Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom Mit-Iia atitj Fair The skies will be partly cloudy today and the temperature should reach the low 60s. ol. XCIV-No. 48 Copyright 1983, The'Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, November 1, 1983 Fifteen Cents Twelve Pages U.S. admits to bombing Grenadian institution Trick or Treat Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK This Halloween ghoul spent the evening drinking with the spirits at Dooley's while others celebrated with the traditional door-to-door approach to tricking and treating. Colle e town debates nuclear ban From AP and UPI BRIDGETOWN, Barbados - U.S. in- vaders in Grenada sorted seized weapons and documents yesterday, admitted they accidentally bombed a mental hospital and said the military leader of the ousted junta has been detained on a warship. The Reagan administration said reports that up to 50 civilians perished at the hospital in last week's air strike were exaggerated. A Pentagon source, who declined to be identified, said that 14 people died in the attack by a Navy A-7 bomber based on the USS Independence. U.S. forces were not , aware the building was a hospital, the White House said. Military officials said they did not learn about the casualties at the hospital until early yesterday, although the attack apparently had occurred on the first day of theinvasion, Oct. 25. The United States and seven of Grenada's non-communist neighbors launched the invasion following a coup by radical Marxists in the government who killed Prime Minister Maurice Bishop Oct. 19. In Washington, the Reagan ad- ministration was considering whether to make public some of the documents seized in the invasion. Officials said the documents inlcude military supply con- tracts between Bishop's government and Cuba, the Soviet Union and North Korea. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said that Gen. Hudson Austin, leader of the 16-member junta that overthrew and killed Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, had been detained on the USS Guam off the Grenadian coast "for his personal protection." The stated aim of the invaders is to restore order, protect civilians and evacuate foreigners who wished to leave the tropical Caribbean island of 110,000 people. But President Reagan also- claims that Cubans working on the island were building -military installations and stockpiling weapons in preparation for a Cuban takeover. Cuban President Fidel Castro has denied the accusation, denounced the U.S. action and demanded -a full ac- counting of the number of Cubans killed, wounded and seized on Grenada. Soviet- and Cuban-made weapons were among the arsenals found on the island. Jamican Prime Minister Ed- ward Seaga, given a tour by military of- ficials, said he was shown an estimated 100,000 grenades and 4 million rounds of ammunition. Meanwhile House Speaker Thomas O'Neill Jr. said he was dispatching a congressional delegation to Grenada later this week to investigate "all facets" of the American invasion of the island. On the eve of a House vote requiring President Reagan to withdraw the troops from Grenada within two mon- ths, O'Neill Named Rep. Thomas Foley (D-Wash.) to lead members of . the House Foreign Affairs, Armed Services See U.S., Page 3 CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - From a basement of- vice located midway betweeen Harvard and MIT, peace activists are waging a campaign to ban nuclear weapons work in Cambridge - a ban that could halt more than $100 million in missile design contracts. M\/embers of Mobilization for Survival are working to declare Cambridge a "nuclear-free zone," where it would be a crime to design, build or store nuclear weapons. The city's 44,000 voters will decide the issue Nov.8, THE. MAIN target of the campaign is the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, a high-technology spinoff from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that employs about 1,800 people. Draper holds some $140 million in contracts with the Defense Department, most of it for guidance systems on MX, Poseiden, Trident and cruise missiles. In the past eight weeks, the campaign has divided this intellectual community. Nobel Prize winners are lined up on opposing sides - biologist Geroge Wald of Harvard is for it, and physicist Samuel Ting of MIT is opposed. So are the presidents of Harvard and MIT. "We have the right to say we will not be complicit in the arms race," said Richard Schreuer, a Mobilization Volunteer. "Draper is directly con- tributing to the arms race." DRAPER OFFICIALS said the campaign poses an economic threat. "We could be genetic research next year, then who knows what," said company vice president Joseph O'Connor. If the referendum passes, the Nuclear-Free Cam- bridge Campaign would be a major breakthrough for a movement that seeks to end the arms race village by village across the world. Cambridge, a city of 95,000 academics, workers, and immigrants, situated across the Charles River from Boston, would be the largest U.S. city to declare itself off-limits to weapons work. It would also be the first nuclear-free zone established in a place where weapons design is carried out. See CAMBRIDGE, Page 2 .....................,...............^....... ...:........:.v..:::..:v.........r.............:.""..".:..r;{?.;.'.}::::::......::....::.: .. .... ....... f.. ................ ...... ... ...................... :................... .. ..r............................... .. ..:" . ;..................................:::::}::?: ...... ..... .. .................. ...v...........r....... ..... ...................... ..............................................~}:^}i::;:{:?::L4"i}:?"?i:>~ii}:::}^ii ii: ::: Black mayors split on Jackson candidacy Markley madness From AP and UPI The Rev. Jesse Jackson's campaign for the presidency may not land him in the White House, but it will spark new interest in politics for blacks, increase registration and give blacks greater leverage, some black officials said yesterday after Jackson announced his candidacy Sunday. "He will inspire thousands of our people to register to vote," said Johnny Ford, mayor of Tuskegee, Ala., and president of the National Conference of Rlt Maors.n "Bv running he will help many of our people get elected to local, county and state offices." But most important, Ford said, "he will be an inspiration to our people." "I do not feel that he will get the nomination," said CincinnatieCity Manager Sylvester Murray, "but I do think that his running wil provide some pride to minorities, and will' provide a sense of being part of the system." Other black leaders were less en- thusiastic about Jackson's decision Sunday to seek the Democratic See MAYORS, Page 9 Jackson will file onmiThulrsdav .... ... ........ ....... .... ............-:::.,".....................................":::::::....::..{..:.:.:.....:::.:..:..::::.....?...?:{;{"...... . ,.to-:... r:i:;> ;?:;::;:.:"I ............ y ............. .. , ...... .. . . . . . . . ...v. ... . . ........ ... ..............:.... . . . . ............... .. :v_ .,": ::"... ..,....,::: .. ":":v?:,:: r. ::v ..v:: xv:. .. ::::.v.. :::i}i:"}}?ti}:r?::: :::{":3;."??v.i:iij:. .i:.. . . .};::'{?;i?::.. . .ii.:{ - v r.". ..f.. .b. ... ......... ..n..........h............ . h... ..... ....................~......::..........,,...... . . .":: Woman dies in ossible s uici e By MATT TUCKER Rumors of doom stir dorm By BARRY WITT Good morning Mary Markley, are you still there? Rumor had it that some of your residents - 55 to be exact, or was it 53? - were in for a rough Halloween night. Since the weekend, the dorm has been abuzz with talk of tragedy because a national astrologist Allegedly predicted doom. STHE STORY goes that the omniscient prognosticator Jeanne Dixon wrote in the National Enquirer last summer that 55 people would be killed on Halloween night in a Big Ten University building shaped like a letter of the alphabet. At least, that's how one story goes. Other Markleyites said last night that they had heard the prediction was in the Enquirer, but that it wasn't Jeanne Dixon's. Still others said that it was in fact Jeanne Dixon, but it was in the Star and it involved 53 students. See MARKLEY, Page 9 A 21-year-old local woman fell to her death early Sunday morning from her room on the 20th floor of Tower Plaza, a central campus highrise located at 555 E. William. Ann Arbor Police said they found the body of Carolyn T. Won lying on the street at 5:45 a.m. Sunday. Won was an LSA senior last term, but she is not listed as having graduated. University officials said no information was available on her status as a student this term. Won's permanent address as registered with the University last year was her Tower Plaza apartment. ALTHOUGH POLICE would not call the death a.suicide, they did say there were "no signs of struggle or indications of foul play," and said Won either fell or jumped from her apar- tment window. Resdients of the 20th floor declined comment on the fatality. The incident marks the first probable suicide of this academic year. Last year three students commited suicide, two in residence halls and one living off campus. WON'S DEATH ALSO brings to two the number of fatalities connected with Tower Plaza: On May 13th, 1982, University professor Philip Brickman leapt to his death from the roof of the 26-story building. Brickman was not a resident of the complex. Won's body was taken immediately to University Hospital, where an autopsy was ordered. The results of the autopsy were not available at press time. Is this Markley? It just might be, if the rumors that swept the dormitory last night turn out to be true. i TODAY- Pay, don't play HE ROCK GROUP Boston has been sued for $20 million for failing to produce enough albums. The c'iviT nit fihxrl in TT C Tistriet Cnart in Manhattan- moon pyschiatrist testified she was sane when she took the money. Janet Knaeble was convicted Friday by a Maricopa County, Ariz., Superior Court-jury on five counts of grand theft in embezzling funds from the Phoenix office of Nabisco. During the trial before Judge Cheryl Hendrix, witnesses said Knaeble took the money while she worked for Nabisco between 1972 and 1976. Her attorney, Dennis Jones, told jurors the crimes were commited by one of Knaeble's 16 personalities known as Tarrah, who did not know right from wrong. He asked jurors to find his client nick, 66, of Brooklyn, reported to the Internal Revenue Service she was a housewife with an income of $21,000 from 1976 to 1978, according to a grand jury indictment in U.S. District Court in Manhattan last Thursday. Instead, she earned $200,000 in those years from peddling umbrellas, gloves, and handbags and from shrewd stock market in- vestments, the indictment said. Lipnick is accused of falsely stating her occupation as a housewife while neglec- ting to mention her profitable peddling business, as well as under-reporting income derived from dividends on stock 1942 - The University was criticized by a Navy lieutenant for not having enough students enlisting in the armed forces. 1954 - The Literary College faculty voted to ask the school-to grant severance pay to a professor who was dismissed for refusing to testify before the House Commit- tee on Un-American Affairs. 1974 - Michigan Gov. William Milliken announced he would keep his running mate, James Damman, even though Damman was accused of unethical politics as a Trnv cityo ntnnril and ninanffninl '1 I 1