I AP Photo Police in East Lansing hoist a man into their patrol car late Friday night after a party turned into a bottle-throwing melee. Police arrest 40 at MSpU party Medical student safe after Grenada " " invasion (Continued from page 1) Grenadian soldiers. Although Mohtadi said Radio Free Grenada reports predicted the U.S. in- vasion two days before troops landed he said the military action took him by surprise. He also said he did not feel in danger until U.S. troops landed on the island. "I felt safe (before the invasion) even though half of the student body felt they had to leave," he said. But once the Marines invaded, Mohtadi said he began to worry that Cuban soldiers would take the students hostage. "AFTER THE Marines came in there was a good chance we would be used as a bargaining chip," he said. Mohtadi said he was aboard the second Air Force transport plane carrying Americans off the island. Af- ter stops at Barbados and Charleston, S.C., he flew home to Ann Arbor. He said the Grenadian people were "a very friendly group" and were op- posed to the new regime which took control of the island in a military coup last week. THE EXPERIENCE was "a charac- ter-building adventure" Mohtadi said. "I'm glad that it's over but now that it is over, it's something to look back on," he said. "This is like a dream," he ad- ded. "It was really bad, like a night- mare." Mohtadi, who received his un- dergraduate degree from Eastern Michigan University, said he is not sure what he will do now. "I hope the school doesn't close down," he said. "I would think twice, but I think...yeah, I would go back there." While Mohtadi ponders his possible return to Grenada, the families of at least four medical students said they have received no word from them since the invasion, but were "keeping the faith." More and more students are trickling home daily. The Department of Defen- se says some students have chosen to stay on the island and that it knows the whereabouts of all the Americans on Grenada. Communications with the island have been disrupted and commercial telephone service with the United States has been cut off, the defense department said. Now we can detect a breast cancer smaller than this dot. At such an early stage. your chances of living a longheathy life are ex- cellent. But we need your hel p. The only proven way to detect a cancer this small is with a mammogram. A mam- mogram is a low-radia- tion x-ray of the breast capable of detecting a cancer long before a lump can be felt. It you re over 50. a mam- mogram is recommend- ed every year If youre between 40 and 50, or have a family history of breast cancer. consult your doctor. In addition. of course, continue your regular self-examina. itons EAST LANSING (UPI) - Up to 1,000 Michigan State University students spilled out onto the streets early yesterday morning and hurled rocks and bottles at police who were closing down an illegal drinking operation. Police Capt. Tom Hendricks said several police officers were injured - one sustaining a broken nose and others suffering from cuts, bruises and woun- ds from human bites. FORTY PEOPLE were arrested. Most of the charges were misdemeanors, Hendricks said, but there were four felony charges - assaulting a police officer, operating a PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT a < w SPR01E The U.S. Environmental Pro- tection Agency has multiple openings for undergraduate students who meet our finan- cial need criteria. Opportuni- ties exist in engineering and statistics / computer science. Salaries range from $5.10 to $5.72 per hour. Contact the Student Employment Office, 2053 Student Activities Building, for information and application material or call Beth Laird at 668-4220. U.S. EPA Motor Vehicle Emission Laboratory 2565 Plymouth Road ANN ARBOR, MI 48105 An Equal Opportunity Employer blind pig, malicious destruction of a police vehicle and inciting others to riot. The disturbance began Friday night after police moved into the Cedar Village area, a section in the eastern part of the city where many students live, to close down a blind pig operating out of one of the apartments. At around 11 p.m., Hendricks said students from nearby apartment buildings began gathering in the inter- section of Cedar Street and Waters Edge Drive. "When you've got police cars parked in one area, they tend to attract atten- tion," Hendricks said. AS POLICE EMERGE from the apartment with four people in custody, they discovered hundreds of students in the street. "Then in our attempts to get the street open again, officers were pelted with rocks and bottles," Hendricks said. He said order was restored by about 3 a .m. Hendricks declined to link the distur- bance with the fact it was homecoming weekend on the MSU campus. He did note, however, that "there were plenty of parties going on, perhaps more than normal" on the eve of Michigan State's game against Minnesota. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports 600,000 protest U.S. missiles More than 600,000 people demonstrated yesterday in the Netherlands and Denmark, and hundreds of anti-nuclear activists blockaded two U.S. bases in West Germany to protest NATO plans to deploy new nuclear missiles in Europe. Some120,000 people took to the streets in cities and towns across Denmark to protest the missile deployment. It was the Scandinavian country's largest nationwide demonstration ever. InCopenhagen, police reported crowds of 65,000 as protesters carried life- size models of Pershing missiles, anti-American signs and peace banners calling for the scrapping of the missile deployment. In Washington, President Reagan, trying to defuse the protests in Europe, accused the Soviet Union yesterday of stalling in arms negotiations and building up its nuclear arsenals while NATO is making deep cuts in its weapon stockpile. "The comparison of Soviet actions with NATO's reductions and restraint clearly illustrates, once again, that the so-called arms race has only one par- ticipant - the Soviet Union," Reagan declared in his weekly radio address. Arms talks crucial, pope says VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II, expressing fears over the warfare that plagues a divided world, said yesterday he had sent letters to President Reagan and Soviet leader Yuri Andropov urging them not to give up negotiations to end the nuclear arms race. The pope said he asked Reagan and Andropov "to not turn away from negotiation as the only way to recompose differences and the conflicts of in- terest and to put an end to the arms race, which keeps the whole of contem- porary humanity in apprehension." "The international situation is very tense and I am also very troubled," the pope said in an address in Latin to the closing session of the month long World Synod of Bishops. The pope sent his messages to Reagan and Andropov Thursday following the terrorist bombing that killed about 300 U.S. and French peace-keeping troops in Beirut, the U.S. invasion of Grenada and Andropov's threat Wed- nesday to withdraw from Geneva arms limitation talks if the United States deploys intermediate-range missiles in Europe. "We are witnesses of growing contrasts and menacing conflicts of varying scale," the pope told the more than 200 bishops attending the synod. Quake aftershocks shake Idaho CHALLIS, Idaho - Wave upon wave of aftershocks shook the hills and plains of Idaho yesterday following Friday's monstrous earthquake that killed two children and moved a mountain. The aftershocks rumbled at the rate of about one every three minutes, said Ed Williams of the Ricks College seismographic station in Rexburg, Idaho. Williams said there had been six to eight large aftershocks, but the tremors were "dying down in intensity and frequency." Searchers scoured the vast wilderness of central Idaho for hunters, back- packers and anybody else who might have been possibly injured in the quake that rocked seven states in the West Friday morning. The quake was the strongest to shake the lower 48 states in more than two decades and the first to kill anyone since the San Fernando Valley, Calif., tremor in 1971. ' 81 still missing from lost rig HONG KONG - Rescuers have sighted two or three possible survivors of the U.S. oil-drilling ship Glomar Java Sea, which vanished with 81 people aboard during a typhoon, the ship's owner said today. But'a U.S. military spokesman said rescue ships in the area have failed so far to find any of the missing crew, which included 42 Americans. A statement in Hong Kong by Global Marine Inc. said the possible sur- vivors were spotted about 60 miles northwest of the site in the South China Sea where the 5,926-ton rig was drilling before it disappeared four days agd. U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Jack Gregory. sokesman for the West Pacific Rescue Coordinaton Center at Kadena Air Base on Okinawa, said no sur- vivors had been found after several hours of intense search. "We did think we spotted some possible survivors on a life raft, but four ships have arrived in the area and they haven't found anything," Gregory said in a telephone interview. "It doesn't mean they aren't there, but we haven't found them." Senate fails to extend debt limit WASHINGTON - The federal government neared its credit limit yester- day amid warnings that failure to extend the borrowing authority would produce a constitutional crisis that would make Watergate pale in compair- son. "Who's going to decide as to who is going to get paid?" if the bill is not enacted by tomorrow's midnight deadline, said Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker. "The president would have to make the decision as to what checks to send out so that the others wouldn't bounce." The government has borrowing authority to last only through midnight tomorrow. The lack of Senate action in a special session yesterday ensured that the problem would not be resolved before tomorrow night and raised the possibility that the ability of the government to borrow more money might lapse. The bill would raise the Treasury's borrowing authority, now $1,389 trillion, to $1.45 trillion - enough to carry the government through January. Sunday, October 30, 1983 Vol. XCI V-No. 47 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY; Sports desk, 763-0376; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0557; Display Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. Faye, Paul Helgren, Steve Hunter, Doug Levy, Tim Editor-in-chief ......................... BARRY WITT Makinen, Mike McGraw, Jeff Mohrenweiser, Rob Managing Editor ........................JANET RAE Pollard, Dan Price, Mike Redstone, Paula Schipper, News Editor ...................... GEORGE ADAMS John Toyer, Steve Wise. Student Affairs Editor .................. BETH ALLEN Business Manager SAM G. SLAUGHTER IV Features Editor ..................FANNIE WEINSTEIN Sales Manager ... .. . MEG GIBSON Opinion Page Editors.................. DAVID SPAK Operations Manager LAURIE ICZKOVITZ BILL SPINDLE Classified Manager . ........ PAM GILLERY Arts/Magazine Editors ..............MARE HODGESi Dia Mage... JEFF VOIGT SUSAN MAKUCH Finance Manager .... JOE TRULIK Associate Arts Editor .............JAMES BOYD Nationals Manager ........... RON WEINER Sports Editor ...........................JOHN KERR Coop Manager...................DENA SHEVZOFF Associate Sports Editors............JIM DWORMAN Assistant Display Manager ........NANCY GUSSIN LARRY FREED Assistant Classified Manager .... LINDA KAFTAN CHUCK JAFFE Assistant Sales Manager JULIE SCHNEIDER LARRY MISHKIN Assistant Opergtions Manager. STACEY FALLEK RON POLLACK Sales Caordinator................... STEVE MATHER Chief Phatographer................ DEBORAH LEWIS CruainSprio.........I ENT 4 4 4 4 SOAPS Here is a synopsis of what happened on the campus'favorite soaps this week, as submitted to the Daily by students. If you're interested in .AeicanCace ciety This space conrbuted as a public. service Are You A writing next week, call 764-0552. All My Children It appears Nina and Cliff won't be getting back together anytime soon, as Nina was terribly upset when she found out Cliff wants to shack up with Devon. Ellen fears that Devon will get hurt if she pursues her relationship with Cliff. Devon looks like she'll move in with her new friend Lynn, who has an extra room. But Lynn lets Devon know that she's a lesbian before anyone did any packing. Daisy managed to escape the stranglehold put on her by her incognito fiancee Lars Bogart, but pushing him off a balcony didn't kill him. Lars gets aboard Palmer's yacht and stalks all his victims outside Palmer's stateroom. Brooke gets a job offer in San Francisco, throwing another cur- ve into her relationship with Tom. If she takes it, their plans to start a family fly along with her right out the window. - Douglas Middlebrooks Another World Mark gets tapes of phone calls from Horace Bakewell's secretary im- plicating Jeremiah Denby in a plot to kill him. Janet tries to warn Mark, thinking they'll get back together. Designing Person? if so, Ann Arbor Civic Theater has designs on you! We are looking for talented, experienced directors, producers, and designers of costume, stage sets, and choreography, as well as set and costume builders and props persons. Come join us in helping-to create exciting, rewarding community theater this season. Send your resume to Ann Arbor Civic Theater, 338 S. Main St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 or call 662-7282 between 1:00 and 4:00. Jeremiah comes to Bay City to finish off Mark, but keeps Janet in the dark. Stacey and Jamie admit love for each other, and Stacey decides she must tell Mark. Cecile's father dies in Paris~ and Brian goes to comfort Elena. Rachei warns Donna to lay off Sally. Sandy and Blaine will go to Wyoming to find the Ewing's half- brother. Mark proclaims his love for Stacey though she is trying to dump him, while Janet overhears and stor- ms off. - Susan Jones Guiding Light Bradley attacks Phillip at the hospital, pulls a gun, and threatens to kill him. He is later fired and once gain turns to the bottle. Lillian turns on Phillip and tells him not to see Beth anymore. Beth realizes both Bradley and Lillian are irrational and decides to move out, but Bradley prevents her from doing so. Ed's surgery is suc- cessful, and he looks forward to operating soon. Eli vows revenge on Henry, H.B., and their families, then changes the dosage of Henry's medicine, which causes him to have seizures. Warren pressures Leslie Ann into a more serous relationship. Phillip and Rick become friends again. After Rick breaks their date, Mindy goes to the Homecoming Dan- ce with a professional football player. - Maureen Mullan General Hospital Celia was released by the DVX. Grant gave the hostages clues to show that he's on their side., Robert and Connie know that teh hostages are being held in the pavilion and are making plans for their rescue. Gregory and the DVX have realized introduction wnnrlwnrk inv~i Student i