Page 2-Wednesday; July 28, 1982-The Michigan Daily Israelis step up attacks on Beirut Bythe Associated Press the besieged Moslem half of the city. Byrael diveomedrs ndgun PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat sent Israeli divebombers and gunners urgent messages to the presidents of furiously blasted areas near downtown the Soviet Union, Cuba and France, and west Beirut yesterday, destroying at to the king of Saudi Arabia appealing least two apartment buildings in one of for immediate pressure on Israel to the heaviest bombardments since the stop its assault on west Beirut, which siege of the city began last month. Arafat said had resulted in the deaths of Israeli and Palestinian guerrilla ar- "hundreds of civilians" in the city. tillery exchanged fire into the night. Israeli Prime Minister Begin gave The Palestine Liberation new warnings to a U.S. congressional Organization rejected Sudan's offer of group that Israeli forces surrounding asylum. In Jerusalem, Israeli Prime west Beirut will obliterate the Minister Menachem Begin vowed not to estimated 8,000 PLO guerrillas trapped negotiate with the PLO even it if inside if they do not leave Lebanon recognizes the Jewish state. willingly. Lebanon's state radio reported 110 PLO communiques said yesterdays people killed during the day and 210 air, sea and land bombardment toppled were wounded. several west Beirut apartment high- The Voice of Lebanon, the rightist rises, ignited fires and blasted civilian Christian station, said 115 persons were neighborhoods, killing 84 people in one killed and 220 wounded, including seven building alone and wounding 142. It was dead and 33 wounded in east Beirut, on the sixth straight day of attacks on the the Christian side of the divided city. Lebanese capital's western sector. There was not independent confir- Bombs fell close to west Beirut's mation of the casualty figures. downtown commercial sector, hitting a The Christian radio also said building that houses the ambassadorial Palestinian missiles struck near the residences of Canada; Yugoslavia, port of Junieh, 11 miles north of Beirut, Greece and Switzerland, Associated for the first time in the war. The radio Press correspondent Nicolas Tatro and official Lebanese sources said one reported. The building was unoccupied missile hit the West German Red Cross ship Flora, killing a West German and at the time. n te Israel's military command said war- wounding three other Red Cross planes flew two raids over PLO workers. targets in south Beirut and all jets After nightfall, the guerrillas fired returned safely. The command also massive barrages of ground-to-ground said two Israeli soldiers were wounded Katyusha rockets and mis iles on by PLO guerrillas firing bazookas and Israeli positions in the hills aove the machine guns near the closed airport. Lebanese capital. Israeli artillery Israelis returned fire, the command replied with an attack on the heart of said. Fall 82 student enrollnent Today The weather Ann Arbor weather will be as close to the Bahamas as it can get today. Skies will be clear, humidity will be pleasingly low, and temperatures will range from the low to middle 80s. Q Caught on the court HENRY JOHNSON, a former starter for the University of Texas basketball team finds basketball has been very, very bad to him-recently he was in court for playing on the court. Johnson, whose trouble started when he lost his academic eligibility to play midway through the 1980-81 season, was arrested while playing in a University gym last week and booked on misdemeanor criminal trespass charges. Justice of the Peace Guy Herman, however, called the case "a waste of the court's time" and set a personal recognizance bond for Johnson, who was released last Thursday. "I don't think the legislature meant for that criminal trespass statute to be used to give people six months in jail and a $1,000 fine for shooting hoops ...," said Herman. School officials strictly enforce a rule against use of the gym by non-students and Johnson did not have proper authorization at the time of his illicit free-throws. Hubert Gill, Johnson's at- torney, said, "It seems like a hell of a way to treat a former basketball player." lr Happenings Films AAFC - Black and White Like Day and Night, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Cinema Two - Clash by Night, 7:30 p.m., Gun Crazy, 9:30 p.m., Lorch.. CFT - Bye Bye Brazil, 4, 7 & 9 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Miscellaneous National Lawyers Guild - "Crisis in the Middle East: The Struggle for a Just Peace," 5:30 p.m., 431 E. Congress, Detroit. Academic Alcoholics - meeting, 1:30 p.m., Alano Club. Stilyagi Air Corps - meeting, 8:15 p.m., Union. Commission for Women - meeting, noon, 2549 LSA. School of Music - tour of carillon, 4 p.m., Burton Tower. To submit items for the Happenings Column,'send them in cart of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. The Michigan Daily 1 4 4 expected to dr( (ContinuedfromPagel): an uncomfortable degree of elitism," he added. Both Frye and Sjogren said the reductions are unfortunate, but necessary, if the University wants to maintain its high quality. "An enrollmentsdecline is not only inevitable, but desirable," Frye said, explaining that a smaller student body is necessary if the staff size is decreased. He said it was "urgent to protect the quality of the University." ALSO complicating the problem, ac- cording to Sjogren is the decrease in the number of 18-year-olds nationwide. Sjogren agreed that the high cost of education is a serious problem for the University. "We all get very concerned when college choice is affected by financial reasons," he said. "This is the first time since World War II that a significant number of students couldn't attend (college) for financial reasons. "Before, ifsa student was the least bit imaginative, he could do it. Today, there are numbers of cases where any amount of creativity ,won't help," Sjogren added. IN ADDITION, Sjogren said that his office "came dangerously close to run- ning out of people," and almosttdidn't fill their quota of 4,380 freshmen. "We had more applications this year than last, but the percentage accepted was lower," he said. The quota was met, but only by ad- mitting almost all thepeople who were by 830 wait-listed, Sjogren added. He said, however, that the quality of incoming students didn't fall, and, in fact, is moderately higher, because the studen- ts have higher test scores, though slightly lower class ranks. SJOGREN said the yield rate (the number of accepted students who decide to attend the University) for 1982-83 fell from 69 to 64 percent for in- state students, and from 42 to 35 percent of out-of-state students. He attributed the decline to the high cost of attending the University. Frye said the proportions of General Fund revenue coming from state ap- propriations and tuition are "con- verging," while tuition formerly played a much smaller role in filling the University's coffers. "The portion of the General Fund coming from the state has dropped over the past decade from 60 to 50 percent, while the portion coming from students' tuition has risen from 30 to 40 percent," he said. "The state cannot expect us to keep an institution of this quality if that trend continues," he added. "What alarms me is there's not a lot of elasticity," Frye said. "There's just not a surplus of qualified in-state students, based on this information," he added. According to Frye, even though the enrollment decrease was not by ad- ministrative design, a number of schools and departments are deliberately cutting back. Mims poin- ted to the College of Pharmacy and the School of Dentistry as examples of this. 4 Vol. XCII, No. 49-S Wednesday, July 28, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan,.49109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI. 4'8109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and sub- scribes to United Press Inter- national, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76- DAILY. Sports desk, 764-0562; Cir- culation, 764-0558; Classified Adver- tising, 764-0557; Display advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 4 Opinion, Page Edjior Spo~rs dtos .... MARK GINDIN ... JULIE HINDS KENT REDDING RICHARD CAMPBELL ... JOHN KERR RON POLLACK BONNIF HAWKINS NEWS STAFF: George Adorns. Greg Brusstor. John HmHBarb Misle,.Bill Spindle. Kristin St'pIeton. BusHess Mager'.. . ...JOSEPH BRODA DisRlay/ Casified RManager....ANN SACHAR Soes Coordinator . K...... E. ANDREW PETERSEN Circulation Manager ... ......KIM WOOD Circulation Director ................TIM McGRAW BUSINESS STAFF: Becki chottiner,. MaureenDrum- mond, Kathryn Hendrick, Karen Johnson, Sam Slauighte.. SPORTS STAFF: Joe Chapelle. Jim Dwormn Jim Sisson. PHOTO STAFF:DougKMcMahon,ElizabethScott. ARTS STAFF FSrah Bassett Jill BeiswengerJerr Brenc, JaeLC HCo. IDi ghonM. RieenR Fein,,g.Michael Huget, EKioJac ,kson,. ElenRieser. 4 4