SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside ol Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom itp FROSTY High-44 Low--21 See Today for details I I Vol. LXXXV, No. 40 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 20, 1974 . Ten CentsE Eight Pages 771/ 1~ ' IUSEE ?&SHAPPDCAL6LY SGC elections The results of last week's Student Government Council election should be ready early Monday, ac- cording to Elections Director Alan Bercovitz. But the Student Action Coalition announced Friday that it will challenge the outcome. Any other group or student who wishes to contest the elec- tion must do so within 24 hours of the results being certified. If the challenge is upheld a new elec- tion would be necessary. However, one SGC of- ficial commented yesterday that a new election wouldn't help much unless more students voted. Last week only 3.5 per cent of those entitled to vote bothered to cast ballots. Oops A strange coincidence produced an error in last Friday's Cinema Weekend column - we reviewed the wrong movie. Two pictures with the title Family Life were released in the same year, but only one - a Polish film - was listed in our usual sources of research. Cinema II informs us, how- ever, that the Family Life they plan to show this evening is an English-made picture directed by Ken Loach. Well, as the song goes, it's a small world after all. Happenings .. . ... are a mixed and almost empty bag today. Washtenaw County Community College will hold an open house today from 1-5 p.m. for the public to take a look at the school . . . the Residential College lecture series will present John Evans, a psych. grad student, speaking on "Parapsychol- ogy: The New Personal Frontier," at 7 p.m. in the East Quad Green Lounge . . . Hill Aud. will rock to the sound of Beethoven's Symphony number 1 begining at 8 p.m. and performed free by the University Symphony . . . on Monday the Univer- sity theatre program will present "The Killing of Sister George" at 8 p.m. in the Areana Theatre - admission is 50 cents . . . and square dancing - for those who have been -attending - is again scheduled for Monday at 8 p.m. in Barbour Gym. 0 Tough customer A runaway kangaroo gave two of Chicago's fin- est fits yesterday as they tried to capture the agile beast. The cops attempted to handcuff the animal but in doing so got a lesson in the art of self-defense. "His punch was brutal and he kicked us both pretty bad too," one policeman said. "We really didn't know what to do. After all, there aren't any general orders on the cap- ture and care of a kangeroo." The marsupial got away with nary a scratch. p 'Book 'im Sen. Edward Gurney (R-Fla.), who served on the Senate Watergate panel, has lost a fight to avoid being fingerprinted and photographed as a result of a bribery indictment against him. He claimed the procedure - standard for anyone charger with a felony - would be "humiliating". But the federal judge hearing the case did not agree and ordered the Senator "treated like any other defendant." 0 Ying for Vesco The Costa Rican legislature is currently consid- ering repeal of the law which has shielded million- aire-financier Rober SVesco from extradition by United States authorities. Vesco is wanted on charges stemming from a $200,00 contribution to former President Nixon's re-election in an alleged attempt to influence an investigation by the Secur- ities and Exchange Commission. U.S. officials have twice tried unsuccessfully to secure Vesco's return since he arrived in Costa Rica nearly 18 months ago. If the law is repealed, extradition could take place. Re-armamnent? Soviet scientists have succeeded in growing new legs on frogs and rats and there is evidence that restoration of human limbs could be oossible in the future. Data from the experiments suggests that damaged tissues, limbs, and organs in high mammals and theoretically humans can be re- generated. On the inside . . . . . all the latest on yesterday's narrow victory over Wisconsin appears on the Sports page . . . The Sunday magazine offers an in-depth look at gifted children .. . MicE Foresters compete CO Hell By DAN BLUGERMAN HELL - Claudia Rast hoisted the six-foot birch log to her shoulder, skipped a half-step to the toe mark, and flung the timber skyward. It landed eight feet and 10 inches away in Hell. THAT GAVE her last place in the Bolt Throw, one of 12 events at yesterday's Midwest- ern Foresters Conclave in Hell, Mich. The Forestry Club of the Uni- versity of Missouri emerged victorious for the s e c o n d straight year in an all-day event pitting students from a dozen midwestern universities in tests of forestry skills and old time logging practices. The University's School of Natural Resources hosted this year's conclave at the Fresh Air Camp 10 miles north of campus. THE ACTIVITIES r a n g e d from chopping 10-inch square cottonwood logs, for speed with short - handled, single bladed axes to that perennial back- hills favorite-the tobacco spit. The day's events culminated with a three-legged relay of canoeing, tree felling and fire building. The relay began as contest- ants ran 200 yards to beached canoes which they raced around a buoy on nearby Patterson Lake. One canoeist from each team then sprinted to hand off a wooden stake to a teammate. This contestant -pounded the stake into the ground near a 30-foot pine log and felled the log with an axe and saw, trying to land it as near the stake as possible. A TIME penalty was com- puted foreach team according to the distance each log fell See HELL, Page 2 24-20 CLIFFHANGER dgan bysls adger . n. ebyBde'H e a t e r 's h o t f e e t b o o s t B lu e ; Sdefense gives up 287 yards s By ROGER ROSSITER Special To The Daily MADISON--The malign- ed Michigan offense came to life vesterday, nowerinz the Wolverines past the upset - hungry Wisconsin Badgers, 24-20. Unable to stop Wiscon- sin's attack, the Wolverines dcd the next best tbhing grinding out two long, time c o n s u m i n g touch- down drives in the second half. QUAR TE RB A CK Den- nis Franklin ran the option to near perfection and completed five str,)ight passes in that sec- ond half. He also led the Wol- -erines to 10 consecutive third dow Nn conversions, enabling Michigan to keen its undefeated rernrd (6-0) intact. "We knew thev (Wisconsin) would come back after last w-,ek," said Michie-n coach Bo Schembechler. "We're .irst haryv to get out of here with a win." "We never quit." said Wis- consin coach John Jardine. "We did something to Michi- L*n no one else has done." That "something" was score 20 noints, the most against a Michi- aan team since Ohio State Gmnred an equal number in 1972. WISCONSIN scored first, driv- inq 80 yards, all on the ground, in 16 olavs. Ron Pollard drove into the endzone from the two, and Vince Lamia's conversion ga-e Wisoonsin a 7-0 lead, one pl- into the second cuarter. Michigan marched straight dmvn the field after the kick- off to tie the score. The Wolverines rattled off fotr first downs onra 10-yard Rob Lvtle run around right end, a Franklin keeper around right tackle for seven, a nine-yard Chuck Heater burst through the midile, and a Lytle dive for eight. FRANKLIN THEN handed to Heater off left guard, and the senior fullback rambled 22 yards through a big hole for the touchdown. The Wisconsin defenders were completely fool- ed by Franklin's slight-of-hand work as they all followed Frank- lin to the outside, expecting the option. Michigan had the ball only three times in the first half as the Badgers controlled play, running through the Wolverine defense with uncanny ease. "I'm not gonna make ex- cusesbfor our defense when somebody moves the ball on us," said Wolverine safetyman Dave Brown. "But remember, they didn't win." WISCONSIN HAD great suc- cess running right at the Wol- verines' defensive line behind huge offensive tackles Dennis Lick and John Reimer. Fullback Ken Starch rambled for 88 yards in 14 carries in the first half, but the Badgers could not find the Michigan end zone a second time. "That's the most anyone's run on us in years," Schembechler said in disbelief. "Wisconsin's got a good of- fensive line, and a good team period," offered defensive tac- kle Greg Morton. "They're pro- bably the second best team we'll play next to Ohio State." WISCONSIN KEPT the ball away from Michigan in the first half, and the Wolverines re- turned the favor in the second. Michigan drove 70 yards to take a 14-7 lead following the second half kickoff. Franklin hit tight end Greg DenBoer three times on third down situations in the drive. See BLUE, Page 8 Boston crowds demonstIra te pro, con busing Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN A PARTICIPANT in yesterday's Midwestern Forester's Con- clave groans and winces as he releases a log in the Bolt Throw, one of the 12 competitive events. This year's conclave was sponsored by the University's Natural Resources Club and held at the Fresh Air Camp near Hell, Michigan. By JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY, ROB MEACHUM and STEPHEN SELBST special To The Daily BOSTON - Thousands of Bos- tonians, most of them young people, came out yesterday to vent passions sparked by the busing issue at two demonstra- tions-one in support and one in p r o t e s t of court-ordered school busing to promote racial integration. After several weeks of violent clashes between black and white youths in South Boston, some of the city's tensions appeared to be easing. School attendance rose at the end of last week, and both of yesterday's crowds were orderly. IN THE downtown area, near- ly 7,000 marchers-most of them white college students-walked four miles through Latin, Orien- tal, and white neighborhoods to a pro-busing rally at Boston Common. Thedemonstrators chanted, "Kids can't learn in a racist school" and heard speakers from radical groups as well as a local parents' organization decry the harassment of black students and attempted school boycott by whites. Meanwhile, anti-busing organ- izers held their rally at Kelly Field, a run-down playground in Hyde Park where the busing issue has recently grown vio- lent. Yesterday's crowd, estimated at 1500, listened quietly and ap- plauded as Boston School Com- mittee chairman John Kerrigan blasted civil rights groups and the news media for "caring nothing about Boston" and us- ing what he claimed was a "double standard" in supporting school busing. KERRIGAN and a n o t h e r school committee member, Paul Ellison, drew the loudest cheers when they attacked the Boston Globe for its editorial supp:rt of school busing. Kerrigan .aid the paper should be renamed "the Maggot Globe." Several demonstrators sport- ed red, white and blue "Enough Is Enough-Boycott the Globe" stickers on their car bumpers. One elderly man said, "I've been the reading the Globe for 50 years, but I cancelled 'cause it turned nigger." "We're proud in Boston," Ellison told the crowd. "We have the first public school .sys- tern in the country, and now we're going to be the first school system to defeat forced bus- ing." BUT NOT everyone listened. In a Saturday picnic mood, teenagers played touch football at the edge of the crowd as small children chased e a c h other through the baseball-dia- mond's bleachers. The pro-busing rally drew large numbers of onlookers but few joined the march. "I think everyone should just love each other," said one mid- dle-aged woman who asked not to be identified. "But busing? Why didn't they leave things the way they were? If the par- ents would just leave the kids alone, they'd work it out for themselves. BOTH CROWDS took to chant- ing. At Kelly Park, young peo- ple used a converted football cheer-"Here we go, Boston, here. we go"-as Ellison de- clared, "We are right in Bos- ton; we've been right all along." The pro-busing ma rcchers shouted, "Hey, hey, the school committee has got to go," as they p a s s e d the committee building. Organizers branded Kerrigan and other committee members "racists." OVER $24 MILLION: Rocky WASHINGTON (P) - Vice President - designate Nelson Rockefeller, who must pay $903,- 718 more in federal taxes, said yesterday he gave $24,712,245 in gifts to charitable, educational and other tax-exempt organiza- tions from 1957 through June 30 of this year. Rockefeller made the disclos- ure in a letter to Sen. Howard Cannon, (D-Nev.) chairman of the Committee on Rules and Administration, and released by the Rockefeller office here. Rockefeller's largest gifts were for the furtherance of the visual arts, his chief non-polit- lists donations ical interest and hobby. THE disclosure of his charit- able gifts came a day after he announced he will have to pay an additional $903,718 in federal income and gift taxes, a figure likely to soar past the $1 million mark when interest is included. But as President Ford made a campaign swing through three states yesterday, his press sec- retary, Ron Nessen, issued a White House statement, saying Ford 'still has complete faith in Vice President - designate Nelson Rockefeller." In New York, before the an- nouncement of his charitable contributions, Rockefeller said he is not guilty of any wrong- doing and added: "I wrote the piece that made the headlines." This was a reference to the income and gift tax. "There's nothing wrong, there's nothing illegal, there's nothing immoral, and there is no conflict of interest in any- thing I've done or that's come out," Rockefeller said. Ford campaigns for GOP congressmen LOUISVILLE, Ky. OP)-Presi- dent Ford campaigned through three states yesterday urging the election of Republican con- gressmen and exhorting the GOP faithful to press forward to overcome unfavorable polls. After five speeches in North and South Carolina, Ford flew here to plug for the re-election of Sen. Marlow Cook and other members of Kentucky's Repub- lican slate. "YOU'VE got an obligation," he told an airport crowd at Greensboro, N. C., "So do I, and we don't achieve it by sit- ting on our hands and wringing our hands and say 'Gee, the polls look terrible.' he said may be in prospect. Referring to the polls, Ford said, "All the experts say I can't change the outcome." But he declared, "It is a lot better for me to be out here . . . than sitting around the oval office wringing my hands: "I've got a WIN button. I'm not a loser," Ford added, re- calling that former President Harry Truman upset the poll- sters in 1948 by "fighting for what he believed was right." IN URGING Renublicans "to maximize yolir efforts in the next 10 days," Ford sa-id "the stakes are very, very high." In his prepared comments, he urged voters to send him Re- publican Congressmen "to -. j : .. .R .x '6 ' ' . . ;,{