Same old story By BOB MILLER If Michigan had to lose the 1979 Rose Bowl, it might as well have been to the number one team in the country. But the questions after the game were, did Michigan really lose, nd is Southern Cal really No. 1? In the spirit of diplomacy, the answers are yes and no on ath counts. AS FAR AS THE final score, the records, and the results concerned, it will forever stand at USC 17, Michigan 10. 1, there will be people who contend that Charles White abled at the goal line and that this cost Michigan the ime. Bo Schembechler is one of those people. He said, after wing the replay of the fumble-non-fumble touchdown, that game plan changed to try to get the Wolverines back in contest. aAt that point the score was 14-3. Rick Leach opened up the offense by passing and was intercepted. A pa Jordan last second field goal ballooned the Troj at the half. THE 10 POINTS USC scored as a result of t fumble/touchdown were more than enough toI Cal the victory. What might escape the memory of those game was that Leach threw an interception jus into the game which led to USC's first TD. scored all of their points by way of gifts from ti and the referees. But Michigan was not able to do anytin themselves on offense. Leach threw for 137 yE third of that yardage came on the Wolverine down of the afternoon, a 44 yard aerial bomb Roosevelt Smith. However, that was the only. wilted roses atented Frank second half. jan lead to 17-3 DESPITE THE WHITE fiasco; despite a roughing the kicker penalty (which should be nominated for best acting he celebrated job of the young year), Michigan was not going to win the give Southern Rose Bowl, not the way they played. "Our defense played well enough to win, our offense who saw the didn't," lamented Schembechler. t four minutes USC coach John Robinson felt the same way. "It was like The Trojans the game two years ago. It was a veryphysical game. You've he Wolverines got to give the defense credit, they played exceptionally." THE IRONIC POINT is that Michigan's defense was sup- r spectacular posed to be suspect all season long and the offense was pur- ards, but one- portedly in a class by itself. But when 'the 1978 season is s' only touch- reviewed, it will be the defense from after the Michigan State rom Leach to game until the end of the season that really held the team scoring in the together.SeBLEPae1 WITH HIS TEAM losing yet another Rose Bowl, coach Bo Schembechler reflected the feelings of Michigan football fans on New Year's Day. REGENTS' RIGHTS AND WRONGS See editorial page 4be 41r; (jib atl STILL SUBZERO High-14° Low-5*° See Today for details VOL. LXXXIX, No. 79 Dems and GOP set for city Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, January 5, 1979 Free Issue SixteeAn Pnae Shah leave takes \1 primary By KEITH B. RICHBURG City Democrats will battle in primary elections next month for the party iominations for mayor as well as the rucial Fourth Ward council seat. Republicans, meanwhile, will have a orimary of their own, with incumbent juncilmember Louis Senunas being hallenged for his Third Ward seat om within the ranks of the GOP. IN THE DEMOCRATIC mayoral 'rimary, newcomer John Montgomery vill challenge party favorite Jamie ienworthy, despite suggestions from Tarty leaders that he withdraw. In the unexpected Fourth Ward - ?rimary, veteran city politician and former Councilmember LeRoy Cap- _aert will make his seventh run for council since 1963. but must fight for the Democratic nomination with Melvin xrieshaber, a forensic center employee making his first political try. Montgomery, a 1977 University graduate,,said he was laid off from his Chrysler plant job when he began ex- ploring a mayoral race as a way "to keep my mind active. "I CALLED the city hall sort of jokingly to find out what it takes" Mon- tgomery said. "Once I found out how easy it was I decided to do it." Montgomery said his candidacy See CITY, Page 6 while gener, By UPI, AP, and Reuter TEHRAN, Iran - Three of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's top har- dline generals have resigned on the eve of Iran's transition to civilian rule, well informed diplomats said yesterday. The report came as troops fired on anti-shah demonstrators in Tehran and Shiraz and airliners carrying foreign and Iranian evacuees took off without radar assistance from -Tehran's airport where military experts substituted for striking civilian controllers. THE CARTER administration, meanwhile, upset by a bloody anti-shah demonstration by Iranian students in California, promised yesterday to deport any foreign student who takes part in illegal violence in the U.S. The warning was made by Attorney General Griffin Bell one day after he was instructed by Carter to review possible steps the government might take. The attorney general said he was studying "our legal options" that could lead to revocation of student visas for the Iranians. "Any other visitor to our country who is here to obtain an education and resorts to violence con- trary to the law should be on notice that we will initiate appropriate legal proceedings to see that their stay in the United States is ended," he said.] BELL'S STERN warning, Carter's order, and complaints from Congress members, were all prompted by an an- ti-shah demonstration in Beverly Hills, Calif., Tuesday, in which protestors stormed the mansion where the shah's sister and mothe are residing. Diplomats ii Iran named the resigning generals yesterday as Tehran military commander Gen. Gholam Ali Oveisi, army aviation commander Gen. Manouchehr Khosrowdad,-and air force commander Lt.-Gen. Amir Hossein Rabii. Reports that the three generals had quit followed an official announcement that the shah had appointed former gendarmerie chief Gen. Abbas Qrabaghi as chief of staff, by passing Oveisi. WESTERN DIPLOMATS said the resignation of the three generals, if con- firmed, would considerably improve chances of avoiding a military coup. Onediplomat described the three generals as "the only ones who wanted a real crackdown" pn anti-shah demon- strators. THE THREE generals, along with See SHAH, Page 8 BULLETIN An armored car was robbed of over $1.5 million near Lakeport, Michigan last night. See story, page 6. Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN Up, UP, and away... Michigan forward Alan Hardy hooks over the outstretched arm of Minnesota's Kevin McHale (44) in Wolverine basketball action at Crisler last night. Hardy recently regained his starting spot from freshman Thad Garner and has won praise from both coach Johnny Orr and assistant Bill Frieder for his clutch scoring and rebounding. Michigan won 88-75. FLEMING'S FINAL SESSION: adRegent By MITCH CANTOR built off Fuller and RON GIFFORD ce of the new c At their busy December meeting - to the north sid the last with former University THE PROP President Robben Fleming at the helm despite the ob. - the Regents voted to approve a site Baker (R-AnnA for a new University Hospital as well as dissenting vote to renew the University's contract with sistently favore he Public Interest Research Group in ter east of thef Michigan (PIRGIM). is concerned a The Regents approved a plan to con- of the medicalc struct the $310 million medical facility "This is pro north of the present Main Hospital expenditure by building, with a new access road to be a single buil appr Road. The main entran- omplex would be shifted e. ' POSAL was approved jections of Regent Deane Arbor), who cast the lone e. Baker, who has con- ed building the new cen- present location, said he bout the overall growth campus. bably the largest single the state of Michigan on ding and certainly the ve ospital largest expenditure by far that the oversee improv University has ever made," he said. "It campus, leavin will set land use and development of the move the site of medical center for many years. eastern portiont "I can't vote to spend $200 million to Immediately: $300 million of the state's money construction without being absolutely sure that this unanimously ap is the best plan," Baker added. "You for hospital plan have to have an overall plan that can be plan. Howeve continuously updated here," he said. seemed comn BAKER INSTEAD urged the hospital location. planners to create a master plan to See1 site 'ements to the medical ng open the option to the new facilities to the of the area. following the-vote on the site, the Regents proved a motion calling nners to create a master r, the majority still mitted to the north BOARD, Page 6 Kent State plaintiffs, Friday In theinteri m.0 Heisted 'U' drugs found A half-ton safe containing 52 vials of & drugs used in experiments at the University was found intact Dec. 28 at the bottom of an 18-foot deep pit in the Medical Science I building. Stolen the previous weekend, the safe was found by a University employee. UNIVERSITY scientists had warned that the drugs, including cocaine, mor- phine, and some amphetamines, could cause paralysis or death. The experimental drugs had been used in medical research projects with monkeys who had been addicted to morphine. The substances were being tested to determine whether or not they are addictive. "We really don't know what kind of Thow ctnrraipcwamr; filrf bynrr/l reaction people will have to them if they are injected," said Dr. Bert LaDu, chairman of the Medical School's Department of Pharmacology. THE POTENTIALLY lethal drugs were among a large quantity of nar- cotics that was kept in a 1,000-pound gray safe on the sixth floor of the Medical Sciences building. It was last seen at 6 p.m. on Dec. 23. Authorities noticed it was missing Dec. 26. Police say they found a hand-made wooden dolly near a loading dock. The discovery led investigators to believe the thieves improvised a block and tackle, hoisted the safe onto the dolly, then left the building by elevator. POLICE PUT a $1 million street value on the recovered drugs, but LaDu said that figure is "greatly exaggerated." Even the more common drugs could have beendangerous beae nthev nae Beginning today, the Daily hap- pily increases its coverage of national and international events by providing readers with news from Reuter, a British news service. Like the other news services we use, the Associated Press (AP) and United Press International (UPI), Reuter covers events in the U.S. and around the world. Reuter, however, provides much more extensive coverage of events outside the U.S., particularly in Asia and Africa. Reuter also provides a welcome non- American prospective on the news. The Daily is the only newspaper in the state which uses Reuter. get cash s( CLEVELAND (AP)-A $675,000 settlement and a statement of regret brought an end yesterday to the long and bitter legal battle waged by the vic- tims of the Ohio National Guard bullets fired at Kent State University in 1970. "We got everything we wanted and more," exulted lawyer Sanford Jay Rosen of San Francisco, who represen- ted nine people wounded at Kent and the families of the four students killed. THE SETTLEMENT was read into the record in U.S. District Court, ending a retrial of a five-year-old damage suit ettlement stemming from the shootings. It included a statement on behalf of the defendants-Gov. James Rhodes and 27 present and former National Guard members-expressing regret and saying that "the tragedy of May 4, 1970, should not have occurred," but denying liability for the shootings. The biggest part of the settlement, $350,000, goes to Dean Kahler, now 28, who was paralyzed below the waist during the clash between guardsmen and students who were protesting the movement of U.S. forces into Cam- bodia. -Students, By ELISA ISAACSON and KEITH RICHBURG Back home in Shaker Heights, just outside of Cleveland, sophomore Beth Warren could liven up her vacation with an occasional 3.2 beer. But upon returning to Ann Arbor she found this state's new 21- year-old drinking age law in force, having been upheld in federal court. Unable to legally consume even the mildest form of alcohol here in Michigan, Warren announced, "I'm going to turn to drugs." nR ANV ctnHantc eniumm hvarp mnot unnin t -w -AM 1 A 9 ' tbars gree easy enough to get alcohol if you live in the dorms." Many students have devised strategies for eluding the law, from drinking in the privacy of their rooms or cars to manufacturing fake I.D.s. The incentive for violating the law is even greater in this city, since if caught consuming alcohol, 18-20-year-olds will be subject only to a $5 fine, under an ordinance adopted by City Council and effected December 27. The city law, patterned after the $5 marijuana penalty, is only slightly less stringent than a recently enacted $25 state penalty which the governor signed the day the new drinking age went into effect. a cry with alcohol will be issued a summons similar to a parking ticket which can be paid through the mail. Persons over 21 who buy liquor for their underaged friends also will be given the $5 ticket. The local ordinance specifically excludes 18-to-21- year-old persons found with open cans or bottles int cars, or with alcohol on high school grounds. AT THE SAME time it passed the $5 penalty, Council directed the city attorney to investigate the feasibility of having a "zero dollar fine." Council defeated the "zero dollar fine" idea by a single vote onl after the attnrnev - and a spokesnerson for I