Selective recall See Editorial, Page 4 C I be Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom 1E ai1 Sparkly Cloudy and colder, with a chance of light snow today and a high in the upper 30s. Vol. XCIII, No. 65 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 23, 1982 Ten Cents Eight Pages W Mystery surrounds near- death experiences By CHERYL BAACKE "I was sitting there, thumbing through a comic book, and suddenly I could not take a breath. I felt like someone had put a clamp over the trachea," said Carolyn Lewis-Stone of an experience she had when she was 14 years old. "I remember just being scared, then all of a sudden it was just really peaceful. I felt as if I had exited through my back." LEWIS-STONE, who is now a social worker at the University's counseling center, doesn't know what happened to her physically that day. But she does remember vividly what she believes was a near-death experience that followed. Dr. C. Bruce Greyson, chief of psychiatry at the University Hospital, currently is resear- ching cases of near-death experience. It is a phenomenon, he explains, that occurs when a person is very close to death because of an ac- cident, severe injury, or illness. Often a person who has been pronounced clinically dead has revived to relate the ex- perience, according to Greyson. "IT DIFFERS from dreams and hallucinations," he said. "It is perceived as being vividly real." During the experience, he said, the patient is "wide awake, almost hyper- alert." The existence of near-death experience does not prove there is life after death, he said. "I don't know any serious researchers who would say that. (We are) interested in practical ap- plications-to learn more about life." Patients describe three basic types of these experiences: In an "autoseopic" experience, the person floats near the ceiling and looks down at what's going on; in a "transcendental" experience, the patient sees a dark tunnel leading toward a bright light; and in a "life review;" the person sees parts of his life in rapid succession. Many patients also experien- ce strong feelings of peace, and some have the impression they are meeting people, Greyson said. LEWIS-STONE had a combination of tran- scendental experience and life review. "I was standing in this blackness and I realized I was being pulled," she said. "I was aware of my head, (my brain), and my trunk, but not my legs or arms. "Suddenly there was an enormous book that was just fascinating." The book was in color, she said, a contrast to the darkness. The book, organized like a photograph album, opened and its pages flip- ped rapidly. Lewis-Stone was very curious about the pictures. The pictures were like moving film, she said, and she only caught a glimpse of each. "I wan- ted it to slow down. I wanted to see how this worked. Then it dawned on me-this is about me!" AFTER THE book closed, Lewis-Stone began to move in the darkness again. Then, she recalls, "There was an opening of light before me. As I was being pulled along, the light was getting bigger. The only thing I can compare it to was looking directly at the sun or a flash- bulb. But my eyes didn't hurt. I was just fascinated." She heard an unfamiliar voice in her head ask, "Are you ready?" "Somehow, with that question, I seemed to let go of all curiosity," she said. She remembers thinking that there were still some things she wanted to do in her life. "Again, not with my voice, but with thoughts, I said no, simply no. I felt as though I had a choice whether to go or not. "THERE WAS a pause and I was being pulled backwards," she said. At that point she realized it probably had something to do with See MYSTERY, Page 5 Threats of violence *surround Kahane' address By ROB FRANK Despite bomb threats and death notes against his supporters, radical Rabbi Meir Kahane spoke to a group of 90 students last night in the Michigan League. The speech by the rabbi was moved to the League after the Univer- sity Activities Center, his initial spon- sor, decided not to underwrite his ap- pearance. Kahane's general message to the crowd - which had paid a dollar a piece to hear him - was that Jews in America and the world are being misled by leaders who are "chosen for their money, not for their Jewishness." THE LEADER of the Jewish Defense League said he was "outraged" that his UAC Viewpoint lecture had been can- celled. "It is an outrage not-because it Tr is me," Kahane said, "but, because this campus is supposedly dedicated to Autui See JEWS, Page 2 Jail esc By GEORGE ADAMS Three of four prisoners who escaped from Washtenaw County Mail Saturday night are still at large, and officials from the Sheriff's department believe at least one of them has already fled the county. Michael Gregory, 33, of Ann Arbor was apprehen- ded Sunday night at a vacant home in Pittsfield * Township. THE INMATES escaped from the Hoback Road facility at approximately 9 p.m. Saturday by squeezing through a six-inch gap in a barred window while 16 prisoners were gathered in a recreation room talking and watching television, according to New rules proposed defense V By JIM SPARKS were moving ah A key faculty committee wants to reviewing for rewrite the guidelines restricting the classified resear type of military research done on cam- In the past, th pus, and some critics say the change applied onlyt could make it easier for professors to research. But1 help the defense department develop Senate Assemb] new weapons. ministration to The Research Policies Committee all research. T voted last week to ask that the Univer- still not acted on sity make minor changes in the wor- Last Thursday ding of its research guidelines which Committee agr forbid professors from doing research revised guidelin that could lead to the destruction of non-classified r human life. classified rese WHILE members of the committee same. say the changes are designed simply to CURRENTLY make the guidelines more clear and that the Univers eliminate confusing wording, some say research pr the subtle changes could promote cam- foreseeable ar pus weapons research. which, the direc Committee members also said they for fork head with plans to begin the first time non- rch done by professors. he University guidelines to classified defense last April, the faculty ly voted to urge the ad- extend the guidelines to 'he administration has that recommendation. y, the Research Policies reed to ask that the nes become the rules for esearch. The rules for earch would stay the Y, University rules state sity will not approve any. ojectb "the clearly nd probable result of ct application of which. See RESEARCH, Page 5 Dioily Photo by EL IZABETH4 SCOTT ukful of trees? nn Johnson decks lamp posts along State Street with boughs of holly, preparing the city for the holiday'season. wit apees still at large A. -)"Ol cell and ripped an iron bar used to support a desk out of the wall. They broke a 3/4-inch safety glass win- dow and then used the bar to pry open the bars on the window. The four were discovered missing about an hour later, according to Sheriff's Department Com- mander Chester Reese. The Sheriff's Department is urging residents to take "reasonable" safety precautions, but said none of the three is considered extremely dangerous. The escapees are : " Bruce Jackson, 26, of Detroit, five feet nine inches, 135 pounds, serving two and one-half years for breaking and entering, " Daniel Valentine, 20, of Whitmore Lake, five feet ten inches, 145 pounds, serving time for breaking and entering and third degree criminal sexual conduct; and " Daniel Wright, 25, of Ann Arbor, six feet one inch, 170 pounds, serving time for breaking and entering. "WE THINK that two (of the inmates) are still in the county because they're originally from here," Minick said, referring to Valentine and Wright. "The last one, we think, is either in Muskegon or Detroit, his former places of residence." Minick said that prison officials used to worry that an inmate could pry the bars out of the window,'but they never thought anyone could fit through the small space between the bars. "I still don't know how that 170-pound fellow fit through," he said. Washtenaw County Sheriff Tom Minick. Minick said two of the inmates went Reagan backs 'densepI'ack' plan for basing M into an open WASHINGTON (AP)- Wielding both stick and carrot, President Reagan an- -nounced yesterday he intends to deploy the huge MX missile in a "dense-pack" string of Wyoming silos, then prepared to advance new arms control proposals to the Soviet Union. "We would prefer that the Soviets dismantle SS-18s (intercontinental ballistic missiles) rather than we build more holes," Reagan said in a written statement. "But we can accommodate either and maintain stability." To emphasize his long-range goal, Reagan formally named the MX the "Peacekeeper" missile and called his basing plan "a reasonable way to deter attack." THE LONG-awaited MX basing decision, which faces a doubtful future in Congress, would have the United States deploy its first new intercon- tinental missiles in 20 years. But in a nationally televised speech later yesterday, Reagan was to signal the Kremlin leadership that America would prefer reduction of nuclear ar- senals to participation in a dangerous and expensive arms race. Hours before the formal announ- cement, all signs indicated the president had accepted the Air Force recommendation to place 100 MX weapons in super-hardened launch silos spaced about 1,800 to 2,000 feet apart near Warren AFB in Wyoming. THE CLOSE-spacing concept, which the Air Force calls "dense pack," represents a dramatic departure from past missile deployment plans, in- cluding the Carter administration's scheme for the MX. That plan called for spreading 200 MX missiles among some 4,600 con- crete shelters stretching across the Utah and Nevada deserts and shifting real missiles and decoys from site to site. The untested theory behind the dense- pack plan is that most of the MX missiles could survive a Soviet surprise attack because incoming Soviet warheads would disable each other as they converged on the MX silos and ex- ploded. REAGAN SAID cost was a factor in his decision. "We concluded that by pulling the launch sites much closer together and making them a great deal harder, we could make significant savings," from the plan originally en- visioned by then-President Carter. See PRESIDENT, Page 2 In Remembrance AP Photo. Senator Edward Kennedy and Rory Kennedy, daughter of the late Robert Kennedy, pray at the grave of the late President John F. Kennedy yesterday in Arlington, Va. President Kennedy was assassinated 19 years ago in Dallas, Texas. TODAY The Woody show HEY DEFINITELY.didn't sing "annihilate Ohio State and humble Woody Hayes." And that's probably the reason no one got punched in the face. The event? Ex-Ohio State Football Coach Woody Hayes took the spotlight again this week, but this time on the conducting stand. Hayes, the infamous tough .... - 9- -A ffl. *ynnhnr a nlnnina t m State underwear E VER SINCE someone wrapped the state Seal of Oklahoma in old underwear and spirited it out of Guthrie, Okla. 72 years ago, Guthrie's citizens have been trying to get it back. The seal, not the underwear. Yester- day they succeeded. John Hannah, president of the Logan County Historical Society, "stole" a replica of the state seal from the Capitol in Oklahoma City and carried it back to Guthrie, which had been the territorial capital. "We in Guthrie certainly feel it was snuck out in the dead of the night ... after a questionable election," said Hannah. In nnnfactto he ch,,1,nA1 .in r oi9n the rptlrn of the state~ probably several old pair of underwear.. . that's how he got past the guards" at the Logan County Courthouse, Hannah said. What was the official reaction to yesterday's "theft?" A dastardly act, said John Reid, news secretary to Gov. George Nigh, a most dastardly act. O The Daily almanac " 1945 - Michigan's hopes for a victory in its Homecoming game against Ohio State were dashed when Coach Fritz Crisler announced that first string full-back Jack Weisenburger would not be able to play due to a broken bone in his chest. Michigan won anyway, 7-3. " 1968 - Julie Nixon and David Eisenhower announced that they would be married Dec. 22 in New York. " 1976 - It was announced that Betty Ford would receive an honorary doctor of law degree at the University's winter commencement exercises. University President Robben Fleming said, "Mrs. Ford exemplifies todays' independent woman, expressing her views honestly and forcefully. C i !I