VORSTER'S RETIREMENT See Editorial Page \: ' £iEI41px Itl AUTUMNAL High-upper 70s Low-near 50 See Today for details l Vol. LIX, No. 16 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, September 24, 1978 Ten Cents Ten Pages LEACH TOSSES THREE SECOND HALF TDS Blue aerials rip Irish, 28-14 By HENRY ENGELHARDT Special to The Daily SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Michigan's 28- 14 win over Notre Dame yesterday might have looked easy, but it wasn't. The 2-0 Wolverines played the second half of the game as if it were their last of the season and they also got a few breaks, in dealing the Irish (0-2) their second consecutive home defeat. IT TOOK A lousy Notre Dame han- doff, a Jerry Meter interception, a few wide open receivers for Rick Leach's throws and a team attitude of never- say-die to earn this victory. "Lots of our kids played their guts out in that second half," said Bo Schem- bechler, with a proud smile. "We will not wilt physically." Scembechler's squad started slow, but hit with more intensity as the day wore on. The Irish, on the other hand, stepped on their own toes with greater frequercy as they and their capacity (59,075) crowd saw a 14-7 halftime lead disappear. AFTER TAKING the second half kick, Notre Dame drove from its own 24 to Michigan's 26 where on first and ten, quarterback Joe Montana and running back Vagas Ferguson had handoff trouble. Curtis Greer pounced on the loose ball for the Wolverines. The Irish did not move the ball effec- tively the rest of the afternoon, getting only four first downs and turning the ball over four more times after that initial possession of the second half. Meanwhile, the Wolverines grew more confident and capable ion each possession. They turned the Montana- Ferguson fumble into seven points on a seven-minute, 71-yard drive that ended with a Leach-to-Doug March pass covering five yards. "I THOUGHT WE played excellent offensive football in the second half," said Schembechler. *Tight end Marsh was open repeatedly and Leach hit him four times, twice for touchdowns. It was Leach's second half passing (three touchdowns) and fine blocking by the offensive line that keyed the offensive surge. Leach, who did not practice either Tuesday or Wednesday because of an ankle injury, completed four of 13 in the first half but was five of six for 89 yards in the second half. The offensive line gave Leach ample time to find his receivers, who were wide open most of the time. The line, missing tackle Bill Dufek due to a leg injury, pushed the Irish around in the third and fourth quarters and the backs, most notably Harlan Huckleby, took advantage. "THE OFFENSIVE line really pum- ped them out," said Schembechler. "You don't (usually) run Notre Dame out like that." On Notre Dame's second possession of the second half, Wolverine captain Jerry Meter picked off a Montana throw and returned it 14 yards to the Irish 34. "Montana must've thought that he could get the ball over my head," ex- plained Meter, "and I just reached up and got it." THE THIRD quarter ended with Michigan on Notre Dame's 16, but on the first play of the fourth quarter Leach found Marsh a lonely figure in the end zone and the Wolverines had thei winning points. Gregg Willner's conversion wenit See MICHIGAN, Page 10 Gov't spy opponents plan counter tactics i Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY IN A FITTING ENDING to an impressive Wolverine comeback, members of Michigan's defensive unit raise their arms in exhaltation after sacking Notre Dame quarterback Joe Montana for the final two points in yesterday's 28-14 Michigan victory. The safety climaxed a Michigan comeback that saw the Wolverines trailing 14-7 at halftime. . FLEMING'S REPLACEMENT: By LEONARD BERNSTEIN Government spy opponents aimed their National Organizing Conference, held this weekend in the Michigan Union, at two methods of ,accom- plishing their goal: obtaining and disseminating information about government spying, and organizing a viable force to challenge and ultimately end domestic spying activity. Most of the discussion centered around the twin themes, and the 200 registered members planned tactics to be used by both local groups and a nation-wide coalition. A major issue, covered during the second workshop, was possible actions to prevent covert intelligence work on college and university campuses. +Panelist Ahmad Jabbari described CIA efforts to. recruit and place him as an agent in Iran while he was a student at Washington University in St. Louis. Campaign to Stop Government Spying (CSGS) member Bart Osborn said actions against college recruiting are necessary because university guidelines have proved ineffectual. He cited the case of the Central Intelligen- ce Agency's (CIA) choice 'to ignore guidelines set by Harvard University. "It's gotten back to the point where we see it has to be legislated," OsbQrn said. "The law 'is on the public's side because what they (intelligence groups) do is criminal," he added. Conference sponsors have taken bar- ticular care to emphasize that the CIA is not the only culprit in intelligence abuses. Workshops were conducted on spying by private companies, the Law Enforcement Intelligence Unit (LEIU>, local police and campus police. Environmentalist - and anti-nuclear groups in particular - have been a corg- stant target of private spies. CSGS members have charged that Georgia' Electric Company and other utilities have begun to develop intelligence branches of their own. See SPY, Page 5 Coaliton, Smith plans.no changes f or ' against spying diverse By BRIAN BLANCHARD Allan Smith's confident smile betrayed the confessional tone he used to refer to business in the Ad- ministration Building, an old haunt of his: "I'm frankly very much out of touch with the modus vivetdi over there now." Before Smith takes over the Univer- sity's top position in January, he says he needs to study current management methods, submit to administration "in- doctrination," and memorize "the par- ty line." BUT SITTING in his Law School of- fice last Friday, the former Law Dean and ten-year academic affairs vice president didn't look worried. Law Prof. Smith - 66, tall, and lean - reported he had spoken only twice with retiring President Robben Fleming since Smith's appointment by the Regents Sept. 14 as acting president come January. He cited the University Hospital replacement plan as one example of a major University under- taking with which he isn't very familiar. But the basis for his poise is clear. Of the six present University vice presidents, "not'one of them has served as long as I have." SMITH IS NOT sure what changes he might help see through at the Univer- sity when he returns to the Ad- ministration Building after four years of teaching and writing in the Law Quad. He currently instructs a first- year course in property and helped write a case book soon to be published. "I really don't have any programatic plahs," said Smith. He sees himself as the last in a series of faculty members and administrators who make decisions on campus. The University "has its own momen- tum," according to the even-voicea graduate of the University of Nebraska Law School. "And in part what that means is that matters come along and ultimately reach a point of decision. Somebody has to make a decision and insofar as those are made at the school or college level, why they can get along without a president. Even more (decisions) are made at the vice presidential level. "BUT THERE are some parts of these affairs that reach the president's See SMITH, Page 5 Vance's yrian trip postponed The domestic surveillance practiced by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Federal Bureau of In- vestigation (FBI) in most every state, and against a wide variety of organizations and individuals. This diversity was reflected by the par- ticipants in this weekend's National Organizing Conference to Stop Gover- nment Spying, being held in Ann Arbor. Native Americans, blacks, anti- nuclear groups, Quakers, civil liber- tarians, women's organizations and gay activist were all represented, and though their views span the political and social spectra, they share a con- cern-domestic surveillance and harassment by some combination of the CIA, FBI, local police, and private security agencies. THE GOAL of the conferenge, accor- ding to Campaign Director Peggy Shake, was to "bring together local organizers to share experience and tac- tics so that they can better stop political surveillance and harassment in the See ANTI-SPYING, Page 5 Smith Carter raps PLO, compares to KKK ALIQUIPPA, Pa. (AP) - President Carter yesterday compared the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) to the Ku Klux Klan, the Nazi party and the Communist Party, saying "it would be nice for us if they would just go away." Carter's remark at a town meeting in this Pittsburgh suburb came in respon- se to a questioner who asked why the PLO was allowed to retain a small in- formational office in Washington. THE PRESIDENT responded by saying that many organizations "ob- noxious to us" still have the right to free speech in America so long as they don't pose a threat to the nation's security. "There are many groups like this that cause us concern - the Ku Klux Klan, the Communist Party, the Nazis," Car- ter said, adding: ."It would be nice for us if they would just go away." The PLO is recognized by most Arab the status of the Palestinians and the West Bank even if Jordan withholds its support. Carter said he hopes that a self- governing palestinian authority on the West Bank can be set up in the next two or three months, as soon as Egypt and Israel conclude the peace treaty they committed themselves to at the Camp David summit. THE PRESIDENT passed up a chan- ce to spend a quiet weekend at the White House to make a new round of political appearances that began Friday. While visiting here, Carter was scheduled to attend a fund-raiser for congressional candidate Gene Atkin- son. Earlier at Pittsburgh airport; Carter said he had no immediate reaction to a report that Hussein had canceled a trip to the United States. DHARAN, Saudi Arabia (UPI) - Saudi Arabia yesterday displayed to Secretary of State Cyrus Vance the vast oil power at its disposal in President Carter's attempt to arrange a Middle East peace. Vance has briefed Jordan's King Hussein and Saudi Arabia's King Khalid on Carter's Camp David negotiations with Israel and Egypt and had meant to mark time until In Arab hardliner summit ended in Damascus so he could fly there and make his pitch to President Hafez Assad. SAUDI ARABIA used the time to show him Dharhan, home of the Saudi oil wealth which influences what Hussein and other Arab leaders -in- cluding Egyptian President Anwar Sadat do. Repeatedly, his hosts told the American that U.S. oil reserves are limited, that U.S. Oil imports continue to rise and that when Iran and other oil sources run dry, the United States will be all the more dependent on this nation's petroleum. Vance is leaving this morning if the Arab hardliner summit conference in Damascus is over. Otherwise he will skip Damascus and fly direct to Washington. Damascus reports said the Arabs were having trouble completing their final communique. WHILE HE waited, the Saudis took him on a tour of Ihahran, the home of ,Sunday- Aramco, the petroleum producing giant which is the motor that drives the booming Saudi economy. Vance also visited the campus of the University of Petroleum and Minerals, a new college staffed largely by Americans or by Saudis trained at American universities. ' Then he flew to Jubail, 55 miles to the northwest of Dhahran, where the* Saudis are spending billions of dollars to create the largest manufacturing complex in the Middle East and a naval base. BUILDING CRANES dot the dusty landscape where 3,000 Korean laborers have carved out a harbor and are See VANCE, Page 2 ,: ,: