/t SUNDAY MAGAZIN E See Inside PIrO .41tAFr ti i1 BALMY High-r1-56 LOIV-4a-45 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 64 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 16, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages U WOLVERINES BOWL BOUND 0tUSEE t52 APP(4. Join the CIA The CIA unexpectedly and without explanation cancelled a recruiting sessionsatmthe University Ilast week. Maybe the reason is more applicants than the agency can handle. One recruiter says job applicants at the CIA have doubled over the past year, due to a Senate committee's investiga- tions of the agency. The recruiter, Tom Culhane, says his recent visit to Seattle was booked solid with applicants eager to join the trenchcoat and shades crew. Last year 800 persons a month were asking about CIA jobs, says Culhane. He says that number has since doubled to 1,700 a month. And what is the recruiter's explanation for his agency's new popularity? "People now see the importance of intelligence in the world," says Culhane. 0 Happenings .. . ... a bit of everything today. The Third Annual Black Arts and Cultural Festival begins at 1 p.m. at East Quad and continues until 8 p.m. with a photo exhibit, fashion and talent shows, and a poetry reading . . . at 4 p.m. the Great Paper Airplane Contest begins at Waterman Gym, the competition pitting paper planes in mortal combat is open to all freshpersons and sophomores in the College of Engineering, and juniors and seniors majoring in aerospace engineering. Only paper and three square inches of clear tape are allowed to make the planes . .. at 4 p.m. tomorrow Prof. Gerard Genot speaks on "Fedrigo degli Alberghi" and "Le Faucon" .. . at noon the SGC candidates present their views on the Diag . . . and Third World Women meet for a brown bag' lunch from noon-1:30 in the Regents Conf. Rm., Administration Bldg. s OSU loyalty Wolverine fans may hate Ohio State, but there's one man who has come all the way from Santa Barbara, California to watch every Buckeye home football game this season. And Robert Lint, a 1934 OSU grad, says he doesn't even understand the details of football. He pays $450 per round trip, plus hotel and meal expenses for each jaunt. "Once in 40 years a fellow ought to be able to indulge himself," Lint said. "I don't know much about the technicalities of football. I like the thrills, the enthusiasm." " Bring a snake to church A preacher and six members of his congregation have been found guilty of brandishing snakes to disrupt church services. The defendants are mem- bers of a religious faith that interprets the Bible literally when it says to "take up serpents." All seven defendants denied the charges but admitted they took two copperhead snakes into the Calvary Holiness Church in Georgia. The Calvery Baptist church pastor testified that Carl Porter "hit me in the face with the snakes" as he tried to escort the group out of his church where they were visiting. And JoAnn Dye said she was bitten when one of the defendants picked up "a mass of snakes" and flung them in my brother's face." 0 Beer beats milk The beer that -made Milwaukee famous is cheaper than milk in that city these days. And it was milk that gave Wisconsin its fame as Amer- ica' s Dairyland. The history-making changeover came recently when Milwaukee-area grcers hiked the price for Whole milk by 10 cents a gallon to between $1.39 and $1.42. That's about 1.10 cents per ounce of fresh milk. But a case of 12-ounce, returnable bottles filled with beer costs $2.99 or 1.04 cents an ounce. Basketball bride Basketball season is underway and what better place for two fans to get married than at mid- court? And what better time than between the halves? Ernest Munoz and Deborah Smith tied the knot last night during halftime at a San Antonia Spurs game. Munoz has become a time-out dancing star recently and decided he wanted to get married near the fans he calls the "baseline bums." When Munoz has a couple beers under his belt, he steps out into the aisle to do his specialty-a sexy bump and grind that drives the "baseline bums" wild. Before the wedding and immediately after it, Munoz and bride cheers on the Spurs with chants such as, "Rooty-toot-toot, rooty-toot-toot, who's that ass in the referee suit?" On the inside . .. . the Sunday Magazine features a profile of reggae music star Jimmy Cliff by Stephen Hersh . . and the Sports Page tells the victorious tale of this weekend's game against the Fighting Michigan repels in spired Illini Conquers fumbles, late threat en route to crucial21-15 win By JEFF SCHILLER special To The Daily CHAMPAIGN, Illinois - A lethargic Michigan foot- ball t e a m ho-hummed its way through the first three quarters, then hung on at the finish to defeat Illinois 21-15 here yesterday, to set up n e x t week's showdown with Ohio State for the Big Ten championship. Two hours after the game's conclusion, Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke announced on behalf of the two title aspirants, that the loser of the upcoming Ohio State - Michigan g a m e (or Michigan in case of a tie) had accepted an invitation to play the Big Eight cham- pion (either Nebraska or Oklahoma) in the Orange Bowl in Miami on New Year's night. LEADING 21-0 after three quarters. Michigan watched Illi- nois strike for two fourth quar ter scores to pull within six points with 1:19 seconds remain- ing in the game. Illinois tried to regain the ball with an onside kick, but freshman tight end Mark Schmerge pounced on the ball, and the Wolverines, aided by two Illinois illegal procedure penalties, successfully ran out the clock. The game was marked by errors on both sides. Each team turned the ball over four times. Michigan's turnovers were all the result of fambles, while Illi- nois threw three interceptions and lost one fumble. A concerned Bo Schembechler spoke of the impact mistakes had on his team's performance. "THERE WERE a few drop- ped balls today. That's the story of the game. There's never an excuse for a fumble. Never. Unless of course, someone has a heart attack running down the field. Otherwise, there's never an excuse. Those were my best men who dropped those balls." Aniother kev element was a strong, gusting wind, a factor that was immediately evident in determining Michigan's strategy. The Wolverines won the open- ing toss and elected to have the wind at their backs. This gave Illinois the immediate advant- age of receiving the kickoff, and the later option of receiving again to start the second half. Schembechler explained the unisual move. "WE CH/)SE to kick off be- cause of field position. We felt that if our defense held them deep, the wind would keep them from kicking it out of there." The strategy worked. Illinois moved for one first down, but was unable to advance the ball further and punted to the Mich- igan 34. The Wolverines moved nine yards in three plays with fullback Rob Lytle falling inches short of a first down, then put the Illini back deep in the hole with a wind-aided punt. See BELL'S, Page 8 Frd predicts U.S. economic recovery AP Photo MICHIGAN TAILBACK Gordon Bell dives past Illinois linebacker Scott Studwell to score Michigan's first touchdown in the Wolverines' 21-15 victory, yesterday. Bell tallied twice and freshman quarterback Rick Leach scored the Maize and Blue's third six-pointer. 3 ABDUCTIONS SINCE SEPTEMBER: Rash- of kidnapitngs hits Detroit By AP and Reuter RAMBOUILLET, F r a nc e - President Ford yesterday told the six-nation economic sum- mit that the U.S. economic re- covery was stronger than ex- pected and w o u l d continue strong. According to American sources, the President also call- ed for a 'steady course in eco- nomic policies without the stops and starts that create a general lack of confidence. F R E N C H President Valery Giscard D'Estaing said last night the six-nation Western eco- nomic summit made a good start and he was hopeful it would produce concrete results. After a first round of discus- sions lasting almost three hours, the French President told re- porters that the Western leaders had gone to the heart of the financial and economic prob- lems afflicting the industrial na- tions. "I believe we can produce something concrete before the end of the summit, I am opti- mistic," he said. ATTENDING t h e economic summit at the 14th century Chateau of Rambouillet are the heads of government of the United States, Britain, France, West Germany, Italy and Japan. The official summit spokes- man, French presidential aide X a v i e r Gouyou-Beauchamps, told a news conference that the talks had got off to a flying start. No details were given of the d;scdissions, which concentrated o'i the world economic situation, in particular the problems of recession, unemployment and inflation. WEST GERMAN Chancellor Helrut Schmidt opened the ses- sion and each leader then re- viewed the situation in his own country. President Ford told the other heads of government they should set as their .goals vigorous eco- nomic expansion, high levels of employment in 1977 and a re- duction in the inflation rate coupled with increased world. trade, U.S. sources said. By mentioning 1977, Ford con- firmed forecasts that unemploy- ment in 'the major countries could not be cut substantially next year and that it would take another year before major in- roads could be made on this problem. I believe we can pro- duce something con- crete before the end of the summit, I am op; timistic.' -French President V alery Giscard d'Estaing HE REJECTED the view that U.S. economic growth was im- possible to sustain. He said he believed that economies could prosper while cutting back on the use of scarce natural re- sources such as oil. Presidential spokesman Ron Nessen said Ford brought along papers to Rambouillet on plans for rescuing New York City from its financial difficulties, and has been studying them with L. William Seidman, White House economic policy coordi- nator, and other aides. In another development at the six-nation talks Japanese Prime MinisterhTakeo Miki,hwhobre- ported his country has been hurt by a decrease in world trade, began pressing immedi- ately for a freer flow of inter- national commerce. DETROIT (UPI) - A series of 'abduc- tions that police blame on the power of suggestion may have turned the Detroit metropolitan area into America's kidnap capital. Authorities report five kidnapings since Sept. 29 in the Detroit area alone, with vic- tims paying $375,000 in ransom. THREE OF the cases were solved within days and all but a few thousand dollars recovered by the FBI, State Police and local authorities. But the reason for the outbreak is not completely clear to authorities. "These things come in bunches," a De- troit .police intelligence officer said. "One guy hears somebody got away with a bun- dle and nobody got hurt, so he decides to try it too." OFFICIALS generally discount another theory, that the high level of long-term un- employment in Detroit inspired the abduc- tions. The Detroit area unemployment fig- ure for October was 14 per cent and in the city's black neighborhoods it runs as high as 30 per cent. "None of these kidnapings happened in Detroit," one city official said. "They all happened outside the city so it's kind of hard to blame us for them." Police privately describe the latest ab- ductions as amateurish in planning and execution. They note the kidnapers spent marked ransom money within hours of re- ceiving it, left fingerprints and engaged in give-away conversations with their victims. "PROS don't do this kind of thing," an FBI source said. "And that's why we've caught almost all of them." The biggest payout was $150,000, left near the western Wayne County suburb of Ink- ster by Robert Stempel, a General Motors Corp. executive, for the safe return of his 13-year-old son. ' The payoff was made Wednesday night and less than 48 hours later, the FBI and State Police arrested two men and an- nounced they had recovered most of the ransom money. "These kidnapings happened to come so quick it looks like a crime fad," a State Police officer said. "If it's like all the other fads we've had, it'll disappear pretty fast." SGC hopefuls reflect variedpolt11ca views By GLEN ALLERHAND Twenty-two candidates, including representatives from four parties and three independents, offer a wide spectrum of political views in the Student Government Council (SGC) election set for Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. ACTION, termed by party member Irving Freeman as "fairly liberal to radical," supports three major issues: lower tuition rates, improved University housing, and the implementation of affirmative action goals. FREEMAN STATES, "We're coming in on two different things: campus-SGC issues and student parity on University committees. We want student input on all committees." Charles Holman, ACTION candidate and president of the new campus chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), comments, "I would like to see black people more aware of SGC, and would like to have people know what it's about." "Because of our political stance, I think we'll lose some sup- port since we're basically the same as SOC (Student Organizing Feminists confer on educatlion By ELAINE FLETCHER Feminists from all segments of the academic community gathered yesterday at arsym- posium sponsored by Interna- tional Women's Year (IWY) to tackle problems such as sexist professors, child care, and the University's failure to imple- ment affirmative action guide- lines. A small but enthusiastic crowd of men and women met at the Modern Languages Build- ing for the first half of a two- day conference entitled "Wom- .... .....:... . a .