PRESIDENT CARTER See editorial page V' Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom 1ailg FALLING High-70o Low-390 See Today for details VoL LXXXX, No. 16 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, September 23, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Supplement Sputtering Blue clips Jayhawks' wings, 28-7 6 - By GEOFF LARCOM It wasn't spectacular, nor, was it impressive, and it was hardly what Bo Schembechler had hoped for coming off last week's disheartening loss to' Notre Dame. In fact, the most charitable thing that can be said of yester- day's 28-7 victory over Kansas is that it was a win, as the Wolverines did only what they absolutely had to on-offense in handing the Jayhawks their second straight loss of the young season before an unen- thusiastic Michigan Stadium crowd of 103,698. The Wolverines simply owned the ball for most of the game, running 93 of- fensive plays to Kansas' 51, in amassing 467 yards in total offense compared to the Jayhawks' meager 104 total. THE CHIEF contributors here were Stanley Edwards, who rushed for 106 yards out of his tailback slot, and John Wangler, who entered the game at the beginning of the second quarter and en- ded up with credit for 195 of Michigan's total of 220 yards through the air. Ralph Clayton grabbed three passes for 70 yards and tight end Doug Marsh added three receptions for 38 yards. Freshman Lawrence Ricks, who'd run only two plays previously this year, chipped in with 53 rushing yards, while fullback Lawrence Reid rambled for 52. But those stats weren't what Schem- bechler was looking for, not when his team had that many chances to execute - and failed to come through so often. "I ask you, was that a 28-7 game?" Schembechler said incredulously. "Ninety-three offensive plays and we get four touchdowns. That's ridiculous. We're making mistakes a Michigan team should not make. In a game like this, we should be dominant." TO A CERTAIN extent, the Wolverines were. There seemed little doubt that Kansas was not the team to take advantage of the Wolverines' of- fensive slumber, with Michigan's near- invincible defense virtually suffocating the Jayhawks' pass-oriented offense throughout. But what irked Schembechler most was that there should have been much more. Freshman Ali Haji-Sheikh missed two 42-yard field goals, one each in the first and fourth auarters. Along with that, the Wolverines were inter- cepted once and lost the ball twice on fumbles in the backfield, caused by Jayhawk defenders blowing in and knocking the ball loose from the Blue quarterback. Meanwhile,, the best the Jayhawks could manage was fleet-footed safety Leroy Irvin's 60-yard punt return in the opening minutes of the second quarter. After Michigan had stalled at its own 23, Bryan Virgil booted a line drive which Irvin gathered in at his own for- ty. He broke to the right sideline and pranced untouched into the north end. zone for the only Kansas score of the day. Mike Hubach converted to make See BLUE, Page 10 Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS MICHIGAN QUARTERBACK JOHN WANGLER releases the pigskin before being hit by an onrushing Kansas lineman during yesterday's 28-7 Wol- verine victory. Wangler completed 12 of 18 passes for 195 yards, while his backfield mates accounted for nearly 250 yards rushing. GEO-University stuggle goes on, even after all these years By NICK KATSARELAS February, 1975. The biting winter wind slices the campus. Despite the chilling temperatures, groups of people march in front of the Modern Language Building. And Angell Hall. And the Chemistry Building. And 25 other buildings. The protest was organized. So organized in fact, the strikers suc- ceeded in closing many courses for one month, a feat only a blizzard has ever managed to do. The strikers were the Graduate Em- ployees Organization (GEO). At the time, it was a viable political force on campus with over 700 actively par- ticipating in the strike. GEO had wide- ranging student support, and succeeded in obtaining many of its demands from the University. BUT THAT was° four and one-half years ago. Now, GEO has a significan- tly lower membership. So low, that only 75 members voted for officers in its last election. Student awareness of the problems between the union and the University is minimal, and most of the student body doesn't even know what "GEO" stands for. The University and GEO are curren- tly engaged in a court battle to deter- mine whether union members are em- ployees, with the right to bargain collectively, or just students. GEO President Greg Scott says he is confident the ruling will be in the union's favor. But GEO still has major problems. Its members have been working without a contract for over three years. It is without any of the provisions contained in the one and only contract, including an important clause concerning agency shop. There also : appears to be a major drop in GEO membership. Scott said the peak membership was about 1,200 several months after the strike - a figure attributed to a firm belief in GEO's effectiveness. SCOTT ESTIMATES there are ap- The victory climaxed a long effort by GSAs - student, research, and teaching assistants - to organize a union which began in 1971. AFTER GEO'S official certification as the bargaining agent for campus GSAs, the union quickly resumed its battle with the University. It demanded wage increases, lower class size, and hol 11( is iflalY dflmoflStr(- tilDs uand (Ieiritites (IS II'E' ((l.' - (EO( PresidIent Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY THE MICHIGAN DEFENSIVE WALL caves in on Kansas quarterback Kevin Clinton, but the Jayhawk passer unloads his aerial under the gun yesterday at Michigan Stadium. Clinton, whose rifle-like arm concerned the Michigan coach- ing staff, completed only 6 of 21 passes for 28 yards, as the Wolverines rolled to a 28-7 victory. PASSIN( UP CONTINUES DESPITE PLE AS: proximately 400 GEO members now, although only 25 people showed up at its first meeting of the year held two weeks ago. Although Scott said the size of union was disappointing, he said he is optimistic about the ability of GEO to continue its drive for full recognition to build a stronger labor organization. GEO became the official bargaining unit for all Graduate Student Assistants (GSA's) in April, 1974, following a vote of GSAs sanctioned by the Michigan Employee - Relations Commission (MERC), and since then, its relation- ship with the administration has been, at best, tenuous. greater curriculum input, and an end to alleged racial and sexual discrimination by the University. Negotiators for both sides bargained for eight months. A MERC-appointed mediator was called in, and GEO of- fered to go into binding arbitration, an offer the administration declined. After efforts to avert a strike, 700 union members walked out on February 12, 1975. Class attendance was cut in half the first day of the strike and about 200 students joined GSAs on the picket lines. The first week of the strike See GEO, Page 2 Women injured Incidents of passing up women increased markedly at yesterday's University football game after the stadium announcer asked fans to stop the practice, many spectators reported. Two women were treated and released at University Hospital after being injured as a'result of the practice, according to a hospital spokeswoman. She would not say how serious the in- juries were or release the names of those hospitalized. HOWARD KING, stadium public ad- dress announcer, said he met with Athletic Director Don Canham and Sports Information Director Will Perry before the game, and decided not to make an announcement condemning passing up unless he noticed the ac- tivity. "You take something of a risk in pushing too hard," said King. He said he made the announcement in the third quarter, and noticed that the passing up atgame, didn't stop. After he called a play, King, * then said he reworded the announ- cement asking that the passing up be discontinued. King called the injuries "most uufor- tunate" and said that Canhm had been "especially concerned." Perry said he knew nothing about the passing up incidents. Several observers said women were being passed up in "assembly line" style after King's initial announcement. One said ten women were being pissed up at one point. 28, beer brands you won't want to guzzle WASHINGTON (UPI)-Test results just released by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) show at least 28 beers have traces of cancer-causing nitrosamines, with Schlitz leading the list. The test, made public late last week, showed 17 domestic and 11 imported beers contain detactable levels of the con- taminants. The highest reading for an American beer-7.7 parts per billion (ppb)-was found in Schlitz. The lowest-no detac- table level-was Coors, with Stroh's a close second. THE HIGHEST reading among imports-3.6 ppb-was found in a Heineken sample. Low among the imports was Guiness Stout, with no detectable level. Both the FDA and the brewing industry have said they are confident the nitrosamines can be eliminated through changes in the brewing process, and they expect a clean-up within a few months. The FDA also hassaid the amount of nitrosamines in beer is small enough that-based on what the agency knows now-there is no reason for moderate beer drinkers to change their habits'. FDA RELEASED the latest test results-from studies made last spring-after it got several requests citing the Freedom of Information Act. Among those seeking the results was the Center for Science in the Public Interest, which has asked the FDA See 28, Page 7 No word yet on San Salvador abductors Draft Ken WASHINGTON (AP) - The movement to draft Sen. Edward Ken- nedy as a presidential candidate has grown by at least 50 per cent in the week since the Massachusetts Democrat indicated he might seek the nation's highest office. An Associated Press survey turned up one or more Kennedy efforts in at least 29 states and the District of Columbia, about equal to the number where there is organized re-election ac- tivity for President Carter. BUT BECAUSE of the spontaneous rand, sudden growth of the Kennedy nedy BUT THIS MEA staking claims for nedy's representa If Kennedy runs,r accept the de fact ,,n or risk theirm them with new one Kennedy hopest is motivating the movement NS a lot of people are also smooth ov themselves as Ken- necessary to form tives in their states. "It all will go to he may be forced to as he enters the o committees as his Garrett who orga wrath if he displaces Teddy movement s. sponsoring chapter that the spirit which "WE'RE DOIN( se supporters would tification so he caj p growingjas. 'er any transition in," said Garrett. an pfficial campaign. In Iowa, where one of the first can- Sen. Kennedy as soon didate tests will come in January race," offered Bill caucuses, Iowans for Kennedy Chair- nized the Ready for man Matt Wanning said if Kennedy in Oregon and is runs, naming the official team "is en- rs in other states. tirely up to him." G the resource iden- "I would imagine that the senator n use it when he gets would want to bring in people from out- side the state to coordinate his ac- dtivitiesonce he announces,"sagreed a~fident Richard Williamson, Kansas coor- dinator for a Kennedy draft. tpp o r But a Kennedy candidacy would face + other problems with these groups. The SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) -Authorities waited for word yester- day from gunmen who kidnapped two U.S. businessmen in a bloody highway ambush outside San Salvador. Leftist insurgents continued their hit-and-run war against the government, and six were reported killed in attacks on national guard posts. Police said they believed the abduc- tion, in which the businessmen's bodyguard was killed, was related to the recent anti-government violence. Americans and other foreigners have been the targets of leftist attacks in the past. DENNIS McDONALD, general manager of Apler of El Salvador, sub- sidiary of California-based Beckman Instruments, and his co-worker Fausto Buchelli, a Puerto Rican, were am- bushed Friday evening as they drove from their factory toward San Salvador, six miles away, police said. and several casualties were reported. THE REBELS had promised a "black Septengber" in their campaign to topple the military government of Carlos Humberto Romero and install a Marxist government to replace the small elite that controls this Central Ameican nation of 3.5 million people. Yesterday's clashes at guard posts outside San Salvador were the latest in a series of attacks in the past 24 hours, according to government officials. They said four guerrillas were killed in fighting at Panchimalco, a town seven miles southeast of San Salvador, and two guerrillas were killed in fighting at Apopo, 12 miles north of San Salvador. FSunday 'Ihe first of this se (tonY s b-c f h y D il. , t l t M r a in ' r ne e s 114 tY .. but Carter is con of his own public st