SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside :Yl r e Sir 19a loomiih SODDEN, Hligh--56 Low--38 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol, LXXXV, No. 58. Ann Arbor, Michigan--Sunday, November 10, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages I DO I SMELL A ROSE? f r r - ~i tFtxU.$E ?&S HAPPEN o t. "Amy Eggheads reunite Remember last year's egg drop contest, when participants tried to throw eggs off the third floor of the Engineering Building without breaking them? Well those ingenious folks at Pi Tau Sigma, the Mechanical Engineering Honorary Society, are at it again. This time it's a brick swing. Contestants are invited to build contraptions capable of pro- tecting a raw egg from being scrambled by a swinging brick. The bricks will be dropped from various heights. The winner is the egg that comes out intact. First prize is dinner for two at Win Schuler's, second prize an omelet pan and third prize a dozen grade A large eggs. The event gets underway at noon tomorrow under the graduate library. For more info call 668-6027 or 769-8459. 0 Internships available Applications are available for the Pre-doctoral Interns and Post-doctoral Fellowships in Clinical Psychology at the suburban Philadelphia branch of the Devereux Foundation, a group of residential treatment, therapeutic education and rehabilitation centers. The 12-month internships provide training and experience with mentally and emotionally handicapped children, adolescents and young adults presenting problems of learning and of personal adjustment. Information and applications are avail- able from Dr. Henry Platt, director; the Devereux Foundation, Institute of Clinical Training; Devon, Pa. 19333. " Happenings . are few today but picking up for tomorrow. An exhibition of drawings, acrylics and prints by two art school faculty members, Migonette Cheng and Albert Mullen, begins today at the gallery of the new art building on North Campus. An open- ing reception will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. . . . the Michigan Volleyball team will play Ball State (3rd place in the NCAA) at 1:30 p.m. at the IM Bldg. . . . The Black Theater workshop presents two Ed Bullins plays, "The Electronic Nigger" and "The Gentleman Caller," tonight at 7 p.m. in the Residential College Aud.t.. advance tickets for' the UAC-Soph show production of "Damn Yan- kees" can be purchased tomorrow thru Wed., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Mendelssohn Box Office .. . The Inmate Project is sponsoring two films tomor- row night at 7:30 p.m., "This Child Rated X" and "Dark Corner of Justice," in the Kuenzel Room of the Union . . . The Polish Club presents Polish Cultural Night tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Interna- tional Center's Rec. Rm. . . . anyone interested in the field of gerontology is invited to a forum on the topic, "The Neighborhood Approach to Needs Assessment for the Elderly," at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Henderson Rm. of the Michigan League ... and finally, tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. the first in a series of informal "men's raps" on sexism will be held at Guild House, 802 Monroe. The topic of discussion is "Our Relationships with Women, and the Impact of Feminism." " Calley on bail William Calley was freed on bail and removed from Army custody yesterday. His lawyer said the former lieutenant plans to get a job and "sink into anonymity." After more than three years of legal maneuvering, Calley was freed by the same federal judge who reversed his conviction for the My Lai murders. He was released on his own recognizance in lieu of $1,000 bond. The Army has appealed the reversal of Calley's March 1971 conviction for murdering 22 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai in 1968 and the appeals court in New Orleans has said it will act on the appeal the week of February 17, 1975. "Right now he's a free man," said Houston Gordon, of Covington, Tenn., the at- torney who spearheaded the legal motions which resulted in Calley's being freed on bail and in a reversal of his court-martial conviction. Hairy rescue Most kidnapers demand money, but the pair who apparently lifted Seattle's two-foot-high bust of its Indian namesake, Chief Seattle, was a bit more particular. The ransom: the mayor's moustache. The stature was pilfered from its Pioneer Square pedestal two weeks -ago. Last week, an anonymous caller made the unusual ransom demand. Seattle's mayor Wes Uhlman, however, was adamant. The moustache stayed. But the statue didn't. Another caller revealed Friday that the elusive Indian could be found at a party in the city's north Broadway district, and, sure 'nuff, the statue was found and restored to the city. A man and a woman, both 29, were arrested and charged with grand larceny by possession. Both statue and moustache are re- portedly doing fine. On the inside . . ... Gordon Atcheson writes about John Reither, after defeat, and Dan Borus writes on the -view from Boston in the Sunday Magazine . . . and to- day's Sports Page highlights the Big Ten Cross O SI Bedlam at MSU as clock runs out By MARC FELDMAN Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - The Mich- igan State Spartans struck for two lightning - fast touchdowns late in the fourth quarter, and waited 46 minutes after the final gun to confirm their 16-13 upset victory over top-ranked Ohio State yesterday at Spar- tan Stadium. The Spartans had iallied from a ten point deficit on a 44-yard Charlie Baggett to Mike Jones touchdown pass and a shocking 88-yard fullback up the middle run by Levi Jackson two min- utes later. T H E BUCKEYES,fregular season losers for the first time since their 1972 visit to East Lansing, came back strong and moved to the MSU one-yard line when time expired and the con- fusion started. Starting the aborted drive af- ter Jackson's run with 3:17 left, the Bucks moved to the MSU one with 0:27 to go. Fullback Champ Henson met a stone wall there and the teams tried to untangle and get off another play. With the clock and Sartan partisans ticking off the seconds, O S U quarterback Cornelius Greene took the snap, appar- ently just as time ran out, and fumbled the ball. Wingback BrianBaschnagel picked it up on the five and scored. One referee indicated touchdown, but two others didn't. The teams alternated jumpipg up and down for victory, the goal posts were dismantled,tbut the outcome remained in doubt. EVENTUALLY it was decided that the ball was snapped after time had expired. If there had been time on the clock, Ohio State would have been penal- ized five yards for illegal pro- cedure because they didn't come to set for the required one second. The television cameras and stopwatches made the final con- troversy small, but it sure was hairy for a while. In the wild melee after the game, Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke worked his way through the fans and reporters to a room marked "Officials." He knocked on the door several times and, convinced that tey were afraid to open it, tried to force a note through a small aperture. DUKE SHORTLY discovered that the officials were at their See STATE, Page 8 loses! G / ' 11'1 e es llini Big Blue defense tough In 14W,6 winl By ROGER ROSSITER Special To The Daily CHAMPAIGN - URBANA The Michigan defense rose to the occasion, stop- ping Illinois three times inside the Wolverines' 20 yard line in the fourth quarter yesterday to pre- serve a 14-6 victory. The win, coupled with Ohio State's 16-13 upset loss to Michigan State, pulled Michigan into sole possession of first place in the Big Ten with a 6-0 league mark, and a 9-0 re- cord overall. A MOMENT of silence for Illinois gridder Greg Williams, who was fatally shot Friday night at a fraternity party, was held before the game. The death subdued the usually bois- tero's Illinois homecoming crowd of 60,678 and the Illinois squad was visibly shaken. Michigan scored twice in the first half on touchdown runs by Gordon Bell and Dennis Franklin, but Illinois threaten- ed throughout the second half, while the Wol-erines could only cross midfield once in the sec- ond 30 riin1tes. Illini defensive back Mike Gow raced a punt back 45 yards into the endzone with 2:10 left, cutting Michigan's lead to 14-6. ILLNOIS COACH Bob Black- man elected to go for a two point conversion, but Jeff Hol- lenbach's pass fell incomplete. Michigan middle linebacker Steve Strinko was called for pass interference, however, and the Ilini had another chance from the half yard line. Illini Jim "Chubby" Phillips tried to plunge off left tackle, but the Wolverines nailed him short of the goal. Illinois then tried an onside kick that bounced off Michigan guard Kirk Lewis's chest right into the hands of Illinois fresh- man John Sullivan at the Illi- nois 47. HOLLENBACH connected on three of four passes, moving the Illini to Michigan's 21. The third completion came on a diving shoestring catch by Jim Smal- zer, good for 19 yards. Then, on third and 13 from the -Michigan22, Hollenbach under- threw Smalzer, but Michigan's Dan Jilek was called for inter- ference. That gave Illinois an- other first down at the Wolver- ines' 16. See WOLVERINES, Page 8 Daily Photo by KEN FINK QUARTERBACK CORNELIUS GREENE (7) grits his teeth desp airingly as he tries to evade Mihigan State left tackle Jim Tau- bert (94) and left end Otto Smith (71). Though Greene carried for seven y ards on this plhy it wasn't enough as the aroused Spar- tans upset the number one team in the nation, 16-13. It was the first loss for the Buckeyes in two years, when Ohio State went down to a Duffy Daugherty coached Spartan squad 19-12. STRIKE IMMINENT- 1between UMl progress 'Tindus try WASHINGTON (A - Leaders of the United Mine Workers (UMW) and the coal industry said they made progress in contract negotiations yesterday while many coal mines operated overtime in the last weekend before a strike. The strike is scheduled to be- gin when the current contract expires midnight tomorrow. Even if an agreement is reach- ed this weekend, UMW Presi- dent Arnold Miller has said that a strike would last at least two weeks to allow 120,000 union members in 25 states to vote on any tentative pact. WHEN THE talks adjourned last night with plans to resuitie this morning, chief industry ne- gotiator Guy Farmer said, "We have made real progress. There are no issues that couldn't be resolved." Farmer said it was unlikely an agreement would be reached today but that it was possible a new contract could be tenta- tively settled by the strike dead- line. Miller said both sides were drafting contract language and narrowing the issues. "WE'RE MAKING progress," Miller said. Asked if the talks could bog down in a stalemate, Miller said, "I don't see any indica- tion of that now." Another union official said both sides were "honing down the remaining issues." He add- ed, "We're still not hovering on the brink of a settlement." FARMER SAID earlier that the mine operators had agreed in principle on some type of cost of living escalator clause but not on the details. Union spokespersons said the other major unresolved issues include wages, grievance pro- cedures, pensions, sick pay, aid to disrbled miners and widows and some safety demands. About 500 y o u n g persons identifying themselves as mem- bers of the Workers A dion Movement demonstrated in front of the White House and within view of the hotel where the negotiations were taking place. THEY SAID they were dem- onstrating for 30 hours work for 40 hours pay and chanted: "Workers end thedgreed; coal miners take the lead."- In New York state, the Tem- porary Commission on Living Costs said a three-month strike would force the layoff of 372,000 workers. The state's Emergency Fuel Office said a long strike would have more impact than winter's gasoline shortage. Many coal mines were repoirt- ed operating in the Appalachian states yesterday, a day when they are often closed. A spokes- person for the UMW District 31 in Fairomnt, W.Va., said abr.it 80 per cent of the mines in that area were working on overtime. He said he doubted if they would open today or tomorrow, when it will be more expensive.; AT THE COAL talks, Farmer said Miller should not have any trouble selling his union mem- bers whatever agreement is produced at the bargaining tahle because of "the way it is turn- See COAL, Page 2 Bomb explodes in OAS Headquarters By AP and UPI WASHINGTON-An explosion last night damaged the head- quarters of the Organization of American States (OAS) just three blocks from the White House, police said. An OAS spokesperson said the explosion apparently was caused by a bomb placed in or near a public telephone booth on the building's second floor, near the office of the secretary general. THE BLAST coincides with the meeting of OAS members in Quito, Ecuador, to debate whether to lift the 10-year-old economic and diplomatic sanc- tions imposed by OAS members against Cuba. In Quito, bombs exploded Thursday at the Bolivian em- bassy and the Brazilian cultural center. A third was disarmed at the Paraguayan embassy. All three countries are likely above the blast site. The Pan American Union the permanent secretariat the OAS. is of THE SECRETARY general, Galo Plaza, of Ecuador is in Quito for the conference, as are most OAS officials. Weinberger won't reveal HEW plan WASHINGTON UP) - Caspar W e i n b e r g e r, secretary of Health, Education and Wel- fare, is trying to keep secret his blueprint for reducing HEW spending by $3 billion to $4 bil- lion a year. The California conservative, were "in excess of $3 billion" and were aimed primarily at deferred spending, rather than elimination of programs. There is little optimism that Congress will buy the HEW plan. WEINBERGER has said pre-