Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom E Lit c4au iEai3 Guess what? Mostly cloudy with more-you guessed it-snow flurries. Expect a high between 25 and 30. Vol. XCIV-No. 75 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, December 7, 1983 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages PLO bomb in Israel kills four From AP and UPI Daily Photo by DOUG MCMAHON Winter wonderart, Mother Nature shows up the art students on North Campus yesterday as she adds a coat of glistening snow to their artwork in the Sculpture Court. Pan.el wavants open dorm, lottery JERUSALEM - A PLO bomb blew apart a crowded bus yesterday killing four people and wounding 46 in the bloodiest terrorist attack in Jerusalem in more than five years. In Beirut, militia gunners poured heavy machine-gun fire at the U.S. Marine base at Beirut airport. NO U.S. casualties were reported in the machine-gun attack, the first on the American contingent of the multinational peacekeeping force since Sunday when an artillery barrage killed eight Marines and wounded two. In Tripoli, the Palestine Liberation Organization claimed responsibility for Jerusalem blast, saying one of its guerrilla units planted the bomb aboard a "military bus." The bomb ripped limbs off some passengers and blew away the roof and sides of the bus while it was stopped on Herzl Boulevard linking southern Jerusalem to its western suburbs. One- fourth of the wounded were in intensive care units with serious burns and singed lungs, doctors said. IT WAS THE most serious attack on civilians in Israel since the Israeli in- vasion of Lebanon in June 1982 to crush the PLO, and the worst bombing in Jer- usalem since a June 1978 bus bombing that killed six people. The office of Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir vowed "the perpetrators of this wicked assault . . . will not remain un- punished." The explosion occurred when the bus was stopped at a traffic light in Jerusalem's Jewish section. It came during a school vacation for Hanukkah, and several children were believed to be on the bus. THE BLAST also damaged another bus stopped at the red light, knocking the driver and some of his passengers from their seats. Parts of the red-and-white bus were scattered over a 200-yard radius. The roof flew almost 100 yards and landed down the street almost intact. The bomb appeared to have been placed under a seat near the center of the bus. It blew a 3-by-6-foot hole in the floor, buckled seats and stripped the panelling off the sides. "It appears that the bomb was very heavy," Transport Minister Haim Cor- fu told Israel radio. "A heavy package or a big shopping basket like that should have aroused suspicions among the passengers." Bombs are often found on buses by passengers, who are reminded on television and radio to be alert for suspicious packages. Police said the four dead were two girls, 14 and 15 years old, a 65-year-old man and a 35-year-old man. At least 10 schoolchildren were among the 43 in- jured. "There was a baby's blood-stained pacifier on the street," said one shaken rescue worker. "It was a horrific scene." MEANWHILE, U.S. Marines at the airport responded to the rebel machine- gun bursts with fire from tank guns and anti-tank weapons. The fire came from an area controlled by Druse and Shiite militias. "At 5 p.m. 11 a.m. EST today our eastern perimeter received heavy, con- centrated machine-gun fire from a for- tified position," said Marine spokesman Maj. Dennis Brooks. "The Marines responded ... and the fighting ceased. It stopped im- mediately. there were no casualties." AT THE SAME time Beirut radios reported U.S. jets few reconnaissance over Syrian-controlled Lebanon and Syria said: it downed two unmanned Israeli spy planes. Five formations of F-14 Tomcat in- tercepters, each made up of two jets, steaked over Beirut at midafternoon See PLO, Page 5 By SUE BARTO Students who decide to remain in University housing next year may have an easier time switching dorms if Housing Division officials accept a new system proposed by a planning committee yesterday. The new plan would open lease lotteries in all the halls to any current resident of University housing. Under the system used last year, students were only allowed to enter the lottery in their current hall, Those wishing to change halls had to sign on to lengthy waiting lists. After signing a lease in their old hall. MEMBERS OF the Fall Planning Committee said the proposed system would allow everyone an equal chance of getting a spot in one of the more popular halls, such as West Quad or Mosher-Jordan. Current residents of those halls, however, may resent losing their privilege to renew their leases. A majority of the nine-member planning commit- tee, which is made up of housing officials, building directors, a faculty member of LSA, and students, approved the, plan, said Marlene Mantyk, housing advisor and chairperson of the committee. The proposal also includes an "escalation clauise" which would increase the number of leases available to returning students currently living in the more popular dorms, Mantyk said. Last year, only 42 per- cent of the spaces in each hall were made available to returning students, with the rest reserved for in- coming freshpersons. THE CEILING would be escalated after officials tallied up the number of leases available system- wide. Un-signed leases for the less popular dorms would be used to allow more students into the popular halls, keeping the ceiling at 42 percent for the system as a whole Mantyk said. Residence Hall Association members said they fully support the recommendation. "It's the fastest, simplest, smoothest plan possible," said RHA mem- ber Matt Burley. Although Burley acknowledged that the residents of the more sought-after dorms would lose their current advantage over residents of other halls, he said the escalation clause would make up for some of the loss. See PANEL, Page 6 i MSA passes sexual anti- disermunation proposal By PETE WILLIAMS Students will be asked to approve a sexual non-discrimination clause for the Michigan Student Assembly's con- stitution during elections this spring, MSA members voted unanimously last night. The clause, one of the first to be ap- proved by a University organization, was approved in part to encourage University administrators to take a similar step. "IN SOME WAYS we hoped that it would have an effect on (the University by-laws) but it was not done for that purpose," said Diane Devries, lesbian coordinator for MSA. "It was done because MSA thought it appropriate." If the proposed wording is approved by three-fifths of the student voters next term, MSA's constitution would be' altered to read: "The Assembly shall recognize and undertake to guarantee. the right to enjoy all of these rights . . without regard to the race, color, sex, social class, political views, national origin, religious creed, sexual orien- tation, or any other arbitrary or 'We have always supported the sexual orientation clause at the general (Univer- sity) by-law level. We felt it was time we take a firm stand ourselves." -Mary Rowland, MSA president unreasonable consideration." Devries said the assembly had been talking about changing the by-laws for some time, but the task of drafting a proposal did not fall under any mem- ber's specific duties. IT TOOK three weeks for Devries and gay coordinator Greg Prokopowitz to draft a proposal after they were appoin- ted last month. "Until November, there was no one to work on it," Devries said. "Once MSA realized that it didn't fit in with any other group's concerns, they created the (lesbian and gay) liaison positions." MSA president Mary Rowland said the clause represents the assembly's strong sentiments on the issue. "WE HAVE always supported the sexual orientation clause at the general (University) by-law level," she said. "We felt it was time we take a firm stand ourselves." Rowland predicted that the clause would have little trouble earning voter approval. MSA Vice President Jono Soglin agreed, saying the clause will be a more political issue than the unsuc- cessful attempt last year to get students to approve a steering committee vote for the assembly's vice president for minority affairs. Blown away AP Photo A housing project is left in ruins yesterday in Selma, Ala., after a tornado stuck, killing one and injuring at least 14. The tornado was part of a second plague of tornados and floods to rip through the Deep South since Saturday. TODAY- Snowballers' attack peters out HAT STARTED out as a fight between two halls in Markley snowballed into an attack on the rest of the hill area dorms late Monday night. Residents of fourth Reeves moved a was too much, according to one Reeves house resident. Sources say that West Quad and neighboring South Quad will be hit eventually-watch out. Q A sports scandal that wasn't N HIS JUST released autobiography, Giant Steps, bas- ketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who played college ball at the University of California at Los Angeles, reveals that he was offered a bonus package to transfer to Michigan during the 1966-67 season. Abdul-Jabbar, who says he was According to Hal ... D ID ANYONE ELSE notice who was included among the noted celebrities queried by The New York Times Book Review on Sunday about their favorite books for work and pleasure of 1983? That's right. Questioned along with Ronald Reagan, Sally Ride, and Dan Rather was none other than our very own Harold Shapiro. What was the president's favorite book for work? Victor Fuch's "Who Shall Live," a studied proposal for universal comprehen- sive medical insurance. For pleasure, Shapiro named Joel Samoff tenure. The students held that Samoff was denied tenure because of his Marxist political beliefs. Also on this date in history: " 1971 - The Daily learned that John Lennon and Yoko Ono would make an appearance at a rally held two days later for radical leader John Sinclair. * 1969 - Residents of Baits told University housing of- ficials they were considering a rent strike if the University didn't lower their rent and negotiate with the Baits Housing Tenants Union on other issues. " 1961- University President Harlan Hatcher told a group i, 1, ! I i