LSA-SG ENDORSEMENTS See Editorial Page L '7b L~IE.4ta ? Iai1 FLURRIOUS High-mid 30s Low-lower 20s See Today for details Eight Pages plus Supplement Vol. LXXXIX, No. 64 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 19, 1978 Ten Cents Eight Pages plus Supplement a ng ( n tl e u ksi Wolverines c By RICK MADDOCK Michigan captured the first round of the rose Bowl preliminaries before 105,410 fans at Michigan Stadium, using power offense and charging defense against a stunned Purdue football team. The 24-6 victory gives Michigan a share of the Big Ten lead with Ohio State and Michigan State, for the tenth consecutive year the game against the Buckeyes will be the battle for the roses. Russell Davis and Rick Leach rolled over the supposedly stingy Purdue defense. Going into the game, Purdue had given up an average of 117.9 yards rushing. The Wolverines cruised for 343 yards on the ground, led by Davis with 134 yards and Leach with 90 yards. The Wolverines .only completed five passes, but two of them were for touchdowns. . Ralph Clayton scored on an eleven yard grab, and Doug Marsh snagged a ten yard touchdown pass. Purdue's aerial game was quickly lost when sophomore quarterback Mark Herrmann was injured with 5:26 left in the first quarter. According to preliminary reports he received a pinched nerve in his neck. Herrmann was hurt on a 12-yard pass completion to Jim Young. While Young was making a one-handed diving catch, Herrmann was hit by the pass rushers. "HE HAS A concussion and neck injury," Purdue coach Jim Young said. rush P "It occurred after letting go of the ballt and a forearm hit him."t Freshman Chuck Oliever replaced the1 sophomore sensation, but he didn't stay1 on the field very long for his first series. He was hit 13 yards behind the line of1 scrimmage by linebacker RonY simpkins on his second play. The hit forced the ball free, and linebacker Tom Seabron recovered. Oliver was sacked four times in the game, losing 45r yards. He was able to pass 16 times,1 completing six for 54 yards.1 "They (Michigan defense) didn't givei me time to throw," Oliver said. "We just couldn't put the ball in the. endt zone. They're a quick team." THE MICHIGAN rush was the key toI the fine defensive play. All day long the Michigan rushers were invading the Purdue backfield.I "That's. (rush) what we basically urdue tried to do," said Michigan tackle Curtis Greer. "I think our secondary played excellent. They gave us time to get in there and put our hands in the quarterback's face. On the offensive line, we made a commitment that "no matter what it took, we were gonna get in his face." Free safety Michael Harden added, "I think basically on defense we played a good game. The key to the secondary play was the play that the defensive line gave us. Greer and those guys just got in and rushed him out." PURDUE NEVER did score against the defense, as the only points it scored were on a blocked punt with 9:32 left in the game. Tom Kingsbury blocked Gregg Wilner's punt from the Michigan ten. The ball was snatched by Mark Adamle who trotted into the end zone. The Boilermakers attempted to go for two on the conversion, but defensive captain Jerry Meter snubbed that attempt as he sacked Oliver. "I don't know what happened on the blocked punt," Michigan coach Bo Schembechler said. "It's upsetting. It was the first time we've had a blocked punt since nineteen hundred and sixty- nine when Missouri did it against us in the same field position." Another factor that helped the defense out is that Purdue only ran 50 plays. Michigan ran 83, and one can see that the Wolverine defense spent much of the time on the sidelines. In the second quarter, Michigan had 21 plays for 145 yards while the Boilermakers had 11 plays for 11 yards. The situation was just as bad for the Boilermakers in the third quarter. Michigan ran 27 plays See MICHIGAN, Page 8 hopes, 24-6 Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN MICHIGAN FULLBACK' Russell Davis takes a plunge into the Purdue line as linebacker Kevin Motts (58) and defensive end Ruben Floyd (92) converge. Tail- back Harlan Huckleby (25) watches Davis barge for a few of the 134 yards he picked up in yesterday's 24-6 Wolverine victory. Samoff's picks protested; appeal By KEN PARSIGIAN Political Science Department Chairman Sam Barnes last week challenged three of five persons chosen by Political Science Asst. Prof. Joel Samoff as candidates for the Literary College (LSA) Executive Committee Appeal Board which will rule on Samoff's tenure appeal case, according to a highly-placed source. LSADean Billy Frye confirmed the challenges, and said the committee had reached a decision on them. He refused, however, to comment further. Barnes, who refused comment on "any phase of this process," would not confirm his protests. Homeless Some Vietnamese children hang from the boarding ladder of the freighter Hai Hong yesterday, awaiting their fate in the wake of Malaysia's refusal to grant them shelter. At a meeting at the Malaysian capital yesterday, France and Canada offered to take in some of the refugees, but it*is yet unclear whether the U.S. made any such commitment. The American quota of 25,000 Indochinese refugees for 1978 has already been filled. The stranded reportedly bought their way out of Vietnam over a month ago by paying a Hong Kong syndicate $5 million for a "cruise." U process SAMOFF, WHO has twice been denied tenure by his department, appealed the case in October to the LSA Executive Committee, a group of 30 faculty members. From, this committee, the two parties involved in the appeal, Samoff and Barnes, must each select five candidates for the three-member appeal board. Barnes and Samoff would each then veto four members of the other's group. The two remaining candidates would automatically become part of the appeal board, and would then select the third member from the entire Executive Committee. Barnes was apparently so concerned about the three candidates in question that he decided to challenge their status as candidates rather than simply veto them later, a departmental source said. Samoff said he was surprised not only by the challenge itself, but also by the Executive Committee's handling of the matter. He said he was first informed of the challenges by LSA Associate Dean Bernard Galler a week ago Thursday in a telephone call. Samoff said he then made some inquiries and learned that "at first he (Barnes) had protested all five of my, choices, but then reduced the number to three. Then on Thursday night I drafted a memo objecting to the objections, and objecting to the possibility that they would be considered without my having a chance to respond. Friday morning I called to tell the Executive Committee that I was sending them that memo, Co-oPs By JULIE ENGEBRECHT Under a little-publicized act signed by President Carter last August, a National Consumer Cooperative Bank will be established, providing consumer co-ops with a new source of financial and technical aid. Although the bill was passed several months ago, provisions are still unclear and local co-ops don't seem to know how it will affect them. There's no telling how many of the various types of co-ops there are in the area, but the bill will likely contribute to the number. It will be a year before guidelines for the bill are secured. MOST LOCAL co-op representatives say they feel the bill is severely limited, and many of them had lobbied for what they call a more comprehensive act. Funding and assistance of the new bill is geared toward lower-class groups, so established Ann Arbor cooperatives with a steady income will have trouble competing for the same funds as newly formed cooperatives. The bill consists of two sections, the first of which establishes the National Consumer Cooperative Bank and allows it to make market rate loans to eligible measure of this type, but eventually signed a compromise bill, resembling the more conservative Senate version, last Aug. 22. STEW KOHL of North American Students of Cooperation (NASCO) said he does not feel the bill provides enough money for technical assistance. "Two million dollars for technical assistance which is to be spread out over 50 states is like nothing," he said. "You have to remember that the authorization covers food, and housing along with all the other service cooperatives." Both Kohl and Luther Buchele of the International Cooperative Council (ICC) explained they don't expect the bill to be implemented until at least a year from now, as regulations still need to be set up. Forty-seven nationwide hearings, including one Dec. 1 in Detroit will seek public input on matters pertaining to the bill. The hearings and other regulatory meetings will attempt to define generalities and mold them into specific guidelines. Co-op leaders and government agencies will work together in setting rules. for federal aid stalled and they said they had already made a decision. They said they had 'rejected three of the five nominees." SAMOFF SENT his memo anyway, and the Executive Committee decided to suspend its decision until Samoff had a chance to respond to the protest. He did so, and the committee altered its decision. Sources said the committee let one of the challenges stand and rejected the other two. NeitherBarnes nor Frye would confirm this, and Galler was unavailable for comment. Samoff, however, said he was informed that that was the "nature of the decision." Samoff said he was uncertain of Barnes' reasons for the challenges, especially since he could simply have vetoed the three nominees he felt were inappropriate. "I REALLY don't know why he did it. My sense is that the department just' doesn't want to deal with this issue, and See SAMOFF, Page 2 Sunday " Iran's military leader of two weeks pledged to restore security in that country, as troops gunned down anti-shah demonstrators. See story, page 2. " The Student Organizing Committee (SOC), now running for LSA-SG, has plagiarized the name of a student government group that operated two years ago, according to a member of the defunct SOC. Details on page 3. " Senator and former astronaut John Glenn visited the Soviet Union and voiced his fear that Soviet refusal to cease coding data from outer space could be' detrimental to SALT negotiations. Story on page 2. use the National Consumer Cooperative Bank in the near future. "I wish I could be more positive, but I don't think we're going to be able to use the bill," said Buchele. "I also feel that in terms of really helping low-income groups, the bill doesn't have much priority." KEN WADLAND, coordinator of the People's Food Co-op on Packard said the buying of a new building for the co- op will be much easier with the establishment of the bank. He explained that last year his co-op couldn't buy a permanent building because a local bank would not mortgage it. The co-op is currently renting its space. "Once we're able to apply for funding through the co-op bank we should be able to buy," Wadland said. "A co-op bank will be much more understanding of the situation of a co-op." Ann Arbor co-ops have traditionally been able to establish themselves, and Wadland says he believes the bank will See CO-OP, Page 2. Congressman, reporters shot, believed dead in Guyana attack GEORGETOWN, Guyana (UPI-)-A U.S. congressman on a mission to check reports that Americans were being kept prisoner at a jungle religious colony was shot and perhaps killed yesterday along with others in his party in an Leo Ryan (D-Calif.), had been killed. Ryan was escorting some Americans from the People's Temple religious settlement who had decided to return to the United States. Suddenly one of the nartv nulled a nistol and opened fire as planes. The pilot said the pistol shots apparently were a signal for attack by the group of armed men on the tractor- trailer. rn R V