ynton SeehWeekend airsailis and all that jazz_____ainen Ninety-Three Years of Editorial Freedom P Sitv 1E aiI Flustered Partial clearing with a few flurries expected. Look for a high in the mid 30s. Vol. XCIII, No. 125 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, March 11, 1983 Ten Certs Ten Pages 'Turner leads 'M' upset over oIowa, 66-60 By JESSE BARKIN The way the students at Crisler Arena mobbed coach Bill Frieder after last night's 66-60 victory over Iowa, one might have thought the Wolverines' t basketball team had just won the national championship. Instead, it was a ninth place team playing the spoiler and probably preventing a fine Hawkeye team from receiving a bid to the prestigious NCAA tournament. "I WENT DOWN and thanked them," said Frieder after venturing towards the south end of Crisler to bury himself among the jubilant Michigan fans. "I watd to congratulate the students because they have hung with us all year." That was the kind of game it was for the inconsistent Wolverines. They had lost three consecutive games before last night and had seen their chance for a winning record almost disappear, with a 13-13 record going into their final home stand. But now Michigan is assured of at least a .500 record as it faces Northwestern Saturday in the regular season finale, But behind the -scintillating play of guard Eric Turner, who tallied 30 points See 'M', Page 10 rdge bars draft-aid law By BARBARA MISLE with wire reports A Minnesota federal judge yester- day barred the federal government from enforcing a law that would deny financial aid to students who have not registered for the draft. Saying the law was "likely to violate students' constitutional rights against self-incrimination," U.S. district Judge Donald Alsop issued a preliminary injunction in a lawsuit that draft resisters and educators viewed as a national test case. THE SUIT, brought by six Min- nesota college students, challenged the law signed by President Reagan last September which required male students applying for financial aid to prove they registered with the Selec- tive Service before receiving any federal funds. "It takes no great stretch of the imagination to discern how plaintif- fs' identification of themselves as non-registrants could incriminate them or provide a significant link in the chain of evidence tending to establish their guilt," Alsop wrote in his 26-page opinion. "Enforcement of a law likely to be found unconstitutional is not in the See MINNESOTA, Page 9 Proposed cuts distress' Ed. School professors, By BILL SPINDLE School of Education professors are confused and angry about a recent proposal to cut 40 percent of the school's budget and eliminate almost half their colleagues' jobs. But in many cases they are trying to remain optimistic about the school's future. Professors learned the outcome of the school's 10- month review early this week when the dean allowed them to read the confidential report just completed by a financial review panel. MANY PROFESSORS said they were confused and disillusioned by what they said is a contradictory report. "When you look at the first part of the report it makes a recommitment to education and the achool," said one professor, who asked to remain anonymous. "But in the second part it is just cut and slice, cut and slice . . . nothing about being better. It's as if folks said they were going to send you to college and then said, 'By the way, we are not going to give you the money to do it.'" Many criticized the panel's report for the extent of the recommended cuts. "I DON'T THINK the school can do what the report asks it to do with the resources left available," said Prof. See PROPOSED, Page 6 Michigan's Paul Jokisch (45) and Richard Rellford (40) fight for a rebound as Iowa's Mark Gannon (44), Craig Anderson (34), and Michael Payne apply some muscle after a missed shot during last night's game at Crisler Arena. Michigan came from behind to pull out a 66-60 victory. conference examines '1984' Does Big Brother have an eye on us? By CARL WEISER Is Big Brother really watching you? University poet in residence Czeslaw Milosz told a crowd of 300 last night that he is beginning to think so. "1984 is a description of reality," Milosz told an opening night audience at "The Future of 1984," conference being held this week to study George Orwell's famous novel. MILOSZ said 1984 marked the turning Former Sen. Eugene McCar- thy yesterday assailed TV news and televised political ads at a press conference. McCarthy is in town to take part in "The Future of 1984" conference. See story, page 5. point in science fiction. Beofre Orwell's novel, technology had been regarded as a means to achieve Utopia, he said. But Milosz said Orwell showed that technology could also become a tool of an evil government. "Manipulation of the past and indoc- trination have existed since time im- memorial," Polish-born Milosz said. He said people don't realize how much their minds are molded by science. The basic flaw with Orwell's book, he said, was that Orwell's totalitarian or- der failed to capture the basic disorder of reality." MILOSZ, A nobel-prize winning poet, is the University's visiting Walgreen Profesor in Human Understanding. Robert Holbrook, associate dean for academic affairs, opened the conferen- ce in place of Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye who was sick with laryngitis. Law Prof. Francis Allen joined Milosz at the opening night ceremonies. "IT IS IN THE private world that friendship, compassion and other life enhancing values were first and most strongly experienced," Allen said. He also criticized television com- paring it to the "telescreen," the monitoring device that haunted the characters of Orwell's 1949 novel. "How great are the differences bet- ween such a society and one in which persons. . . can never bring themselves to turn off the television set?" Allen also defended freedom of the press and attacked fundamentalist religions as a forerunner to Big Brother. "Fundamentalists seek to im- pose restrictions on the privacy of others," he said. Allen said he was concerned by the power of the National Security Agency. "Any government, like our own, that supports (an agency than can) sweep the atmosphere and collect radio messages in the process of tran- smission, identifying and recording them, has earned our serious concern." See PROFESSORS, page 5 D ivest Daily Photo by DOUG WMAHON Regent Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing) called for divestment of University stocks in corporations operating in S. Africa at the first Campus Meet the Press yesterday. Dunn also discussed tuition hikes, the budget review process, and minority enrollments. See story page 3. Research committee By LISA CRUMRINE A key faculty committee yesterday released a report recommending the University allow individual academic units to administer their own guidelines for non-classified research. The 18-page report, which sum- marized previous resolutions passed by the Research Policies Committee, will be presented to the Senate Assembly March 21. Three of the committee's four student members filed a dissenting opinion with the report, criticizing the RPC for not recommending the formation of an oversight group to regulate non- classifed research throughout the University. THE REPORT is the result of a See RESEARCH, Page 6 Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Nobel Prize winner and visiting Walgreen professor, Czeslaw Milosz speaks about how '1984' is already a reality in some East European countries. Milosz is part of The Future of 1984" conference which began last night. TODAY Attention, MSA candidates IRED OF FEELING that your student govern- ment fee goes to fund worthless projects or that the Michigan Student Assembly is ineffective? Quit complaining and try for a seat on next year's assembly in the upcoming April elections. Interested can- and filled. "They're just identical to human cavities," said Dr. Terry Myers, who did the job. Myers has performed dental work on the zoo's gorilla- and Siberian tiger population in the past. Zoo Director Steve Graham said the cavities were probably the result of too much junk food. Peanuts, who is pregnant, used to be a performing chimp and her trainers occasionally rewarded her with a candy bar, potato chip, or a sip of soda pop. Ice cream lover's delight ter be prepared!" warned St. Albans Elementary School student Sandy Raymond in an invitation to the president. "You might just have a stomach ache when you're done, but it will be fun!" For every pound of sundae consumed, sponsors have pledged to send out an equal amount of food staples to areas in the united States hard hit by the recession. The Daily almanac said was marked with violence and disorder. * 1954 - Student leaders announced they would try to for- ce a campus wide vote on a proposed new academic calen- dar. d.1942 - 400 educators from nearly every field of scien- tific and academic achievement convened at the University for the 47th annual meeting of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters. 4 I I i