SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside , it i~au 4)att CLASSY High-6S Low-45 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 34 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 1 2 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages i SFCOSEE E WS AE4CAHLLDAILY Hoffa James P. Hoffa has refused a State Police re- quest that he take a lie-detector test to answer questions about the disappearance of his father, former Teamster President James R. Hoffa. Hoffa called the request "insulting" and "outrageous." The Detroit Free Press yesterday quoted a State Police source who said, "We don't have any more reason to suspect Jimmy P. than anyone else - or any less. Purely from a police standpoint, we can't eliminate anybody yet." Big heist It's impossible to drive off unnoticed with a new- ly painted, $30,000 bulldozer. At least that's what the workers at a Traverse City farm implement store thought - until yesterday. The recently re- paired bulldozer was whisked away from a parking lot at Cole Brothers, and police are keeping their eyes peeled for the big, yellow vehicle. O Happenings .. . .. . are slow today but thing pick up speed on Monday. The Center for Afro/American Studies holds a get-acquainted meeting of black faculty and students from 5-7 p.m. at the Trotter House ... and at 7:30 p.m. there will be an organizational meeting for the returnable bottles ordinance in 4106 Union . . . on Monday Prof. Tzvetan Todorov, edi- tor of Poetique speaks on "Strategies of Interpre- tation" in MLB, Lecture Rm. 1 at 5 p.m. . . . cos- mic transmitter Tyagi Ji holds a session from 7-9 p.m. at the Friends Meeting House, 1420 Hill - - . the Washtenaw Council on Alcoholism and the Washtenaw Community Mental Health Department hold a "town meeting" from 7:30-10 p.m. in Briar- wood Shopping Mall, Rm. A . . . Titicutt Follies, the chilling film of life in American mental hos- pitals is free at 8 p.m. in Angell Hall, Aud. B; and Common Cause will meet at 8 p.m. in the fourth floor conference Rm. of City Hall. Foot fondler The infamous San Antonio female foot fondler's lays of caressing women's feet and kissing their toes may be numbered. Police have arrested a 24- year-old man they think may be the guy with the Fetish. Police said an off-duty officer and a pass- erby capturedsFaustino Collazo as he ran from a screaming 30-year-old woman, who said a man had shoved her against her car, grabbed her ankle, and removed her shoe. In recent weeks a man in his 20's has attacked three women, knocking them down, and yanking off their shoes to fondle their toes. 0 Hearst misses the ball Heiress and former Symbionese Liberation Army member Patty Hearst is just "another bubbly red- head" who can't hit a tennis ball, says a neighbor who claims he played a one-set match with her just days before her capture. Richard Chacon told a reporter from "City Sports" magazine, "I didn't even know who she was. As a tennis player, she was about as bad as they come." Chacon said he was looking for a tennis partner when he spotted a "bubbly redhead" practicing her strokes against a wall in the neighborhood where Hearst was ar- rested a few days later. She accepted his invita- tion to play. "I thought she was just another giggly girl learning the game of tennis," Chacon said. 0 Rabbit stew A Washington State University student who had been reported for keeping illegal pet rabbits in his room told housing officials that would no longer be a problem. "You can take me off the list," he said. "I ate 'em." Dead or alive? 0 F. Scott Fitzgerald The remains of F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda, will be moved next month to a Roman Cath- olic cemetery that rejected the famous author 35 years ago as unsuitable for burial there. Fitzger-. ald told friends he wanted to be buried in St. Mary's Cemetery, but the Church originally denied the request on the grounds that when he died he was not a practicing Catholic and that his books were not the kind of reading material that found favor with Church officials. Now Fitzgerald's granddaughter has received permission for the move from the Catholic archdiocese of Washington. S pock kand Wright Margaret Wright met famed pediatrician and 1972 Presidential hopeful, Benjamin Spock on a rent strike picket line and now they're on the ballot to- gether for 1976. This time Spock is second in com- mand and Wright, a 52-year-old black activist from Los Angeles, is running in first place. They are the candidates of the leftist Peoples Party. Econ- omics, said Wright, will be the party's chief is- sue. "What we need is a socialism that fits Amer- ica," she says. Party officials say they hope their 1976 campaign budget will double their last effort- a shoestring $20,000. On the inside .. . the Sunday Magazine features David Wein- ichigan hbiese Spa rtans, 16-6 Runners power Blue in second half surge By MARCIA MERKER Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan used a solid rushing at- tack and a stalwart defense to stifle Michigan State's Rose Bowl hopes yesterday by defeating them 16-6 before 79,776 chilly fans and a nationwide television audience. Michigan's running backs Gordon Bell and Rob Lytle rushed for 111 and 105 yards respectively for Coach Bo Schembechler's 10st career victory. THE GAME was highlighted by timely turnovers, field goals, and a successful Wolverine fourth quarter. In that period, Michigan came alive, scoring ten points on a 19-yard touchdown run by Bell and a 25-yard field goal by junior Bob Wood. The Wolverines' remaining tallies were on two field goals by Wood in the second quarter. MSU placed one through the uprights in each of the first and third periods. THE VICTORY at East Lansing gives the Wolverines a 2-0 Big Ten record and a 3-0-2 overall mark. It has been six years now since the Spartans beat the Blue in football. MSU is now 0-2 in the conference and 3-2 overall. "We lost it. They played very well. We certainly were ready to play, but for some unknown reason we left the ball on the ground a little bit," said State Head Football Coach Denny Stolz after the game. The Spartans fumbled five times and lost three while the Wol- verines were three for three on fumbles in addition to throwing one interception. The first turnover came during the Spartan's first drive in the ballgame. MSU GOT the ball on its 27 yard line. In a series of rushing downs, the Spartans drove 41 yards. On the first play, tailback Levi Jackson ran up the middle for three yards. Then, State fullback Tyrone Wilson scampered ten yards off left tackle nearly untouched as quarterback Charlie Bag- gett faked successfully to the right. On the next play, Wilson blocked for Jackson who sped around the right end to the Michigan 48. During the following down, the Wolverines were called for a personal foul and it looked like a long afternoon for the Maize and Blue. t BUT THREE plays later on the Michigan 17, Wilson ran off guard, was hit hard, and fumbled the ball. Michigan's shortside halfback Jim Pickens pounced on the pigskin and the Wolverines began a 13-yard drive. That was State's first mistake. Michigan didn't look any better as it turned over the ball two downs later. The offense rushed straight up the middle three times, using tailback Bell and fullback Lytle. On the next play, quarterback Rick Leach ran the option, pitching poorly to Bell who never got a good hold on it. The pigskin ended up on the Michigan 27 in the hands of Spartan middleguard Tom Sandal. THE SPARTANS scored on this drive, marching just 15 yards down the field, by letting their Danish ace kicker Hans Nielsen put it through the uprights. This made the score 3-0 with 5:45 remaining in the quarter. It was not until the second period that the Wolverines got on the scoreboard. The culmination of their first long drive, 49 yards, in the game was a 33-yard field goal by junior Bob Wood. THE WOLVERINES got possession of the pigskin at the end of the first quarter on the Michigan 35. Leach led a series of rushes to get down to the State 35. See DEFENSE, Page 8 Doily Photo by KEN FINK MICHIGAN WINGBACK JIM SMITH receives a most painful tackle, courtesy of Spartans Joe Hunt (32) and Kim Rowekamp (43). The Spartans didn't do enough of this hard hitting to stop the Wolverines yesterday, as the Maize and Blue notched their third victory of the season, 16-6. LANSING MEETING: Students lobby for ower uition By JAY LEVIN Optimism will be the keynote when student government lead- ers from 11 state universities and colleges meet in Lansing today to discuss a lobbying cam- paign for lower tuition. Rick David, an associate Vice President of Student Govern- ment Council (SGC), will repre- sent the University at the ses- sion. THE STUDENT leaders will x work in conjunction with Stu- dents Associated for Lower Tui- tion (SALT), an organization born at 0 a k l a n d University which h a s begun mobilizing other s:hools in its drive. Besides the University, other schools at the meeting will in- elude Oakland University, Mich- igan State University, Eastern, Western and Central Michigan Universities, F e r r i s State, Grand Valley State and Saginaw Valley. Jim Bier, a coordinator for the tuition hike fight at Oakland University, expresses enthusi- asim for the group effort. "WE HAVE a unified group of stu>dents with a set of specific goals in mind," said Bier during a telephone interview Friday. "I can see a real desire to get involved in the issue." According to Bier, the cam- paign began on Sept. 24 when several Oakland University sstu- 'ets went before the school's Board of Trustees to postpone for 30 days a tuition hike. "From that point, we began a several pronged effort, includ- ing letter writing and lobbying in Lansing. We mobilized the state (other Michigan schools) and ourselves and put a lot of work into it," he said. BIER ADDED that one main goal of the student leaders :s to- find another alternative to tui- tion increases and ways Yf re- ceiving more state aid. "We agree that the financial sitaution of the state is baO," said Bier of the recent state budge cuts, "but higher educa- tion should not bear the brun+." SGC President Debbie Good- man echos Bier's optimism for a unified group meeting. "I'M TOO realistic to thlik of achieving a tuition rollback overnight," said Goodman, "but with this sort of contact be- tween schools-working togetner -we can have a very powerful voting block." Goodman pointed out that the state's higher education stu- dents and their parents amount to 200,000 voters who could ex- ercise a good deal of clout with Governor Milliken and the legis- lature. David Mitchell, SGC ice pres- ident, strongly believes the state should change its priorities and make sure higher education is at the top. He added, "Students have been left out of the deci- sion making by the state and the schools, but we pay first. ' Five convicts escape from top security prison with homemade electronic device MARION, Ill. ()- A dragnet of police and federal agents hunted yesterday for five con- victs who opened the gates of the federal government's top- security penitentiary with an electronic gadget made in a prison shop course. Warden Charles Fenton of M a r i o n Federal Penitentiary said the five were last seen at 8 p.m. Friday running out the front door of the prison and into the darkened, pine-dotted hills nearby. He said a car probably was waiting for them. GUARDS, blocked by two un- onened gates, were unible to chase the convicts immediately and could not pick up the trall in the darkness. "Once you get over the hill it's black-very black," as a prison official said. The breakout began while the convicts were attending a his- tory lecture. Instructor Loren Dees was overpowered after be- ing lured into a back room by an inmate complaining of a cut finger. The five took the teach- er's keys to the main corridor and fled. said. He said Roche evidently obtained technical publications describing the workings of the softball-size signaler, w h i c h emits an audible beep. "For all I know it's in Popu- lar Mechanics," the warden de- clared. held device was a transmitter that activted the receiver and opened the gates. Fenton said a breakout alarm was sounded "instantaneously" by a guard watching the corri- dor on a television monitor. Be- fore the men were out of the inmates scrambling through the last gate but could not follow because they do not carry the electronic devices needed to open the gates. "IT'S UNLIKELY that the plan stopped at the front door," Fenton said. He said a getaway car probably was waiting near- by, building, he said, Dees hdd HE SAID later that a receiver kicked his way out of the back controlling the gates was appar- room. ently installed during recent re- Guards reached the main cor- pair work and that the hand- ridor in time to see the five See 5, Page 6 Secret CIA orders disclosure couldamage U.. relations WASHINGTON RP)-Disclosure of 27-year-old secret orders that authorized the CIA to carry out covert operations abroad could damage foreign relations and prompt attacks on U.S. .diplomats,r. according to an unprecedented government summary of long- classified documents. The summary was filed in federal court here by officials of the National Security Council in response to a Freedom of Information suit. . IT DESCRIBED openly for the first time documents which could reveal the extent to which the CIA was authorized to use the Foreign Service and other U.S. government agencies abroad as a f ......v r r.yl. " . ..