Ninety-Three Years of Editorial Freedom tJ' L Lit igan 43 Blanketed Snow likely with a high in the upper 20s. Vol. XCIII, No. 105 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, February 6, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages Where should engineers study En By NEIL CHASE It probably won't save any money, but money is not the central issue in the review of the College of Engineering's humanities department. At stake, according to Dean James Duderstadt and the college's executive committee, is the "central mission of the college." Why, they ask, should they train engineering students in the humanities when there is a top-notch liberal arts college less than a block away? IN ITS CHARGE to the committee conducting the review, the executive committee proposed that the humanities department be eliminated and its function transferred elsewhere in the University, presumably to LSA. If that should happen, engineering updergraduates would fill their entire Late spurt sparks Spartans past Blue By LARRY FREED Everything went according to the script. The two stars were center stage, the cross-state rivals fought evenly, and the crowd was up for the event. Unfortunately for Michigan, the script of late has also included bit parts for its supporting cast. All this led to a concluding scene in which the Wolverines dropped their fifth con- secutive game, this time to Michigan State, 70-05. ONCE AGAIN fatigue caught up with Michigan in the latter stages of the con- test, as Michigan State ran off a 12-2 spurt opening up a 65-57 lead with 1:50 remaining to insure the victory. See MSU, Page 8 21-hour humanities requirement with LSA courses. They presently take at least a part of that requirement in the engineering college. "Some students will probably make it in LSA," said humanities Prof. Henryk Skolimowski. "They will resent that for the time spent (in an LSA class), they could have spent more time on another area of the humanities that ap- plies to them." HUMANITIES professors say that their courses - unlike offerings in LSA - are geared specifically toward the needs of engineering students. "Engineers have little interest in literature," said humanities Prof. David Huges, who teaches a science- fiction course. Many professors said their courses are designed to develop an interest in literature among engineering students. 'Some students will probably make it in LSA. They will resent that for the time spent (in an LSA class), they could have spent more time on another area of humanities that applies to them.' -Humanities Prof. Henryk Skolimowski majors," said engineering junior Scott Hollister. But he added that the challenge of competing against LSA students would be good for him. Presently, engineering humanities courses are considered tohbe easier than corresponding courses in LSA "in the sense that not as much material is covered," Skolimowski said. If the humanities department is closed, some of its courses that do not parallel LSA courses would probably be lost, said Prof. Dwight Stevenson, the humanities department chairman. IN ITS CHARGE, the executive committee suggested that the engineering college hold on to courses in technical writing, which teach students how to write sophisticated papers and reports. For LSA to accept the burden of teaching several thousand more credit h y t: s gish? hours to the engineering students each year, the College of Engineering probably will have to pay for it. That means that cost savings are unlikely in .he proposed switch, Dean Duderstadt -aid. But cost savings is not the primary goal of the switch, he added. "We think we're doing an enormous disservice to our students" by forcing them to take humanities courses in the engineering college," Duderstadt said. WETHER OR NOT the professors in the department will follow their studen- ts into LSA remains one of the toughest questions of the review. We have a very serious commitment to do everything in our power to keep their positions," Duderstadt said. But Department Chairman Stevenson said he was concerned about the depar- See PANEL, Page 2 Engineering students are apprehen- sive about the possible switch into LSA courses, although their admissions test scores suggest they can compete adequately against their future classmates. THE MEA.N verbal SAT score for en- tering engineering students last year was 560 - 10 points higher than their LSA counterparts. That success can be attributed to the high degree of selectivity in admitting engineering students, said Lance Erickson, associate director of ad- missions. "It's the most competitive program we have in undergraduate ad- missions," Erickson said. "I'D BE AT a disadvantage because I wouldn't be writing as well as English 20 killed in Beirut bom.bing Doily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Michigan State's Richard Mudd (24) stretches for the rebound as Michigan's Tim McCormick looks on. The Spartans came from five points down to post a 70-65 victory in Big Ten play yesterday as Crisler Arena. Scribbles say more than words From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - A car-bomb ex- plosion turned the Palestine Research Center and the temporary Libyan Em- bassy into roaring infernos yesterday' killing 20 people, wounding 70 and for cing others to leap from balconies or clamber down drainpipes and knotted curtains. Police said the death toll could rise from the tremendous explosion that burned the two buildings, shook the central Hamra shopping district of the city's Moslem sector and sent a cloud of brown smoke and debris skyward. A SHADOWY group called the Front for the Liberation of Lebanon from Foreigners claimed responsibility, and the Soviet news agency Tass blamed the Israelis and their agents. There was no confirmation that either was behind the remote-controlled blast in West Beirut. Panicked and screaming occupants of the seven-story research center jum- ped from the lower floors. Others scrambled down drainpipes on the side of the building. Some tore curtains from office windows and used them as ropes to escape. Ambulances and private cars tran- sported the wounded through crowded streets as Lebanese army troops and Italian members of the multinational peace-keeping forces cleared the way. Among the dead were three Lebanese police guards and among the wounded were 17 plainclothesmen who apparen- tly had been keeping the offices under surveillance, police said. Police Sgt. Youssef Bitar said the- blast was caused by an estimated 132 pounds of hexogene, a liquefied gas, placed in a car and detonated by remote control. He said the force of the blast was equivalent to 528 pounds o TNT. The car, described by one Lebanese radio station as a blue, American-made model, was parked in front of the research center, where remaining Palestine Liberation Organization of- ficials are headquartered. It is across from Karicas Street from the tem- porary Libyan Embassy and its news agency. "Weywere the target of the explosion, which was a new crime in the chain of Israeli crimes against the Palestinian and Lebanese peoples," said PLO representative Chefic al Hout. Libyan interests hae been a frequent target of right-wing terrorists because of Col. Moammar Khadafy's support of See BOMB, Page 3 A r ''~o/ ,!ok pay 1,f/ea.#eX4 / A , W ,, 41 , ' drco//ee p4ae G n oh A ? b /el/Mi dkz dr i's tttd t d4d , 'ei ha a2 ckl /~ ~d /Zf~& rYC fll1 - clrd c in dei ~ yo/ d ~i/tdt MeIJUJ4 / 1Zlt ciAf r~ / GC//u / o /'iw, d iec z -- /o i, S zetk.6z w5 C9UkecAt4Oh k 'lrp aiA k .y o : ~ cn ri n 'y w a a dA l ag/ketkee' heedzLt !rt ru4d 4zaed 1% / o Sclniel- 25ee 77,64F.S, yw t Nazi criminal faces trial for murders. Grad women face bias at 'U' LYON, France (AP) - Klaus Barbie, Nazi "Butcher of Lyon," was expelled from Bolivia and flown to France under military guard yesterday to be tried for torturing and killing thousands of Jews and resistance fighters during World War II. The Interior. Ministry said Barbie, 69. was transferred to the Fort de Montluc military prison in Lyon where he was indicted for "crimes against humanity" for his actions as the Gestapo chief of Lyon from 1942-44 during the World War II Nazi oc- cupation of France. No trial date was announced. BARBIE'S plane apparently had been scheduled to land at the Satolas military base at Lyon, but those plans were changed for security reasons. There had been reports that Barbie would be flown to Lyon, and a middle- aged woman was found at the Lyon air- port with a .22-caliber riflq concealed in a white sheet. The woman was detained for questioning and police reported she told them that her parents had been sent to a Nazi detention camp in France during World War II. Police had searched the Lyon airport following a bomb alert, and dozens of people had gathered outside the ter- minal. One of them, Tina Godet, said her mother had died in a Nazi concen- By JAN RUBENSTEIN The problems women face at the University are inherent in the in- stitution and not just a series of isolated incidents, a group of administrators and faculty said yesterday at a con- ference on women and graduate schools. Speakers agreed that some barriers women face include bias on the part of professors, the lack of tenured female faculty, and the absence of support groups for female graduate students. But they offered different ways to ap- proach the problems. THE UNIVERSITY'S Center for Con- tinuing Education of Women sponsored the workshop, "Surviving and Thriving in Graduate and Professional School: Women at the University," which took place at Rackham Hall. 'Women are perceived as dabblers rather than the truly committed.' Psychology Prof. Jacquelynne Eccles Sociology Prof. James House said the University's lack of commitment to support groups for women, and male faculty members who either discourage women or are unsym- pathetic to their needs, are two major obstacles. Speaking before an audience of about 150 people, most of whom were women, House said the chilly environment at the University discourages many female graduate students from com- pleting Ph.D programs. ALTHOUGH women comprise 50 percent of all Ph.D candidates in the sociology department, only 27 percent finish the program compared to 54 percent of the men. Part of the answer lies in makiig more services available to non- traditional students such as older women who are returning to school and See GRAD, Page 2 Barbie '.*. awaits trial See NAZI, Page 3 TODAY- Go green WHAT WOULD happen if someone suggested that Spartan green become the official color of Ann Arbor? The city manager of Bryan, Texas, home of Texas A&M, found out the hard way. Ernest Clark, a graduate of West Texas State University, recently withdrew his suggestion that Bryan n.-- .-.i.. epp-ntnange converalls--the Paul is dead O VER THE LAUGHS OF some legislators and the criticism of others, the Arkansas Senate passed a bill on Thursday that would force record manufacturers to label albums that contain hidden "backward" messages. The bill would require labels on albums and tapes con- taining "backward masking"-hidden messages detected when a recording is player backwards. "Some crazy preacher has concluded that rock 'n' roll is bad and listened to this and wrote it up and sent it to you," said Sen. Ben A Il1n (T)_T a+lenek)a in a fruitles attemnt tn kill the hill. broke into the warehouse and carefully picked over gour- met foods before making off with $100,000 worth of the finest dried mushrooms and scallops. The 4,000 pounds of impor- ted Japanese mushrooms and 1,600 pounds of dried scallops were intended for Chinese New Year celebrants later this month, the warehouse manager said. "You've got to un- derstand. There were some of the finest mushrooms that money can buy. And the scallops, too. The best," said Roosevelt Ouyang, manager of the Mighty Union Import Co. The mushrooms sell for $14 a pound, and the scallops for almost $40 a pound, according to Ouyang. A $5,000 reward he- hnn nfa fr - i n :f-nrmntin: landin t th . ran - -e o rebates from an Ann Arbor travel agency for students who were unhappy with their Rose Bowl accommodations; * 1970 - 600 students closed their accounts with the Ann Arbor Bank to protest the bank's policy of garnishment of Ann Arbor Tenant Union striker's accounts; e 1977 - The Soviet Union called off a scheduled exhibit, "The Art of Russia, 1800-1850," at the University Art Museum, because the University had planned a poetry reading during the festival by a Russian dissident. 0 On the inie rl_ i |