Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom . . E Lit i au i IuiQ White stuff The snow may get as high as six inches before this one is through. High in the mid-30s. Vol. XCIV-No. 74 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, December 6, 1983 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages U.S. airman to remain prisoner From AP and UPI Fraser, Mich. BEIRUT, Lebanon - Syria vowed yesterday to Goodman we hold a captured American airman until U.S. marines carrier John] leave Lebanon and announced that another flier shot down du downed by Syrian gunners during a U.S. air strike minor injurieE Sunday had died of his wounds. IN MOSLEP The raid was the first U.S. air strike in Lebanon crowded stre and the first direct attack against Soviet-backed ding more tha Syria - which, like Israel, occupied large portions of No group c Lebanese territory. caught people SYRIAN DEFENSE Minister Lt. Gen. Mustafa which police Tlass confirmed that one captured U.S. pilot died af- plosive, parti ter that raid and another, who was taken alive, would . Some peopl be returned "when the war is over." They were the nearby buildi first American military men taken prisoner since the bleeding, a fe' Vietnam War. force of the bl Tlass said in a telephone interview in Damascus THERE W that the captured American pilot, Lt. Roy Goodman, bomb mightl 26, of Virginia Beach, Va., was "in excellent con- and gone off dition...suffering no injury." political or m Tlass also confirmed that Lt. Mark Lange of With the U in Syria ., died after he was captured. Lange and ere aboard a two-seat A-6 from the F. Kennedy. The pilot of the other plane uring the raid was rescued with only s, the Pentagon said M West Beirut, a car bomb blew up in a et, killing at least 14 people and woun- an 80, police said. laimed responsibility for the blast that heading to work and school. The bomb, said contained about 330 pounds of ex- ally collapsed the building. e were trapped inside and residents of ngs stumbled into the street dazed and w people had been stripped naked by the ast. ERE conflicting reports whether the have been intended for another target prematurely. There was no apparent ilitary target where it detonated. .S.-Syrian confrontation growing, the United States said its planes. caused "significant damage" to Syrian positions during the air raid. Two American planes were shot down. The U.S. Navy sent more reconnaissance flights over central Lebanon yesterday, but there were no reports they were fired on by the Syrians. SECRETARY OF STATE George Shultz sought yesterday to portray the weekend U.S. air strike in Lebanon as an isolated incident that does not reflect escalation of the conflict, and urged the Soviet Union to encourage restraint by Syria. He said in Washington that the use of U.S. airpower did not foreshadow an American effort to mipose a military solution in Lebanon, and called on the Soviet Union to use its influence with Syria to moderate that country's policies. "I think a case can be made that Syria and Syrian surrogates have kind of had violence going their way unchallenged toa much," he said. ASKED IF the United States would attack Syria if See U.S., Page 2 AP Photo Michigan's Tim McCormick passes off to a teammate while Georgia's Troy Hitchcock looks on during last night's 76-70 upset victory in Atlanta. Mc- Cormick paced the Wolverines with a career-high 25 points. Michigoan upsets 13th ranked aws760 By LARRY FREED and it gives the team a lot of confiden-- special to the Daily ce." ATLANTA - December 5th, 1983. Make note of this date.. It was when the Michigan basketball team cameof age. MICHIGAN went down to the Omni to face the 13th-ranked Georgia Bulldogs. Those'same.Bulldogs who returned an experienced Final Four,team from one year ago. All the young upstart Wolverines did was help Georgia ex- perience a 76-70 upset and vault the Maize and Blue hoopsters into national prominence. "This is-the biggest win we've had since I've k'een here," said junior co- captain Eric Turner. "Georgia was a nationally ranked team and beating them on their own court is a big lift for us: It shows we can play with anybody Although Turner has been a key in the past, he was of little consequence last night. In fact, the Michigan guard pit- ched a shutout on the scoreboard going 0-6 from the field in limited action. THE 6-3 FLINT native, however, barely could walk to the lockerroom af- ter the game as he was inflicted with chronic back spasms. The injury, which has hindered his play through the first five games of the young season, might cause him to be rested for the next couple of weeks. But not even Turners' injury could put a damper on the Michigan team's vic- tory. This game proved coach Bill Frieder's maturing team is no longer a one-man squad, as everybody had a See HOW, Page 10" High C H ' From staff and wire reports The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday decided to review 'the government's policy of tying federal financial aid for college-aged males to draft registration. The court will examine a ruling by a federal judge in Minnesota who last June struck down the draft status disclosure rule as unconstitutional. THE RULE requires federal grant and loan applicants to prove they have registered with the Selective Service ad refuses federal aid to those who have not met the legal obligation to register. Six University of Minnesota students challenged the law last year, sparking the ruling by U.S. District Judge Donald Alsop. Alsop wrote that the law was uncon- stitutional because it determines guilt and assesses punishment without first allowing for a trial. THE. LAW REMAINS in effect, however, because the Supreme Court set aside Alsop's ruling pending the outcome of the appeal acted on yester- day. In seeking Supreme Court review, government lawyers argued that the law makes benefits available to all qualified students who register at any time before applying." .. Harvey Grotrian, the University's director of financial aid, said he is- cautious about the high court's decision to review the law. "HAD (THE SUPREME Court) decided not to hear the case, the min- nesota judge's ruling would have stood," he said. "But just the fact that they have decided to hear it may mean the ruling could be overturned." Grotrian said it will be business as usual for the University's financial aid program. "The fact is the law and the regulations surrounding it are still in effect," hesaid. All but five of the University's finan- cial aid applicants have met the registration requirement. AN ATTORNEY for the Minnesota Public Interest Group, which represen- ted the six University of Minnesota students, said she is confident the high, Hearing d )urt to hear draft-aid case court will uphold Alsop's ruling. "We're confident the high court will see the merit in Judge Alsop's decision," said Gail Suchman, senior attorney for MPIRG. She expressed some reservation, however., saying "This court, has a history of being very conservative.'' THE LAW reactivating draft registration was signed by then- See COURT Page 6 layed in draft registration case By GLEN YOUNG A federal district judge in Detroit, e hearing the case of a University student indicted for failing to register for the draft, has decided to delay action pen-' ding further review of documents which have been turned over by the White House and other government agencies involved in the case. The decision, which Judge Phillip Pratt expressed to attorneys Friday, follows a ruling last month by a panel of district judges in Cleveland to overturn the conviction of a Cleveland man ac- cused of failing to register with Selec- tive Service. ATTORNEYS for the University graduate student, Dan Rutt, say both the Cleveland decision and ruling in the Rutt case are partial victories. The at- torneys had asked the judge to seek the governments documents, saying they would help prove their contention that Rutt and 15 other registration resistors nationwide are being prosecuted selec- tively. See HEARING, Page 2 Rutt . pleased by decision 1 Faculty panel pursues U'research conference By THOMAS MILLER The University moved a step closer to sponsoring a major conference on ' academic freedom and military research yesterday when a top faculty governing committee decided to pursue the proposed forum. The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) acted on a request made by medical school Prof. David Bassett at last month's faculty Senate Assembly meeting that such a conference be held here at the Univer- sity. BASSETT proposed the conference i response to concerns over Pentagon- sponsored research on campus and to the regents' rejection of guidelines for non-classifed researdh last June. The guidelines, proposed by the Assembly's Research Policy Commit- tee, would have prohibited research that has "substantial purpose...to destroy or permanqptly incapacitate human beings." Many SACUA members shared Bassett's concern that the University has not dealt sufficiently with the issue of military research. "IT'S SOMETHING we need to talk about," said Nursing School Prof. Cheryl Easley. "All sides need to be heard." Most SACUA members said that while they realized a conference might not convince the regents to reverse their decision about the research guidelines, an international forum on the issue might 'serve an educational purpose. "This conference could have an educational thrust to it," said Medical School Prof. Alphonse Burdi, another SACUA member. ;ARE THE. REGENTS going td be educated? I don't know. But it is my feeling that the regents' rejection of the :guidelines was not an educated one. It was more of a gut reaction from them," Burdi said. "But that doesn't mean they're going to change their minds if we have the conference." SACUA chairman Herbert Hildebrandt, a busiress school professor, said that there was "over- whelming support (from SACUA) for further investigation into whether a conference should be held." He said SACUA's next move will be to bring the issue to the Collegiate Institute on Values in Science (CIVS). CIVS is an organization of professors at the University who meet once a mon- th to discuss ethical issues in science. The current membership totals about 50 professors. Two SACUA members, Burdi and psychology Prof. Donald Brown, belong to the group. HILDEBRANDT said SACUA will consult CIVS because "The groupis in place and already discussing issues See SACUA, Page 6 Five golden rings APPhot Security officials in Beverly Hills guard this Christmas tree worth about $4 million dollars. The blue spruce, which belongs to Cartier's jewelers on Rodeo Drive, is decked with diamonds, rubies, and pearls. , oDAY The envelope please ONGRATULATIONS ARE in order for the five winners of the first annual LSA Student Government writing contest, "The Value of a Liberal Arts Education." Kent Grayson, a senior from Wayland, Mass., won $200 in the junior-senior division, while Jill Adelman. a freshwoman Tens OR ALL YOU girls out there still looking for that perfect mate, Sandra Bernhard has a few suggestions for you. Ten, to be exact. The actress who made her film debut in "The King of Comedy" picked America's 10 most desirable bachelors for the .December issue of Harper's Bazaar. Topping the list was artist Robert Rauschenberg. park for $100,000. "The ball came right at us, with no arc," said Charles Johnson, 48, of Woodinville, Wash., who suf- fered a broken cheekbone, shattered glasses, and an in- jured eye during a July 17 game. He said he has been unable to perform his job as a welding plumber since the accident because dust, dirt, ,and light conditions at his. workplace irritate his eye. The Mariners contend the county and the Kingdome are legally protected by a disclaimer on the back of each ticket. "When someone buys a ticket, implicitly twice as many first place votes as his closest rival, Lynn Waldorf of California. Also on this date in history: .1914-Scandal rocked the University when a freshman student ran off to Detroit to elope with a woman 19 years his senior. "1950-Ann Arbor stores stocked their shelves with colored oleo, as sale of the marga'ine became legal. "1955-The Student Government Council voted to II .I i