I Helicopter crashes, -five Missing MIAMI (AP) - An Air Force helicopter trying to intercept a shipment of drugs crashed in a rainstorm in the Atlantic Ocean near the Bahamas, and officials said yesterday four men were rescured and five were missing. . The helicopter, which crashed Mon- day night, was carrying a U.S. drug en- forcement special agent, four Air Force personnel and four Bahamian police of- ficers assigned to a special enfor- cement program designed to interdict shipments of marijuana and cocaine headed for South Florida from Latin America. DEA administrator Francis Mullen said the Air Force helicopter had tried unsuccessfully to intercept a DC-3 air- craft that the DEA suspected was plan- ning an "air drop" near the Bimini Islands. He said he was raining heavily at the time of the crash. THE PROGRAM, known as Operation Bahamas-Turks, was a joint effort by DEA's Miami office, the Bahamian government and the Air Force, which obtained authority to join in narcotics operations under legislation passed since the Reagan administration took office. DEA spokesman Frank Chellino said an extensive air and sea search for the five missing men started shortly after the helicopter crashed about 10 miles north of Nassau. Mullen identified the missing men as DEA Special Agent Larry Carwell, 39, of Houston; Air Force Capt. Dyke Whitbeck, the pilot; Air Force Lt. Thomas Hamby, the co-pilot; Air Force Sgt. Edgardo Acha; and Constable Ar- try Jones of the Bahamian police. The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 11, 1984 - Page 3 Education board to review new school standards Ice cubeAP Photo Bob Baker of Grand Rapids skis through the icy waters of Pigeon Lake in Ottawa County about 30 miles west of Grand Rapids, earlier this week. Baker and four friends from the West Michigan Water Association braved frigid waters and 20 degrees air temperatures for the annual mid-winter ritual. Med. Students- return to Grenada LANSING, Mich. (UPI)-A sweeping plan for upgrading educational stan- dards-seen as the most significant document ever to be handled by the State Board of Education-will come before that panel today. The key features of the plan are lengthening the school year and school day and establishing tougher graduation requirements for high schoolers. POLITICALLY, ITS MOST revolutionary aspect is a threat that the board will seek mandatory statewide graduation requirements if local districts do not adopt them voluntarily. "Better Education for Michigan Citizens: A Blueprint for Action-The Michigan State Board of Education Plan" is the product of months of study by groups such as the Michigan Com- mission on High Schools. It would extend the current 180-day school year by 20 days. The new year would include 190 class days and 10 for teacher preparation and ad- ministrative matters. Only five days could be cancelled due to bad weather. IN ADDITION, junior highs, senior highs and middle schools would be required to provide six class hours per day. The state would pick up the tab for the extra schooling, which would be phased in over a four-year period. No price tag was available, but a less ex- tensive plan was pegged earlier at about $10 million. The extension and the additional fun- ding would require legislative ap- proval. "THE SCHOOL year has been eroded and the school day has been eroded," State School Superintendent Phillip Runkel said. "Other nations have longer school years," he said. "I think this could make a difference." Reaction from local school officials has been mixed. "With the state funding, I think it's a marvelous idea," said Mona Shores Superintendent Gerald Keidel. But Marquette School Superintendent Richard Klahn said extending the year "is like saying that 52 Sundays in Sun- day school is good for a kid, so double it and he'll be a more religious kid." The board is considering recommen- ding the following graduation requirements: Four years of com- munication skills, two years of math, two years of science, two years of social studies, one year of health and physical education, one semester of computer science 'and two years of foreign language, fine arts, vocational education or practical arts. ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada (AP) - Medical students evacuated during the U.S. invasion returned to classes yesterday, swapping stories of war and hunting for looted belongings. One hundred beginning students enrolled with the 148 evacuees at the two Grenada campuses of the American-run St. George's University School of Medicine. BUT 175 second-semester students accepted an offer to remain at tem- porary classrooms at Long Island University in New York. "They apparently have the hilarious notion that they're safer in Brooklyn than they are here," said Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, vice chancellor of the American-run medical school. He added, however, that he found their decision "quite understandable." SECOND-semester students were on the campus near the Point Salines air- strip when the first American troops landed at the strip in the Oct. 25 invasion that ousted a short-lived radical military regime. Only 260 U.S. troops, supported by 440 members of the multinational Carib- bean Peacekeeping Force, remain on Grenada. There has been no contact with "hostiles" since Nov. 21. "It's real quiet," said Capt. William Mastin of the 18th Airborne based in Fort Bragg, N.C. HE SAID THE army saw no need to take special precautions for the studen- ts. Most students interviewed said they felt more comfortable now that the pro- Cuban leftist government has been replaced. Most students lost clothing, books, cameras, stereos and other items to looters after the evacuation. Bourne said some losses may be paid for by the U.S. government. BUT DAMAGE from direct "acts of war"-such as 10 doors kicked in by the U.S. troops - cannot be recovered, Bourne said. The government-run Spice Island Radio appealed for voluntary return of school goods. Leslie Wilbur, an ad- ministrative assistant, said 10 vehicles belonging to school and faculty had been returned by Grenadians who ap- parently took them with the expectation that the Americans would never return. Charles Modica, chancellor of the 7- year-old school, said he was "pleasan- tly surprised" by the number of studen- ts who returned to Grenada. "This is a new beginning for Grenada, and we're proud to be part of it," Modica said. HAPPENINGS 0 Highlight The Ann Arbor Tenants Union is holding a "Pre-Renters Workshop" and mass meeting for anyone interested in sorting through the confusion of ren- ting. The meeting begins at 7 p.m., in the Michigan Union's Pendleton Room. Films Cinema II-Mean Streets; 71& 9,p.m., MLB 3. Cinema Guild - The Quiet Man; 7 p.m., True Grit, 9:20 p.m., Michigan Theater. Ethnographic Film Series - Shadow Catcher: Edward S. Curtis and The North American Indian, 7 p.m., MLB 2. Performances Laugh Track - Eric Tunney, 9 p.m., U-Club. Speakers Chemistry - Organic thesis colloquium, Lee Ann Baron, "Cobalt & Cop- per Promoted Amide Hydrolysis. Model Reactions for Carboxypeptidase A," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem.; special department sem. (analytical), Andrew Ewing, "Analytical Applications of Micro-Voltametric Electrodes," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Computing Center - Forrest Hartman, "Welcome to MTS," 7 p.m., 130 BSAD. Chem. Eng. - Brice Carnahan, "Intro to Digigal Computing & MTS, I," 7 r p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Russian & East European Studies - Brown bag, William Rosenberg, "The Comparative History of Labor Protest - Report on the Paris Colloquium," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm. Latin American Solidarity Committee - Elizabeth Burger, member of MICAH, 7:30 p.m., Trotter House, 1443 Washtenaw. Meetings Science Fiction Club - 8:15 p.m., League. Michigan Gay Undergraduates -9 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 5 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Academic Alcoholics -1:30 p.m., Alano Club. New Jewish Agenda - Middle East Task Force potluck followed by meeting, 7:30 p.m., call 665-5784 for info. Miscellaneous Museum of Art - Art Break, Jeannette Goldberg, 12:10 p.m. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Malicious Intent rr rI Court tapes withheld in Craft '5 From AP and UPI JOPLIN, Mo.-The judge hearing former TV anchorwoman Christine Craft's fraud retrial refused yesterday to allow the playing of a tape in which members of a viewer panel were asked by a researcher if they thought Craft was "a mutt." U.S. District Judge Joseph Stevens Jr. denied a request by attorney Dennis Egan to play the tape to jurors hearing Craft's law suit against Metromedia Inc., former owner of KMBC-TV in Kansas City. CRAFT, 39, contends KMBC-TV management reneged on a promise that her appearance would not be changed if she accepted the co-anchor position. Craft is seeking $3.5 million in damages from Metromedia, claiming the company lied to her about not em- 'raud trial phasizing appearance during her inter- views for the job. She testified that soon after beginning work in January 1981, her superiors began criticizing her looks and subjec- ted her to a strict clothing and makeup regime. Craft resigned after she was demoted to a reporter in 1981. The trial is expected to go to the jury Thursday or Friday. On the tape, Steve Meacham, a former employee of Audience Research and Development of Dallas, asked members of a focus group-a cross-section of viewers brought together to discuss local newscasters-their opinions of Kansas City's news anchors in May 1981. Among his remarks to the group were: "Let's spend 30 seconds destroying Christine Craft." "Is she a mutt? Let's be honest about this." "Move her back to California. If we all chip in, can we buy her a ticket?" AP Photo Gone fishin' Frank and John Siewiorek brave four inches of new snow during a fishing expedition yesterday off the Edgewater Marina in Cleveland, Ohio. The brothers cleared enough of the snow off the ice to bore half a dozen holes in the ice. However, they admitted that fishing was not as good as in past years. Ties to Vatican established Kissinger Committee to make aid recommendation (Continued from Page 1) mission's spending recommendations had reached the White House before last weekend and that they were "fac- tored in" to the president's budget plans. Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.), chairman of the Senate Budget Com- mittee, said he thinks the commission's recommendations have "a very good chance" of approval by Congress. IN EFFECT, the commission will recommend a continuation of the ad- ministration's present economic and security policies but at intensified levels. In addition to what is expected to be a doubling, of economic aid, the com- mission also will ask for sharp in military aid for El Salvador. Ad- ministration officials already have said they intend to request a supplemental appropriation in the $10 million to $140 million range. However, the request may go beyond that range once the ad- ministration has an opportunity to examine the commission's report, of- ficials said. Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) said the commission offered "a blueprint for continued warfare." However, he en- dorsed the panel's recommendation that further aid be conditioned on im- provement in human rights. (Continued from Page 1) The United States is the only major power among the 107 nations that recognize the Holy See. There are no representatives from China and the Soviet Union, the world's largest com- munist nations. The new arrangement also will give the U.S. ambassador to the Vatican more access to information from senior diplomats who make up the am- bassadorial corps to the tiny city-state. The Vatican uses its diplomatic of- fices, among other things; to smooth the way for international aid during disasters and to try to head off armed international conflicts. ANTED Students with cotiprehensive understanding of microcomputers (Apple, IBM, Atari, Commodore) PART-TIME TELEMARKETING Flexible Hours High Pay Walking Distance from Campus