenetic engineering. GENETIC engineering or gene- splicing, consists of the rearrangement of DNA, the genetic material in all living things. Scientists can add genetically determined characteristics o cells that would not otherwise have possessed them. "Especially close scrutiny is ap- propriate for any procedures that would create inheritable genetic changes or that are aimed at enhancing normal people, as opposed to remedying recognized genetic defec- ts," the commission report said. "The very subjectivity that makes the latter line difficult to draw suggests the danger of a drift toward attempting to 'perfect' human beings," the report added. THE COMMISSION noted public anxiety that work in the field might remake human beings, like Franken- stein's monster, and that the use of these new powers might be considered "playing God." The commission said it found concer- ns about creating a monster exaggerated. But Capron said a prohibition may be necessary in the area of the hybridization of human beings with other living things. "THE PROSPECT of creating an ac- tual being with partially human characteristics offends a deeply held taboo," he said. "There is, however, no legal or regulatory prohibition of such a step. And if the barrier is to survive in the face of scientific advances, the reasoning behind it will need further. See COMMISSION, Page 5 Doily Photo by TOD WOOLF Tammy Goldman (left), SAID candidate for the LSA-SG vice president slot, does some last minute politicking in the Fish Bowl. s By ROB FRANK Members of the Michigan Student Assembly last night found themselves to be both the attacker and the subject of attacks. First, MSA members assailed the director of University libraries, who had come to the student government's meeting to explain his decision to remove vending machines from the University's two largest libraries. THEN, MSA members found themselves being assailed by a group of engineering students, who brought petitions signed by hundreds of students up- set by what they said was MSA's confused attacks on campus military research. The 10 engineering students complained that in at- tacking military research on campus, MSA has lum- ped together engineering students and weapons research. MSA has wrongly suggested that the University administration's decision to funnel more money to the College of Engineering is somehow linked to a rise in military research, the students argued. The engineering students, who presented petitions signed by several hundred supporters, also charged that the man MSA hired to study campus defense research is biased against it. The students pointed out that the investigator, Roger Kerson, worked on a report last year that was critical of military research on campus. ENGINEERING senior Tom Girard said he would like Kerson "to make a thorough, complete report and to get rid of the emotionalism which surrounds this issue," but doubted Kerson's ability to do it. Another of the engineering students, senior Kevin O'Connor, argued that Kerson does not have the scientific background to evaluate adequately Univer- sity military research. "He doesn't know the dif- ference between a test tube and a carburetor," O'Connor told MSA members. Earlier in their meeting last night, however, MSA members were on the other side of the table, criticizing University library officials for their decision to bar food and drinks from the Graduate and Undergraduate libraries. RICHARD Dougherty, the director of University libraries, and David Norton, the director of the Un- dergraduate Library, spoke to MSA members last See ENGINEERING, Page 5 or, sr TODAY Candy coins TOLL MACHINES don't digest candy well, Illinois state police officers have discovered, and at least one motorist who tried feeding the machines with experimentaldimes has been arrested and faces a $1,000 fine. About a dozen machines have broken down in the last month because of motorists' use of candy nickels, says Cpl. William Schmitt, a spokesman for police assigned h to the Illinois Toll Highway Authority. Schmitt blamed the toll machine, faces a fine up to $1,000 on a charge of toll machine, faces a fine up to $1,000 on a charge of criminal damage totproperty. Q Macho, macho man calendar to hit the bookstores. Sure you've seen "The Men of Michigan," "The Real Men of Michigan," and "The Ab- solutely Unreal Men of Michigan" pin-ups, but now there's "The 1983 Macho Man Calendar." Besides Sam, Slim, and Mort, there's Chuck who can make himself belch and Brett who's learned how to light a woman's cigarette without burning her nose. December features Russ, the fisherman, .say he can put worms on hooks without throwing up. And when Russ goes ice fishing, his snot freezes on his mustache. Available at Community Newscenter and Crown House of Books for $4.95. Copyright pending. O " 1932 - The entire German cabinet resigned, and Adolph Hitler refused to help with reorganizing under Chancellor Von Papen. " 1944 - President Roosevelt said he hoped Congress would enact legislation for compulsory one-year gover- nment military training for young Americans. " 1971 - Thousands of women met for the first National Women's March on Washington to voice their opposition to restrictive abortion and contraception laws. " 1973 - The BGS degree was the most popular major this year, chosen by 15.4 percent of all juniors and seniors in LSA. [I ' Sg k w. a_ _ ' ' ', . ° 3 ' , 1 .. 3 . . MEET SAM, SLIM and Mort. That's their dog, Killer, too. When fall rolls around, they put on their hiking boots and flannel shirts ant had fnr th a ndc n m I Awamok. i