Ninety-four Years of Editorial.Freedom .: 'I e .4 43UU 43Iai1 t Par Mostly sunny with a1 mid 50s. high in the I Vol. XCIV-No. 47 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, October 30, 1983 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Roses wilt Illini 16-6 victory dims Blue hopes By RON POLLACK Special to the Daily CHAMPAIGN - After Illinois beat Michigan 16- 6 yesterday, to take firm control of the Big Ten lead and an almost-iron grip on a berth in the Rose Bowl, a grey-haired old man walked up to a mob of ecstatic Illini players and said, "I'm so happy. I didn't know if I'd live long enough to see this." It was a long time in coming. IN HEAD coach Bo Schembechler's 15 years of coaching at Michigan, Illinois had never beaten the Wolverines. Should the Illini (7-1, 6-0 in the Big Ten) win two of their final three games against Big Ten tail-enders Minnesota, Indiana and Nor- thwestern, they will go the Rose Bowl for the first time since 1964. "I feel we are the favorites to go to the Rose Bowl, who are we kidding," said Illinois head coach Mike White, as he looked admiringly at a red rose he was holding. "I'm elated we're the favorites.." The victory triggered a frenzied celebration throughout Memorial Stadium. With :50 remaining on the clock, the scoreboard proudly started flashing "Rose Bowl, Rose Bowl." With eight seconds left, the goalposts were torn down. But the celebration on the field was mild com- pared to that in the Fighting Illini locker room. "IT WAS CRAZY in the locker room," said Illinois wide receiver David Williams, who caught six passes for 127 yards. "Everyone was going wild. Everybody was too happy to cry. We were running around, whooping it up, hollering, and carrying roses around. There was even some champagne." A more somber mood permeated the Michigan squad, whose record fell to 6-2, 5-1 in conference play. Tailback Kerry Smith was talking to a reporter after the game when linebacker Tom Hassel grabbed him and said, "Tell him (the reporter) to fuck off. Bo said not to talk." FOR AT LEAST one quarter yesterday, Michigan had something pleasant to talk about. The first time the Wolverines touched the ball, they moved it 48 yards on 16 plays to set up a Bob Bergeron 38-yard field goal. In the second quarter, however, thiigs soured for Michigan. With six minutes left in the half, See 'M', Page8 Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK A dejected Steve Smith walks off the field amid the jubilant Illinois fans following yesterday's 16-6 Wolverine defeat at Champaign- Urbana. U.S. troops take Cuban and Grenadian barracks from AP and UPI ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada - American troops in Grenada have captured a strategic army barracks where diehard Cuban and Grenadian soldiers were holding out and pressed on with the hunt for up to 500 more Cubans hiding in the hills, U.S. officials said yesterday. In Washington, the Pentagon raised the number of American wounded in the five-day-old operation from 67 to 76. It said the number killed remained at 11 and the number of missing at seven. U.S. OFFICIALS said the American forces have killed 36 Cubans and Grenadians and wounded 56. No civilians were reported killed in the fighting. Units of the almost 6,000 American soldiers on Grenada captured the Calivigny barracks stronghold late Thursday after overcoming "heavy resistance," the Pentagon said in a delayed report. IT SAID "MANY weapons and documents" were confiscated in the barracks, less than a mile east of U.S. headquarters at the southern tip of Grenada, but gave no other details of the operation. U.S. Marines have also captured Deputy Prime Minister Bernard Coard, Marine Capt. David Karcher told Sreporters. He said the Marines had to protect Coard and his Jamican-born wife Phyllis from a crowd of hostile Grenadians that quickly gathered. COARD LED A hard-line faction in a power struggle within the Marxist government that led to the house arrest of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop Oct. 12. Bishop, 39, was freed by a mob of his supporters Oct. 19 but then slain by soldiers hours later. Marines said an informant pointed out the house in suburban St. George's where Coard was hiding and the Americans surrounded the building and ordered him out. One Marine said rifles and pistols were aimed at them from the house and Coard was told, "Come out or we'll blow the place up." In Moscow, the Grenadian am- bassador to the Soviet Union claimed that the tiny nation's Marxist military strongman, Gen. Hudson Austin, had retreated into the central highlands to lead a guerrilla battle. The report could not to be otherwise confirmed, although U.S. officers acknowledge Austin's whereabouts remain undetermined. THE CUBAN government ridiculed the U.S. military's contention that as many as 500 armed Cubans remained at large, saying it was "the product of U.S. imagination and panic." "Now it seems they see Cubans fighting behind every tree and rock," a Havana government statement said. "The United States is saying that there are around 500 Cubans fighting in the mountains. It is a lie," Cuba's am- See U.S., Page 3 Med. student comes home from Grenada By GEORGEA KOVANIS with wire reports When Sassan Mohtadi awoke to battle sounds last Tuesday morning, he dove under his bed and began to pray. "We woke up at the sound of the gun- fire...we lay on the floor under the beds," said the first-year student at St. George's Medical School in Grenada. "I was scared. I was sweating. My heart was beating so fast." MOHTADI, WHO Thursday arrived safely at his mother's home in Ann Ar- bor, said he stayed in his dormitory room until U.S. paratroops landed on the tiny Caribbean island and escorted students to a lecture hall. In an interview yesterday, Mohtadi said the one and one-half hours he spent crouched under his bed "was the most dangerous time in my life." Like approximately 600 other American students attending St. George's University, Mohtadi waited while Cuban and American soldiers clashed after the U.S. invaded the island Tuesday. Mohtadi said the American soldiers shuttled students from their dormitory rooms to a lecture hall where they stayed for the next 27 hours, alternating between sitting in lecture-room chairs and protecting themselves from the shooting. "ONCE IN A while we heard sniper attacks and we just had to run for cover," said Mohtadi, who had been on the island for two months. He said students were next taken to a smaller lecture hall where they helped medical personnel prepare ban- dage for wounded Cuban and See MEDICAL, Page 2 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB William Vigil of the Nicaraguan Embassy speaks with University Biology Prof. John Vandermeer and University grad- uate student Ben Davis on "The Current Situation in Nicaragua" at a teach-in on Latin America held yesterday in the Modern Languages Building. U.S. stay home, By JACKIE YOUNG The Marxists who took control of Grenada in 1979 were able to reduce unemployment, give cheap loans to farmers, and produce a regional fishing industry previously controlled by foreigners, the 1980 Socialist candidate for the U.S. presiden- cy told a campus audience yesterday. "Real Democracy was achieved for the first time with the (Marxist New Jewel Movement) in Grenada," said Andrew Pulley, who is also chairman of the Detroit-based Socialist Workers' Party, in a speech before about 80 people at the second day of the Teach-in on Latin America. ATTACKING THE Reagan administration's intrusion into Grenadian affairs this week, Pulley said that "never at any time was there a threat to United States students in Grenada" after the death of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop several weeks ago. The difficulties in Grenada didn't endanger the lives of students and it wasn't a crisis situation, Pulley said. "Some ,speakers say difficulties do exist between leadership in any organization." Pulley said the administration's continual rehashing of the Soviet downing of a Korean Airlines jet in August is being used to justify U.S. military intervention in foreign countries and increased defense spending. THE PUBLIC "must prepare to organize to prevent the situation from becoming worse, Pulley said. "The danger of nuclear war comes from the U.S. trying to prevent other countries from determining their own destiny."~ Pulley questioned the reasoning behind the U.S. attempts to save their own citizens in Grenada while killing people in- the process. He said the Reagan administration is saying "We are only concerned with our own students and our own citizens, the hell with the natives." Before the U.S. intervened only one person was killed, now more than 6,000 U.S. troops are fighting in the area, he noted. THE ADMINISTRATION tactics are to "get more people See SPEAKERS, Page 3 Mok tadi awoke to gunfire ..... .. .. .... .... ................... .......... ........... ... .......... .......... ..... I TODAY Potential pols Sharp tongue EMMA SHARP is just that, even at 100 years old. Her recipe for a long life - good food, hard work, no soda pop, and this may be the key, never learning to drive a car. "I tried it once," explained the Penrose, Colo. resident with a smile after turning 100 recently. "But I thought once I learned, I'd go faster than I should, so I never learned. I thought I went fast enough as it was." Born Oct. 14, 1883, on a farm in Grenola, Kan., the widow of 30 years offered a few more hints. "I've always worked in the fields and did marry her 11th husband, a Texas oilfield worker she declined to name. "It's time for me to find a good man," she said Friday, nine days after beginning divorce proceedings against her three known current husbands. "There may be a fourth," she said. "I have to call his mother and find out." Guiding Wingfield through the legal maze that began when she filed for divorce Oct. 19 from James Hubert Shak- cleford, Donald Ray Wells, and Lewis Claybourne Wingfield is her attorney Bruce Parker. "I don't know how many she's married," he said. Parker said bigamy is a third-degree felony, but it normally requires 2 spousal " 1971 - A contingent of anti-Vietnam War Veterans released 100 black balloons - each representing 15,000 American and Asian deaths - to the accompaniment of taps during halftime of the Michigan-Indiana football game. " 1973 - University sophomore James Warner, who spent six years in a North Vietnamese prison camp after being shot down in Oct. 1967, spoke to a small crowd at MLB about the harsh treatment he received at the hands of his captors. " 1979 - Academic Judiciary members confirmed that an economics student who claims he was wrongly accused of i I