In Weekend Magazine: David Lee Roth * 'Shanghai Surprise' Our 'rape culture' * Shakey Jake Woods cl ble Air_4jau11 Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, September 19, 1986 kii1 Vol. XCVII - No. 12 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Twelve Pages French ariy officer killed in E. Beirut BEIRUT (AP) - A lone assassin shot and killed a French military attache outside the French Embassy in Beirut yesterday morning. It was the latest of a series of terrorist attacks here and in Paris. Anonymous telephone callers in Lebanon and France claimed responsibility for the assassination in the name of two obscure groups and threatened further blows. One demanded release of an alleged terrorist jailed in France. ACCORDING to Beirut police, Col. Christian Goutierre, 60, had parked his car near the French Embassy in Christian East Beirut at 8:30 a.m. He was about to get out when the gunman approached him. Police said the attacker shot Goutierre three times in the head with a silencer-equipped pistol and escaped in a waiting green BMW. For unknown reasons, Goutierre had parked his car outside the embassy's security zone which extends 100 yards around the four-story building Anna Strowe, 5, of Ann Arbor, makes her opinion on nuclear disarmament known while protesting at Regents' Plaza. Strowe was one of about 40 participants who rallied yesterday with WAND (Women's Action for Nuclear Daily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER Disarmament) against a University proposal to remove a regulation forbidding research that may harm human beings. .Group protests research By PRENTICE ZINN Yesterday at Regents Plaza demonstrators gathered to protest the report issued by the ad hoc committee that reviewed the University's classified research guidelines. The protesters, many of them members of local peace organizations, voiced concern over the Committee's recommendation that the Board of Regents eliminate the "end use" clause in the current research guidlines. The clause forbids faculty members from doing classified research which has the potential to endanger human life, such as weapons research. THE PROTESTORS also sang peace songs and staged a small march around Regents Plaza, warning that the University could become a "University of the Pentagon.". The current guidiines were placed under review after faculty and admistrators complained about ambiguous wording concerning their enforcement and requirements that all research be publishable after a year. con Re 2l~ gr cur Sti res us report The protesters criticized the mmittee's proposal to remove the search Policy Committee and assified Review Panel, two oups that help enforce the rrent guidelines. Robyn Watts, the Michigan Ldent Assembly's military search advisor, called the "end e" clause a strong moral See GROUP, Page 5 Paris police inspect pedestrians and is patrolled by embassy guards and Lebanese police. GOUTIERRE had. been stationed in Beirut since October 1984. See BEIRUT, Page 2 Blue looks to bury Beavers in home debut Robertson supporters predict his success By STEPHEN GREGORY Local supporters of Rev. Pat Robertson feel confident he will get the three million signatures he is petitioning for before deciding whether to run for president. In a televised speech Wednesday night seen by an *estimated 200,000 people nationwide, Robertson an- nounced he would run only if he can obtain the signatures. LAURA Crandall, an Ann Arbor resident who supports Robertson, said she agrees with his decision because it releases him from federal laws obliging him to give opponents equal -air time on his Christian Broadcasting Network. Missy Caulk, another Robertson supporter, predicted he would get the signatures "in a matter of weeks. He has more than 3 million people on his mailing list already," said Caulk, also an Ann Arbor resident. See LOCALS, Page 3 PIRG petitions 'U' By BARB McQUADE Like so much timber, Oregon State is expected tohfall to Michigan tomorrow with a loud thud. The Wolverines, 1-0, are 40- point favorites as the Beavers come into Michigan Stadium. And after Oregon State's 27-0 loss to Fresno State last week, the spread may be even a bit stingy. "WE KNOW it will be a very- difficult game for us," said OSU head coach Dave Kragthorpe, "especially so at this time because we are coming off a poor performance. We don't think that the Michigan game is hopeless." Kragthorpe knows about hope. Last season when the Beavers went 3-8, they pulled off a 21-20 upset over Washington at Seattle. "They're a tough hard-hitting, physical group," Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler said. "They haven't won a lot of games, so they'll come after you." THE BEAVERS toss out a pass- oriented offense, throwing 40 to 50 times a game, according to Schembechler. "They're like Brigham Young, they'll throw a lot," he said. In fact, Kragthorpe came to Oregon State last year after serving as an assistant coach at BYU. Against Fresno State, the Beavers went to the air 37 times, splitting quarterback duties between starter Erik Wilhelm and Dave McLaughlin. Wilhelm completed 12 of 20 pass attempts for 161 yards with one interception. McLaughlin was 7 for 17. "I think Erik Wilhelm played better than most people thought he did under the conditions of a heavy rush and poor pass protection," Kragthorpe said. "OUR offense was disjointed. We never put a drive together of any consequence. We had opportunities but we couldn't cash in on them." But Schembechler, 16-0-1 in home openers, isn't taking the Beavers too lightly. "Their quarterback is a capable guy," he said. "I'm not going to tell you they're going to win the Pac-10, but anything can happen." "A team that throws as much as OSU is particularly dangerous," agreed assistant coach and defensive coordinator Gary See WOLVERINES, Page 11 By MICHAEL LUSTIG Several members and supporters of the Public Interest Research r Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) yesterday asked the University's Board of Regents to allow the group to resume collecting money from students by using a refusable fee check-off system on the Student ThVerification Form. The regents, the University governing board, met yesterday for the first time this academic year. UNTIL PIRGIM's original contract with the University expired in February, 1985, the group had received funding through a voluntary check-off donation system on the SVF. When the contract expired, PIRGIM, a student group that See PIRG, Page 2 Chuckles Daily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER LSA Senior Chuck Lipsig sits contemplating at yesterday's WAND anti-nuclear protest at Regents' Plaza. "I'm supposed to be stoic and unimaginative because I'm a statistics major, but I'm not," said Lipsig. TODAY The black hole T" waiting a long time for this," said Paul Rasmussen, chairman of the faculty planning committee. Rasmussen said the new building will provide more adequate lab facilities, safer air quality, and a place to "hang out" for chemistry students. Mellon Stuart Project located at the Delta Upsilon fraternity house at 1331 Hill St., will feature Bo Schembechler, the U-M marching band, the Friars, and the Michigan cheerleaders. Along with the home- opener celebrations, a special tribute will be paid to late U-M football announcer Bob Ufer, who INSIDE CONFERENCE CLASHES: Sports previews the Big Ten's weekend football action. .,AT CTAAMU. Aris __ve ._ ._ 2ww I