I SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside Y It~ :43 i1is MUDDY High-61 Low-45 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State ._....._ Vol. LXXXVI, No. 59 Ann Arbor, Michigar n-Sunday, November 9, 1 975 Ten Cents Eight Pages -------------- I dig Blue blanks Boilermakers t. ! CU 'EE WWS KAM CALLDAY Doom and gloom A University professor has predicted an increase inflation, high unemployment, lower car sales than expected in 1976 and the possible resignation of Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns by the end of this year. Business School professor of fi- nance Thomas Gies made his comments as the opening speaker at a meeting of the University Press Club Friday. He predicted that the inflation rate will reach 15 or 16 per cent in 1976 as com- pared to the present five per cent rate. Happenings .*. a good day to stay home with the newspap- ers, but events pick up tomorrow. There will be a 5 p.m. supper discussion on "Southeast Asian American policy and the Church" at the Ecumeni- cal Campus Center, 921 Church . . . Laila Abou- Saif speaks on "The Egyptian Woman in the Mass Media" at 4 p.m. tomorrow in MLB, Lecture Rm. 1 . . . also at 4 p.m. George Stocking, from the Univ. of Chicago, speaks on "Sex and Aggression in the Trobrian Islands: Notes from Malinowski's Diaries" in the East Conference Rm., Rackham .. Henry Blackburn, prof. of medicine from the University of Minnesota talks about "Coronary Disease Prevention: Professional Attitudes and Controveries" at 4 p.m. in the Francis Aud., School of Public Health . . . German prof. H. Joachim Maitre from McGill Univ. delivers the Centennial Thomas Mann Lecture entitled "Thomas Mann as Historian" at 4:15 in Lec. Rm. 2, MLB . . . at 8 p.m. there will be an open Common Cause meet- ing in the 4th floor conference, City Hall . . . and Action-Peace Corps / Vista representatives will recruit through Thursday in the Career Planning and Placement Office. The Hustle Dance teachers are delighted with thehreturn of the Hustle. Now that people are touching in rhythm and learning steps again, the teachers are back in hot business. Phyllis Buda, who teaches the Hustle, the foxtrot andgeven the waltz inBos- ton, said her students' ages range from 20 to 30 where they used to be between 50 and 80. The rea- sons for taking your partner for a twirl haven't changed that much since a ton-hatted Fred Astaire spun Ginger Rogers across a marble floor on Broadway. "When the world is depressing, people go back to dancing, said one teacher. "It's the least expensive thin von can do," she added. You can waltz at one ballroom near Boston for $2.75 a person. Or if you want you can send $300 for a three month course and come ot a top dancer. Hfo pants A Kalamazoo man got rid of his pants and $1,000 on a city street yesterday. Jay Jolley told authori- ties two men armed with handguns accosted him and demanded his diamond ring, his watch, and cash in his wallet. Then thieves said they liked the stle of his pants and ordered him to take them off.' Jollev was left on the street pantless and nenriless ht unharmedl He drove to a nearby nlire steion to renort tho crime. Wheelchair hold-u p Even his wheelchair apparently did not stop a Philadelphia man from pulling off a six dollar rob- bery yesterday. Melvin Taylor, the holdup victim, told police he was walking in North Philadelphia when he was approached by a man in a wheel- chair being pushed by a youth. Taylor said the man in the wheelchair pulled a gun from under his cushion and forced him to hand over his money. Police arrested Dexter Howard, 22, who is para- !vzed from the hips down. Mushroom high Want to get high for free - and be legal besides? Hundreds of people are scrutinizing cow manure in western Oregon pastures for small, brown mush- rooms that will provide just that kind of high. "If von eat 30 or 40 of the mushrooms you start to sae colors and all sorts of things like that," says the former head of the Oregon Mycological Socie- tv. Mannel Boves of the Oregon State Crime Labor- atory said, "If oiic drink a hiehball and eat a few of them, von can take a rretty good trip on the combination." The mushrooms are a dung-growing varietv. which is why peonle look for them in the nrgtres The-r contain a hallucinogenic compounol called psilocybin. On the inside .. . . . . the SundaY Maga7ire features a skeptical look at Esalen, a type of sensitive awareness train- ing, and the Sports Page detailsMichigan's foot- bnll trilmoh over P'irdie and its victory in the Big Ten Cross Country Shampionship. 0 Leach's aerials pace 28-0 rout By RAY O'HARA The Michigan Wolverines unveiled a passing attack that no one knew they had yesterday and left an astounded crew of Purdue Boilermakers in their wake, 28-0. Quarterback Rick Leach came out throwing on the first series of downs -and although he missed his first two attempts he connected on six of his next seven tries for over 200 yards and one touchdown. THE BOILERMAKERS were as surprised at the display as the 102,000 fans and were consid- erably less enamored of it. "Michigan doesn't have a reputation as a passing team," under- stated Purdue coach Alex Agase, "but it seems that every time we play them they start throw- ing." "I felt early in the game that we could stay with them," he explained," but we didn't antici- pate them hitting the big plays. It took the big play to beat us." Despite Michigan's aerial circus the Boiler- b-kers refused to panic. But three tremendous nlavs in the first quarter gave the Wolverines a 14-0 advantage. COMING-BACK to a play which had almost worked moments earlier, Leach hit Gordon Bell on the wide side of the field with a short flare pass. Starting from Michigan's 31 Bell sprinted to his right, caught the ball' on a dead run at the 40 and rambled down the sideline to the T'rde 35 where he was sent flying out of 1ontrds by Prdue's Mark Travline. Four plays brought Michigan to a third down nd five situition at Purdue's 20 but then the lue iunexpectedly disdained the pass and in- See MICHIGAN, Page 8 Daily Photo ov SCOTT ECCKER JIM PICKENS (18) and Calvin O'Neal (96) puts the crunch on Purdue's M ike Pruit (38) in yesterday's 28-0 shutout of Purdue. The Blue defense in their second shutout of the season held a highly touted Purdue running attack to 173 yards. O'Neal led the Michigan team with 8 solo tackles and assisted on six more, while Pickens was in on 8. Pruit, who lugged the pigskin 22 times for the Boilermakers, was held to a 3.3 yard average. BUDGET PRIORITIES INCLUDED: U' studies decision process By MARGARET YAO The University is in the process of adopting a rogram to shore up long-range planning espe- .ially in budget related areas, according to Assist- ant Vice-President for Academic A f f a i r s Ned Dougherty. Present procedures governing planning and pri- )rities are inconsistent and random, and "where they do exist, they are adequate but tend to be very ad hoc in nature," he said. A PRIORITIES questionnaire, the first step in the project to be completed in December of 1978, has already been distributed to deans of the Uni- ersity's schools and colleges. Next week, units in each school will begin drawing up responses to the questionnaire. Donald LeLong, director of the Office of Aca- Rhodes Sci-fi meeting centers on monsters and moonships demic Planning and Analysis which is handling the implementation of the program, pointed out that its major goal is to enable administrators "to make better informed decision with a longer-term per- spective." According to LeLong, the project, which origi- nated last fall when Vice-President for Academic Affairs Frank Rhodes asked the Program Evalua- tion Committee to begin drafting materials, has become "even more important" in the light of the regularity and severity of budget cuts in the past year. JUST LAST month, 1.5 per cent of the Univer- sity's state appropriations were pared off an al- ready lean budget, necessitating a hiring freeze on all faculty positions. This cut was a sequel to a previous 1.5 per cent slash in August where pro- grams and services campus-wide felt the reper- cussions. LeLong grimly acknowledged that the present situation will continue saying,' "We re in for at least several more lean years."~ LeLong stressed that the workability of the pro- ject rests in the assumption of "no increase in resources" for responders to the questionnaire. "IT'S EASY to develop some grandiose, blue sky plans" where budget limitations are not recog- nized, but "it's not realistic," he said. LeLong said that the assumption of litpited fund- ing was the most important difference between this project and similar projects inrthe past and at other universities. Results of these other projects "never really lead into planning. . . . But this (Rhodes' project) links all the elements together. It's much more realistic," said LeLong. According to the questionnaire, the project is divided into three phases: -in Phase I unit objectives are determined; -in Phase II current operations are evaluated in the light of objectives stated; -in Phase III directions and alternative courses of action based on the results of Phase I and II will be delineated. :,4"", i .:-i~i::iJ::.J":;}-r:n:"F&y$. Donahue PrTo fs test works By JEFF RISTINE Fast thinking during a crisis, cooperative Russians and two Canadian draft dodgers were required for the success of a University professor's space experiment aboard the joint Apollo-Soyuz mission last summer. Professor Thomas Donahue, chairman of the engineer- ing school's department of atmospheric and oceanic science, says the results of his experiment to measure the amounts of oxygen and nitrogen 140 miles above Earth may help scientists to better understand the ozone layer of the upper atmosphere, BUT HE adds the information did not come easily and that NASA's astronauts and ground crew described the effort as "the maost difficult they'd ever undertaken." Donahue's project on the nine-day -July flight required an Apollo astronaut to bounce ultraviolet rays off a reflec- tor mounted on the Soyuz spacecraft and back to a spectro- See PROF.'S, Page 2 -! r. gg ratis Ti a ,f¢r''"- "'","t l. By RICK SOBLE For the past two days they have been sitting around the Ann Arbor Inn talk- ing about weird monsters, exotic wom- en, spaceships and the Shadow. But, then, that's how science fiction fanatics are. THESE EXPERTS in the trivia of the outlandish have gathered here for a three-day convention that winds up t.day. Titled "Classicon" and described by s ornsors Ray Walsh and Mike Parsons as "a pulp-science fiction-detective convention," it is a marketplace for thousands of books and magazines and has attracted some of the greatest authorities on science fiction, they say. For instance, Sam Moskowitz of New- science fiction histories and anthologies, and bills himself as the world's leading expert on science fiction. "I HAVE one of the largest science fiction collections in the world, includ- ing every science fiction magazine ever published," Moskowitz claimed. "Until recent times, science fiction wasn't considered respectable, so li- braries didn't collect it," he added. Moskowitz said that his collection con- sists of 40,000 science fiction maga- zines, 12,000 fan magazines, 15,000 hard cover books and 5,000 soft cover books- valued at an estimated $125,000. "I SPEND $6,000 a year just to keep up," he said. The convention is highlighted by an art exhibition and periodic auctions. See SCI-FI, Page 2 ark, N.J., has written more than 40 Swa inson optimistic about By AP and UPI MANCHESTER, Mich.-Former Governor John Swainson, whose perjury conviction forced him to resign from the state Supreme Court, said yesterday he is certain, his innocence will eventually be established. "I am absolutely confident I will be vindicated," he said, "because I am innocent." Swainson also stated yesterday that he decided on his own 1955 law that ended a 20-year public service career, Su said to overturn the law would have required state St Court action. "I am not prepared to have my colleagues consid matter, or anguish over it," he said. "In my estimation, not the right action. I am under the law and I will obey the Swainson. the first sitting state iustice to face felony c a.ppeal ainson upreme at' m 'ln this country, we erthis have been exposed to that's e law." the spectacle of high harges., 224.