Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom :1.1 Litv E ai1Q Breakfast Cloudy today with a chance of rain by afternoon. High near 45 degrees. 7V0. XCIV-No. 115 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, February 17, 1984 Fifteen Cents Fourteen Pages i, Gemayel to J break accord with Israel From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - Druse and Moslem militias stepped up military and political pressure yesterday to oust President Amin Gemayel, and Gemayel sought Saudi intervention to save his disintegrating army and government. U.S.' Marines and Italian troops packed their equipment and prepared to pull out of Beirut. IN WASHINGTON, President Reagan received a final plan for with- drawing most of the U.S. Marines from Lebanon within 30 days Thursday, and a senior White House official said the first troop movements could come within 48 hours. The official, who briefed reporters on the condition that he remain anonymous, said the redeployment should be completed within 30 days from today. However, 500 people, including Marines and Army trainers, will remain in Beirut to guard the U.S. Em- bassy and perform other duties, the of- ficialsaid. BUT EVEN after the Marines, perhaps 1,200, are relocated on the ships, they will remain as members of the multinational force, the official said. The timetable for withdrawal of the Marines was submitted to the White House yesterday by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, who included a provision for removing the Marines more quickly in the event of an emergency. The White House official said Reagan would formally approve the plan today. IN LEBANON, President Amin Gemayel has agreed to renounce his government's May 1983 troop- withdrawal agreement with Israel, Beirut radio reported yesterday night. The state radio said that Gemayel had agreed to an eight-point Saudi plan that includes scrapping the Israel- Lebanon pact, and that Lebanese Foreign Minister Elie Salem had in- formed Saudi officials of the decision. Beirut radio said Gemayel provided details of the Saudi initiative to leaders of the various Lebanese factions. It said he also sent a written message about his decision to former President Suleiman Franjieh, a member of the opposition National Salvation Front, which also includes Druse leader Walid Jumblatt and former Prime Minister Rashid Karami. AMERICAN officials, who spoke on condition they not be identified, said they were skeptical the Saudi-mediated plan would work. Druse opposition leader Walid Jumblatt said in an interview view he would veto it. He called it "too little, too late." "There will never be a compromise See GEMAYEL, Page 3 Poetry in motion Leonard Bernstein becomes a blur of motion as he directs the Vienna Phil- harmic Orchestra in Wednesday's dress rehearsal in Hill Auditorium. The Daily Photo by REBECCA KNIGHT orchestra played Brahms Symphony No. 2 and Mozart's Symphony No. 41. See story, Page 6. Fifth-Ward election may end GOP council rule By ERIC MATTSON Only one primary will be held in this year's City Council election, but if either of the two Democrats vying for a Fifth-Ward seat win the final race, Republicans may lose their 10-year majority on Council. CityElections In next Monday's primary, Fifth- Ward voters will. decide whether can- didates Barbara Rachelson or Doris Preston will face Republican Sally Pennington in the April 2 city election. REPUBLICANS have traditionally held both seats in the Fifth-Ward, but last year, Democrat Kathy Edgren defeated the Republican incumbent Louis Velker. Party representation in other wards is likely to remain the same, making the Fifth-Ward race crucial in deter- mining, whether Democrats can gain control of City Council. In other words, candidates are running unopposed or only one Republican and Democrat are competing for a Council seat. Councilman Larry Hunter (D-First- Ward), who is running unopposed in the April election, said both Preston and Rachelson have a strong chance of defeating Pennington. THE TWO candidates are aligned on many issues. They both support a city- funded shelter for Ann Arbor's homeless, an increase in human ser- vices funding, and less stringent enfor- cement of city parking regulations. Although the candidates agree onthe city's problem areas, Rachelson says they differ in their approaches. "We are less similar than people think," Rachelson said, adding that she backs more stringent planning policies than Preston. THE TWO Democrats also differ in the amount of experience they've had working on city governments. Preston, 40, a University alumna and currently a librarian at the Graduate Library, has served on the Ann Arbor Planning Commission for three years, the Washtenaw County Metropolitan Planning Commission, and the Mayor's Energy Advisory Commission. Preston, who also headed Kathy Edgren's campaign last year for the Fifth-Ward seat, criticizes Rachelson's lack of familiarity with Ann Arbor politics. "BARBARA JUST has not been in town that long," Preston said. See DEMOCRATS, Page 2 representatives on last night's panel. Insufficient student participation in drafting the code is the main problem with proposed guidelines, said Jonathan Ellis, co-director of Canter- bury Loft and one of four panelists. "I think the students ought to appoint their own judges, and they ought to make their own rules," Ellis said. BUT Sharphorn said he encourages students to criticize the code and make suggestions. The proposed code is "not immutable," Sharphorn said. Parts of the code "might be changed." Under the code, students could be punished for acts such as arson, sexual, harassment, assault, theft, vandalism and possibly some, types of civil disobedience - all things the Univer- See PROPOSED, Page 5 Turner's late shot buries Illino is, 62-60 By JEFF BERGIDA Who says Michigan can't win the close ones? Not Eric Turner. THE JUNIOR guard's 10-foot jumper with two seconds remaining gave the Wolverines a 62-60 victory over seven- th-ranked Illinois last night at Crisler Arena. Turner finished with a season- high 22 points, hitting nine of 12 shots from the field. Trailing 58-52 with under four minutes remaining, Michigan made a 10-2 run which featured just about every play in the book. Tim McCor- mick, who finished with 12 points and four rebounds, started it off by going in for a, dunk which was knocked away by Illini center George Montgomery. Replays showed that the ball was hit while it was going through the net but the officials ruled no goaltending. Mc- Cormick hit one free throw. "It went through andl they knocked it away with a hand," said Michigan coach Bill Frieder. "I was willing to bet. everyone they knocked it out but no one would take it." GAMBLING matters aside, a-Turner free throw pulled the Wolverines within four, 58-54, and on the next Illinois possession Dan Pelekoudas took a charge and calmly sank two foul shots. The senior was booed consistenly throughout the contest but Frieder had nothing but praise for him after the See CAGERS, Page 11 C 'criti By CLAUDIA GREEN Despite the absences of two guests of e honor and a sparse audience of 15, last night's forum on the proposed student code for non-academic conduct brought d u ct critics and supporters together for a sometimes explosive discussion of the guidelines. Virginia Nordby, director of the oe University's affirmative action office who has helped rewrite the proposed rules several times, and Mary Rowland, president of the Michigan i z e dStudent Assembly who has been an out spoken critic of the code, failed to show up at last night's discussion at the 1 U ICampus Chapel. ALTHOUGH Nordby was replaced by Daniel Sharphorn who also worked on the code, there were no student Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF Michigan's Roy Tarpley, and Illinois' Efrem Winters (24) and Bruce Douglas (25) fight for position under the boards as Butch Wade puts one up in the Wolverine's 62-60 win over the Fighting Illini last night at Crisler Arena. TODAY Time out NCE AGAIN it's time for that mid-term reprieve from midterms, papers, and projects; and the Daily will be out of publication during the winter break. But we'll be back Tuesday, February 28, with news, sports, arts, and everything else you buy the Daily for. ,A.... 1. 1 ment, and Debra Winger, her defiant daughter, were both nominated for best actress. The movie also received nominations for best picture, best director, best screen- play,.film editing, original score, sound, art direction, and two best supporting actor nominations. Also nominated for best actress were Jane Alexander, who starred in Testament; two-time Oscar winner Meryl Streep for Silk- wood, and Julie Walters for Educating Rita. Nominated for best actor were Michael Caine for Educating Rita, Tom Conti for Rueben, Rueben, Robert Duvall for Tender Mer- cie and Alhrt Finnev and Tom Conrtenav far their role ficial language of the United States. The resolution suppor- ting a proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution died in the rules committee on a 2-3 vote despite Hayakawa's statement that English should be declared the official language because it unifies Americans. "The English language isn't the great unifier," responded Senate President Pro Tem David Roberti of Los Angeles. "It's the Bill of Rights. What unifies this country is freedom of choice." * 1933 - The Michigan Socialist House, a student rooming house, reported a fund surplus of $55. " 1954 - University men were urged to register for $4 dance classes at the League. Women were admitted without charge because they served as hostesses. " 1972 - The Housing Policy Committee voted to drop plans for combined cafeteria facilities for Alice Lloyd and Couzens Halls, despite assertions that the two "cannot operate in the future without the connection." I {