"I Ninety-four Years ofr Editorial Freedom . E Lit t i Iai1Q Dappled Partly sunny today with a high in the low 50s. Getting cloudier tonight, dropping to the mid-20s. L Vol. XCIV-No. 52 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, November 5, 1983 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages a e Trk b b rips through Israeli base TYRE, Lebanon (AP)-A suicide terrorist raced his "truck bomb" through a wall of gunfire and blew up an Israeli command post yesterday, in a grisly replay of the Beirut Marine attack. At least 29 Israelis and 10 Arab prisoners were reported killed. Israel lashed out swiftly in reprisal, sending waves of warplanes against Arab targets in Lebanon. As many as 60 people were killed in the air strikes, Lebanese reports said. RESPONSIBILITY for the bombing of the Israeli headquarters here was claimed by a group calling itself "Islamic Holy War," state-run Beirut radio said. This same shadowy Shiite Moslem extremist group, professing allegiance to Iran's revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, had claimed responsibility for three earlier truck bombings-the attack on the U.S. Embassy in Beirut last April, which killed 17 Americans and p2 others, and the twin bombings of U.S. Marine and French military command posts in Beirut Oct. 23, which killed at least 230 Americans and 58 French soldiers. An anonymous telephone caller told the French news agency in Beirut that yesterday's bombing was carried out in retaliation for Israel's con- tinued occupation of southern Lebanon and the arrests of Shiite Moslems here, Beirut radio said. YESTERDAY'S killer struck at about 6 a.m. as Israeli soldiers, border policemen and civilian security men slept in the two-building, L-shaped compound, which served as a security base for policing the Tyre area, 12 miles north of the Israeli border. The pick-up truck, carrying about 1,000 pounds of explosives, passed three unmanned checkpoints on the Mediterranean coastal road, and then veered off toward the compound, Col. Yona Gazit of the Israeli northern command told reporters. "The sentries at two posts opened fire as it crossed through the barrier into the compound," he said. "The driver was hit but the truck rolled on. Just before reaching the two buildings it ex- ploded." FARTHER NORTH, outside the port of Tripoli, fighting raged on for a second day between Syrian- backed PLO mutineers and Yasser Arafat's loyalists. At least 200 people were reported killed there. And, as -this bloodsoaked land was convulsed anew, Lebanese peace talks recessed in Geneva, Switzerland, for 1 weeks. The Israeli military command in Tel Aviv reported 29 Israelis killed in the Tyre blast, along with 10 of several dozen Palestinians and Lebanese under detention at the Israeli com- pound. Beirut's state-run radio earlier said 25 Arab prisoners were killed. THE TEL AVIV command said another 29 Israelis and three Arab detainees were wounded. Through the day, cranes, bulldozers and soldiers with blowtorches worked at the bombing Through the day, cranes, bulldozers and soldiers with blowtorches worked at the bombing r See TERRORIST, Page 2 Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Student entrepeneur Jeff Gelman stands by some of the games which have helped him take care of his tuition payments. Gelman formed his video game business last year. Studenthentrepreneur scores hi*gh wi- th video gam e profis By MARCY FLEISHER Jeff Gelman rides around town:in a silver 1983 Trans Am, but he's looking at a Porsche. The money he makes takes care of his out-of- state tuition - and a whole lot more. Gelman doesn't much like to play video. games, but he loves to see others drop quar- ters in thti slot. THE LSA JUNIOR, founded JBG Amusements only last year, but his now booming video game business already has grossed him between $20,000 and $30,000, he says. The business began when Gelman bought four video games with a loan from a friend. He put one in his own fraternity, and one each in three others. From those rather humble beginnings. he's built his business to 50 games in Ann Ar- bor and several surrounding cities. In ad- dition to campus fraternities - he's now got games in 12 - Gelman also has machines in Pizza Bob's, Olga's, and eight games in the basement of the Lawyer's Club of the Law Quad. This month, his business will bloom again, as he's just signed on with the Pump 'n' Pan- try gas station chain to install as many as 50 more machines in stores throughout Michigan. WITH THE NEW contract, Gelman says he's ready "to get completely commercial" and out of the fraternities, where his machines are vulnerable to excessive damage. "More times than not," he says, "there's damage to those machines." Depending on their location, his machines can pull in anywhere from $50 to $200 a week. His clients get half the revenues and he claims the rest for himself. (The fraternities don't get quite as much because they end up spending a good portion of it on repairs.) A xMs. Pac-Man machine costs Gelman about $1300 which he says will pay itself off in two to three months. TO ASSIST him, Gelman employs, two other students and a full-time technician. Their salaries, and the machines themselves, account for just about all the expenses of the business. "Because we have no factory, work out of an apartment (Gelman's), and have few em- ployees we can offer better percentages for our clients, better games, and compete with all the video places in town," Gelman says. He says he plans to continue building his business while in college and at law school in the future. But after he completes his education, he hopes the business will be big enough to sell for "multitudes of money." He says he's not worried about fading in- terest in video games because new technologies will continue to develop to keep people interested. The latest craze, laser disk games, will be his next venture. Citing the $4,000 price tag on the games currently available, he says he'll start buying "when the price goes down." Students to stay put in next bomb.threat By NEIL CHASE , Because of a recent string of bomb threats in dormitories which turned out to be false alarms, housing officials have decided to stop evacuating residents when a threatening call is received. The tentative policy change was made to discourage pranksters from phoning in false threats, officials say. It will remain in effect until housing safety officials can review the situation and create a formal policy. STOCKWELL HALL residents have been forced out of their dormitory three times, while Mosher- Jordan residents have had to leave their dorm on-. ce this semester.-- The change in security came after a series of three bomb threats were called into the two dorms within a twenty-four hour period earlier this week. Stockwell received one bomb threat that sent students into the streets at 3 a.m. early thius semester, and another on Tuesday night. Wed- nesday night, Mosher-Jordan became the target of yet another threat. Only one hour after the residents had taken refuge in Stockwell and Couzens, Stockwell received a similar call. THIS TIME, however, Stockwell residents were informed of the threat, but were not ordered to leave. Mosher-Jbrdan Resident Director Lydia Bud- See STUDENTS, Page 3 Tenant groups feud over who should I Law Review's minority program lacks results get MSA d By KAREN TENSA The feud between the Ann Arbor Tenant's Union and its offshoot, the Tenant-Landlord Resource Center, flared further yesterday, with Union members locking Center officials out of the office the two groups share. The groups are battling over $7,300 in MSA funding which was allocated to the tenants' union last spring. Two of the students who head the resour- ce center, which was created last April, say they should receive the money because union leaders have not used the funds properly in the past. THE MONEY for the tenants' union comes from the mandatory fees students pay to MSA every term. Eleven cents from each ollars student's MSA fee of $4.50 is allocated to the union. MSA President Mary Rowland says the council is "bound by the students' vote (last spring) to give the money to the tenants' union," even though she says union mem- bers have "begun to burn out." The regents also affirmed the decision, last summer to give the money to the union. Resource center president Eileen Fintor says the center was never in- tended to operate on MSA funding, and officials have applied for a com- munity development grant. The center does not hold MSA recognition as an independent student organization. BUT NONE of that is about to deter See TENANT, Page 3 By JIM BOYD Although the law school's prestigious student journal, the Michigan Law Review, adopted a new affirmative ac- tion program last year, no new minority students have joined the staff, and only two even applied for accep- tance to the journal. Review staff members, however, say it is probably too soon to judge the ef- fectiveness of the program after only one year. They say that the small num- ber of minority applicants may bethe result of factors unrelated to the minority admissions program. THE REVIEW adopted the modest affirmative action program in response to rising criticism about the lack of minorities on staff. There are currently no minorities on staff, and there has only been one black staff member in the last 17 years. The law school has enrolled about 55 black students each year, and about 50 students from other minority groups. Last year, the Review agreed to automatically accept the two best qualified minority students, whose writing samples rank in the upper half of all the samples submitted. If no minority students rank in the upper half of the samples, none are offered a position on the staff. The review accep- ts between 35 and 40 new staff members each year. OF THE WRITING samples sub- mitted this year, only two of them were from monority students. And when staff decisions came late in July, neither students' writing sample ranked in the top half of the group. Members of the Review expressed a good deal of confusion over why there See REVIEW, Page 3 AP Photo Sub missionn U.S. Navy Destroyer Peterson keeps an eye on a disabled Soviet submarine as another Soviet vessel crosses between. The sub was found yesterday 490 miles due east of St. Augustine, Fla. (See Digest story, page 2). TODAY Trafficking turkey URKEYS TEND to be pretty retarded birds but the fowl that hangs around the highway in front of the post office in Colgate, Wis., must be blessed as well. "It's pure luck that this one is still alive," said Jean Arntz, 43, who lives across the county road from the post office. The bird has developed a habit of standing in Off their rockers GOT A GRANDMOTHER who's too sedentary? Get her around Jan and Louise Rose and she'll be off her rocker in no time. The two grandmothers from Las Vegas (not related, despite the same last name) are planning an 8,000-mile hike around North America to encourage the elderly to get back into the swing of things. "We are doing it for seniors to get them off their rockers and make them Bloody embarrassing (OUNT DRACULA had a rough time at the Northern Illinois Blood Bank in Rockford last week. He fainted at the sight of blood. Sam Marlow, the man underneath the Count Dracula costume, had intended to donate blood to promote a haunted house project by the local chapter of the March of Dimes. But when Marlow, who is chairman of the project, went to the donation center and saw another donor give blood, he keeled over. He was revived but left the half the auditorium with a crowd made up mostly of children and elderly alumni. " 1965 - University officials announced they were asking other universities, including Harvard, to join them in set- ting a reciprocal one-year student exchange. * 1972 - Two District Court judges dismissed charges of malicious destruction of property against protesters ac- cused of digging bomb crates in the Diag during the sum- mer. The protesters said, they dug the holes as part of a demonstration against stepped-up air raids over North . ,I