Selection of jurors stalls in Kelly trial, (Continued from Page 3) A PRESIDING judge has no authority to deny a peremptory challenge, but Campbell ended the proceedings as if no challenge had been made by adjourning the courtroom without granting the challenge. "I don't know what happened,' Noah said afterwards, referring to his challenge. Waterman likewise said he did not know why or by what authority Campbell made that decision. Campbell's move to postpone the challenge comes in the midst of a com- plaint Waterman has voiced regarding the absence of blacks on the jury. "WE HAVEN'T even seen 4 percent black jurors," Waterman said later, referring to Washtenaw County's 22 percent black population. "This (the r jury) is supposed to be a cross-section of the community." The trial is scheduled to begin next Monday. - The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 20. 1982-Page 11 - ~N / I' - 7 <::7&~ ~ .4. .-. 7 .>~ 7 Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT .Beam me dow)n No, this isn't a scene from Star Trek. It's actually Katie Quinn at the American Society for Metals in Cleveland. It does appear that some intergalactic force is at work, however. SOME HAVE HUNDREDS Profs get booked up at the Grad By CHARLES THOMSON Although building a personal library takes years of work and vast sums of money, some University professors can, and do, stockpile hundreds of books- with a little help from the Graduate Library. Under the current circulation rules of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library, faculty members can borrow an unlimited number of books. And some professors, taking full advantage of the opportunity, have as many as 500 books checked out at the same time. A SURVEY last year showed that between 25 and 30 faculty members each had more than 100 books from the Graduate Library in their possession, according to Jim Cruse, head of Circulation Services for the Hatcher Library. Books may be kept indefinitely if renewal notices periodically are mailed in and the volumes are not demanded by others. Cruse, however, said the library is "not really" concerned about the number of books professors have borrowed from the library. Demogogues ran e over dictionary (Continued from Page4) "No, it was in caps." "Was it upper case? "I WOULD be glad to giveit to the senator. It is right in the dictionary. I. did not print this up. I was even more shocked than the senator must be." Byrd then asked if Dole meant to suggest, by inference, that "those who may be demagoguing the issue on the other side and downtown are word, nc Democrats also?" "demos" Sen Daniel Patrick Moynihan, (D- "See Der N.Y.) strode to the front of the Senate omitted in and lugged the huge unabridged dic- tionary, h( tionary to his desk. Hearty laughter "I was t engulfed the chamber. lost my e Sure enough, the Senate's 1955 copy of minutes," Webster's, in giving the origin of the laughter. "If someone really needs (the books), we know where they are," Cruse said. "I see nothing wrong with people having 100 or 200 books." CRUSE SAID some faculty members might use the library as a handy way to establish private collec- tions. "It's possible," he said, "but I think the library would be on very dangerous ground if we started to question what is legitimate use and what isn't." Some professors assert that the library's borrowing privileges, coupled with the size of its collection, are an important attraction for the University. Charles Tilly, a professor of history and sociology; said the policy has eased considerably his work on three research projects. Tilly currently has an estimated 500 books from the library. Some of the volumes have been checked out for as long as six years, although they typically are returned within three weeks, Tilly said. TILLY SAID his three projects employ one full- time person whose major responsibility is keeping track of the library books used by the project. Tilly, who has done research at the University of Toronto and Harvard University, said the University has "a better library for our purposes than either of those." Undergraduates are allowed many of the same borrowing privileges as faculty members, Cruse said, including the ability to renew books an unlimited number of times. Undergraduates, however, cannot renew books through the mail and, unlike professors, are fined for overdue books. Cruse said he found it amusing that persons with hundreds of books checked out often return books very promptly when others request them, but that it is people "with three or four books that resort to making up stories." "Some of our best borrowers have large numbers of books charged out," he said. "The number is not the issue." Extinction of dinosaur ,; related to meteorites Moynihan -. - calls names >ted its Greek root was or "people" and then stated, mocrat." That reference is n later editions of the dic- owever. to speak an hour, but having nthusiasm, I will take six Moynihan said to more BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI)- The key to the mystery surrounding the disap- pearance of the dinosaur and other species from the face of the earth 65 million years ago may lie on the bottom of the Caribbean, a new report has suggested. The report, published in the May 21 issue of Science magazine, directly relates the extinction of certain species with the bombardment of the Earth by meteorites and other celestial bodies. THE EVIDENCE, independently reported by scientists in Berkeley and New Jersey, links the extinction of five species of plankton called radiolaria, to meteors that struck 34 million years ago. It also bolsters growing belief the extinction of dinosaurs"was"c~ued by a collision with a giant meteor, asteroid or comet. The evidence is described in the magazine in two reports on an unusually rich layer of the rare element iridium from deep-sea sediment cores pulled from the Caribbean. The iridium is accompanied by deposits of tiny bits of glass called microtektites, believed to be the cooled remnants of molten rock sprayed out- ward by large meteor impacts. "It is difficult to avoid the implication major meteorite impacts have played a role in the evolution of life on Earth," said chemist R. Ganapathy of Phillip- sburg, N.J., who authored one of the Science reports.