I Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 3, 1983 House debates imited Grenada press coverage WASHINGTON (AP) - Top network representatives yesterday assailed a ban on news coverage of the U.S. in- vAtion of Grenada, with a CBS executive calling the policy "the dawn of- new era of censorship." CBS News President Edward Joyce told Congress the Reagan ad- ministration resorted to "unpreceden- t0'd censorship" and "introduced a new reJtionship with the press, a relation- ship virtually unknown in U.S. history." TESTIFYING before a House Judiciary subcommittee, Joyce said journalists posed no threat to the scurity of the invasion or the lives of UIS. troops. His view was shared by sliior comrentator John Chancellor of NBC, and ABC senior correspondent David Brinkley. "I am seriously concerned that we may indeed be witnessing the dawn of a new era of censorship, of manipulation of the press, of considering the media the handmaiden of government to sp- oon-feed the public with government- approved informaton," Joyce said. The hearing, conducted by the sub- committee on courts, civil liberties, and the administration of justice, was the first of a series on the conflict between the need for information and national security. THE INVASION began at dawn last See CENSORSHIP, Page 3 I.S. an nounces troop reductions in Grenada (Continued from page I) The embassy had been cordoned by U.s. personnel, consistent with the governor general's action and in con- suttation with him for the security of er bassy personnel pending their return to Cuba," Speakes said. $PEAKES SAID Scoon also had mode similar requests that Soviet and Libyan Embassy personnel leave the island, but he said he had no infor- mation that U.S. forces had surrounded those embassies. The White House spokesman refused to -speculate on whether U.S. forces mijht be used to enforce Scoon's evic- tion order against the Cubans. we are in consultation with the governor general, and at the moment and action that we would take at the governor general's request remains a hypothetical situation," Speakes said. KPEAKES SAID the Cuban wounded, accompanied by Cuban medical per- sonnel and an international Red Cross comhmittee, had been scheduled to be transported aboard an American C-130 aiicraft from Grenada to Barbados, where they-would be transferred to a D(-8 plane chartered by the Red Cross for the remainder of their flight to Havana. Speakes said the Red Cross was making separate arrangements for the return of Cuban dead but said he did not know how many Cubans had been killed on Grenada. He did say, however, that it was his understanding that the dead were being buried on Grenada pending arrangement for transportation of their remains. As for the personnel still inside the Cuban Embassy, Speakes said the United States had offered free passage through U.S. lines and exit from Grenada for any Cubans who wished to leave, but he said so far none but the wounded and the women and children who had left today had agreed to go. SPEAKES ALSO said the United States'is now working on arrangements to get some 600 Cubans captured in the fighting back to Cuba. "Our first priority was to deal with the question of the wounded," Speakes said. "Now, we are able to deal with those who are able-bodied and we will try to return them as soon as we can work out the technical arrangements.',' F 1 i 1 E c { E AP Photo Fifty-seven Cuban wounded in Grenada are airlifted from Grenada to Bar- bados yesterday on their return home to Havana. 'U' black enrollment drops (Continued from page 1) tract minority students," he said. graduate students has gone down. "There certainly has been no DUDERSTADT also cited the fact relaxation in the efforts (to attract that many of the black students minority students but I think we have to recruited by the University come from work harder to keep up., inner-city high schools as a con- "It's quite low. It is a low number," tributing factor to declining black said Black Student Union member Paul enrollment. He said many black Fleuranges, a Residential College students from these high schools find it senior. "It's kind of to be expected," he difficult to adjust to the high level of said attributing the decline to a competition at the University's decrease in financial aid and to a engineering school. general decline in overall enrollment at "It's much more difficult for a the University. student from a Detroit high school to come up to speed," Duderstadt said. "The University is seen as a 'very tough academic place,' " E r ickson said, because of that, black students from inner-city high schools are often hesitant to attend the University. BUT ERICKSON said the University has not relaxed its efforts to recruit black students. "We're running up to our ears all the time in various approaches . . . to at- FLEURANGES said the University must pursue black students aggressively. "They need to offer in- centive to come," he said. "It points to the fact that maybe retention methods aren't working that well," he said. "There is a qualified pool of black applicants out there... It's just a matter of where the Univer- sity goes to find them," he said. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Jackson may spur black vote WASHINGTON - On the eve of Jesse Jackson's presidential declaration, analysts predict a 2 million increase in national black registration in 1984, with much of the gain concentrated in states that Ronald Reagan narrowly carried in 1980. Leaders of groups working for a big black turnout said yesterday that Jackson's candidacy - which he will formally declare today - will serve as a spur, but the real "triggering force" was Harold Washington's victory in Chicago in April. They point to Washington's win as an object lesson that has not been lost on the black man in the street of what an energetic registration campaign could achieve - and as a factor in subsequent black political triumphs in mayoral primaries or elections in Philadelphia, Boston and Birmingham, Ala. As a result, they claimed that a 20 to 25 percent increase in black registration is feasible - "ambitious but not impossible," as Gracia Hillman executive director of the National Coalition on Black Voter Participation, put it. About 10 million blacks were registered in 1982 and seven million were unregistered. Nicaragua Church protests against deportation of priests MANAGUA, Nicaragua - Priests refused to celebrate mass yesterday, All Souls' Day, to protest he deportation of two priests in what they claim ins a harassment campaign of the Roman Catholic Church by the Sandinista government. A government communique Tuesday announced that two foreign priests were being deported for publicly criticizing a military draft law. The com- munique accused the Rev. Luis Corral Prieto and the Rev. Jose Maria Pacheco of "urging people to ignore the Military Service Law and suppor- ting the counterrevolutionaries by demanding a dialogue between the government and the rebels." The protest call was also heeded in other parts of the country. A growing dispute between the church and the Sandinistas intensified when a conference of the country's bishops criticized a military draft law enacted by the leftist government. The government says the law is in response to an "imminent" U.S.-supported invasion of Nicaragua by rebel exiles and troops. After two days of deliberations, the bishops issued a communique Tuesday night calling for a day of national protest. They asked for churches to remain closed and the faithful to stay home and fast and pray. "Our Church is being persecuted," the bishops' communique said. Jamaica expels Soviet diplomats KINGSTON, Jamaica - The Soviet Embassy yesterday denied Jamaican accusations that four Russian diplomats plotted murder, calling their ex- pulsion an attempt to worsen relations between the two nations. A Soviet Embassy spokesman said the four diplomats planned to leave Jamaica tomorrow, just under the deadline imposed in Tuesday's expulsion order issued by Prime Minister Edward Seaga. The prime minister told Parliament he was expelling the Soviets and the Jamaica correspondent for the Cuban news agency in connection with an alleged plot to kill a female employee of the Jamaican Foreign Ministry. Seaga said security officials had learned the five men hatched the alleged murder plot because the unidentified woman had learned that another ministry employee was passing information to the Soviets. Marines tighten security as sese investigations continue BEIRUT, Lebanon-U.S. Marines yesterday shifted the main entrance to their camp to the gate used by the suicide terrorist and set up a heavily for- tified 130-yard maze in hopes of foiling any more bomb attacks. Police sources said, meanwhile, that Lebanese investigators were threatened with death if they continue to probe the Oct. 23 bombings that killed 230 Marines and sailors at Beirut airport and 58 French troops a mile away. The sources, who requested anonymity, did not name those making the threats. 'But they disclosed that the terrorists first surveyed the bomb targets by posing as peddlers. As FBI laboratory specialists continued analyzing the 40-foot-wide bomb crater, the Marines shifted the new main entrance to their camp at Beirut airport from north to south. Fake professor pleads guilty CARLISLE, Pa. - A college professor who taught under assumed names at two state universities at the same time pleaded guily yesterday to four misdemeanor counts of forgery. He agreed to pay $17,600 restitution and could face a prison term. Paul Crafton, 60, must pay $14,00 to Millersville and Shippensburg state universities for tuition refunds and new courses for the students he taught. He also agreed with prosecutors to pay $3,400 in prosecution costs to the state. Crafton could get a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail and a $20,000 fine. Twenty-four felony counts of forgery, tampering with records, false swearing and theft by deception were dropped by Pennsylv'ania Attorney General LeRoy Zimmerman's office. A sentencing hearing has not been scheduled. Zimmerman said he would seek a prison term. By pleading guilty, Crafton avoided a trial and thus left unanswered a host of questions about why he used the credentials of a Canadian and an Australian professor. 1 br ic iOigan aiIt Thursday, November 3, 1983 Vol. XCI V-No. 50 (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 MaynardStreet, 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. Tom Ehr, Joe Ewing, Chris Harrison, Paul Helgren, Editor-in-chief ........... . . .... . BARRY WITT Steve Hunter, Tom Keney, Ted Lerner, Doug Levy, Managing Editor ....................... JANET RAE Tim Mokinen, Adam Martin, Mike McGraw, Scott News Editor ..................... 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