Page 4 - The Michigan Daity - Thursday, July 7, 1983 Orbitinig ants di*,e on r~i Ze ot space shuttle flight CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) - A high school California, when Challenger landed, or project that gained national attention as a result of the liftoff itself," said when it booked a ride for an ant colony Fred Reiss, a Camden High School on the space shuttle Challenger has had science teacher and director of the some bad news, project, which was undertaken by students from his school and nearby The New Jersey students, who Woodrow Wilson High School. worked for 5 years on a project to put 150 carpenter ants into orbit, learned "The other possibility is the amount Wednesday the colony died. The of time, two months, the ants spent in th students will now analyze' film and shuttle before liftoff killed them, " he videotape taken of the insects aboard said. the shuttle last month. They are holding The 30-gallon container of ants was out hope that the queen and her worker designed to test effects of ants lived for at least a short time while weightlessness on the insects. It was in space. opened in Florida and no signs of life "THEY either died in the desert of were detected. 'U' officials request 9.5% tuition increase (Continuedfrom Page 1) what we're going to request and that's about 9.5 percent." THAT'S GOOD news for students who have seen painful leaps of 15 and 18 per- cent the last two years. If the Regents approve the proposed increase, lower division tuition for in- state students will increase from $1976 to $2164 per year, for out-of-state students from $5748 to $6294; upper division for in-state students from $2210 to $2422, and for out-of-state students from $6180 to $6768. The smaller increase this year reflec- ts a change of heart by the state, which has been cutting state support to the University for years. LAST WEEK the House and Senate approved a nine percent increase in state appropriations to the University. Frye said the aid boost signalled "a turnaround in the priority of higher education," but added that it is not enough to freeze tuition at its current level. Some increase is necessary to help cover rising utility costs and faculty and staff salary increases, University officials say. The 9.5 percent tuition increase roun- ds out "the whole budget picture," said Bob Sauve, assistant to the vice president for academic affairs, and it is the smallest increase possible to cover the University's needs. LAST YEAR the governor's office cut $5.8 million from the University's original appropriation, but University officials were able to absorb the loss. But this year the proposed operating budget is very tight, Sauve said, and if the state funds are cut at all it would be a "terrible problem" for the Univer- sity. "We don't have money set aside as a buffer," he said. "We're working on the assumption that (next year's) increase in appropriations will be real." The University will receive $163.8 million from the state next year, an in- crease from $150 million in 1982-83. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Court decides death row appeals WASHINGTON - While handing down a decision on the execution of prisoners, the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday declined to rule on the con- troversy surrounding home video taping. The court, in a 6-3 decision, said federal appeals courts do not have to post- pone the executions of all death row inmates pushing non-frivolous appeals. The decision could mean that 1,200 condemned murderers on death row could die sooner because they may not be able to pursue certain appeals. The ruling came in the case of Texas death row inmate Thomas Barefoot. The court said that expedited procedures used by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to deal with last-minute appeals were legal. In the same case, the court ruled that psychiatrists may be allowed to testify about a convicted murderer's "future dangerousness" when the life- or-death sentencing decision is being made. Meanwhile, in an unusual action, the court declined to decide this term whether Americans are illegally taping television shows with home video recorders. The justices ordered more arguments in the case this fall. Sex favors charged in House probe of Carter briefing papers WASHINGTON - A House subcommittee chairman said Wednesday there are allegations the 1980 Reagan campaign used sex to obtain President Car- ter's briefing papers. Meanwhile, counselor Edwin Meese said President Reagan would agree to be interviewed by the FBI about the documents. Rep. Donald Albosta (D-Mich.), whose subcommittee on human resources is investigating the briefing papers incident, said: "We've got indications that a sex scandal could be created out of the testimony." He said the subcommittee is focusing on the information but added the material was "just hearsay" without confirmation. He said, however, it "seems to be coming from people who are reliable sources." Meese, asked about Albosta's comment, said: "At no time was there any contemplation or attempt by the Reagan campaign management to get any information out of the Carter campaign." Hijackers seize Iranian jet KUWAIT - Unidentified hijackers seized an Iranian jumbo jet with 371 passengers on board yesterday and forced it to Kuwait where it was refueled for take off to Paris, airport officials said. Earlier, an official for the Kuwaiti Interior Ministry had said an unknown number of hijackers were holding talks with government officials at Kuwait International Airport. The hijackers released 185 passengers - all women, children and old men - then took off for an undisclosed destination with nearly 200 people still aboard, a government spokesman said. Earlier, Interior Minister Sheik Nawaf AI-Ahmed rejected an offer by the hijackers, believed to number five or six Iranians, to set 50 to 60 of the passengers free. The jumbo jet was on a domestic flight in Iran when it was forced to divert to Kuwait by the unidentified hijackers. A report carried by the state-run Kuwaiti News Agency, KUNA said the plane was carrying 371 passengers. Syria balks at troop withdrawal JERUSALEM - Secretary of State George Shultz failed yesterday to per- suade Syria to consider withdrawing its troops from Lebanon. But he and President Hafez Assad agreed to set up a working group to continue discussions between their governments. "It remains to be seen what happens next, but there is activity in the diplomacy," said Shultz. He said he argued for hours with Assad and Foreign Minister Abdul-Halim Khaddam about the Israeli-Lebanese troop withdrawal accord, but "we had no agreement about that agreement at all." Meanwhile in Beirut, a french soldier and five Lebanese workers were reported killed and five French soldiers were reported missng Wednesday in the collapse of a bomb-damaged, four-story building that French peacekeeping troops were demolishing. Walesa refuses to end vacation SOKOLOW PODLASKI, Poland - Lech Walesa refused yesterday to end his unauthorized vacation and vowed to fight in court to keep his job. "If they really fire me, I'll go to court," the head of the outlawed Solidarity labor federation said as he climbed into his white minibus with his wife, Danuta, and three young daughters. "I am absolutely sure I will win," he added as the family left for a drive to a lake near a vacation site outside Warsaw. "I will never lose my job because of this - simply because I'm right." Walesa ignored a 2 p.m.deadline for returning to work, saying he would not go back unless "taken by force." Although the shipyard has not decided on Walesa's case, Polish law stipulates that failure to return from an unauthorized leave within three days constitutes grounds for dismissal. Summer Dinner Theatre TicketsJavailable unest June 30 GroupSeatsAvailable Ofcda July,2,7,c8 al"""2 Dinner ShowS65perpers. 6.30p.m. Michigan Union Ballroom 4