For Daily subscriptions, phone 764-0558 SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside Y1 t e itigau 4 &bv 43attils, ENJOY See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 4 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, September 12. 1976 Free Issue T-^1- D---, 1W 'eve Page S irouSE rNEWS IAPEN CCL6-M Presidential visit President Ford will meet with 20 hand-picked students for a question and answer session Wed- nesday afternoon at Crisler Arena, prior to his 7 p.m. speech there, it was announced yester- day. A White House spokesperson said the lucky group is to be selected by Michigan Student As- sembly President Calvin Luker. Luker could not be reached for comment last night. Join us! The Daily needs you, and this week we're giving you not one, not two, but four (count 'em) chances to get acquainted with us and learn just how we go about publishing a newspaper six days a week. We'll have representatives from both the news, business and sports staffs at several dorm locations on Tuesday and Thursday; pick the meeting which is most convenient to you and drop by (you don't have to live in that dorm, of course). Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., we'll be speaking at the West Lounge of South Quad, and in East Quad, in Rm. 24 in the basement of Tyler House. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. you can check us out at Bursley in the East Lounge and at Markley in the Angela Davis Lounge. See you there. Scouts out Bo, the team, the cheerleaders, the cops and the sports writers were all back at home in Michi- gan Stadium yesterday for the game, but for the first time in 52 years, the Ann Arbor Boy Scouts missed the show. The greenshirts had al- ways been admitted free in exchange for their services as ushers, but Athletic Dire'r Don Can- ham this summer informed local scout leaders that the boys would have to shell out a few bucks for tickets like everyone else if they wanted to see the games this year. With more and more sellout games each season, the scouts often ended up in the aisles without seats, and Canham said some of the youngsters have been-well, verbally abused in the past. "This is something that is beyond our control," Canham said. Probably. Happenings ... begin with an open house at Community Switchboard, 761-HELP, Ozone House and the Creative Arts Workshop from noon to 6 p.m. at 621 E. William . .. The Ecumenical Campus Cen- ter holds an international picnic for foreign stu- dents from 12:30 p.m. to 5:00, meet at the Inter- national Center . . . the Graduate Outing Club will be hiking beginning at 1:30 p.m., meet at the Rackham north entry . . . Campus Crusade for Christ has a reunion at The Cube at 2 p.m. ... the Women's Golf Club meets at the central campus Recreation Bldg. at 5 p.m. . . . Harvey Wasserman talks about bringing the anti-nuclear campaign to Michigan at 7:30 in Rackham The film "Lovejoy's Nuclear War" will be shown .. . and auditions for the Origin Experimental Musi- cal Theater Co. begin at 1 p.m. at Art Worlds, 213 S. Main. For information, call Franklin Wep- ner at 668-8277 . . . and we're saddened to report that absolutely nothing will happen Monday. Knight flight Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp, who braved a night and a meal at Philadelphia's Bellevue- Stratford Hotel to assuage tourists' fears of the mysterious "Legionnaires' Disease", has blasted the Knight-Ridder newspaper group for cancel- ling their scheduled meeting at the hotel. In a telegram Friday to executives at the chain's Miami headquarters, Shapp said "perhaps some businesses in Philadelphia may respond by can- celling advertisements in your newspapers to show their displeasure." A 15-member executive board for the chain, which owns two Philadelphia papers, The Detroit Free Press and over two dozen other newspapers across the country, had planned a meeting at the Bellevue for Sept. 24 but switched to another building because of "uncer- tainty" over the hotel's safety. Smallpox nevermore World Health Organization officials said yester- day that the disfiguring, blinding, killing disease called smallpox is about to be wiped from the earth. The Organization told the Center for Dis- ease Control in Atlanta that no new cases have been reported anywhere in the world for over a month - a clear sign of the imminent conquest of 'the disease, according to officials. On the inside ... Jeffrey Selbst takes a look at the Sun Myung Moon cult for the Daily's Sunday Magazine . . . 9nd C'.-.,-., - -a ... A r.m..ntn n +miartc nf Blue blunders past Badgers '76season begins, 'with 40-2 7 victory By RICH LERNER For the first 11 minutes of the game yesterday, the Michigan Wolverines lived up to their number-one-team- in-the-nation billing. Picked as the country's best collegiate football team by many pre-season prognosticators, the Wolverines ex- ploded for 23 points in the game's first quarter and hung on the conquer Wisconsin in the season opener for both teams, 40-27, before 101,337 Stadium. "We're happy with the win but we're not satisfied," said Michigan coach Bo Schembech- ler in his post-game press con- ference. Schembechler was certainly pleased with the Michigan of- fensive attack. With eight start- ers back from last year's group, quaiterback Rick Leach direct- ed the unit to 455 total yards. The sophomore from Flint hit on six of eight passes for 105 yards and added another 84 yards on nine rushes. S O P H O MO R E tailback Harlan Huckleby scored three touchdowns and ran for 131 yards on 19 attempts includ- ing a 56-yard touchdown dash on his first carry. Senior sensation Jim Smith netted 174 yards running back kicks, snaring four Leach pass- es, two for touchdowns, and running the reverse. In addi- tion, Smith sprung Huckleby on the option several times with crunching blocks from his wing- back position. The Maize and Blue offensive line, spearheaded by Mike Kenn and Gerry Szara completely controlled the' line of scrim- mage. See MICHIGAN, Page 11 sun-baked fans at Michigan Hopefuls exchange By AP and Reuter For the first time in a week Jimmy Carter was home yester- ,Jay and sighing about how tough it is sometimes to fake exuberance on the campaign. trail. And Gerald Ford, who didn't leave home, said a presi- dent should be president first, candidate second. It was long-distance sparring for the two contenders who have been tossing charge and counter- charge all week on a variety of issues. CARTER HAD said the Presi- dent is hiding in the White House. Not so, Ford told reporters in an informal meeting yesterday. Carter should make up his mind on how he feels, he said. See CANDIDATES, Page 9 Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER IT LOOKS like a scene out of Swan Lake, but Wisconsin's Greg Gordon is more like a dead duck as Jim Smith snares one of his two touchdown receptions yesterday in the first half of Michigan's 40-27 win over the inspired Badgers. SEEK PROOF OF NEWSPAPER STATEMEN TS: i kers set demands By AP and Reuter Police this morning arrested a woman member of a group of Croatian nationalists who hi- jacked a TWA Boeing 727 over upstate New York on Friday, throwing negotiations for the re- lease of about 50 hostages into deadlock. A spokesperson for the In- terior Ministry said police at Charles de Gaulle Airport did not intend to release the wom- an, who left the jet for talks with U.S. Ambassador Kenneth Rush. "We have asked them to give up and the negotiations are deadlocked. In fact, there are no negotiations at present," the spokesperson said. PARIS - The CroatIan hi- jackers of a Trans World Air- lines Boeing 727 want to see copies of four U.S. newspapers carrying a pro-Croatian state- ment before they release their hostages, a U.S. embassy spokesperson said this morn- ing. The spokesman said copies of the four newspapers which printed the statement - The New York Times, The Los An- geles Times, The Chicago Tri- bune, and The Washington Post - were being flown to Paris and should arrive in a few Vorster at crossroads in a volatile South Africa hours. "Their only remaining con- cern is to be certain they have got the publicity they wanted. Once they believe that we hope they will give up," the spokes- person said. The hijackers landed in Paris yesterday after five cities in North America and Europe were pelted with propaganda leaflets on their demand. A female hijacker, one pas- senger and copilot Lou Sena- tore left the plane and went to the control tower of Charles de Gaulle Airport to talk with Ambassador Kenneth Rush, a TWA spokesman in New York reported. SOURCES AT the airport said the woman wanted to telephone a Ukrainian priest in the United See HIJACKERS, Page 7 BULLETIN SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP)- Two men and a woman were arrested here yesterday and charged with conspiring to mur- der Sen. Edward Kennedy, Springfield police said early to- day. Kennedy, (D-Mass.), was in the Springfield area yesterday to campaign for re-election. Police said they arrested Rob- ert White, 42, of Enfield, Conn., and Sandra Rondreau, 34, of Westfield, Mass., at the wom- an's home yesterday afternoon. A few hours later, police ar- By BRIAN JEFFRIES Associated Press Writer JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)-Ten years after his predecessor was knifed to death in parliament, South African Prime Minister John Vorster is in the center of a storm that may change the face of southern Africa. Three months of bloody rioting against South Africa's race laws have undermined the apartheid system of separation of the races, the cornerstone of Vorster's policies. THE ONCE-FLOURISHING economy, which has made South Africa a land of prosperity for whites, is in the most critical condition since the depression of the 1930s. Thewhite-ruled bufferrstates that once protected South Africa from the surge of black nationalism in central and northern Africa have nearly all been swept away. Only in Rorieaii ae awhite stuhhrniv hannina majority rule in Rhodesia and independence for South-West Africa, now ruled by Voster's government. Kissinger and Vorster are to meet again next week for further discussions. His response to racial rioting at home that has left more than 300 persons dead since June, has been to threaten more policesac- tion while promising to consider "genuine grievances" of nonwhites. This has led his opponents to charge that he is failing to provide leadership at one of the most critical periods in the nation's his- tory. BUT TO HIS SUPPORTERS, he is a strong leader not to be panicked into hasty action, a man committed to white rule but open to some change. Vorster is expected to map out his strategy for peaceful change at home and abroad in a sneech tomorrow - the 10th anniversary AP Photo A New York policeman carries the belongings of a colleague injured early yesterday when, a bomb set by airline hijackers exploded in the Bronx. The blast killed one policeman. Airport security ax By AP and UPI NEW YORK-The "Fighters for Free Croatia" who skyjacked a New York-to-Chicago jetliner Friday passed through one of the nation's most sophisticated airport security systems before boarding the plane. But one of the Croatian nationalists who walked through the elaborate security area at New York's La Guardia Airport and boarded the Trans World Airlines jet reportedly was wired as a human bomb that could be detonated at the press of a button.