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October 29, 1983 - Image 1

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1983-10-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Ninety-four Years
of
Editorial Freedom

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4ir 41r
an

1~Iai1P

Fresh
Mostly sunny with a high in the
lower 50s.

Vol. XCIV-No. 46 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, October 29, 1983 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages

Lebanese
name 11
suspects
in marine
bombings
From AP and UPI
BEIRUT, Lebanon - A well-placed
Lebanese government source said
yesterday that Lebanon has turned
over to the U.S. Marines and the FBI
the names of 11 suspects in the terror
bombings that killed 226 American and
56 French troops.
The source, who spoke on condition
he not be identified, said one of the 11
has been arrested. The source said that
the suicide terrorists who drove the two
trucks packed with explosives wore
funeral shrouds under their clothes and
worked for groups backed by two
kforeign spy services.
CAPT. WAYNE Jones, a Marine
spokesman, said he was not aware of
any list of names being turned over to
the Marines. In Washington, Roger
Young, assistant director of the bureau,
said, "I've not heard about that, and I
doubt it." He added that there were no
FBI personnel in Lebanon.
See U.S., Page 5

its
Grenadian
mountains

From AP and UPI
ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada - U.S. troops.
backed by F-18 jets and mortar fire bat-
tled Cuban soldiers entrenched in the
mountains of Grenada yester-
day. The fighting has killed 11
Americans and wounded 67 others sin-
ce the Caribbean island was invaded
four days ago, the Pentagon said.
At least 30 Cubans have died, other
Washington government sources repor-
ted, but soldiers here said dozens of
Cuban bodies were seen at one battle
site alone - near the Point Salines air-
port, under construction by Cubans.
Grenadian casualties remained
unreported.
NEARLY 800 Cubans were in U.S.
custody, but the troops here believed
more than 200 remained at large on the
island. An unknown number of
Grenada's Peoples Revolutionary Ar-

my soldiers also were still resisting.
Six thousand U.S. troops - more than
triple the original landing force - were
now on the island, American military
officials reported.
In Washington, Adm. Wesley Mc-
Donald, U.S. Atlantic Forces comman-
der, said a captured top-secret
document showed that Cuba planned to
station about 6,800 troops there and in-
tended to take over the island. And he
said "It could be weeks" before the U.S.
force overcomes all resistance.
MCDONALD reported that about 300
to 350 Cubans were still "fighting a
delaying action. . . going back into the
hills" more than three days after U.S.
Marine and Army troops made a sur-
prise airborne, helicopter and air tran-
sport landing on the island following a
Marxist coup.
McDonald said remaining Cuban
See MARINES, Page 2

AP Photo
A U.S. Marine takes a look down a street from the corner of a building in a town on the island of Grenada Tuesday before
advancing to another point in the area.

"'M; Illinois battle for Rose Bowl

By RON POLLACK
Special to the Daily
CHAMPAIGN - Welcome to Big Ten football's
version of the Hatfields and the McCoys.
When the powers that be put eight-ranked Michigan
(6-1) and ninth-ranked Illinois (6-1) opposite each
other on the schedule, they were just begging for some
ood-old fashioned country feudin'.
They asked for it, they got it.
ALL WEEK LONG, the Illinois and Michigan cam-
ps have been like smoldering powderkegs ready to
explode at a moments notice. Both teams bring un-
defeated marks in conference play into today's game
(12:35 p.m. EDT, TV channel 2), which should go a
long way toward deciding the Big Ten's Rose Bowl
representative.

Fighting Illini starting defensive tackle Mike John-
son fired the first shot when he said that Michigan has
"been waving that Wolverine turd in our faces for a
long time. It's just about time for that to
cease...They're not high on us and we're not high on
them...We've been losing to them for too long. I feel
this is the year."
Wolverine starting strong safety Evan Cooper
returned the fire in explosive fashion. He said the
Illinois players are not above giving out cheap shots,
and verbal abuse from the sideline. He added that the
Fighting Illini's antics display a combination of
exuberance and a lack of class.
"ITS A LITTLE bit of both," Cooper said. "They're
trying to make up for their lack of confidence. They
can't intimidate their opponents with good clean

football, so they try to intimidate them with cheap
shots."
Next to let loose with a volley of fire was Michigan
assistant head coach and defensive coordinator Gary
Moeller.
"(Illinois) does some unnecessary things, at least
we think so the way we coach," Moeller said.
ADDING TO THE fury is the fact that Moeller was
fired as the Illinois head coach in 1979.
"It's a team I really want to beat," Moeller said.
"Number one, because it's a big game for the
Michigan program, but there's that little extra for
me."
Moeller is not the only actor in this scenario to bolt
from one side of the feud to the other. Harry Gosier, a
See BLUE, Page 8

I

'U'

officials name

transition team
for art school

By BARBARA MISLE
University officials yesterday named
four art school professors to a panel
that will recommend how to carry out
an 18 percent cut to the school's budget.
The panel, or so-called transition
team, has until Jan. 15 to submit a plan
to Vice President for Academic Affairs
and Provost Billy Frye for implemen-
ting the $260,000 budget cut approved
last month by University regents.
TRANSITION TEAM members will
set a schedule for accomodating the
reduction, which includes the
elimination of 11 faculty positions, said
Robert Holbrook, associate vice
president for academic affairs.
By the end of next week the panel
must write a "charge," or a statement
of what it will accomplish by the
January deadline, Holbrook said.
"The question they have to answer is
'how do we get (to an 18 percent cut)
from here?' "he said.
FINAL RECOMMENDATIONS on
the art school are the sole responsibility
of the transition team, although the
plan requires Frye's approval, said
Holbrook.
Art school professors appointed to the
team are: Wendel Heers, Dwayne

Overmyer, Sherril Smith, and Paul
Stewart.
None of the professors were available
for comment yesterday.
ART SCHOOL dean George Bayliss,
who will work with the transition team,
said yesterday that there are no
specific plans yet, but he said the
panel's task will be difficult.
The School of Art received the
smallest cut among the three schools
reviewed under the University's plan to
reallocate $20 million of its $303 million
general fund budget, by 1985. The
Schools of Education and Natural
Resources received cuts of 40 percent
and 25 percent respectively.
But Bayliss said an 18 percent reduc-
tion will have a big impact on the art
school.
"OBVIOUSLY (the cut) is
numerically less severe (than Natural
Resources and Education), but it's still
a very serious problem for us and it will
be hard for us to accomplish," Bayliss
said.
But if cuts must be made, the tran-
sition team is "as good as way as any,"
to carry them out, he said.
See ART, Page 3

Alberto Arene tells an audience of about 200 gathered for a teach-in at the
education school that the best way to solve the Central American conflict is
through political means.
eS
Latin AmOericans call
for peaceful solutions

Sunset AP Photo
James Hammock is silouetted by the setting sun against a fountain in a park
in Lexington, KY as he reads a newspaper.

By MARIAN ABERNATHY
The Latin American Solidarity
Committee began its two-day-long
teach-in last night at the School of
Education, with representatives of two
Central American nations describing
the political struggles in their coun-
tries.
Nearly 200 people heard El
Salvadoran Alberto Arene, a member
of the Revolutionary Democratic Front
of the Forabundo Marti National
Liberation Front (FMLN), a
Salvadoran opposition group, outline

the bloody history of his nation.
HE SAID that while the FMLN
believes that "a political solution is the
best and easiest way to finish this con-
flict" between the military junta now
ruling the country and its opposition,
the group will not tolerate U.S. military
intervention into the problem.
"We are convinced that if the Reagan
administration wants to make El
Salvador another Grenada, the force of
the invasion will face a bloody night-
mare," Arene said.
See LATIN, Page 3

TODAY
As the world turns
L IKE MOST AMERICANS, we'll all get an extra
hour of sleep tomorrow. Yes, it's time once again to
turn back our clocks to end six months of Daylight-Saving
Time. The official time change will occur at 2 a.m.
tomrrow-r £lthnuh hman nuirle will shift their cloks

station because of bad ratings, but the retirement com-
munity's old-timers want the show back. "If you've enjoyed
music and dancing through your lifetime, you know the
problem" said Lucy Truitt, 76. "Lots of people looked for-
ward to seeing the show. It was good, clean entertain-
ment." She has been circulating petitions at a local con-
valescent hospital and among neighbors and social clubs
and says the station, KRON, apparently doesn't "realize
that the group of people who like that show is not as small as
they think it is." KRON listened to the protesters but station

estranged wife's dentures until she returns the Chevy van
that is registered in both their names. He said a friend
helped him pull off the tooth caper, but his 12-year-old
daughter, Robbie, said he was alone when he took them
fr6m the house early Monday. No charges have been filed
against Schepel because authorities say they do not want to
get bit by a dispute that is more moral than legal, police
spokesman Terry Branum said Thursday. Nancy Schepel
admits she took the van about two weeks ago and left it at a
friend's home. She said she will get new dentures at a cost

followed by a clash between demonstrators and more than
200 police turned George Wallace final Michigan campaign
stop at Detroit's Cobo Arena into chaos.
* 1970 - Students for a Democratic Society founder Tom
Hayden and unsuccessful democratic gubernatorial can-
didate Zolton Ferency debated plans for reforming the
American government. While Hayden said "the first thing
that is required is that we purge ourselves of the idea that
we have a working constitution," Ferency countered, "I
don't believe any manifesto can improve much on the

I

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