Ninety-four Fears of Editorial Freedom P Lit 4 1tIa1Q Freedom Mostly sunny with a high in the mid 50s. ol. XCiV-No. 43 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 26, 1983 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages U.S. soldiers invade Grenada Reagan so From AP and UPI BRIDGETOWN, Barbados - Nearly 2,000 U.S. Marines and Army paratroopers invaded Marxist-ruled Grenada in an airborne strike yester- day, clashing with Grenadian troops and armed Cuban workers. The U.S. forces, ordered to protect some 1,000 Americans on the tiny eastern Caribbean island and "restore democracy," were followed by 300 troopers from six Caribbean nations. PRESIDENT Reagan called the operation which began before dawn, "completely successful." He said 1,900 Marines and Army Ranger paratroopers sized the two main airports on the mountainous, 21- mile-long island that has a population of 110,000. At least two U.S. soldiers were killed and 22 wounded in the initial fighting, according to administration and congressional sources in Washington. They also reported three members of Grenada's 1,200-man armed forces were killed, and 30 Soviet advisers and about 600 Cubans were captured. MEDICAL students, who make up the majority of the estimated 1,000 Americans on Grenada, were reported unharmed, although pinned down by ys mission the fighting. Reagan said his hand was forced by events that have "no place in civilized society," and that he approved the in- vasion of Grenada to protect Americans and thwart "leftist thugs." He said circumstances left him "no choice but to act strongly and decisively. "LET THERE be no misunderstan- ding: this collective action has been forced on us by events that have no precedent in the eastern Caribbean and no place in civilized society," Reagan said. "American lives are at stake." successful Administration officials said the island, 1,500 miles southeast of Miami, posed a strategic threat to the United States because a Soviet-bloc aircraft might eventually use the airport at Point Salines, where a runway was being extended by the Cuban work for- ce. Reagan, appearing at a White House news conference, listed three reasons for the invasion: to protect American lives, "forestall further chaos" and "restore order and democracy." See GRENADA, Page 2 Congress has mixed reaction to invasion AP Photo House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, attending a meeting about the Grenada invasion with other Congressional leaders and President Reagan, yesterday said the public should not criticize the U.S. for sending troops to protect American residents in the Caribbean country. Marine replacements arrive in Beirut as death toll increases From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Members of Congress, already stunned by the deaths of more than 200 Marines in Lebanon, had mixed sentiments as to whether President Reagan should have committed the United States to another foreign military conflict by sending troops to Grenada. House Speaker Thomas O'Neill refused to criticize the invasion, saying "it's no time for the press of America or we in public life to criticize our country when our troops are being committed." REPUBLICAN and Democratic leaders, summoned to the White House early in the day, were informed that the invasion was under way but details of the operation, including casualties, were sketchy. For the most part, Republicans ap- plauded the invasion, calling it "essen- tial" and a warning to the Soviet Union that the United States will not permit "further intervention" in the Western Hemisphere. But many Democrats were skeptical, saying the landing by nearly 2,000 Ar- my Rangers and Marines was "an act of war." :DEMOCR&T CRep-Don Edwards of California said he had written Attorney General William French Smith asking if the invasion is a violation of the Neutrality Act, which Edwards said From AP and UPI BFEIRUT, Lebanon-U.S. Marines were ordered into sand-bagged bunkers !yesterday and told to "shoot to kill" anyone approaching their camp after three trucks that officials feared might be filled with explosives drove nearby. The Pentagon said the death toll from Sunday's terrorist bombing of a U.S. Marine command post rose to 216. The bodies of 197 already were undergoing processing and identification in Frank- furt, West Germany before being flown to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. No date has been set. THE SUICIDE strike was carried out by a man driving a truck packed with a ton of explosives. It was the bloodiest single attack on the Marines in peacetime and sur- passed the loss of life of combat troops on any single day throughout the Viet- nam War. The Islamic Holy War, a Shiite militia faction aligned with Iran's Ayatollah Rdholla Khomeini, claimed responsibility for the bombing and told Beirut newspapers: "We are the soldiers of God and lovers of death." The group demanded the withdrawal of all foreign troops and said "we are ready to turn Lebanon into another Vietnam." THE MARINE commander, Col. Timothy Geraghty, told reporters more bodies were still in the rubble. About 70 Americans were injured, many of them being treated in Military hospitals in West Germany, Italy and Cyprus French spokesman Lt. Col. Phillipe De Longeux said 38 French troops were killed,15 wounded, and 20 were missing in the bombing at a French command seconds after the attack on the Americans. They belong to a multinational force that arrived in Beirut 13 months ago to help the Lebanese government restore order. ABOUT 300 Marine fresh troops, arrived at the American camp yester- day to replace their fallen comrades and to begin construction-of-anewcorn-.- bat and communication nerve center to replace the four-story Battalion Lan- ding Team destroyed Sunday. See NEW, Page 5 Let-in ...questions U.S. intentions prohibited a "hostile expedition against a foreign country with which the United States is at peace." Most congressional leaders declined comment, but-Sen. Earl- Levin (D- Micy.), a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said the ad- ministration "should resolve quickly See CONGRESSIONAL, Page 7 Natural resources school enrollment drops 29% By JACKIE YOUNG The School of Natural Resources, in the midst of implementing a major budget cut, lost almost a third of its enrollment this year, forcing the school to consolidate some courses and eliminate other ones. Enrollment in the- school dropped to 509 students, down 29 percent from 718 students last year. John Basset, the school's associate dean, attributed the drop to three issues: Concern among prospective students over the budget "cuts; a lack of interest in the field of natural resources in general; and high tuition rates. BECAUSE OF all the publicity surrounding last year's budget review, which resulted in a 25 percent cut over the next five years, "people think that they somehow won't be able to com- plete their degree at the school and so they won't even start here," he said. "Also, if a school is up for review and is cut, then people think there must be something wrong there." High tuition costs at the University have hurt the school especially, he said, because natural resources jobs are not as high paying as others, leading paren- ts to believe a natural resources education is not a sufficient pay off for their investment in education. Career opportunities in the field also are at a low since the 1960s and 1970s when en- vironmentalism hit its peak, he said. Basset said the school plans to red-, uce its undergraduate enrollment to between 250 and 300 students by the end of the five years but, because of the rapid decline this year, that number probably will be reached in just two years. "IF WE GET down to the required enrollments before the five years are up, there is nothing wrong with this, but it is just easier for faculty and students to handle if it is done on a gradual basis," Basset said. But he added that "if enrollment con- tinues to go down below the targeted five-year level, then I am going to be more concerned. If you extrapolate from this year's drop that enrollment is going to go down, then I would be worried." Dean James Crowfoot said the school has had to consolidate many course sections. "A shift of this magnitude ob- viously' affects the whole enrollment pattern of the school," he said. "WE ALSO HAVE had to eliminate some courses and make difficult decisions to keep some smaller ones," he said. The school also has had to revamp its orientation program and contact a lot of students personally about changes in the school's curriculum which affected their programs. Enrollment in the other two schools on campus which underwent budget reviews also fell. Art school enrollment dropped 9 percent while enrollment in the education school fell 7 percnet. The Schools of Social Work and LSA and the College of Engineering all ex- perienced small enrollment increases. For the entire Ann Arbor campus, enrollment dropped by 427 students, to 34,432. Enrollment at the University's Flint campus jumped by 682 students, or about a 14 percent increase. "Things are moving generally as I expected," said Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye. "I am a bit surprised the education school (enrollment) didn't drop more than it did." Enrollment in the Colleges of Ar- chitecture and Urban Planning, the College of Pharmacy, and the Schools of Business Administration, Dentistry, Medicine, Music, and Public Health all dropped slightly. School of Library Science enrollment stayed the same. Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Introducing*... Freshman roommates Michele Smith (left) and Lynda Cooley, twirlers for the marching band, practice on the steps of Revelli Hall yesterday. TODAY Yes, Virginia M EMBERS OF THE University community have the opportunity to see Virginia Nordby, director of the Affirmative Action office, speak at today's Campus "Meet will work with Wayne State University students to register voters. Transportation to Detroit is free and the project is open to all University students. Those interested in par- ticipating should contact social work Prof. Barry Checkaway at 763-5960. Meet the press B UTCHER BRUCE Oxford, who has trimmed beef for his friend Ronald Reagan for more than 30 years, confessed recently he never voted for Reagan despite their " - _ ..,I.... r -f .44 14+ loi i n+ l.oh m n +A a himself a niche in American folklore by leaving a mixing stick in a glass filled with soda-water powder and water. Epperson left the glass on his back porch overnight and found the frozen concoction - the first popsicle - the next morning. In 1922, after Epperson had established himself in the real estate trade, he introduced the frozen treat at a -fireman's ball. It was a sensation, and by 1924, Epperson had patented "a handled, frozen confection or ice lollipop." He called it an "Epsicle." He and his partners negotiated royalty arrangement with the Popsicle Corp., but Epperson cn~d nffhic natant to Pnncie1P -ft' fhe flgPv-.,C~Cinn hv, nin sity administrators not to prevent the Gay Liberation Front and Radical Lesbians from holding a Midwest conference on homosexuality at the University. " 1977 - Lino Mendiola, a spokesman for the Chicanos at Michigan, said the Michigan Student Assembly may get slapped with a civil rights suit unless it reverses a decision to ask most political and minority groups from their Michigan Union offices. " 1978 - A group of students traveled to Lansing to rally on the steps of the state Capitol to protest a ballot proposal E ,I I i