Rose BowI/ Holida Supplement m e An MX victory See Editorial, Page 4 C hE Lritora re Ninety-three Years off Editorial Freedom 4IaiIQ Arctic Partly cloudy and cod with a h in the mid 20s. Vol. XCIII, No.7 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, December 9, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages BM MX, B-i dominate House debate WASHINGTON- Pentagon critics, Weinberger defended the plan, which fresh from their successful attack on is designed to cluster the missiles so " the MX missile, launched new assaults closely that in the event of a Soviet at- P the defense budget yesterday, but tack the first exploding enemy warhead failed to cut funds for the B-1 bomber and a new aircraft carrier. The voice votes against the amen- dments came as the House resumed work on the $231.6 billion 1983 defense appropriation bill. THE HOUSE voted by a surprisingly large margin Tuesday to deny the $988 million President Reagan sought to begin production of the MX. Opponents said they also would try to educe research and development fun- ding for the missile and its controver- sial "dense pack" basing, but that move was not expected to succeed. "The public is getting the idea the whole thing is a boondoggle," Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.), one of the Pentagon's staunchest allies in Congress, told Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger. "I DON'T think you realize the a egree of trouble the MX basing mode s in now," Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.), another strong supporter of military spending, added as the Senate Armed Services Committee opened hearings. would destroy or cripple the rest of the enemy's warheads in a phenomenon known as "fratricide." He said Tuesday's 245-176 House vote to delete $988 million for the first five missiles-if sustained by the Senate- would amount to "telling the world we are disarming unilaterally." THE HOUSE, meanwhile, neared a vote on the $231.6 billion military spen- ding bill from which the MX funds were cut. The bill still contained about $2.4 billion in research and development funds for the missile. Rep. Joseph Ad- dabbo (D-N.Y.), chairman of the House Appropriations subcommittee on defense, proposed to cut this to $1 billion but said he was not optimistic. In Brussels, U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz sought to reassure America's European allies yesterday with a prediction that the House of Representatives vote against the MX missile will be reversed. Arriving from West Germany. fdr the NATO foreign ministers' semi-annual See MX, Page 6 Daily Photo by MARY CASSARD Dr. John Keyes, the director of the University's new Cyclotron/PET Center, explains the functions of the facility's brain scanner. After injecting a patient with radioactive versions of natural body chemicals, researchers will use the positron emission tomography scanner to show how the brain's parts are working. The center will begin its research after the Christmas holidays. 'U' hails new center for study of brain dise ases Police kill man who threatened Wash. Monument By STEVE KOMAROW Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON- A man threatened to blow up the Washington Monument with a truckload of dynamite yester- day, demanding "a national dialogue on the nuclear weapons question." Af- ter 10 hours, police opened fire as the vehicle was driven in the direction of the White House and the'occupant was killed. Police said they suspected an accom- plice, meanwhile, had made it to the top of the monument and was hiding in one of the rooms. "WE ARE still operating under the information.. . that there is a potential for an explosion," said D.C. police in- spector James Shugart after the body was removed from the truck. There was no indication that the truck had "1,000 pounds of TNT," or dynamite as the man had claimed. Shugart had said earlier that bomb- sniffing dogs had a positive response when they were led to the truck, tipped over on its side in a barage of police gunfire. THE INSPECTOR added that police decided to open fire once the truck star- ted moving and the danger existed of endangering hundreds of people somewhere else in the city. "We weren't about to let the van leave the monument grounds," said Mayor Marion Barry. The truck careened down the grassy slope toward Constitution Avenue, and was brought to a stop at a point still several blocks from the South Lawn of the White House. The truck was registered to 66-year- old Norman Mayer of Miami Beach, See POLICE, Page 6 By DAVID SPAK University medical school resear- chers will now be able to slice up a human body into little pieces to find out how its various parts are working. No big deal, right? It is a big deal, if they don't have to use a scalpel. THAT'S THE idea behind the Uriiver- sity's new Cyclotron/PET (Positron Emission Tomography) Center. The researchers who have been working to build the center say it is the wave of the future in researching and diagnosing a wide range of diseases and ailments. The University's PET brain scanner is one of only a dozen nationwide. Basically, doctors use'the cyclotron to make radioactive forms of natural body chemicals and inject them into a patient's system using a normal hypodermic needle. The patient is then placed under the PET brain scanner, which uses com- puters to make pictures picking up the traces of the radioactive chemicals in the patient's head. By locating the pat- terns of where the chemicals show up, doctors can see if the patient's brain is functioning properly, If it isn't, they can see just what is going wrong, using the right chemicals and tests. THE BIG advantage to. the PET scanner is that researchers and doctors "see the structures (of the body) working, not just the structures them- selves," according to Prof. Sid Gilman, one of the principal researchers of the project. And because researchers can see the inside of a body working, they can also more accurately measure the body's use of chemicals and its blood flow. Gilman, chairman of the medical school's neurology department, along with internal medicine Prof. William Beierwaltes and biological chemistry Prof. Bernard Agranoff, received in 1979 research grants totalling more than $11 million to build the facility and See 'U', Page 2 'U' sequence courses victim of budget cuts By NEIL CHASE and GEORGEA KOVANIS Hundreds of students got a better idea this month of what University budget cuts mean when they tried to register for required classes that sim- ply didn't exist. At least two University departmen- ts-economics and computer and communications sciences-called off the second parts of two-part sequence courses at the last minute becaus they were short of staff and couldn't afford to hire enough visiting professors to teach the courses. MANY SENIORS concentrating in economics, knowing this was their last chance to complete their required two- course sequence before graduating in May, were sent scrambling to academic counselors for a solution to their dilemma. Here they were, they complained, nearly finished with Economics 461, and there was no Economics 462 to "CRISP" into. A number of students in CCS 274 who wanted to take the second part of their non-concentrators' sequence-offered this year for the first time-started a petition drive asking that the depar- tment somehow find a teacher for the course. The cancellations are a signal of a growing problem facing University departments: There are simply not enough professors to teach all the cour- ses departments offer. While depar- tments have been forced to lay off staff members or to stop hiring new ones, at the same time they have been slow to cut back the number of courses they of- fer. "We're not going to fail to graduate anybody over this," said economics Prof. Richard Porter. It's unfortunate, he said, that "our majors are paying for a short-term crisis." This term, both the economics depar- tment and CCS were able to take special steps to deal with their problems. The computer science department at the last minute has found a graduate assistant to teach the CCS 374 class, in- place of a professor. AND economics department staff members promise no senior will miss graduation because of the class change. Although they are still unsure about I See 'U', Page 2 Doily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Seeking equality Students gathered on the Diag yesterday listen to Donovan Mack (inset) speak about the need for an end to discrimination against homosexuals. AP Photo Coast Guard patrol A Coast Guard motorboat patrols a deserted Chillicothe, Ill. neighborhood for looters in the wake of flooding from the Illinois river. 7 TODAY The littlest Scrooges L ET'S NOT hear any more talk about the jolly old elf riding in a sleigh. The kids at the Treasure House Kindergarten and Day Care in Charleston, S.C. are too sophisticated for that. "I saw Santa Claus. He's coming in a car and he's going to knock on the door and bring me toys and buy me a horsie," said 2-year- old Toray Smalls. Nikie Champagne, also 2, thinks Santa Swill probably come through the door "and the chimney, Wish." "It's a world premier," said Gary Marince, engineer at Pittsburgh's WDVE-FM, a rock-music station affiliated with Taft Broadcasting. Hal harmonized with Donny Iris, a Pittsburgh-area rock singer. Part of the song, in which Hal gets his wish to be a rock 'n' roller, is the "Hallelujah chorus." He also does "fa-la-la-la-la." "He can go note for note, pitch for pitch," said Marince, who helped produce the record. "It's a mathematical calculation. A note translates to a frequency, which we can get the com- puter to match and hold for 15 milliseconds, 10 milliseconds or whatever." The computer board consists of microchips glamor spots as local beer. "Oh, it's the chic-est thing," socialite Suzanne Marx was quoted as saying in a local gossip column. "I go to the fanciest parties, and I always order beer over ice. I drank it at the party for Prince Charles this summer and at the opening night of the opera." "It's what I order as an aperitif," said Mary Jones, a Pasadena socialite. "It's not fattening, it fills you up. . . we also had it at the Henry Mancinis last Sunday." West Hollywood restauranteur Kathy Gallagher said "The Hill Street Blues group-the writers, the producers and some of the actors-all come in and drink it after work." And Tina Also on this date in history: " 1922-The Board of Control of Athletics granted formal recogntion as minor varsity sports to hockey, swimming, wrestling, and golf. The action brought the total of varsity sports to ten. " 1948-Beta Theta Pi held an "Open Doghouse" to in- troduce their new boxer, Humphrey, to the University's canine social circle. President Ruthven's dog, Lexy sent her regrets. " 1954-The Regents agreed to a change in student I ,I I