Ninety-four YFears of Editorial Freedom C I be Lit i&1atl ~E~ai1v Resurrection Sunny today with highs in the mid-thirties. r _... _ Vol. XCIV-No. 120 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, March 3, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Measles drive draws 9,600 students; some wi n free pizza By SUSAN MAKUCH University Health Services administered 4,220 measles vaccinations during their two-week immunization drive Feb. 3 through Feb. 17, according to statistics compiled yesterday. Health officials examined 9,611 students, 66 percent of whom already had adequate inoculations. TWO DORMITORIES, Mary Markley and Couzens, will be treated to pizza at the Michigan Union because 88 percent of their students reported for a measles screening, the highest rate on campus. The pizza party offer by Health Services, the Union, and University Housing was designed to spur participation in the immunization drive. Although only 4.5 percent of the off-campus student population reported to verious Health Service vaccination sites for screening, Judith Daniels, director of nursing at Health Services said she is "very pleased with the results.", IN COMPARISON, the success rate in residence halls was much higher, with more than 67 percent of the students receiving immunizations or confirming previous ones. "We were primarily concerned with preventing an out- break in the dorms," Daniels said. "Those students live in close proximity and there's a greater danger for the disease to spread." Daniels said that the high level of immunity in the dor- mitories should prevent any outbreak within University housing facilities. ACCORDING to Dr. Caesar Briefer, director off. Health Services, only two measles cases have been confirmed on campus by state health officials, both before spring break. Briefer added that they are still waiting for word on four other suspected cases. Many students, Daniels said, "self-diagnose themselves with a fever and rash and think they have the measles." ONE OF THE people with a confirmed case is an employee See 9,600, Page 3 N ° ; Syria offers.. cease fire pact in Lebanon From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - Presidents Amin Gemayel of Lebanon and Hafez Assad of Syria have agreed to a Syrian- guaranteed cease-fire in Lebanon's civil war, a senior Lebanese official said yesterday. The official, speaking on condition he not be identified, said Gemayel hoped to hold a second round of peace talks in Switzerland "within a matter of days, not weeks" in which he intended to offer opposition leaders positions in a broadly based government. GEMAYEL'S talks with Assad yester- day and Thursday were part of his first visit to Syria since he assumed power in September '1982. Syria backs the Shiite Moslem and Druse militias that have been fighting Gemayel's beleagured government. The cease-fire was to begin yesterday evening, the official said. However, fighting was reported after dark along the "green line" dividing Moslem west Beirut from the Christian east. Police said at least one civilian was killed and 20 wounded in fighting in downtown Beirut. Artillery exchanges also were reported in the mountains to the east lake in the afternoon. The official denied that Gemayel had agreed to abrogate the May 17 Lebanese-Israeli agreement that called for the withdrawal, of Israeli troops from Lebanon, although he admitted the two had discussed the accord at great length. "There is no decision to abrogate the May 17 agreement," he said. BUT HE ADDED: "The May 17 agreement is at an impasse. The en- vironment about the agreement has changed. It has not led to withdrawals or peace in Lebanon. Therefore we are looking for ways and means to reach the same objectives." The official said Lebanon would be consulting with Israel and the United States, which sponsored the talks leading to the accord, and hoped to "go beyond the May 17 agreement." Syria has opposed the pact, saying it wrecks Arab solidarity against Israel because 'it recognizes Israel's sovereignty and legitimacy. Syria also said the pact violates Lebanese sovereignty and endangers Syrian security because it would have permit- ted Israel to patrol a security zone in southern Lebanon. ISRAEL SAID IT would withdraw its troops only if Syria also withdrew from Lebanon. Syria refused, so the pact never went into effect. The official said Gemayel received "solid assurances about the fullwith- See.CEASE, Page 2 Peace no w Doily Photo by CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA With a little spray paint, this stop sign on the corner of Tappan and Monroe streets becomes an anti- war slogan.' ,U.S. gave aid for Falklands W~~ar, says magazine LONDON - (UPI) - A respected British magazine said yesterday the United States gave Britain more than $60 million in military aid during the Falklands War, enabling the British to defeat Argentina. The emergency aid program, The Economist said, was masterminded by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, who cleared it privately with President. Reagan to avoid opposition from Cabinet members opposed to taking sides in the 1982 war. THE BRITISH DEFENSE Ministry said it was "not prepared to confirm the accuracy of The Economist's Report," and the Pentagon declined to comment on it. Without naming sources, The Economist cited "new material" for its story on the 74-day South Atlantic war n which British troops defeated Argen- tine forces that had seized the British colony, 450 miles off Argentina's coast. The Economist said Britain had inadequate armjs and surveillance, poor communications and intelligence, and" situated 8,000 miles from the ar- chipelago - thinly stretched supply lines. "The British operation to recapture the Falklands could not have been mounted, let alone won, without See U.S., Page 3 No more minid games' DENSA Offers freedom from IQ By MARY KERR For $6 a year, the 1,000 members receive six issues 01 the Fill a bathtub to the rim with water. Then sit down in the nENSA newsletter, and a "Dare to be Dense" bumper tub. If any water spills over the sides when you climb in, sticker. you're dense enough for DENSA. Price also makes yearly predictions for his faithful DENSA (Diversely Educated Not Seriously Affected), was following. For 1984 he thinks Michael Jackson will come out created by Dallas author Steve Price, as the common per- with a line of designer jeans - Billie Jeans; James Watt will son's answer to Mensa. join the Sierra Club, and Billy Carter will say his brother is MENSA'S membership is select - all members must score doing a great job as president. in the top two percent of a standardized IQ test. But it's not PRICE, WHO is currently working on a travel guide to child's play to join the ranks of DENSA either. Mars for $125 a day has also published The DENSA Quiz The DQ tests are taxing and tricky with questions like Book, and The Nowhere Dictionary. "Which word doesn't rhyme: bar, car, far, jar, miscellaneous Joking aside, Price said he organized DENSA to try "to star, or tar?" Price says he does not include answer sheets reevaluate what IQ testing has become. with the DQ tests in order to cut down on cheating. Mensa puts too much emphasis on a number (IQ rating) to The club for the worst and the dullest began three years rate a person's potential in society," he said. ago when Price placed a small classified .advertisement in Price, now 29, took many IQ tests when he was younger - the Dallas Observer reading, "Mensa members driving you and did badly. Counselors said with his low scores, he didn't crazy with all their high IQ jabber? If you answer yes without have the tools to go to college, then he went on to excell at the having to analytically decipher this question, you belong in University of Texas at Austin. the DENSA society. No entrance exam required. So pooh Despite Price's digs at IQ testing and Mensa, Gabriel Wer- pooh on IQ, Let's get dense." ba, a past Mensa chairman said he is not threatened by the THE APPLICANTS were generally. swift in responding, group. although some put their stamps on the wrong side of the en- "DENSA is obviously a put-on, a spoof," Werba said. "It velope. shows we have arrived if someone is willing to spoof us." House debates new tax package WASHINGTON (UPI)- House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski wants his panel's $50 billion tax bill to be considered by the House as part of a package that also in- cludes spending cuts, aides said yester- day. Briefing reporters on the commit- tee's late-night closed session Thur- sday, during which the tax bill was completed, a senior committee aide said Rostenkowski, (D-Ill.), will be looking to President Reagan and House Speaker Thomas O'Neill for a signal that tere is some constensus on reducing the federal defici., now ap- proaching $1.5 trillion. "THIS BILL would be better as part of a budget package," the aide said. "Standing by itself...well, we'll just have to see." The bill raises the $50 billion in the next three years by, among other measures, increasing taxes on liquor, reducing the amount of a planned cut in the cigarette tax, freezing the 3 percent telephone excise tax, which was to expire this year, modifying a limit on tax-free industrial development bonds, and limiting the tax write-offs a business can take for a car to the first $21,000 of the car's worth. The car provision, by, Rep. Fortney Stark, (D-Calif.), was aimed at at- tacking businesses that buy luxury cars simply so they can deduct them as a business expense. WHITE HOUSE spokesman Larry Speakes said the administration had not seen the Rostenkowski plan in detail, "but those parts which are con- sistent with the president's budget we will support. Other measures in it we will have to look at and analyze. At the same time we are still sticking to our policy that tax increases should be ac- companied by spending cuts." He said the administration would support or reject "user fees, ' or taxes on specific products like alcohol and tobacco on a case-by-case basis. Reagan, whose fiscal 1985 budget is at least $180 billion in the red, has con- sistently been against any taxes except what he calls loophole closings, some of which are addressed in Rostenkowski's bill. The Ways and Means Committee plans to bring the tax bill to the House Rules Committee next week and is asking that committee to preclude amendments when the bill is con- sidered on the House floor. Daily Photo by CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA Book bin The garbage container behind the Law quad overflows with books yesterday, as the laws must have all been changed, or maybe some law students decided to chuck it all and stay down in Florida. "I Mal Blown off MAYBE JIM RAU should have expected it. But the low turnout of research subjects for his senior project depressed him, nevertheless. Rau chose to do his senior thesis on procrastination. Over the last few weeks h en nt onnsiderlhe time making nnters .... procrastinators will change their ways. "I'll be really disappointed if I can't get anyone by next week," he said. "It's really important, my study depends on getting subjec- ts." LQ Bozo for president OW AMERICA has its first chance to elect a real Bozo to the presidency. With Rubin Askew and Earnest Hollings out of the race and George McGovern standing on thin ice. Larry Harmon. the actor who created Bozo and has Bozo Party." "If I become president, I hope to help the nations agree enough to keep the world going." L Chips defended WHO SAYS POTATO chips are bad for you? Not the folks attending a National Potato Chipping Seminar recently. They insist that those notorious munchy morsels are even good for you. Citing public misconception about the nutritional value of chips. Jay Foods Inc. President Joe Whalen said that "there is no such thing as junk food." GG ,il.. , t ... .. lt. . 1.. ,, 4: . . .. .4. ... >. - _,1 ., 7T 1.. The Daily almanac O N THIS DATE in 1969, the professors in LSA voiced approval for a new degree program, the Bachelors of General Science. Under the proposal, the degree would have had -no distribution, concentration, or language requirements. Also on this date in history: " 1923 - The University track team captured the Illinois Relay Carnival and set four conference records; - A 1C.. - A .- _ .4> -4..,. -4_ . 1 . L I i I i L