Vr SUNDAY, MAGAZINE See Inside *f~Arig Uii AU REVOIR High-T12 Low-4 below See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI-I No. 99 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 30, 1977 Ten Cents Eight Pages p -m 1CU SEE NWS 1AEM CALJ:DNLY High rents, high temps Cold as hell outside, right? Well, you can thank your lucky stars you're 'not Leon Sompolinsky or David Roteberg. These poor guys live up on the top floor of University Towers on Forest Ave., and in the midst of a nationwide panic over energy shortages, they're living in a steaming tropical oasis. You're bundling up even when you're i- side, aren't you? These guys have their windows open almost all the time. It gets up to about 85 degrees, then they turn on their air conditioning to get the temp down to the liveable. Building director Morris Johnson said he hasn't heard the complaint, but that he'd like to -get on the prob- lem right away. Leon says he and his roomie told the maintenance people of the heat but got no results. " Gaies children play Now, we kn6w it's hard to believe, but our northern collegiate counterparts are one up on us. Can't imagine why we never thought of this in our quest for the ultimate orgasmic activity, but the kids at MSU in East Lansing have discovered they can - are you ready? - photocopy their faces. They say the machines in libraries around campus provide a new, painless and dirt-cheap way to duplicate themselves. Kathy Trapp says she's giving away copies as Valentines next month. Clever. Veterinary student Charles Horowitz brags that he and his roommates have decorated their walls with pictures of their scrunched-up, flat- nosed faces. Lovely. Library officials there-quick to investigate this new, no doubt rebellious fad - have concluded it's all legit. (Phew!) "Kids can copy whatever they want to," said library direc- tor Richard Chapin, handing down one of his more controversial decisions during his tenue at MSU. "It is no violation of the copyright law for them to copy their faces." What will -those Spartans think of next? " Happenings ... on this Christian sabbath start out at 9:30 a.m. at the First Unitarian Church, appropriately enough. The South African Committee. will discuss Kissinger's policy on South Africa. That's at 1917 Washtenaw . . . at 1 p.m. the Department of Re- creation will sponsor a Learn 'n Roller Skate party at the Rec Building, with an open skate from 2-4 p.m. . . over at the Michigan Room in the League, the Anthroposophical Student Association is sponsoring a lecture by Ronald Jarman, head of the teacher training course at Emerson Col- lege, England, on "Waldorf Education. An Artis- tic Approach to Child Development." That's at 3 p.m. . . . also at 3 p.m. is the Sunday Gay Dis- cussion on "Gayness and Isolationism" at the Canterbury House, corner of Catherine and Divi- sion . . . at 7 p.m. Dr. Raymond Whitehead will lecture or. "The Maoist Revolution and Christian Ethics" at the Wesley Foundation, corner of State and Huron . . . and at 9:30 p.m. Dr. Harry Taff and Kerry Gaynor will kick off a three-day semi- nar on E. S. P. at Mosher-Jordan . . . Monday's happenings inchde a seminar on "Competitive Interactions With Moderately Complex Outcomes: Some Models and Examples' by Dr. T. Schoener at 4 p.m. in MLB, lecture room 2 . . . and begin- ning square dance lessons will be given at 7 p.m. in the Union ballroom. Y'all come now, hear? " 'Chico' dies Freddie Prinze, the 22-year-old television star of the "Chico and the Man" series, died yesterday 34 hours after shooting himself in an apparent fit of despondency over the breakup of his marriage. Neurosurgeons operated on Prinze for three hours Friday after he was rushed to the University of California Medical Center early that morning with a bullet wound in his right temple, but Prinze never /regained consciousness. Help me, Fonda James Bernhard, serving a sentence for rob- bery in San Quentin Prison, did what many of his fellow inmates would like to do. He walked away from it all-with a little help from his wife. Bern- hard, 29, was missing Friday from the cottage where he had been allowed a "coni'igal visit" with his wife. Ronda. overnight. Accordine to a prison snokesnerson, Bernhard had permission for a 19- hovr visit at one of the mininmvrm security cot- tages near the front gate. ApnarentIv, maximium security wouldn't have been such a had idea. Bern- hard and his wife 'Ronda conjugally slipped out through-a cottage windoly. On the lnside... In a salute to state politics, the Sinday Maza- zine offers you a Mi-h-an legislati-e rotindlin by George Lobsenz as well as a profile of o"r new congressman, Carl P"rsell by Man-)uing Editor Jeff Ristine . .. comolete details of the baskethall game at Northwestern, bromlit to va" hv F-Av He"neqlan axd Don MacT.achlan, can be found on the Sports Page. Carter asks for 4-day work week; 3 stat By UPI and AP WASHINGTON - Presi- dent Jimmy Carter told- an emergency Cabinet session yesterday that government and private in d u s t r y should switch where pos- sible to a four-day, 10-hour a day work week to cut consumption of dwindling natural gas supplies. He also said he was or- dering federal disaster re- lief for New York and Pennsylvania because of the extreme cold, snow and ice in those states and will sign emergency aid legis- lation for, Florida tomor-" row because of weather- inflicted crop losses there. "I DON'T WANT anybody to be unduly alarmed," Carter told the Cabinet. "I'd like the whole process to be done carefully, methodically and coordinated with Jack Watson," the White House assistant Carter placed in charge of the White House team monitoring the energy situation. "We could save a great deal of fuel both in government buildings and also in commer- cial buildings if we could just heat the buildings four days a week," C a r t e r told Cabinet members. "But so far we are prevented from doing that without extra- ordinary extra costs and I think there is a legal prohibition. We are investigating that now." CARTER ALSO urged the , es ge-t governors of 17 states to give him assessments of their cur- rent energy problems, Carter pointed out that 11 states are, in "some degree of crisis" and six states are hav- ing problems because of bLlz- zard conditions. The 11 states he listed as in the "crisis" category weref Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Ken- tucky, "New York, Ohio, Penn- sylvania, South Carolina, Ten- nessee, Virginia and West Vir- ginia. Carter and White House ailes did not list the six others af- fected by blizzard conditions. C A R T E R SUMMONED his Cabinet after energy aide James Schlesinger informed him un- needed gassin thetNorthwest could be shifted to the be- aid leaguered eastern half of the United States. Carter did not elaborate on how indus' ry and government would switch to the concentrated work week, but White House Press Secretary Jody Powell said mandatory overtime for longer work days presented one hurdle. The administration considered amending emergency energy legislation sent to Congress last week to suspend overtime pi o- visions of federal law, but Powell said there was "reluc- tance" to raise the issue for fear it would delay passage of the measure. POWELL SAID Carter is sug- gesting private firms switch to the longer. work days if they can do it without running into over- See CARTER, Page 7 f Cold ravages nation; 36 deaths reported By AP and UPI Frigid weather and a wind-whipped blizzard brought much of the East and Midwest to a near standstill yesterday, closing roads, factories, businesses and places of entertainment. The freeing or subzero weather that hit much of the eastern half of the nation during the early morning hours followed a blizzard that dumped as much as 14 inches of snow on the North- east. AT LEAST 36 wea her related deaths have been recorded in eight states during the recent harsh weather. Winter's latest sledgehammer blow left ugly scars on Mish- igan, keeping roads closed, cars stranded and National Guard crews working in several devastated counties struggling with the .AP Photo Freeway fracas Trucks and cars on Interstate 65 near Lafayette, Indiana stand mired in drifts eight feet high following Friday's blizzard that p aralyzed the area. Six storm-related deaths have already been reported in Indiana. F i First space slruttle set for ground tests PALMDALE, Calif. P)-Half rocket, half airplane, at -this point 110 tons of dead weight. It's the first space shuttle orbiter, ready -to be towed from its hangar tomorrow through two desert cities to a dry lake runway for flight testing. The delta-winged cargo carrier that will zoom back and forth from earth to orbit in a few years was hooked to a tractor to pull it at S to 10 miles an hour to Edwards Air Force Base, 36 miles away. ESCORTED BY A convoy of security and pa'rol cars, the orbiter with its 53-foot-high vertical tail fin was expected to attract hundreds of residents of Palmdale and Lancaster as it crept along paved roads. Set to s'art rolling at sunrise, the convoy would reach its temporary home at Edwards' Dryden Flight Research Center by late afternoon, said officials of the National Aero- nautics and Space Administration (NASA). The re-usable orbiter craft is designed to be fired into space by disposable rocke's, carry out sicentific work in orbit, then soar through the atmosphere without power and land like a glider. Testing will begin Feb. 18. At first, the 122-foot-long craft will be attached, pilotless, atop a Boeing 747 jumbo jet. In this piggy- back setup, the two mated aircraft will roll along the airstrip in See FIRST, Page 7 effec's of Friday's blizzard. The storm packing 50-mile- per-hour winds and prompting Michigan's first blizard warn- ing in 40 years left clear skies, subzero temperatures and huge snowdrifts in its wake. TEMPERATURES yesterday barely reached zero, and wind chill factors plummeted to un- der 50 below. Authorities warn- ed residents to stay indoors or face a serious threat of frost- bite. More than 1.6 million Ameri- cans in at least 15 states are expected to be temporarily un- employed by tomorrow because n a t u r a l gas shortages have forced the places where they work to shut down, a UPI sur- vey showed yesterday. ' With many new plant closings in A'irginia and in New York, however, the unemployment to- tal appeared likely to climb to 2 million or more by later in the week. BRADFORD, PA., was the coldest spot in the 48 contigu- ous states with the temperature dropping to 25 below in the early morning. See CRIPPLING, Page 2 Wildcats. Michiga By DON MacLACHL N Special to The Daily I surprise 99-87. EVANSTON - The Northwestern led by Billy McKinney's 29 points,; second half, upset the second-ranked Wolverines, 99-87 yesterday, handing its first Big Ten loss of the season. Wildcats, 21 in the Michigan Michigan "This is my sweetest victory in 30 years of coaching," said an elated Wildcat coach Tex Winter. "I sensed it and could feel it coming." MICHIGAN, NOW 8-1 in the conference, was plagued by poor shooting, hitting only 39.7% from the field. served to win," said Michigan coach Johnny Orr. "They shot very, very well." Ahead 59-57 with fifteen minutes remaining, Northwestern scored 11 consecutive points in a span of three minutes, seven of them by Mc- Kinney, giving the Wildcats a 70-57 lead. ORR CALLED TIME OUT and regrouped his forces. He installed a three-guard offense of Dave Baxter, Steve Grote, and Rickey Green to combine with John Robinson and Phil Hub- bard. "I wanted more quickness," Orr said later. "We got within two points but couldn't quite do it." After 'an exchange of baskets, Michigan coun- tered with eight straight points of its own, to pull within fire, 72-67, with 9:25 to play in the period. AFTER McKINNEY hit a jumper, Baxter canned a jumper of his own, and Robinson hit a free throw and a lay-up and Michigan only trailed 74-72 with 8:12 left. That was the closest Michigan could get. With. 6:31 to play Hubbard, who pulled down See HOW, Page 8 Northwestern' on the other only 43% from the floor for nected on a blistering 61.3% attempts. hand, averaging the season, con- of its field goal "I've been waiting to have a big victory at Northwestern," Winter said. "It meant a great deal to me. "YOU KNOW, Michigan is capable of destroy- ing you if you don't have a real good game," Winter added. "Northwestern played a great game, and de- Local defends OC." By RICHARD BERKE "If you found someone smok- ing marijuana, it wouldn't be the American way to report him, but you'd be equally guiltyo of breaking the law if you didn't. It seems that laws aren't al- ways right.' Lloyd Johnson applies this ex- ample to defend Richard Nix-'> on's Wa ergate-related actions. Administrator of the Whitehall Convalescent Home in Ann Ar- ofe or boycott? By LORI CARRUTHERS "We are not. going to drink that coffee. Put that cup down," Couzens RA Jeff Weinfeld shouts from a table top. "If you drink it for the caffeine fix," he explained later, "drink tea-or for a hot drink, try hot cocoa." BUT THE COFFEE boycott is one current issue that doesn't seem to be evoking much student activism or interest. One student, Dave Colburn, said the boycott was important but has been dwarfed by even greater issues, such as President Carter's pardon for draft evaders and the execution of Gary Gilmore. The principal reason for the boycott-drastic price increames brought on by a crop-destroying frost and tariff increases by the Brazilian government-makes the matter an economic rather than ethical issue, unlike the lettuce and grape boycotts.