: SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside Y Latest Deadline in the State 47IaitA4 BLANCHE High-A s Lovv-24 See Today for Details le I Vol. LXXXVII, No. 52 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 7, 1976 Ten Cents E HOPES OF UNDEFEATED SEASON DASHED urdUe stunsic han,6- ight Pages Blue dethroned I! YOJ SEE tNL'WS dAPPEl4 CAL' 6,AIY from top spot Happenings kick-off today with a Nuclear Energy Work- shop sponsored by the School of Natural Resources for those interested in working on a safe energy initiative. It's from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Rm. 1040 SNR ... from noon to 6 the Holiday Festival of Art will be held at the Saline Farm Council Grounds ... at 3 p.m. a discussion of "Gayness as a Cultural Phenomenon" takes place at Can- terbury House, Catherine and Division ... at 7 p.m. the Ozone House will hold an orientation meet- ing for new volunteers in Michigan League con- ference rooms D and E ... and at 7:30 Sister Nadine Foley will speak in St. Mary's Chapel, 331 Thompson St., on Women in Ministry in the Catholic Church" ... On Monday, happenings start late with a 4 p.m. lecture by George Menden- hall of the Department of Near Eastern Studies on "Toward a Field Theory of Religion" ... at 7:30 the Center for Coordination of Ancient and Modern Studies holds its last session of the colloquium "Has Democracy Survived?" featuring Prof. Ram Jethmalani, a voluntary Indian political exile in the Kuenzel Room of the Union ... also at 7:30 is an educational seminar sponsored by the Wom- en's Health Collective on "Menstruation" in the -Ann Arbor Public Library ... at 8, Achola Pala, Kenyan anthropologist, will speak on "African Rural Development and the Role of Women" at St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 306 N. Division ... also at 8, Paul Goodman's tape "Beyond Schools: Rediscovery of the Wild'' will be played and discussed in Canterbury House ... and finally, also at 8, the Michigan Association of Gerontology Students will meet in Rim. 3207 of the Union. Man over machine Automatic bank tellers - the 24-hour variety - may not be getting stuck-up by bank robbers, but getting beaten up by patrons in a real possi- bility, as sorrowful bank officials in Doraville, Ga. will attest. Tillie, the automated bank teller police reported, "was assaulted and suffered in- ternal damage" when an angry customer beat upon the machine when it refused to return his bank card. A bank official told police that John Hulme first complained about losing the card and then started beating on the machine with a heavy instrument. "Sir, beating on the machine is not going to get your card back," the official admon- ished Hulme. "It's not going to hurt," replied Hulme, who returned to the scene later' and start- ed pounding on the machine again. But police estimated Tillie suffered more than $1,000 dam- age and Hulme was charged with felonious crim- inal damage to property.. It was not known if he ever got his card back. Melts in your mouth... Chocolate-lovers had a feast in Rheims, France Friday night when a truck carrying 13 tons of Swiss chocolate overturned outside a parking lot. When the'driver returned to his cab at dawn after reporting the accident to the police, not a bar of chocolate was left on the road. Crime does pay A resident of Livingstone, Zambia walked into a local police station this week to report the theft of his new bicycle. The duty sergeant told him to -go out and steal another one for him- self -just don't get caught. Obediently, the man left the police station and stole the first bicycle he saw - the sergeant's, parked outside. 0 Crime doesn't pay A man trying to steal gasoline. from a Lille, France service station in the dead of night de- cided there wasn't enough light. So he struck a match to get a better look. The resulting fire destroyed the station while the man, his 'hair badly burned, was arrested and imprisoned on an unspecified charge. On the inside... ..Sports page offers its explanation for yes- terday's loss to Purdue ... and in the Sunday Maga- zine, former Daily City Editor Steven Selbst writes on the controversial Martha Keys race .for the By ANDY GLAZER Special to The Daily WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.-All the little things fell apart for the Michigan Wolverines yesterday and Pur- due was there to pick up the pieces. And when the last little thing, Bob Wood's 37-yard field goal try, sailed wide with 14 seconds remaining, the Boilermakers had a 16-14 win over mighty but not invincible Michigan. THIS WAS NOT THE FIRST TIME a Bo Schembechler team has lost on a missed field goal (where are you now Mike Lantry?). This one missed by less than a foot. "I've looked at field goal misses like that for five years 'now," said Schemlechler, "and they always look good. That one could have missed, I couldn't tell." Michigan had missed an earlier chance at victory when wingback Jim Smith dropped an easy touchdown pass with 2:20 remaining. "I DON'T EVER LIKE TO DEPEND on winning a game on a forward pass' or a field goal," said Schembechler. "If you have to do that your chances of winning are slim." The Wolverines just never sustained anything after an im- 'pressive opening drive that -put them up 7-0. The rest of the afternoon belonged to Purdue. The Boilermakers outgained Michigan 360 yards to 335. This was no fluke. "THAT REALLY HELPED US after Michigan punted the ball the first time," said Boiler placekicker Rock Supan, who won it for Purdue with a 23-yard kick with 4:20 remaining. "They don't punt too often. "Everyone tightened up after they scored right away," add- ed Supan, "But that punt gave us confidence." Indeed, emotion seemed to play a mighty role in Purdue's See BOILMAKERS, Page 8 PURDUE TAILBACK Scott Dietking (25) tries to climb a mountain of Blue defensemen for a first down in yesterday, ga Michigan's Calvin O'Neal and Dom Tedesco (99) were unable to stop him. Prize-winning Ladd rings. carillon 's bells, By ELAINE *ELSON "I will spend the rest of my professional life in the carillon art," says the man who makes music in Burton Tower. "That's one thing I can be certain of." University Carilloneur Hudson Ladd, a prize - winning musi- cian,_ has been ringing tunes such as "Baby Face" and the Michigan fight song from the Charles Baird Carillon across campus since 1971. He calls the system of bronze bells, clap- pers 'ind wires "a sophisticated musical instrument that is to some degree a part of Univer- sity life." IT WAS IN Amsterdam, not Ann Arbor, that notes from the instrument first struck Ladd's ears. "I never even heard of a carillon while growing up," he says. "And then, just-from hearing it, I decided to learn how to play the carillon." Just two years later, in 1970, Ladd received his diploma with honors4 from the Netherlands Carillon School in Amsterdam, Holland. With an all-A record upon graduation, he became eligible to try for the Prix d' Excellance - the highest musi- cal award offered in the Nether- lands. In 1972, Ladd became ,only the fourth musician in the world to win that prize. for ca- rillon - "and the other three were Dutch." Ladd and three University students play the carillon music heard daily on campus. There are three basic repetoires per- formed on the instrument in Burton Tower: carillon com- ,position (music written espe- cially for the instrument) trans- criptions (primarily early harp- sichord, guitar, lute and organ. music) and popular mediun' (from Broadway to jazz). T H E B A I R D carillon was donated with a blodk to the University in 1935, dedicated to the memory of a University president. It pow shares Bur- ton Tower with the offices of the University Music Society and Javanese Gamelon, and has a ninth - story studio for Ladd. "The touch of the instrument is closely related to piano," says Ladd. "There is a wide range of dynamic control. You See CARILLONEUR, Page 2 Quad drug, search notice called hoax Feldkamp By TOM O'CONNELL South Quad's Kelsey House residents reacted withyconcern and indignation to a notice post- ed in the dorm announcing a "contraband search" to be held tomorrow. But the whole thing turned out to be a hoax. THE MEMO was typed on University stationery with Hous- ing Director John Feldkamp's name apparently forged at the bottom. Posted on Friday, it stated that a "systematic resi- dence hall search for illegal drugs, narcotics, and related paraphernalia" would be under- taken and asked for student cooperation. The document's author has not yet been discovered, but most of those who saw the no- tice were fooled by its very genuine appearance. Kelsey's resident Director Ken Rahn, upon discovering several copies on bulletin boards Friday evening, soon after determined the memo was a hoax by check- ing the signature. Rahn 'also noted that such a search would not be in accordance with cur- rent housing regulations. THE INITIAL reaction of res- idents to the memo varied wide- ly. "I just decided the hell with it," one shrugged. "I'd just AP Photo PRESIDENT-ELECT Jimmy Carter waves from the entrancewfy of the Air Force jet which flew him to St. Simons Island for a five- to six-day working vacation. Carter begIns vacation Israeli navy sinks Arab commando ship By The Associated Press and Reuter News Service TEL AVIV, Israel - Israeli navy vessels sank a boat carry- ing Palestinian guarrillasand captured two otherycraft in a battle off the Lebanese coast yesterday, the military command said. It reported that one Palestinian was killed and 12 were cap- tured, including two who were wounded. The, prisoners were taken to an Israeli navy base, a communique said. It added there were no Israeli casualties. AN ISRAELI MILITARY SPOKESPERSON said the Arab By AP and Reuter ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. - Jimmy Carter stepped aboard a shiny blue and silver presi- dential aircraft for the first time yesterday and acted like a kid with a new toy. "This is what I've been waiting for," the president-elect said as he walked up the steps of the Air Force Jet with a presidential seal on itsdoor at the Albany, Georgia airport near his home in Plains. THEN THE plane took him to a vacation at secluded Musgrove Plantation among the pines and palms and Spanish moss of this southern Georgia coastal island. "I though iPeanut One had been fixed up "That's what I've been looking for," the suc- cessful Democratic candidate for president repeated. "Do you feel presidential?" he was asked. ",I WILL when I get off," he replied and then smiled. After the plant landed, Carter told reporters he will n4eet later this month ,with President Ford and that his wife Rosalynn will meet with Betty Ford. First, he said, he plans to receive a na- tional security and intelligence briefing from CIA Director George Bush. AS IF TO emphasize the working side of the vacation, Carter personally loaded a large