Blue Pa Defense key By RICK MADDOCK Defense. That's what Michigan coach Bo hembechler had tabbed as the key for gaining a ird consecutive Rose Bowl berth. The Wolverine defense proved the coach right in e last two games-the Rose Bowl preliminaries-as allowed only six points to Purdue and three to hio State. THE PASS RUSH, which came alive in both mes, will be crucial against USC in the Rose owl. The rush has to be controlled, since the rojans mix play action passes with Charles White s , "They (Michigan) put on a good hard pass rush," SOUTH AFRICA REGRESSES See editorial page sadena s 14-3 victor? said a frustrated Woody Hayes after his team's loss. "If you remember last week, that's v happened to Purdue. They flushed t] quarterback out of there." The rush could pose problems for Tr( quarterback Paul McDonald just as it did for State's Art Schlichter. McDonald could even I more problems, since he's not a runt quarterback at all. His net yardage is below z indicating that most of his rushing yardage cc when lie is sacked. "THE BIGGEST THING we have to do is ni them (USC) wear us down in the fourth peric See THIRD, Page 11 Express rips Buckeyes Rose trips are expensive By BETH ROSENBERG While the Wolverines have earned their free trip to the Rose Bowl, Pasadena-bound fans may find - the journey a little more costly than the typical ex- cursion rate. But package deals are available for those ever- loyal fans through the University and from various travel agencies. Prices range from $135 to $655, depending on the number of days spent in Pasadena and optipns such as game ticket and side tours. LINDA BRIEF, travel consultant for Boersma Travel Agency in Nickel's Arcade, said non- discount round-trip flights to Los Angeles regularly cost $376 during the day and $300 at night. "About 35 per cent of the seats are reserved for discounts on most flights," Brief said. The cheapest way to fly to the Rose Bowl other than on a package tour is the supersaver fare, which offers a 30-40 per cent discount. But in order to get the low fare, the customer must book his or her flight at least 30 days in advance and stay at the destination for at least seven days. THE SUPERSAVER fare to Los Angeles during the day between Monday and Thursday costs $266. It costs $263 on weekends. Further savings are available on nightcoach flights leaving after 9 p.r. Prices on these evening flights are $188 on week- See TH E HIGH, Page 6 LIEn ?4Iai1 PERMA-FREEZE High-30° Low-low 20s See Today for details ' Vol. LXXXIX, No. 67 Stechuk, PAC wn LSA-SG elections By JULIE ENGEBRECHT The People's Action Coalition (PAC) ill dominate the newly-elected iterature, Science and Arts Student overnment (LSA-SG) with the elec- ion of PAC presidential and vice- residential candidates Bob Stechuk and Katherine Friedman and six PAC Executive Council candidates. Executive Council seat winners from AC are Bruce Kozarsky, Mary Hallesy, Davrell Tien, Dee Ghosh, Valerie Mims, and Michael Epstein. here are 15 seats on the committee. The United Students now hold four eats on LSA-SG, with Mark Slaughter, regory Irvin, Pamela Martin, and Talib-Udin Abdul-Muqsit giving them the second largest bloc of council seats. Mike Spirnak of the Student Organizing Committee (SOC), Bob Warren of the Young Socialists, and Doug steinberg of the Bullshit Party were the only members of their parties to obtain council seats. Winning in- dependent tickets were Dan Solomon and Larry Vadnais. According to Stechuk, the first LSA- SG priorities will be to discuss the issues in which they will be involved and to decide whether the group will be oriented more towards community or academic issues. "LSA-SG is a self-defining group," said Stechuk. "In the first couple of meetings we'll find out what the mem- bers want to be involved in and go from there." Pamela Martin, of United Students, said she'd like to see an educational program for incoming students to let them know what they can became in- volved in at the University. Young Socialists member Bob Warren said he plans to introduce resolutions for a 24-hour child care cen- ter and free abbrtion on demand, and push for University divestment from South Africa,. as well as ending discrimination of minority groups in curriculum. "The Young Socialist Alliance is ex- cited about the opportnity to be in See PAC, Page 6 Tuesday " A London-based human rights group accused China of repressing political dissent through imprisonment and execution. See story, Page 3. t An eight hour seige turned in- to a drinking party yesterday when a man with a rifle held 1to persons hostage in a Wyandotte, Michigan, bar. He later released them unharmed and surren- dered. See story, Page 6. " The Senate Advisory Com- mittee on University Affairs reviewed a proposal to move the first day of University classes up three days and discussed methods to combat the rising cost of computer services. See story, Page 2. After all three of their teams finished the season on a losing note, head football coaches Bob Commings, Cal Stoll, and Mike McGee lost their jobs. See story on Page 10. . Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 28, 1978 Ten Cents . Twelve Pages plus Supplement Frisco 's MoseCone murdered From AP and UP[ SAN FRANCISCO-Mayor George Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk.were shot to death yesterday in City Hall. and a former city official who had wanted his job back, was arrested 45 minutes later. Moscone was killed in his City Hall of- fice and Milk, an avowed homosexual who was elected to the board a year ago, was shot to death in the Board of Supervisors chambers, also in City Hall. DAN WHITE, 32, was booked for in- vestigation of the murders, which stun- ned a city still numbed by the suicide massacre in Guyana of more than 900 members of the Peoples Temple, based in San Francisco. The former supervisor surrendered to police at a station eight blocks from the scene of the San Francisco slayings. Police and city officials said White, who resigned from the Board of Super- visors on Nov. 10 over pay and then asked for his seat back, was meeting with Moscone in a back room of the mayor's office, presumably begging to be. reappointed, when the 11 a.m. shooting occurred. MASCONE, 49, HAD scheduled an 11:30 a.m. news conference to announce White's successor, Don Horanzy, who was waiting in an outer office at the or- nate, domed City Hall when the shots rang out. Mascone's bloody body was found lying on the floor when the mayor's fiscal adviser, Rudy Nothenberg, walked in for an 11 a.m. appointment. Police said Moscone had been shot three times, twice in the head and once in the left arm. The mayor's press secretary, Mel Wax, said White had appeared at the mayor's door about 10:40 a.m., asking. to see Moscone without an appoin- tment. He added, "I didn't want them to see each other. I thought that would be a bad scene." Police said that after the shooting, White left Moscone's office through a back door and ran about 100 yards down the hall and into the supervisors' of- fices, where he allegedly shot and killed Milk, 48, in what had been his own office before his resignation. Moscone, a liberal,, and White had been at political odds for some time. THE MAYOR HAD been supported by the Rev. Jim Jones, leader of the Peoples Temple and one of those who died in Guyana. He once appointed Jones to the city's Housing Authority. Police said, however, that the killings apparently were not connected to the Peoples Temple. Dianne Feinstein-who as president of the Board of Supervisors will become acting mayor-tearfully annoi ced the slayings outside Moscone's oLtce to.a See SAN, Page 7 AP Photo THE BODY OF ONE of the shooting victims is removed from San Francisco City Hall after Monday's shooting death of Mayor George Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk. Guyana holding cult survivors Officials say more selling' of GEORGETOWN, Guyana (AP) - Police here say a decision will be made by tomorrow on which of the 80 sur- vivors of the Peoples Temple suicide- murders here can return home and which will be held as suspects and material witnesses. Three members of the Sect were questioned by police at headquarters yesterday, but Assistant Commissioner Skip Roberts said no charges were filed. He would not say what the questioning covered. Two others have already been charged..; "We just want to question them some more and go back over their story," Roberts said. He said they would be released but did not say when. THE THREE WERE identified as Tim Carter, 28, his brother, Michael, 20, both of Boise, Idaho, and Michael Prokes, 32, a former Modesto, Calif., television newsman. The State Department said in Washington that it expects survivors to start back to the United States from Georgetown today, but there was no sign from Guyanese officials that that Jonestown and the slayings of a mother and her three children in the sect's temple at Georgetwon the same day. Meanwhile, the FBI yesteray released the contents of a note found on the body of dead cult leader Jim Jones but said it had not been able to deter- mine who wrote it. A government source said the note appeared to be written by a close follower of Jones, endorsing the mass suicide decision. THE NOTE WAS found on Jones' body after it was airlifted from Guyana to Dover Air Force Base, Del., last Thursday with the corposes of other Peoples Temple members who joined in the mass suicide-slaying ritual in Jonestown on Nov. 18. A recent letter from 653 members of the Peoples Temple in Guyana asked the Los Angeles County district attor- ney to drop an investigation of the cult and threatened forcible resistance, the Los Angeles Times reported yesterday. The signers are believed to have been among the 912 Americans who died in projects forced By JUDY RAKOWSKY With the passage of the Headlee tax limitation proposal, Ann Arbor officials will now have to go to the voters to get approval for most city projects. Last night at the weekly City Council meeting, the collected heads of city government decided that if some projects are going to continue, a major selling job may be in order. CITY ATTORNEY Bruce Laidlaw outlined the three major elements of the Headlee amendment passed in November: restrictions on the state, local taxation, and the bonding authority. Laidlaw pointed out that while the state cannot decrease its appropriation to local gover- nments in general, it can shift the amount allocated to in- dividual local governments. City Administrator Sylvestor Murray said the state presently provided six per cent of Ann Arbor's budget. "I can see the state holding that pattern," Murray told coun- cil. The constraint Headlee places on loeal taxation is that any increase in the level of taxes must be voter approved. Neither the council members or Murray objected to the expanded voter input into the revenue process. However, they expressed concern over whether voters will approve City council appro By ELISA ISAACSON ALTHOUGH City Council last night financed by CDBG unanimously passed a resolution years and is nom byHeadlee projects which may be vital but not salient to the entire electorate. CURRENTLY, IF STREET pavement or storm drainage is needed in one area of town, the city can specially assess property owners in that specific area and . fund part of the project from the general fund. Under Headlee, however, the project could not receive any city support unless the voters city-wide permit it. Council member Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward) said, "Headlee requires a different approach to special assessments," which could be accomplished by putting several such plans together in one package and presenting it to the voters. That way, people will perceive needs throughout the city and will probably approve them, Morris said. Morris pointed out, however, that this process will probably be more politicized than in the past. Council will have to balance the project awarded between all the areas of the city, she said. MORRIS POINTED out two potential risks. One is that voters may think a project is so vital that they expect it to be funded from the general fund. Another is that voters may refuse tax hikes for projects that do not directly affect them. Councilman ronald Trowbridge (R-Fourth Ward) called that "myopic." Eves day care grant IT HAS been " funding for three w an independent their choice. According to Laurie Wargelin of CDBG child-care, the Main Street