Ninety-Three Years Of Editorial Freedom C I be Mttc igau !EtIU Slick Mostly cloudy tomorrow, with light rain and a high in the thirties. Vol. XCIII, No. 155 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, April 15, 1983 Ten Cents Twelve Pages I I S But regents keep in-state in By BILL SPINDLE The University Regents voted 6-2 yesterday to sell about 90 percent of the University's stocks in companies operating in South Africa as a statement against the country's apartheid policies. At the same time they voted 5-3 to challenge in court a state law which requires the University to divest all of its stocks in those companies by 1984. AFTER SEVEN years of rallies, demonstrations, and even a state law ordering the University to divest, the Regents yesterday reversed two previous decisions to retain stocks. By keeping the stocks, the board had hoped to encourage the companies to promote social change in the country. The resolution came after 18 students, professors, alumni, and Ann Arbor residents - backed by a crowd of about 90 vestments people -urged the Regents to sell University interests in that country. In an effort to placate Michigan firms that have close ties to the University and to gain standing to challenge the state law in court, the University will retain about $5 million of stocks in Michigan-based companies which operate in South Africa. As of Dec. 31, 1982, the University owned a total of about $50 million worth of stocks in businesses operating in South Africa. ALTHOUGH THE University is retaining some of the stocks, a percentage of the dividends they yield will be devoted to programs which promote "educational oppor- tunities" in South Africa, according to the resolution. The Regents' vote represents the largest divestment of funds University Regents voted 6-2 last night to divest 90 percent of their stocks in South Africa. The vote capped seven years of protests over the University's holdings. .Senate confirms Adelman as arms control chief Crisis center helps assault victims cope' Prom AP and UPI nomination despite his qualifications WASHINGTON - Kenneth Adelman, arms control. overcoming three months of criticism ADELMAN, 36, and controversy, won Senate confir- bassador to the L mation 57-42 yesterday as President 1981, was nomina Reagan's arms control chief, ousted Eugene Rost The vote, by a wider margin than ex- Arms Control and pected, was a victory for Reagan, who cy. chose Adelman to be director of the Four Democra Arms Control and Disarmament Agen- presidential ambit cy Jan. 12 and refused to abandon the Adelman in the last Church *approveser leasing Hill Housecz *to Ark t By CARL WEISER The Ark has found a place to dock: right where it was moored in the first place. The First Presbyterian Church, owners of the avant-garde coffee house's home, approved a lease Wed- nesday night which will allow the Ark to stay .. .for now.* Bob Guenzal, attorney for the Ark, said the coffee house will pay $1300 a month to occupy Hill House for one year with an option to renew for one more. The Ark's mangers have agreed to pay taxes and utilities and finance any Sealed renovations. S THE LEASE does not grant the Ark Richard Burton first option to buy Hill House once the Coward's play "P See CHURCH, Page 5 TODAY Financial aid deadline today F YOU'RE THINKING of applying for financial aid, move fast-the application deadline for Fall-Winter 1983 is today. Anyone who wants to apply for federal and University grants, federal loans, or work-study must turn in their forms to the financial aid office, on the repeated attacks on and commitment to deputy U.S., at United Naions since ted to succeed the tow as director of the Disarmament Agen- tic senators with tions spoke against t hours of a three-day debate over the nomination that capped several months of deliberations. Democratic Whip Alan Cranston of California argued that Adeiman's con- firmation "would be a betrayal of the hopes of tens of millions of Americans for swift progress toward a mutual. balanced, verifiable end to the U.S.- Soviet nuclear arms race." SEN. JOHN Glenn (D-Ohio) said, "We should be putting forward.. . not See ADELMAN, Page 3 Adelman ... wins Senate approval By BECKY BERNARD Rape can leave its emotional mark on victims for years. But friends and family of rape victims can also suffer serious emotional stress following an attack - stress which counselors at the Assault Crisis Center say they can help treat. According to Judith Price, educational coordinator at the center, people with close emotional ties to rape victims often suffer from problems similar to what the victim experiences. THE ANGER, guilt, and excessive caution family and friends experience after the attack can interfere with the full recovery of a victim, Price said. "(Friends and family) are the sup- port network that a victim relies on," Price said. "We might be able to help a victim in a counseling situation, but we aren't with the victim all of the time." She said victims who have steady sup- port from friends and family often begin their recovery more quickly. Because of this, counseling for the victim's "support network" is as im- portant as help for the victim herself. Price said people need to know how to help a victim. "THERE IS often a feeling of anxiety. Usually when they find out what they can do to help a victim, it relieves the anxiety," she said. To help rape victims and their friends See CENTER, Page 3 Research guidelines draw criticisms By JIM SPARKS James Nicholls researches ex- plosions. The aerospace engineering professor examines the kind of detonation that can rip through a coal mine or a grain silo. But he also does research on ex- plosions for the Air Force - work that some hope will no longer go on at the University if new research guidelines are adopted by the executive officers. THE GUIDELINES, passed by the faculty Senate Assembly March 21, call for an end to non-classified research "a substantial purpose of which is to destroy or permanently incapacitate human beings." The faculty vote capped nearly two years of an often bitter struggle to ex- tend the restrictions on classified research to include non-classified research as well. Classified research differs from non- classified research in that details of classified projects are not open to the public. Research sponsors decide whether a project will be classified or not. MOST Department of Defense-funded research is non-classified. See PROFS, Page 3 AP Photo ith a kiss and Elizabeth Taylor share a kiss Wednesday night during the curtain call after performing in Noel Private Lives' at the Shubert Theater in Boston. April 21 at noon for students to air their thoughts on how the recent cuts have affected them. Students will be addressing a panel of University financial aid officials, state education officials, and area Congressional representative's aides, who will draw up a report to send to the Department of Education in Washington or use for lobbying purposes. The discussions are being sponsored at ten schools around the country by the United States Student Association and the National Student Education Fund. Students interested in addressing the panel for five or six minutes can sign up by calling Jono Solin at the MSA office. 763-3241. by next tiveness and creativity as a teacher" and "promise as a scholar" by deans and department heads. The winners of this year's awards are Joseph Denny, Pilot Program and the Slavic languages and literature department; Martin Gassler, classical studies; Cathy Johnson, political scien- ce; Bill Knox, Pilot Program, English, and education; Melvin Luetkens, chemistry; Ele Marenghi, linguistics; Michael Sullivan, environmental and industrial health; Christine Weidman, history; and Thomas Will, biological sciences. Q favored closing the doors of state institutions to students who "refused to bear arms for their country." The statement came after some large pacifist demonstration at .the University and at Michigan State College in Lansing. * 1948 - The Young Democrats called for a student vote on a recent Regental ban on political speeches at open public meetings. The group condemned the measure as a move that "does not permit the proper preparation of students for citizenship in a democratic community." " 1971 - Members of a war protest group gave money from income and telenhone taxes to several localg rounS in i I i