Ninety- Two 'Years Of Editorial Freedom tuE943U IE aIIQ IFFY 1 Cloudy today with a chance of showers, highs in the 60s. Vol. XCII, No. 46% Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 1, 1981 Ten Cents Eight Pages M' soars past Gophers, 34-13 f I 'r Rose Bowl hopes alive after Illini down Iowa By DREW SHARP Special to the Daily - MINNEAPOLIS- It was definitely Halloween yesterday in Minneapolis. Quarterback Steve Smith came disguised as a prolific passer. Wide receiver Anthony Carter had plenty to spare in his bag of tricks. And Michigan, in front of 52,875 at Memorial Stadium, walked away with the treats as the 15th-ranked Wolverines stifled the Minnesota Gophers, 34-13, to retain the Little Brown Jug and also stay in the thick of the Big Ten title race. For the second consecutive week, Michigan's Rose Bowl hopes received a jump-start from Illinois. Yesterday, the Illini manhandled conference co-leader Iowa, 24-7, in Champaign. Last week Illinois dumped Wisconsin, 23-21. "WE'VE GOT them (Illinois) next week," said Michigan coach Bo Schembechler. "It's unbelievable. We've got the toughest schedule in the conference over the final four weeks. But we're still in the race, no question about that. It was a good win today and very satisfying." What made the victory satisfying for Schembecnler was the combined per- formance of Smith and Carter. Smith, in his finest day as a Wolverine, completed 13 of 20 passes for 237 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions. Carter, taking advantage of single coverage in the Gopher secon- dary, grabbed a season-high eight receptions for 154 yards and one touch- down. Counting his kickoff and punt return yardage, the junior flyer from Florida rambled for 213 yards total of- fense. "HE WAS sensational," said Schem- bechler of Carter's showing, "Anthony came back for an encore from last year's game. We changed some things around offensively, moving Carter around and putting in a few new things for him." There may have been some new "things," but the results were vintage Carter. "A team like Minnesota plays a lot of man to man," Carter said. "It's been tough on me this season because of the double coverage. Nine out of ten times I've drawn double coverage. We feel a lot better now." SMITH LOOKED nothing quarterback who possessed a cent completion 'rate. like the 39.5 per- "This was Smith's best game of the year," added Schembechler. "It was really encouraging. Smith has wonder- ful ability and he was throwing to great receivers. You combine those two and you can see how he had such a good game. We decided to turn him lose and have him throw early because we knew they (Minnesota) were going to key on our running." See1'M',Page 8 Zero problems for shuttle as Wednesday launh nears G oliath's cube? Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTRM Eight LSA freshmen, members of the Regents' Cube Metamorphosis Group, decided to perform a little mischief early Saturday by transforming the black cube into a colorful Rubik's Cube. Using colored paper and masking tape, the group began the transformation at 2:30 a.m. Saturday, and finished at 5 a.m. "We've been planning it for a month," explained a group spokesman who asked to remain unidentified. Group members, who live in West Quad, Bursley, and Betsey Barbour dormitories, said they also did it to work out all their built-up tension from mid-term exams and papers. Official: Nukes will destroy society LOS ANGELES (AP) - Governmen- ts talk increasingly of the "sur-' vivability" of nuclear war. But disar- mament advocates say that what would survive would be a pain-wracked nation stripped of modern civilization - a return to the Dark Ages or worse. "There'd be nothing left of gover- nments - nothing left of the great social orders we are arming ourselves to protect and defend," said Thomas Halsted, director of Physicians for Social Responsibility. 4HOSE WHO speculate about the world that would follow nuclear war conclude, he said in an interview, "that if you're optimistic, it's the world of the 14th century. And if you're pessimistic you picture roving bands of men ana women trying to eke out an existence from one day to the next, competing with each other for what little food and water might not be contaminated." The physicians' group, along with the Council for a Livable World, sponsored a symposium Shturday called, "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War." Today's strategic nuclear warheads - "9,000 of ours and 7,000 of theirs mounted on the long-range missiles and bombers that are aimed at each other's country" - mean all-out war will claim civilians in unimaginable numbers, Halsted said. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Astronauts Joe Engle and Richard Truly pored over their flight plans yesterday with space shuttle controllers who will guide their five-day journey. The gleaming white ship, meanwhile, sailed through day one of its countdown to Wednesday's launch. "Right now, we have zero problems,' said countdown director Norm Carlson. The astronauts, in Houston, were un- dertaking a final review of the- thick flight plan for the return mission to space. IT'S A light weekend for them. Nothing is organized," said John Lawrence, a spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration. "We are trying to back off quite a bit'so they'll be refreshed. and rested and not exhausted." Engle and Truly are staying at their homes in Houston, rather than in the crew trailers normally used during the countdown stage of a flight. They'll fly their own T-38 trainers to the cape tomorrow. The number of "primary contacts" who can get close to the men has been cut from 700 people for the first shuttle flight to 200. Doctors try to limit con- tact to cut down on chances of colds and other communicable diseases. LIFTOFF is scheduled for 7:30 a.m. Wednesday, just a few minutes after dawn at the cape. If all goes well, Engle and Truly will fly the Columbia for 83 orbits, landing on Rogers Dry Lake on the Mojave Desert in Califor- nia. Early yesterday, engineers in 65 dif- ferent shuttle operations were polled for the readiness of their systems and at 1 a.m., as scheduled, the shift direc- tor announced "the launch countdown is now in progress." The countdown includes 73 hours of scheduled work and 29 hours' hold time, designed to allow crews to rest and for catchup duties if necessary. Engineers were ,optimistic that the lessons learned on the maiden flight of Columbia last April will smooth the way for Launch II. "We are better off" this time, said Carlson. The April countdown was marred by problems - the last of which stopped the clock at the 9-minute-to-launch mark, delaying liftoff for two days. .Success of the five-day, four-hour journey designed to expand and test more of the rocket's capabilities would show the shuttle can be reused over and over. .Sf. . r'" ,m :. ... ..:. ....... .. ... .... .. .... .: .... .. 'v ..a. M E .J1c t :, , .. .. 6".. .tr r.. a.a.h' .. ,.. ,. .. \$J > 0".01.0 ... .. . . ., > :.t .. ... :K1:.a.: E4s": ssx: £',',.> :?k.. .25>' .. .a. .... .. sk .. M. K4 .. ..r. : .. ..<. .. sFWE hl r li.. ,1>:R.: .: S . .. :: ...v:..>y.. ... >: "ES ... ... ... Z". .. t .w.. ..:^v. .:.. MOM ,. >. b... .r....... .. ),'3 . a z >. . ,Ky.\ ......: ... C..:..->:.., .$..,. ..>..,,.~1._. ,.v:.,.......,.,.....:.......:.<..:...:'.>1t 53. A..u..... r JT>.. h"'. ". . $:}C.}«x .'' <1+> :>xA'. 'Q:..'4 >bv.::ilr.,. '3X>o..s 3. .......... .......... s . Prof says New Deal, .3c Architects overcome problems for library altered so( By FANNIE WEINSTEIN The tremendous increase in the size of the national government, beginning with the New Deal, drastically altered * the structure and source of power in society, Cornell Prof. Theodore Lowi' said yesterday during a portion of the new Law School library dedication. Lowi, professor of American in- stitutions at Cornell University, present ed his paper, "Law, Power, and Knowledge" before an audience of about 300 people in the third session of a symposium commemorating the library addition.. THE SECOND republic, Low!! said, began with Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal when the government experienced a "fundamental change of regime." It altered the structure of power by in- creasing tremendously the size of the national government. "The national government discovered... police power," Lowi said. vial powers Congress remained the source of power but the executive branch took over the utilization of this power, he added. "You call it delegation of power. I call it 'legislide'." By 1961 he esimated, government changes had occurred in institutional reality (what is done), constitutional. reality (what may-be done) and ideological reality (what should be done). These changes, said Lowi, com- pleted the break with the first and more state-oriented republic of the 19th cen- tury. THE NEW REGIME changed the role of the law profession most drastically, Lowi said. Lawyers are not officers of the court any more. "They're hardly advocates at all. They're functionaries," he said. Lowi also discussed the impact the larger government has had on the public. He noted that many laws See PROF, Page 2 By HARLAN KAHN Architects were faced with a special problem in drawing up plans for a new library for the University's law school. It would be far too expensive to build the new structure in the same gothic style as the original law library, but a more modern design would not be com- patable with the stately atmosphere of the Law - Quad. The logical answer: Build the new library underground. But architects were also faced with special problems in designing an un- dergound structure. Innovative design must be able to counteract the psychological effects an underground building has on its inhabitants. In ad- dition, if it is possible for an un- derground building to be flashy, the new University law library achieves just that effect. HUGE GLASS panels jut up from a. three-story deep crevise in a grassy lot next to the Law Quad. Opposite the panels is an imposing sloping beige limestone wall which ieflects sunlight into the library. Architecture Prof. Gunnar Birkerts who studies the design of similar un- derground structures at Harvard, Columbia,' and Illinois universities before drawing up his plan, said his chief architectural concerns were "the need to admit light at great quantity and the con ern of the psychological ef- fects of an underground building." In trying to brighten the atmosphere of the $9.5 million library, which sinks' three stories deep into the ground, bright greens and reds were used in the carpeting/. Planters line the hallway, which extends along the L-shaped floor plan opposite the sloping skylight, and ivy climbs up the sides of the limestone wall. See ARCHITECTS, Page 2 Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM FORMER SUPREME COURT Justice Potter Stewart speaks at yesterday's law library dedication. S........................... ,... 3?, bQ.. ttf3': GPi <> _ .. .. ... .:.-. . . :. .... .., ro..: w: ',a.., .w ... .. .. 5......;.w ., ,.,. .., ,' ' .: a' ,, : w? ,: ~ rz , '>S Q' f. f'.; ,,. u a* ' ah, v. g f ' t rcv. r v a ( ya. V y '".f ( ... .. '; !Fy,/ ,.. .T'II, %7? a.:n:..,: . .' e 4: Sn x....PG,. a;.+. .i..«Yu e ii. 3nK.. ..v.. ,. ... .:Q R<. ... 'h.. M I, TODAY, Doggie bagged ESNICK IS A NICE friendly dog. Just ask anyone who lives near the corner of State St. and Packard. But Resnick's good reputation didn't do Resnick's owner Dave Sharken much good when an Ann Arbor policeman on a bicycle stopped them yesterday, and gave Sharken a ticket for walking Resnick without a leash. According to Sharken, the officer recent months. According to Union Director Frank Cian- ciola, several items, including a Persian rug and a $200 lamp, have been returned by some guilty individuals. It all started two months ago when a women returned some towels she swiped from an old Union motel room several years ago. Then three weeks ago, a woman returned a $200, lamp that she says her husband had stolen earlier. She's divorcing him now, Cianciola said. Two days later, a man returned an expensive Persian rug. Most of the items had been stolen years ago, Cianciola said. "We're pleased to have the stuff back." Why the sudden burst of redemption? flooded with calls and letters from people as far away as California. "I, received only one negative letter. That was from a constituent who said he thought tax money should go for humans," Neary said. "But he also said that all dogs. and cats should be shot." Neary's plan is to impose a one- cent tax on every pound of pet food sold by wholesalers to retailers. "It will be people who love dogs and cats who will be supporting it," he said. The tax would yield $2.23 million a year, he said, to be distributed to Indiana's 92 counties ac- cording to a population formula. Neary said he came up with the idea when he saw that the budget crunch in cities submitted identical bids to the school board for plowing snow from the Derby Elementary School yard. The three- member school board, not wanting to show favoritism, assigned each man a team in the World Series, leaving the selection up to fate and the baseball players. "It was the only way to-do it," said Susan Watson, school board chair- woman in the town of 4,220. "We had to find some way that took the decision totally out of our hands." Benoit and Fournier offered to clear the snow for $18.50 an hour, up 50 cents from last year. "I thought the Yankees would win, but they didn't," said Benoit. Last year, the board used the caaxvtmffllt flno Ranfnt tha un ac Vitt Rnvalct'a .s i i ,l