MSA See editor ial page Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Iai BARELY See, Today for details Vol. LXXXX, No.61 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 15, 1979 Ten Cents Twelve Pages , o , ' _ Carter puts freeze on Iran assets From AP and Reuter WASHINGTON-President Carter yesterday froze an esti- mated $5 billion in Iranian government assets held in U.S. banks and asked the United Nations Security Council to reject Iran's request for an emergency meeting. At the same time, the State Department took its hardest line yet toward the Iranians, insisting that students who seized the U.S/ Embassy and some 60 American hostages must agree to re Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS FESTIVITIES AT yesterday's Go Bucks, Go Blue name-changing ceremony coming King Scott Kelly, Miss Michigan, and Miss Ohio. were kicked off with speeches by such visiting celebrities as Michigan Home- BUCKS GO BLUE? Fans rename Ohio- townfo weekend ofbgam lease the captives, before there can be any negotiations of U.S.-Iranian relations. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance flew to New York and conferred with U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, who has offered to mediate the crisis that erupted Nov. 4 when Iranian militants seized the embassy, in which they hold 98 hostages. VANCE DECLINED comment as he left Waldheim's townhouse after talks of slightly more than an hour. Before the meeting, he was asked about Iran's call for a" U.N. Security Council meeting and said, "We have indicated that if the hostage question is resolved, then we're prepared to see the Security Council go forward and deal with the issues that anyone wishes to put before it, in- cluding the Iranians." Meanwhile, in New York, the deposed Shah of Iran will return to Mexico from New York within 10 days, NBC news reported last night, quoting well-placed sources. "Administration officials are not only aware of the Shah's plans, they have been encouraging him not to delay his departure," the network said. THE 15-NATION security council met for about 45 minutes in the early evening and decided to hold further consultations on the Iranian request, but set no time. Waldheim said they probably would be held today. The Moslem militants holding 62 Americans and 36 third-nation embassy See CARTER, Page 6 Upheld From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - A federal appeals court' yesterday upheld the conviction of Rep. Charles Diggs Jr. (D-Mich.), who took kickbacks from staffers and had government paychecks issued to persons who handled his personal af- fairs. Diggs said he would seek a rehearing from the full 10-member U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, since the three-judge panel was divided on the issue. In a 2-1 decision, a U.S. Court of Ap-< peals panel upheld all 29 counts that led to Diggs' jury conviction a year ago and a three-year prison sentence that he has not started serving. "THE DEFENDANT defrauded the public of not only substantial sums of money, but of his faithful and honest services," said the mnajority opinion by U.S. Circuit Judge Malcolm Richard Wilkey. The jury found that the financially See DIGGS, Page 9 By STEVE HOOK and NICK KATSARELAS Special to The Daily GO BUCKS, GO BLUE, Ohio-"Ohio State sucks!" shouted .a ten-year-old Michigan man at an eight-year-old boy and his dog, who were both clad en- tirely in the Buckeye's scarlet and gray. In this usually sedate town of only 3,270, the residents take the Michigan- Ohio State rivalry very seriously. So seriously, in fact, that the mayor last night officially changed the town's name from Archbold to Go Bucks, Go Blue. "THIS IS JUST something for Nor- thwest Ohio to get together and have fun," said Go Bucks,'Go Blue Mayor William Lovejoy. "Many folks go through Archbold on their way to Ann Arbor," Lovejoy said. "This was the natural place for the celebration." "In the 1976 mp of Michigan," the mayor explained, "the person who composed it put in two fictitioug towns - Go Blue, Ohio, just south of the bor- der, and Beat Bo, Michigan, outside of Detroit. We were laughing about it and decided to rename our town Go Bucks, Go Blue for a week a year." Residents celebrated the occasion last night, accompanied by Miss Michigan and Miss Ohio, the Michigan cheerleaders and pom-pom girls, and the 25-member Wauseon High School Pep Band. "THIS IS THE biggest thing that's happened to Archbold since the Freedom Train came to town," bubbled one ecstatic woman. , "Archbold has always been good at promoting itself," said Jirp Frey, a village resident. At the local barber- shop, owner Greg Grime waited out the last minutes of his day reading The Ar- chbold Buckeye in an unused barber chair. "I'm a big Buckeye fan," he said: "I have never been to an OSU game, but I have a boy that will be playing for the Buckeyes in a few years. I'll go see 'em then." ACROSS THE street, at Stotzer's Hardware, Bob Stotzer and his son Rick, both Michigan graduates, ex- pressed their hopes for a Michigan vic- tory. "We haven't missed a game in 15 years," said Bob Stotzer. "We see all of See GA ME, Page 6 People's Action Coalition Sprenkel accepts city position By PATRICIA HAGEN Terry Sprenkel, the city manager of Ames, Iowa, yesterday confirmed, that he would accept the position of City Administrator in Ann Arbor. By a unanimous vote Tuesday evening, City Council authorized Mayor Louis, Belcher to offer Sprenkel the city's top ad- ministrative post. Sprenkel is expec- ted to take office, with a $48,000 salary, by mid-January. "I TALKED with the mayor this morning," Sprenkel said last night. The contract agreement has been completed and he said he is awaiting written confirmation from the mayor. With 21 years of administrative experience, Sprenkel will be Ann Arbor's third city administrator. Af- ter six years, former City Ad- ministrator Sylvester Murray left in September to become city manager in Cincinnati, Ohio. Guy Larcon held the post for 17 years prior to Murray. Ames, which has a population of 46,500, is "a smaller version of Ann Arbor," according to Belcher. The site of Iowa State University, Ames also has an airport, hospital, anda See SPRINK EL, Page 6 vies o SAS( ByCHARLES THOMSON showing in the upcoming elections Perhaps the least accurate way to portray the attitude of the People's Ac- tion Coalition (PAC) on the current LSA Student Governnent (LSA-SG) cam- paign is to call its attitude unsure. "We are going to win all seven seats," said "D" Ghosh, PAC's incum- bent candidate for LSA-SG and spokeswoman for the party's slate in the election. ANOTHER PAC candidate, James Lindsay, after first stating he "thinks" PAC candidates will win seats on the executive council, corrected himself and said he "knows" PAC will do so. "I want to win. I think PAC has the people to do the job. I know we're going to win," he said. :The other PAC candidates are Juniors Aron Kaufman and Lucille Rowels and Sophomores Sharon Bray, Raymond Cassar,'and Paul Liu. PAC was formed a year ago in Mar- ch, emphasizing a commitment to social change. Ghosh, who still speaks of the group's "commitment," says she's confident about the group's because of the groups history. ACCORDING TO Ghosh, PAC is con- fident because "people associate PAC with a lot of good things they have done," and said she plans to "keep up change in,a postive, progressive way." PAC confidence comes despite the fact that the party is not running can- didates for either president or vice -pOS ts a number of issues on campus, em- phasizing that PAC concerns were diverse. "I've been in student gover- nment and I've seen things happen that I want to see continue," she said. Ghosh added that Michigopoly, an information booklet produced by LSA-SG, should be continued. Ghosh also said PAC wants to bring students into the tenure decision process. "We all feel very strongly that students should have a say-so in tenure decisions," she said, adding that the newly reactivated Joint Faculty Student Policy Committee might prove valuable as a useful tool to increase student participation on tenure issues. Divestment is also an issue which concerns PAC,. according to Ghosh. Although indicating that "it's not my top priority," Ghosh said "people should know where their money is being invested," and said PAC favors University divestment from holdings in South Africa. Bray mentioned that another issue PAC was "very much" interested in is expanding the system within the University for experiential learning. LSA-SG elections New device gives moving map of brain By JOHN GOYER A white-coated lab technician types instructions onto a keyboard, the plastic keys clicking. Beside her, set in- to the black metal cabinet of a small computer, a television screen shows a pulsing disc of different shades of green - the video-taped picture of a human heart pumping blood. The idea is simple. Weak radioactive molecules are injected into the patient's bloodstream. As the blood tagged with radioactive material travels through the heart, energy given off is recorded by a scanner and than See GRANT, Page 6 president of the executive council. Ghosh said the party is not running a slate for the presidency "because we think that Dan (Solomon of the Student Alliance for Institutional Development (SAID) is a good guy. We have of- ficially decided that we are going to verbally endorse Dan. He's got the commitment to do the job." GHOSII SAID PAC is concerned with Daily Photo by LISA KLAUS A UNIVFRSITY hOSPITAL worker lies beneath a computerized scanner. that measures radioactivity from tracaer molecules which a patient would ingest. The large disc above the patient records energy given off by the tracers. The data is then transformed by computer into a 'map' of the part of the body scanned. collecting "cigarettes and smoking paraphenalia" to get y . py' gx f: ::r", ,,;yrf":::.::....-. :Jr v:i 4:":i:':{if i"ii;?:: -MMMANNOT TAX 14 P ofy. a lb- 4d fi e P dP h s fie goo e e s J O col ct n "cigarettes nd sm oking paraphenalia" to g et people to "put 'em away for just one day." More greetings from afar It's Ohio State week, and the eyes of most of the foot- ball watching nation will h turn to our own Michigan Stadium Saturday as the Bucks and the Wolverines " "I have many friendswin the great state of Ohio but on the day that the Wolverines and the. Buckeyes meet there is no doubt that every fiber of my body will be rooting for victory for Michigan." Don't worry, Jer, we will. New home, sweet, home So you told your professor that you couldn't do yout- term paper because you went to the Library of Afro-American and African Studies on Hill Street to do your research and it wasn't there anymore? And he didn't believe you? Well, he should have, because the library has moved to a new home John Paul II visited here last month? Well that's nothing compared to what the Irish sold yesterday. Organizations" of the Pope's Dublin visit put 150,000 fence posts, a set of toilets, and other assorted souvenirs on the block to pay for- the costs incurred by them during the Pope's trip. The memorabilia brought in $105,000 and were sold in Dublin's Phoenix Park, where the Pope preached to more than a. million people on September 29. f 1 On the Outside We might as well face the fact winter is coming, albeit m I I,