=I The Michigan Daily-Saturday, November 21, 1981-Page 5 Blizzard hits Midwest, rips From The Associate A wintry storm thatl people dead in a blitz a west laid siege to Michi foot-deep snows yesterdf About 70,000 homesF went dark in western N heavy, wet snow - up to in places - yanked do transmission lines. Man forced to close. Driving ways was impossible. EVEN THE snowplo' ded in Muskegon Heigh doors at the city garage powered and there was n Michigan communitie the power outages we: north of Muskegon, and Cadillac, Big Rapids, an "It's going to take usr put Grand Rapids back Al Shepard, a spokes sumers Power Co. MUSKEGON GOT 6 snow while the Nationa vice at Ann Arbor measi at Hesperia, northeast and 14 inches in Roscom Snow flurries shouldc Arbor through today's with high's in the 30s exp The storm also bro through Mi d Press measurable snow of the season to left at least 12 neighboring Indiana, but brutal winds across the Mid- were the big problem in the Hoosier gan cities with state. ay. IN SOUTHERN Indiana, authorities and businesses estimated damage at nearly $500,000 Michigan as the from tornadoes and severe thunder- ) 14 inches deep storms that preceded the cold front. )wn key power Communities around Lake Michigan ny schools were got a couple of inches of snow. on some high- In the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, crippled by 11-inch snows ws were stran- earlier in the week, 88,000 residents its because the remained without electricity for a are electrically second day and utility officials said it io power. might be Sunday before full service was s hardest hit by restored. re rural areas The storm, which swept through the Grand Rapids, Twin Cities on Wednesday night and d Clare. Thursday, was ranked "somewhere in most of today to the top 10" among the worst storm's in 'together," said state history, according to radar man for Con- specialist Ranier Dombrowsky of the National Weather Service. to 10 inches of THE SNOW contributed to the collap- l Weather Ser- se of the inflated fabric dome of the new ured 12.3 inches Hubert Humphrey Metrodome, future of Muskegon, home of the Minnesota Vikings. mon County. At least 10 people died in the continue in Ann snowstorm's march out of the West. football game, Police in Lincoln, Neb., said Mabel ected. Yaney, 91, died of exposure Thursday ught the first after accidentally locking herself out of ehigan her home. In Minnesota, Robert Wylie, 50, of St. Paul, collapsed and died Thursday while trying to free his car which had jumped a curb and become mired in snow at an intersection. William Fritz, 71, of St Paul, died Thursday after suf- fering a heart attack while shoveling snow. Slushy roads led to an accident that killed two teen-agers near Marshall, Minn., on Wednesday, the State Patrol said. The Iowa Highway Patrol said a 49- year-old minister, Roderick Jackson, was killed in a crash Thursday on icy roads near Maurice, and trucker Ray Ferguson of Newton was killed when his trucek tnn1ed off inte~rstate an. R Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAS f Wintry wheeling As the color of this classic "Black Bullet" wagon gets whiter with each additional snowflake, the owner of this sleek vehicle will eventually have to ponder the question of whether to strap chains on the wooden-spoked wheels. U Soviets MOSCOW (AP) - A Kremlin spokesman said yesterday the Soviet leadership, while still skeptical, is ready to hear details of President Reagan's missile reduction offer when U.S.-Soviet arms talks begin later thiss month in Geneva. Soviet negotiators expect their American counterparts to present "a more detailed version" of Reagan's proposals at the talks starting Nov. 30, the spokesman, Vadim Zagladin, told a news conference. ALTHOUGH Zagladin repeated the Kremlin position that Reagan's speech was aimed at making the Geneva talks "more difficult," his criticism was less harsh than the initial Soviet reaction. "If in fact Reagan wants to be a peacemaker after issuing warlike statements s.ince taking office, then we " recepti can welcome this as a turn for the bet- ter," Zagladin said. Reagan proposed major cuts in nuclear and conventional forces in Europe in a speech Wednesday in Washington. He said the United States would scrap plans to deploy 572 new in- termediate range missiles in Western Europe if the Soviets dismantle 600 comparable SS-4, SS-5, and SS-20 missiles already targeted on NATO countries. ZAGLADIN said Soviet leaders were skeptical about the offer because, he asserted, Reagan had not spelled out which arms the United States was willing to forgo in Europe in return for a Soviet withdrawal of missiles already in place. The purpose is to give the United States a military advantage "not by in- e to arm creasing its armaments by by forcing the Soviet Union to unilaterally disarm," Zagladin insisted. Soviet negotiators in Geneva would demand withdrawal from Europe of U.S. and NATO ground-based nuclear weapons systems in any discussions about removing Soviet medium-range missiles, Zagladin said. THAT WAS consistent with Soviet statements that existing U.S. aircraft and missile systems already in Europe are in "rough parity" with existing Soviet weapons, including the SS-20 missiles. "Soviet negotiators in Geneva will start not from a position of seeking nuclear superiority over the West but to seek parity with the NATO bloc," said Zagladin, the first deputy chief of the international department in the Soviet talks Communist Party Central Committee. An account of the news conference by the official Tass news agency did not mention Zagladin's remarks on Soviet willingness to discuss Reagan's proposal in Geneva. Instead, Tass said, Zagladin accused Reagan of trying to counter the wave of anti-war demonstrations in Western Europe by presenting the United States as a "peace-loving angel." Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev is scheduled to leave tomorrow on a four- day state visit to West Germany for talks with Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. Schmidt has said he will use the visit - Brezhnev's first to the West in more than two years - to urge the Kremlin chief to accept Reagan's arms reduc- tion proposals. One NASA center must go, study says HOUSTON (UPI) A study conduc- ted at the request of a top space agency official has concluded that Reagan ad- ministration budget cuts have made it imperative that one of the nation's four major NASA centers be closed. The study said the space agency has maintained it will not close operations at any of the centers. IT IDENTIFIED Houston's Johnson Space Center; the Kennedy Space Cen- ter in Cape Canaveral, Fla.; the Mar- shall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., as the agen- cy's "big spenders." A copy of the analysis-made by Gene McCoy of Harbour Beach, Fla.- was obtained by the Houston Post. Mc- Coy is a former director of NASA's future programs. "I believe one of them has to be closed and NASA has not publicly faced up to this yet," McCoy said. IT ADDED, "It is imperative that some major NASA centers be closed." The study also suggested operation of the space'shuttle after its four orbital tests should be centralized at Kennedy. Presently, Kennedy controls the laun- ches and Johnson controls the flights. Mark said NASA was considering that proposal. "What do you do when the shuttle becomes operational? One thing we want to do," Mark said, "is make it possible to operate out of other places. Kennedy, with the equipment it has- the firing room and all the computers- may be one of them." University won't appeal GEO decision (Continued from Page 1) "It's going to be interesting to see how we (GEO and University negotiators) figure out what that im- plies," Scott said. In other action, the Regents were told that efforts to establish a health main- tenance organization for the University have been abandoned. "IT IS recommended that the University not proceed further with the plan proposed by Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Michigan to implement an HMO in this area," financial chief of- ficer James Brinkerhoff said. He cited financial risks to the University as the overriding reason to abandon the plan. "We should not drop the idea of con- tinuing to seek an alternative to fee-for- service medical care for our staff and their dependents," he said. Under the proposal made by Blue Cross-Blue .Shield, the Medical School and University Hospital would have to underwrite any deficit between the fees paid and the actual services rendered, a potential expense of some $1 million. BRINKERHOFF said that most HMO plans developed in academic cen- ters have lost money. "Those that have survived have done so because they have separated them- selves from the control and mission of their parent academic institutions," he said. Regents also approved an increase in the University's share of employee health insurance premiums. The ap- proval was based on fee increases ef- fective next month. In further action, the Regents named Prof. Emmett Leith the University's Henry Russel Lecturer for 1982. The lectureship is considered to be the highest honor the University can bestow on a senior faculty member. Leith, a professor of electrical and computer engineering, invented prac- tical holography - lenseless three- demensional photography. Prior to his demonstration of the technique with ad- junct associate professor Juris Upat- nieks, holography had existed only in theory. Leith and Upatnieks used a laser as their light source and, by ap- plying some new techniques, developed a system which produced high quality holograms. Regents also approved a name change for a unit of the School of Natural Resources. Wildlife management studies will become the Center for Strategic Wildlife Management Studies to allow the unit to serve as a focal point for bn-going research dealing with global conser- vation - problems, particularly manangement of wildlands for "sustainable use". U r - ---m m Amk INDIVIDUAL THEATRES ' A7 Ave bern 7619700 FINAL S DAYS! RICH and FAMOU CANDICE . JACQU RERGEN 8 $150 MERYL STREEP WED. SAT.SUN. $1.50 til 6:00 pm .7heh~tnfch S ELINE ISSET A TIMELESS LOVE STORY- uniquely crossing from past to present! Daily-7:00, 9:25 (R) Sat. Sun-1:00, 3:25, 7:00, 9:25 Daily-7:20, 9:40 (R) Sat, Sun-1:20, 3:40-7:20-9:40 STARTS FRIDAY: 11-27-81 "NEW YORK, NEW YORK" (PG) UNCUTI UNEDITED! E31uru Lee twef P II~ncaI y t I