PROFS' PAYCHECKS See Editorial Page V'Ie 5kP41 uiI CLAMMY High--85 Low-45 See Today, Page 3 Vol. LXXXVII, No. 16 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, September 25, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages Shiver Me Timbers! Navy in14 By TOM CAMERON Bo is giving us just what he said he would - close football games. And yesterday's 14-7 win over Navy may even have been a little too close as the Midshipmen threatened to upset the #1-ranked Wolverines right down to the last second of the game. If nothing else, Navy may have upset the number one ranking. "WE WON, and that's all I can say," Schembechler said after the game. "Now we'll find out how good we are, having to play Texas A&M)'this Saturday)." Yesterday started out like any other normal Michigan football after- noon as the Blue offense marched the opening kickoff down to the Navy one-yard line, only to have Harlan Huckleby fumble away the ball. "(Guard Gerry) Szara missed a block on that play," Schembechler said, "but that's no excuse for fumbling the ball." And even though an inspired Navy team then marched the ball up the field, the defense still held before the Middies got too far into Michigan territory. THEN, LIKE other Saturday after- noons, the Big Blue machine took the ball 80 yards in 11 plays, with Huckleby scampering the last thir- teen yards off tackle and falling into the end zone. Michigan went up 7-0 after Gregg Willner kicked the extra point with 13:50 iemaining in the second quarter. The score was keyed when quarter- back Rick Leach kept the ball on a fourth and one on the Navy 35-yard line and went fifteen yards. Although the Michigan offense did not score on its next possession, the defense held and gave the offense the ball once more before the half ended. THIS TIME, Michigan took only eight plays to move the ball 54 yards into the end zone. Harlan Huckleby once again got the call, taking a pitch around the right!end from 22 yards out and following the downfield blocks of wide receivers Ralph Clayton and Rick White into the end zone. Willner's extra-point closed the scoring for the half at 14-0. "After that," Schembechler said, "We did not play very well offensive- ly. Defensively, something was miss- ing." r a nuisance -7 Blue win When the teams came out of the locker room in the second half, there was some sort of change. "We didn't make any changes at half time," Navy coach George Welsh said. "Stopping Michigan on that first drive of theirs helped our confidence. Our kids felt we could catch them after the first half." NAVY CAME out running in the third quarter, but after being stopped on its first possession, the Midship- men went to the air. Quarterback Bob Leszczynski connected on four straight passes to bring the ball down to the Michigan 9 yard line.' A penalty, John Anderson's sack, and a six-yard pass gave Navy a fourth and goal from the Michigan eight.Leszczynski then hit wide re- ceiver Joe Kurowski at the one yard line, but he was brought down immediately by Derek Howard. "That was a great play," Welsh said. "When the Michigan people hit you, you don't go anywhere after- wards. Not us, not any other teams either." MICHIGAN was forced to punt before it could get a first down, and Navy came right back to the air. After passing five yards for a first down, Leszczynski dropped back, but See NAVY, Page 10 Daily Photo by ALAN BIONSKY SOPHOMORE DEFENSIVE BACK Mike Jolly upends Navy ball carrier, Joe Gattuso (40). Jolly's deflection of a fourth down pass saved Michigan's 14-7 victory. The Sooners the better- oody edged, 29-28 COLUMBUS, . (AP) - Fumble-. prone Oklahoma blew a shocking 20- point second period lead, then rallied in the final 1 minutes onElvis Pea- cock's two-yard touchdown run and a 41-yard field goal by Uwe von Schamann with three seconds left for an incredible 29-28 triumph over Ohio State yesterday in the first meeting between the two powerhouses. Until the stirring finish, third- ranked Oklahoma had tried its darndest to give the game away, losing four fumbles and throwing two interceptions. COACH BARRY Switzer had said.- his Sooners "lead the universe in turnovers," and all that charity gave them the astounding total of 19 turnovers in three games . But ironically, it was a fumble by second-string quarterback Greg Cas- tignola with 6:24 remaining that swung the tide back to Oklahoma after the fourth-ranked Buckeyes had surged to a 28-20 lead by playing error-free football since early in the game. The Sooners stormed 43 yards in 13 plays after Dave Hudgens separated Castignola from the ball and Reggie Kinlaw recovered at the Ohio State 43. THE BUCKEYES turned back a two-point conversion run by Pea- cock. But Oklahoma was successful on an on-side kick which everybody know was coming and smartly moved into position for the winning field goal, which the West Berlin- born von Schamann booted with a 15-mile-an-hour wind at his back. With a partisan crowd of 88,119, third highest in Ohio Stadium his- tory, screaming in support of the Buckeyes' defense, Oklahoma relent- 1 e s s 1 y wrenched victory against seemingly impossible odds. Following Kinlaw's fumble recov- ery, Kenny King bolted 10 yards, third-string quarterback Dean Blev- ins passed to Steve Rhodes for 10 more and a crucial offside penalty against Ohio State gave the Sooners a first down at the seven after King had been stopped two yards short. See BUCKS, Page 9 Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERt MIDDIE DEFENSIVE END Mark Stephens (604)makes an open-field tackle on tailback Harlan Huckleby yesterday before a big Band Day crowd. Huckleby ended the day with 147 yards in 24 carries. Kunstler joins rally to protest Kent State gym By PAULINE TOOLE Special to the Daily KENT, OHIO-Close to 1,500 people from all parts of the country gathered at Kent State University yesterday afternoon to protest construction of a gymnasium on the site where National Guardsman killed four students and wounded nine others on May 4,1970. Participants heard noted lawyer William Kunstler denounce the univer- sity plans to buuf a $6 million facility, and proclaim that the struggle over this gym is a continuation of what happened in 1970." No confrontations with police occurred during the rally, which was spon- sored by the May 4 Coalition. But participants at a separate demonstration: after the rally hurled rocks at a construction truck. One person was arrested in that incident. THE RALLY WAS opened with the ringing of a bell by May 4 Coalition leader Carter Dodge. "I recall seven years ago when that bell rang," Dodge said. "Shortly af- ter, the national guard moved on a rally much like this. The violence that day was the violence of the police. Their weapon is destruction. Our weapon is unity." Kunstler, who has represented the Coalition in several legal actions, told demonstrators that it wass "important to put this rally in perspective." :y: "Nixon sent troops into Cambodia," Kunstler said, discussing the shootings' tie to the Vietnam War. "(Nixon) didn't call it a war, he called it an incursion. Soon after, rallies took place around the country. In order to squelch (the rallies) there was a shooting-leaving four dead and nine wounded. "For the first time since Civil War days, the students were a political for- Senate to make gas deregulation plan less costly to homeowners WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate moved yesterday toward making a natural-gas deregulation proposal less costly to homeowners, but shied away from a new test vote on a rival gas-pricing plan proposed by Presi- dent Carter. As a result, the senators remained at an impasse over the natural gas legislation after a rare eight-hour Saturday session. CARTER, meanwhile, threatened to veto any energy bill that conflicts with the interests of consumers. He accused the petroleum industry of trying to add at least $20 billion to the price of natural gas through immedi- ate deregulation. Speaking at a rally in Norfolk, Va., for Democratic gubernatorial candi- date Henry Howell, Carter said: "I hate to veto a bill that a Demo- cratic Congress passes, but you can depend on it. - I'll protect your interests when the bill comes to my desk." NOTING HOWELL'S campaign to The Senate agreed, 61 to 17, to consider an amendment that would make industries, not homeowners, bear most of the extra cost - if natural gas prices are deregulated. However, a final vote on the amend- ment was delayed. THE AMENDMENT was spon- sored by Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, (D- Texas), who is also one of the chief, backers of the deregulation proposal. Bentsen said he made the move in an effort to win support from those who claim deregulation would be too costly to consumers. Under the proposed modification, utilities and other industries that use natural gas as a boiler fuel would pay higher prices for their gas under deregulation than th6se who use it for home heating. The Senate earlier turned down, 59 to 17, a move to kill the amendment outright. In addition to industrial and resi- dential uses of the fuel, natural gas is a major raw material for fertil- izer, a prime farming expense. Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, meanwhile, predicted that Congress would pass a compromise between Carter's plan to keep price controls on natural gas and the industry-backed deregulation mea- sure. "I CANNOT see Congress enacting total deregulation. I can see a middle ground," Byrd, (D-W. Va.), told reporters as the Senate met in a rare Saturday session to continue debat- ing natural gas pricing. He said that while the Senate re- mains deeply split on the gas-pricing issue, he thinks senators .will soon rally behind some form of comprom- ise that will enable the legislation to go to a House-Senate conference committee for a final resolution. Byrd said he is hopeful a filibuster on the bill that has slowed Senate action to a snail's pace can be broken early next week. EARLIER, House Speaker Thom- as O'Neill warned that a vote to end controls on natural gas would be rejected by the House. A move by Senate leaders to halt the filibuster, a motion that re- quires a three-fifths majority, is expected to be voted on tomorrow. Steelworker STRUTHERS, Ohio (AP)-St. Anthony's tavern opens at six in the morning every day of the year except Christmas, and the talk is always about the steel mill down by the river. "We come here to drink when we're making money," says Bob Eshenbaugh, who has worked at Youngstown Sheet & ~I%itLa flnn nnnn-eina high nh nanl aianht narn .n AMA us