Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom C I be Litv iE ai1 t Blows Partly cloudy with winds picking up by noon. High today in the up- per 60s. Vol. XCIV -No. 15 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, September 24, 1983 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages 'U' panel examines alcohol abuse By CHERYL BAACKE In an effort to combat a lack of awareness about alcohol abuse, the University has joined a growing num- ber of colleges nationwide by forming a task force to examine the issue. Getting information to students about alcohol use and encouraging them to make responsible decisions about drinking are the group's main objec- tives, said panel chairwoman Mandy Bratton. THE PANEL, which was formed in April, also will examine the patterns, attitudes, and consequences of student drinking. "No one wants to start a temperance society here," said Bratton, building director of Couzens Hall. "I don't think anyone is bent on telling someone they shouldn't drink." But, she added, "It's dangerous for us See 'U', Page 3 Marines wounded in Beirut shelling From AP and UPI Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Bumper cars This driver seems a little confused yesterday as he drives the wrong way on a one-way street. Ann Arbol police ap- prehended the vehicle on Maynard near Liberty. Bo's boys bolt into Badger country By CHUCK JAFFE Special to the Daily MADISON - According to Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler, last week's 25-24 loss to Washington is currently floating down the Mississippi River. That's where the Michigan coach says he threw it on the way home from Seattle, in order to clear his mind and properly prepare for today's game with Wisconsin. THIS WEEK, however, the entire Michigan team could find itself up the river if it loses its Big Ten. opener to an upset-minded Badger squad at Camp Randall Stadium. "(The Washington game) is in the Mississippi, where I tossed it on the way home," Schembechler said. "We had to get rid of it in order to get ready for Wisconsin. They're a good football team and we'll have to be ready." But an experienced Wisconsin offense and serious injuries to Michigan's defense may have left the Wolverines relatively unprepared for the conference opener, prompting both coaches to say that the key to the game will be their respective passing offenses. "IT'S BEEN A long time since I've seen Michigan throw for more than they run," said Wisconsin coach Dave Mclain, whose team has beaten Northern Illinois and Missouri this season. "They're throwing the ball really well right now, and Steve Smith is ex- perienced and healthy. And Michigan always has a good running game. They're as good as they've always been." "I think they will throw the ball against us," said Schembechler, ignoring the fact that Wisconsin has run the ball twice as many times as they have passed. "They're good offensively, they have a good quarter- back, and we have not been getting a good pass rush." Badger quarterback Randy Wright will try to take advantage of that pass rush and a Wolverine linebacking corps that has been decimated by in- juries. WRIGHT HAS completed 21 of 36 passes for 238 yards this season. Thirteen of those completions have been to junior split ends Al Toon and Michael Jones. Tight end Jeff Nault, last year's leading receiver, balances out the Wisconsin passing attack by providing a reliable threat over the middle. The Badger ground game consists primarily of junior tailback Gary Ellerson, who is averaging 5.7 yards per carry over the first two games. Defensively, the Badgers play an inexperienced- but-aggressive squad, led by inside linebackers Jim See WISCONSIN, Page 7 BEIRUT, Lebanon - Two U.S. war- ships and a shore battery blasted anti- government militia gunners yesterday after Druse and Shiite Moslem forces attacked the Marine compound with mortars, grenades and automatic weapons. Four Marines were wounded. Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jor- dan said the guided missile cruiser Virginia opened fire at about 7 p.m., 1 p.m. EDT, and the destroyer Arthur Radford started shooting about three hours later to try to silence guns firing at the Marine base at the Beirut inter- national airport. THE "CHARLIE battery" of the. Marine contingent in the multinational force also fired a six-round artillery salvo during the attacks, he said. Jordan said the wounded Marines were not seriously hurt. He would not identify them or say whether the positions targeted by U.S. fire were Druse or Shiite Moslem. He said the Marines were still taking fire "from both sides" after the retaliatory barrage. State-run Beirut radio said rockets were hitting in and around the Marine compound at the rate of one every five seconds. THE VIOLENCE intensified as effor- ts to attain a cease-fire in Lebanon's 20- day-old civil war stalled. Saudi mediator Rafik Hariri said in Damascus that "new elements" had delayed a truce following a meeting between Druse leader Walid Jumblatt and Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul- Halim Khaddam. Hariri did not elaborate but said he would meet with Khaddam later. The Lebanese government had leaked reports that a Saudi-mediated truce might be declared by noon today and that the United Nations had agreed to provide 600 observers to police a stand-down. Jumblatt, whose militiamen have been battling the Lebanese army in the Chouf Mountains, said earlier in the Syrian town of Quneitra that the multinational force should leave Beirut. "THE WAR in Lebanon is not only for the Chouf Mountains, but for all ,of Lebanon," Jumblatt told a gathering of Syrian Druse in the town, which is near the Israeli-held Golan Heights. "Even if a cease-fire is reached, this does not mean the battle is over." U.S., French, Italian and British con- tingents were sent to Beirut as a peacekeeping force more than a year ago at the government's request to help the Lebanese army take control of areas held by private militias. President Amin Gemayel had plan- ned to go on television in the evening, See MARINES, Page 3 Stanford students call prof 'Hitler of the 80's' STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - As protesters marched and accused him of racism, William Shockley addressed a small crowd of new Stanford University students yesterday, one day after the school apologized for inviting him to speak. About 150 people carried banners out- side the auditorium where about 100 students listened to the speech by Shockley, who believes society is evolving backward because blacks are reproducing too frequently. UNIVERSITY officials had tried to get him to decline the invitation, but he refused. He was one of three Nobel Prize winners scheduled to deliver lec- tures about their research Friday. A physics professor emeritus at Stan- ford, Shockley shared the 1956 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the in- vention of the transistor. He said he would not discuss his views on genetics in his speech Friday. Shockley believes that blacks are genetically inferior to whites and that blacks should be rewarded for allowing themselves to be sterilized. "It is obviously very painful for the black minority," Shockley told repor- ters before his talk. "The black minority is the group that it is most im- portant for my ideas to reach because they are the segment of the U.S. population most threatened by dysgenics." 'Society is evolving backward because of 'excessive reproduction of genetically disadvantaged. .' -William Shockley Nobel prize laureate 'U'work study program needs. applicants- By JODY BECKER Due to a significant increase in federal work-study funds, the Univer- sity's Student Employment Office has found itself left with almost 1,400 un- filled positions. This year the University received more than $2.6 million for the federally- funded College Work Study program, a 18 percent increase from last year's allocation. BECAUSE the additional funds were available this year, more positions are being advertised, University financial aid officials said. Under the program, the federal government picks up 75 percent of an employee's paycheck. As of Sept. 16, 1,255 students had been hired under the work study program, compared to 914 at the same time last year, according to Student Em- ployment Office Director Vivian Hoey. DURING the first week of school, the office placed more than 100 students in See 'U', Page 3 DYSGENICS is Shockley's term for his theory that society is evolving backward because of "excessive reproduction of genetically disadvan- taged." "Shockley: Hitler of the '80s," read one of the banners of the protesters who marched outside Kresge Auditorium. "Academic racism Is not Intelligent," said another. Economists Milton Friedman and Kenneth Arrow, both Nobel laureates, also were scheduled to speak to new students Friday. Shockley's selection drew swift and loud protests from students and faculty, and earlier this week, Stanford deans encouraged Shockley to cancel his speech. "Professor Shockley's inclusion in the program has proved a grievous af- front to many faculty and students," said James Lyons, dean of students. "I think it was naive to think his racist views would be discounted." SHOCKLEY, 73, said he would con- fine his speech to transistors. "If I were to withdraw, it might lead to the con- clusion that I was losing my nerve with advancing age. If I were to withdraw, it might imply a lack of confidence in the positions I have espoused," Shockley said. "My position is that human quality problems in the United Staes arises more from disadvantages in genes than from environmental ones," Shockley told a Commonwealth Club meeting in San Francisco in 1974. "We have a moral obligation to diagnose our human-quality problems - especially those of American Negroes." Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Hand me down This unsuspecting dummy outside Vintage Clothing on State Street gets handed a winter coat for the cool days ahead. TODAY Shaggy street story renowned for their sense of down-to-earth T HOSE CORNY University of Iowa students, practicality have really hit on a functional idea, this time. The University's student senate Thur- sday night approved a resolution urging school and city of- ficials to carpet all 185 miles of streets in Iowa City. Mem- bers of the BAT Party (Beauty, Amiability, and Trustwor- splash," similar to the annual pool-side fundraiser staged by Delta Gamma sorority every year. The senate also passed amendments to the resolution stipulating that the carpeting should be color-coded to the community's various neighborhoods - black and gold for the campus area, yellow near fire hydrants, and pink and lime green around, the fraternities and sororities. The student senate's president, who opposed the resolution, denounced the ac- tion, apologizing for "the immaturity of the majority of the Iowa student senate." [Q and publisher, who is transformed into "Hugh M. Hepner." Barbi Benton, once a flame of the real Hugh Hefner, graces the cover, and the centerfold is devoted to "Christie Hep- ner," the daughter of the publisher and president of Playbore Enterprises. It is no coincidence that Hefner's daughter Christie holds that job at the real Playboy Enter- prises. "Playbore in an early birthday present for Playboy (which celebrates its 30th birthday in November) though maybe not exactly the birthday present they bargained for," said Robert Vare, Playbore editor and publisher. Q Also on this date in history: * 1971 - The University Commission on Women approved a personnel file review procedure to help them find possible cases of salary discrimination against women. * 1976 - A local record album price war pushed across- the-board prices to $3.76 per album at Schoolkids Recor- ds. Distributors predicted competition in the area "could keep the price this low for 20 years." * 1981-A dozen University men created a sensation when they bared almost all for the first "Men of Michigan" calendar. i