SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside . I' C, 4c Ltta Da111 SEASONABLE High-57 Low-42 See Today for Details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 40 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 19, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages lichian feasts on ileats I Mauling ground assault iF T-VSEE 651A~M CL XDL Stick 'em up The San Francisco police arelooking for a rob- ber who had popsicle sticks up his nose. Service station attendant Robert Tercero also told police Friday that not only did the bandit have the sticks in his nose, but he had grey socks on his hands and wore a brown paper bag as a hat. The thief got $35 in the service station robbery. 0 King of Marvin Gardens Using a "blessed" clay frog token, free-wheeling spending, and liberal amounts of straight bourbon, a private school janitor disenchanted with capital- ism outlasted an attorney an a state senator yes- terday in Detroit to cop the midwest Monopoly championship. Gary Zitrulnik knocked off Barry Waldman and Sen. Dan Cooper. "I was drinking straight bourbon the whole time. Right now the details aren't exactly crystal clear," Zirulnik said immediately after his victory. "This goes to prove a non-capitalist can beat a capitalist in Monopoly ... but you have to know the enemy and beat them at their own game," he added. We'll drink to that. 0 Knocked down A woman Marine officer stationed in Yuma, Ari- zona is being court martialed for allegedly having sex with eight enlisted men, her mother reports, complaining of discrimination because no action was taken against the men. Lt. Mary Niflis, 23, faces charges for conduct unbecoming an officer and gentlewoman and disobedience of orders against- fraternizing with enlisted personnel. The woman's mother has written to Sen. Barry Gold- water (R-Ariz.) seeking redress because she be- lieves her daughter is being treated unfairly. " Here he comes .. . Sandy-haired Steve Mimnaugh, whose measure- ments are 38-32-38, was crowned Boy America of Salt Lake City in competition at the University of Vtpah. Mimnaugh, a doctoral candidate in pharma- cology, was selected Friday by a panel of 3,000 female judges on the basis of bathing suit compe- tition, talent, and responses to "moral virtue ques- tions." The winner delivered a rendition of "Oh, Susannah" on his harmonica. Others sang the na- tional anthem, juggled apples, and recited poetry- presumably not all at once. Mimnaugh was asked "your 19-year-old girl friend is leaving for the Army and wants to have sex with you before she leaves. You want to protect your virtue. What do you do?" His answer was not recorded for pos- terity. Take that The drummer for The Who was fined $120 yes- terday after he admitted maliciously damaging an airline ticket desk computer at a Scotland air- port. Keith Moon spent the night in a jolice cell after the scene at a British Airways counter. The musician reportedly shouted, bawled and swore at the counter and punched a computer machine which then broke down. After the court case, Moon said he became angry after being shunted around all day on his flight because of bad weather. "All the other passengers were as mad as I was, but I just spoke up a bit louder," he said. 0 Happenings .. . . . begin with the ,opening reception for the Ann Arbor Art Assoc. Membership Show from 3-5 p.m. at 117 W. Liberty. The show runs until Nov. 6 . . . The second of the Faculty Chamber Concerts will be presented at 4 p.m. in Rackham Aud. . . . the Baha'is of Ann Arbor will celebrate the birth of Bab at 7 p.m. at 1421 W. Liberty ... on Mon- day noted columnist Harry Ashmore will speak on "Public Relations of Peace" at 3:30 p.m. in Rack- ham's W. Conference Rm. . . . Women in Commun- ications meet at 5 p.m. in Rm. 2024 LSA Bldg... . Tyagi Ji, the cosmic transmitter, will be giving free a session at the Friends Meeting House, 1420 Hill St. . . . and a seminar on the Historical Per- spectives on Criminal Justice with University Law Prof. Peter Weston and Detroit Attorney Ken Cock- rell will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Lecture Rm. 2 of the MLB. On the inside . Sports Page has more information and stats on the Wolverines' biggest win in decades . . . and the Sunday Magazine takes a look at the Adult News book store as seen by Co-Editor Cheryl Pilate. 0 ignites Blue- rout,, 69-0 By JEFF LIEBSTER Before a rain - drenched crowd of 86,201, the Michi- gan Wolverines scored their greatest modern victory in the Big Ten, smashing the Northwestern Wildcats 69 to 0 yesterday afternoon at Michigan stadium. The score is the most Mi c h i g a n has amass- ed since 1939 when the Wolverines pounded Chi- cago 85-0. Gordon Bell, Rob Lytle and Harlan Huckleby each ran for over 100 yards and scored two touchdowns as Coach Bo Schem- bechler used all his available healthy players. Bell, who rushed for exactly 100 yards, passed - former all-American Tom Harmon and secured fourth place on the all time Wolverine rushing list with 2199 total vards. THE WILDCATS had a dif-- ficult time getting anything go- ing all afternoon as'the Michi- gan defense yielded just 115 to- tal yards, recovered four fum- bles, intercepted a pass and scored two touchdowns in gain- ing their first shutout of the year. "It was totally embarrass- ing," said Northwestern coach .John Pont. "We didn't react, we didn't block and we didn't tackle. You can't arm tackle a Bell or Lytle." Going into the game North- western led the Big Ten in to- tal offense while compiling a 2-0 record. But Michigan turned the tables with a devastating touchdown performance. "THEY (Northwestern) were really weak," said senior cen- ter Jim Czirr. "We anticipated and prepared for a much tough- er opponents. Their players were very disappointing, we just pounded them off the ball." With the line opening gaping holes, the offense continually moved the ball at will. Quar- terbacks Rick Leach and Mark Elzinga directed drives of 82, 67, 69, 62 and 62 yards as the Maize and Blue registered a 34- 0 halftime lead. Bell opened the scoring when he dove for two yards with 7:50 remaining in the first quarter. Six minutes later, he made it 13-0 on a seven yard sprint, around right end. Schembechler gave Gordie the rest of the day off as Lytle Huckleby and ,com- pany took over in the second . See HUCKLEBY, Page 8 Home sweet home' insidethVsadum By ELAINE FLETCHER The football fans flee, the press packs up, and the popcorn stands close down, but Archie Corzine doesn't budge. At last, only one gate stands open on the deserted grounds. Archie shuts it himself, then returns to his home-inside the grounds of the Michigan Stadium. Although the location of Archie's house conjures up visions of a narrow cell crunched between concrete slabs and spectator stands-it's just not so. PAINTED YELLOW to match the high wire fence, it stands just within the stadium grounds, a comfortable newly-remodeled frame house that's almost on Main St. "I would rather live in here with the gates locked than in the city of Ann Arbor without them," says Archie's wife, Wanda of life inside the stadium. See AT, Page 2 x. iTU Frida term found of f Jame was of+JJ Daily photos by PAULINE LUBENS a tra QUARTERBACK Randy Dean loses the pigskin for Northwestern and Dan Jilek of Michigan (81) thosr is hot on its trail, along with a host of others. W ildcat's Greg Boykin (32) finally recovers the casia ball, climaxing one of the many fiascos Northwestern committed yesterday. Drug suspect accidentally BULLETIN CSON - Authorities said ay they are trying to 'de- ine whether parts of a body d here could be the remains ormer Teamsters leader es R. Hoffa, but warned it "pure speculation". o hands, a foot, and pieces ne and flesh were found in ash dump Wednesday and sday and were identified as s of a middle-aged, Cau- n man. set free in county jail By TIM SCHICK A man captured in Friday's area-wide drug raid, which resulted in 27 arrests, was accidentally released f r o m Washtenaw County Jail in the confusion surrounding the round-up. Howard Hayes, 25, of 2022 Pauline, re- mains at large as the search for 22 other suspects continued yesterday. THE RAID, the largest in the four-year history of the Washtenaw Area Narcotic., Team (WANT) is the result of a four month investigation, aided by a non-police source. As a result of poor communications be- tween the agencies taking part in the raid and overcrowded jail conditions, Hayes was allowed to walk out of the jail unchallenged Friday afternoon. Co'inty Jail officials had confused Hayes with another inmate of the same last name who was scheduled to be released that day. ACCORDING to Washtenaw County Sher- NYC iff Lt. Laird Harris, 143 inmates were being held in the jail when the massive drug bust began. A court order prevents more than 124 prisoners from being held in the jail.' An exception allows up to 140 prisoners to be held for up to 48 hours. To make room, the sheriff's department had to transfer inmates to jails in Eaton, Branch and Isabella counties. "These (inmates) were moving out while the drug suspects were coming in," ex- plained Harris. "We were also bringing in other- prisoners (on routine arrests) and taking others to circuit court." According to Harris, if the sheriff's de- partment had received advance warning of the arrests, provisions could have been made to transfer other prisoners earlier. "WE WERE worn to hell," he added. "If we had been warned earlier, we could have prevented the confusion." City Police Chief Walter Krasny said last night that he had no idea why the sheriff's >nfusionk department was not notified of the raid. The 27 arrests were made by Ypsilanti, Ann Arbor, and state police. THE MIX-UP occurred when Lacey Hayes, scheduled to be released on a mis- demeanor charge, was mistaken for Howard IHayes. Harris explained: "A guard went to the bull pen and yelled 'Is Hayes in there.' Howard Hayes responded and was pro- cessed (for release) in the usual way. The mistake was discovered two hours later when an officer involved in the arrests recognized Hayes and checked the jail records. The other Hayes was found and released as scheduled. THE RAIDS began at 7 a.m. Friday, as WANT agents sought 49 people charged with. 73 violations of the Controlled Sub- Dal Photo by SCOTT ECCKER stances Act, including distribution of heroin, FS E and two counts of distribution of cocaine. shy fingers No value has been set on the confiscated Shakey Jake, a street corner fixture who fancies himself a local drugs, but between $10,000 and $20,000 was minstrel, displays his finger finery while sitting on a William spent making undercover purchases. St. doorstep. mci ns on brink of crisis Default still imminent3 By DAVID SHAFFER AP News Analysisr NEW YORK -- New York City has at best another six weeks before facing financial default again, and the stakes are getting : incresirgly high for the city, the state and perhaps the country ' The reorieve the city won Friday was temporary, one more in The -h,-,, ,,f;r ,,r, ,.,, t ~ ihe stte gpovernme~nt has nut to- 4, Congress hears pleas WASHINGTON (P)-New York Mayor Abraham Beame and a panel of bankers told Congress yesterday that New York City will default by the end of the year if it doesn't get massive federal assistance. And a spokesperson for all U.S. municipalities said that if New York goes under, every city in the nation will find it difficult, if not impossible, to borrow money.