SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside YI A6F t r4 t 11- D3ati MELANCHOILY High-45 Low-25 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 34 Ann Arbor, Michigan--Sunday, October 17, 1 976 Ten Cents Ten Pages t . IF YOU SEE NMwS HAMO 4CA X-MY Island Park conquest If you get tired of studying today you can go to Island Park and watch the fall of the Roman Empire. A group of University students will com- memorate the 1500th anniversary of the fall of the western portion of the Roman Empire by re-enacting it. Students in the Medieval and Ren- aissance Collegium (MARC) will launch the con- quest by leaving one of the park's islands des- ignated as England and the crusade will reach a climax around 1:30 p.m. with an onslaught of barbarians attacking "Rome," another island. "This re-enactment is intended to be both en- lightening and entertaining," said Mark King, a MARC student. But he added, "We don't intend on having it turn into a literal sacking of the island." Squeeze them in It's not your imagination playing tricks on you - there are more students in your classes. Enrollment at the University's three campuses increased again this fall. The Ann Arbor cam- pus now has 34,754 students, 59 more than last year. The Flint campus has 211 more students, putting 3685 students in the classrooms and the Dearborn campus boasts an increase of 417 stu- dents, bringing the total there to 5,275. As for the number of undergraduates here in Ann Arbor, their ranks swelled by 411 to reach a new total of 21,905. But the number of students has not soared every- where. The total number of graduate students at the Ann Arbor campus is down 692 from last year's 9,470 total and the students in graduate- professional programs went down to 4,614 amount- ing to 64 fewer than a year ago. The male to female ratio inched slightly in the direction of equalization but even with 435 fewer men and an increase of 90 women on campus, the men still outnumber women 21,143 tb 14,847. The Gargoyle comne The campus humor magazine, The Gargoyle, will make its fall debut Monday. Stacks of this bizarre publication will be lurking in dorms and other campus buildings, so keep your eyes peeled. Happenings .. ..begin today at 3 p.m. with a showing of the Gertrude Stein film, "When This You See, Remember Me," sponsored by the Gayness and Spirituality Group at Canterbury House, corner of- Catherine and Division ... at 6:30 p.m. there will be a "Ban Throwaway-Bottles" benefit dinner at Xanadu Co-op, 1811 Washtenaw to support Pro- posal A., Spaghetti, beer and live music will be featured at $1.25 for students, $2.50 for the gen- eral public ... at 7 p.m. the Gay Rights Action group will meet in the third floor conference room in the Union ... Monday has an even larger assortment of events beginning with a noon GEO rally on the Diag designed to pressure the Uni- versity to "start bargaining seriously" ... the Or- ganization for the Advancement of Women is spon- soring a speech at 4 p.m. by Marion Cornwell of the Personnel Department of Ford Motor Co. on "Moving Up Once You've Been Hired," in the Michigan Rm. of the Business School ... at 6:30 p.m. ... at 7:30 p.m. the Freeman School Com- munity Education Advisory Council is sponsoring a "Meet the Candidates Night" in the gymnasium of Freeman Elementary School, 3540 Dixboro Lane ... at 8 p.m. Ralph Cicerone, of the University Space Physics Research Lab, will speak on "Flou- rocarbons and the Atmosphere," in Rm. 25 of Angell Hall ... and from 8-10 p.m. the Woman's Volleyball Club will meet in the Central Campus- Rec. Bldg. Jack the kisser Columbia, Md., police said Friday night they had arrested a teen-age boy on a juvenile charge of sexual assault - more specifically, attempted kissing. They said that on four occasions since last August, the youth had pursued women along cycling paths jumping from his bicycle to try to steal a kiss. Police added that he had suc- ceeded only once. The other women struggled and ran away. A But is it art? Beauty, they say, is in the eye of the behold- er. And one English woman's idea of beauty has left viewers agog at London's Institute of Con- temporary Arts New Gallery, where 22 neatly framed soiled diapers farm the newest exhibit. "They are art because I say so," defends Mary Kelly, mother of the three-year-old "artist." Be- low each diaper - chemically treated for hygiene - is a list of what the baby had to eat and drink the day the ... work? ... was produced. One man's art is another man's,. On the inside ... ... in the Sunday Magazine Laurie Young looks Arb n By JAY LEVIN Ricky Wayne Wilson, prime suspect in the murder two weeks ago of Uni- versity freshwoman Jeannine Boukai, turned himself in to police in his home- town of Louisville, Ky., yesterday morn- ing. It was not known how long Wilson had been in Louisville, .but Michigan authorities had suspected he fled to a southern location. ACCORDING TO Sergeant Donald Wolfe of the Louisville Police Dept., "Wilson apparently was told there was something on him (an arrest warrant) and he wanted to get it straightened out." Wolfe said that Wilson, described by authorities here as a "frequenter" of Ann Arbor, surrendered himself to a riurder "beat cop" he knew in Louisville. Wilson was booked on a fugitive war- rant after the Louisville police contact- ed Michigan authorities. SHOULD THE SUSPECT waive ex- tradition, according to Wolfe, he will be returned to Michigan authorities some- time next week. Otherwise, legal pro- cedures will delay his return to Michi- gan. Wilson has a police record in Washte- naw County on a breaking and enter- ing charge of several months ago. Louisville officials yesterday were searching for Boukai's Yamaha motor- cycle, which authorities believe may have been taken by Wilson. The vic- tim's handbag and wallet have not been recovered, either. "THE ONLY THING I can tell you suspeci is that he (Wilson) is in custody at this time, and we're investigating the possibility of possession of incriminat- ing evidence," said Wolfe. John Wegenast, a Louisville detec- tive, said yesterday that authorities were checking Wilson's parents' home for both the missing belongings and Leah Knox, the woman who Michigan au- thorities believe had fled Michigan with- Wilson. Wilson was named as a suspect the day after Boukai was found shot to death in a remote section of the Arbore- tum, just yards outside the Ann Arbor city limits. Local authorities believed Wilson knew the victim, and were in- vestigating reports that Boukai might have bought a contract on her life. AUTHORITIES have already confirm- in custody ed that Boukai, who was studying to be an environmental lawyer in the Uni- versity School of Natural Resources, took out a life insurance policy and withdraw money from a local bank less than a week before her death. Wilson made no statements yesterday upon his surrender to Louisville police, authorities said. Wegenast, who claims he has known the suspect for almost seven years, said that Wilson had a reputation for "rais- ing hell" in Louisville,rbut was never charged with crimes worse than break- ing and entering. "I had several dealings with him," said Wegenast, "He's always been kind of a punk." But with respect to the murder charge, he added, "I never figured this kid was capable of murder." Wilson Mihian b.,gs mik Chinese ask death for Mao's widow PEKING (Reuter) - Huge, dancing crowds paraded through Shanghai yesterday carrying crude effigies of Mao Tse-tung's widow, Chiang Ching, dangling from a hangman's noose. Sources in China's largest city reported that organized demon- strations involving hundreds of thousands of people demanded punishment for the ex-actress and three leading radicals re- ported to be accused of plotting the assassination of Premier Hua Kuo-feng. THE FOUR - Madame Mao, Communist Party Vice-Chair- man Wang Hung-wen, Vice-Pre- mier Chang Chun-chiao and Yao Wen-yuan - had their power base in Shanghai. But the sourc- es said it now appeared that "almost the whole city has turn- ed against them." The vast crowds carried red- and-yellow banners demanding the four be "knocked down." All day they danced, sang and chanted outside the harborside headquarters of the Communist Party, witnesses said. See CHINESE, Page 2 Icats, 38- 7 1Lytle leads Blue with1 172 yards rushiing By RICH LERNER Special To The Daly EVANSTON, III.-The top-ranked Michigan Wolver- ines exploded for 28 points in the second quarter here yesterday, grinding out a 38-7 victory over winless North- western. Holding a slim 3-0 lead after the first period of play, the undefeated Wolverines smashed across four touch- downs in a nine minute span to post a commanding 31-0 halftime lead. Iftob Lytle scored two of the four tallies, and wing back Jim Smith and quarterback Rick Leach each scored one in the period. "THE FIRST QUARTER went the way we wanted it to," said Wildcat coach John Pont. "Then Smith's touch# down catch shook us. We suffered the effects of that for the entire second quarter." For all intents and purposes, the second half was just a scrimmage, Michigan having sewed up the game by intermission. A contingent of Northwestern, students in the crowd of 31,000, disgruntled with the Wildcats' twelfth straight loss, cheered their team on with chants "library, library, let's go study." "You get 31 up and I suppose you let up," said Mich- igan coach Bo Schembechler, Pont's college roommate at Miami of Ohio. "We have had so many games like this, its frightening. I'd just loye to get into a slugfest where a yard means a yard." LYTLE LED the Wolverines' first half charge, pick- ing up 142 of his total 172 yards prior to half time, and passing Ron Johnson for third place on Michigan's all- time rushing list. Michigan outgained Northwestern 346- 69 in the first half, picking up 21 first downs to the Wild- cat's 3. The Maize and Blue had trouble getting on track in the first quarter, hindered by untimely penalties, an in- tercepted Leach pass, and two fumbled pitches by Harlan Huckleby. "The first fumble was a pitch which just hit him in the hands and he dropped it, and the second one I hesi- See SECOND, Page 9 Q uaddies taste. Daily Photo by SCO IECCKER Wolfman Jerry Zuver (8) picks off an errant Randy Dean p-ss for Michigan in yesterday's 38-7 victory over Northwestern. Zuver, along with end John Anderson, each intercepted pass- es as the Wolverine defense limited the Wildcats to one touchdown for the day. 'Candidateswae irwr By AP and Reuter Accusations of slander, misrepresentation and dishonesty flew fast and thick yesterday as President Ford and Jimmy Carter attacked each other in speeches and an exchange of telegrams. Both heated up the rhetoric as they campaigned in the Mid-West with just 17 days before the election. FORD RODE AN old-fashioned whistle-stop train as hew sought votes in the small towns of Southern Illinois, while Carter flew to Kansas City, Mo. and Ohio for a one-day tour. In their most pointed exchange on the campaign trail, Carter sent a telegram calling on the President to stop misleading voters into thinking the Democratic candidate would raise taxes for everyone earning over $14,000; slash $15 billion from the defense budget; push for social programs costing at least $100 billion and try to end tax deductions for homeowners mortgage interest. He told reporters yesterday morning he was sure Ford would "refrain from making erroneous statements again"- a reference to the President's nationally televised press' conference last Thursday. BUT SOON AFTER Carter spoke, Ford began his ten- hour trip aboard the train "Honest Abe" in Joliet, Ill., andy retorted, "We're just telling the truth." He charged his challenger "will say anything, anywhere to be President of the United States." Later, Ford announced to a crowd in Lincoln, Ill. that he had replied to Carter's telegram with a wire of his own, calling on the Democrat to clarify his positions on the issues. The President's reply, distributed later in the train, began sarcastically that he appreciated Carter's desire to clarify his positions.r By ELIZABETH SAVIANO Amid dorm pandemonium, on a lone hall in East Quad, 12 industrious Residential College students have created a kind of oasis through an experiment in cooperative living. Casting off their laminated meal cards, the dorm co-op pioneers have opted for "home- cooking," a choice that brought with it all theabenefits of self- sufficiency - and the one dis- advantage of liberation from the dorm system - house-keeping. THE UNIVERSITY housing office, which usually exercises a stringent policy against break- ing meal contracts, did approve the co-op idea last spring when blueprints for the arrangement were taken to Housing Director John Feldkamp. East Quad Resident Director Irene Dorzback, who helped co- ordinate the co-op some six months ago, said that since stu- dents attempted to plan a co- on li-in it'iation in the dorm "just a bunch of students who wanted to get out of their meal plans ... who had no real com- mitment to the co-op." THIS TIME, Dorzback said, interviews were conducted to see what students could contri- bute to the co-op and what they thought they could learn. Although all the students in- terviewed were accepted to the experiment, the number of par- ticipants ultimately had to be cut to 12. "We had to resort to a lottery to get a place in the co-op," one member recall- ed. And as soon as the member- ship was set, wheels began to turn. Jobs were designated on a rotating basis: work-manager, meal-planner, food-orderer and treasurer. The co-oppers broke ' into their jobs over the sum- mer. ME NWHILE, the Environ- mental Health and Safety In- snectors divided the Strauss Hall into "two-family dwellings