Blue-OSU supplement inside Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom E Sir k tttlu IMPROVING Partly cloudy today with a high around 50. Low tonight in the mid 20s to 30s. Breezy. Vol. XCI, No. 68 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, November 21, 1980 Ten Cents Fourteen Pages Economyheads towards expansion kl || f y 1 Shr cmnd r a~w y a 9> jC '7 pir p o S report LUoiy roto ky LISA KLAUSNER UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL COACH Bo Schembechler gives a few rousing words to fans gathered at the Mudbowl last night for a pre-OSU pep rally. Fans, cheerleaders, pom-pon girls, and the marching band helped give the football players a proper send off to Columbus where they will meet the Ohio State Buckeyes in their annual clash. The evening peaked with the burning in effigy of a Buckeye player. Wolerine fans rlament abec f Ufer at rall.- Iy. By JIM DAVIS Bless his cotton-pickin' maize andblue heart, but radio announcer Bob Ufer couldn't attend the "Beat Ohio State". rally last night. Hundreds of other true Blue Wolverine fans turned out in near freezing tehiperatures to give the Michigan team a rousing sendoff for Saturday's season finale football game in Columbus. YELLING "UFER, UFER," throughout the rally, the crowd was told at the end that the veteran WJR radio an- nouncer would not appear on his physician's orders: Former Michigan quarterback, Dennis Franklin served as master of ceremonies, and introduced Bo Schem- bechler as "the greatest coach in America." Schembechler said the ball club has improved more during this season than any Michigan team in the past 12 years. "THIS TEAM will do everything it can do to win," the coach prorised, "and I guarantee-it will." A victory over the Buckeyes will give the Wolverines the Big Ten Championship and a trip to the Rose Bowl. The optimistic feeling continued as three senior football players, George Lilja, Andy Cannavino, and Mike Trgovac each spoke to the chilled but enthusiastic crowd. LILJA THANKED the fans for their support during the season and said, "We felt those Michigan fans up in the stands." The burning of a scarecrow Buckeye football player in a huge bonfire warmed the Rose Bowl-minded fans. Coach Schembechler introduced Defensive Captain Cannavino: "He played the best defensive game I've ever seen last Saturday. THE SENIOR linebacker added, "We're going to take over their stadium as if it were our own." While discussing last year's disappointing Gator Bowl appe'arance, Trgovac said, "There's only one bowl game for us, and that's the Rose Bowl." Ann Arbor City Councilman David Fisher (R-4th Ward), declared Saturday "Beat Ohio State Day." "It's time to get on and win a Rose Bowl," the former Michigan footballer said. By DEBI DAVIS The U.S. economy will undergo a period of "vigorous and sustainable ex- pansion" in the coming year, according to a report prepared by University economists and presented today at the 28th Annual Conference on the Economic Outlook held in the Rackham Amphitheater. The report, prepared under the direc- tion of University President Harold Shapiro, Professors Saul Hymans, E. Philip Howrey and researcher Joan Crary, says this economic growth is dependent on the "tinely passage" of the tax cut promised by President-elect Reagan. "WE ARE about to 'inaugurate a president who has long proclaimed policies which are most conducive to economic prosperity," said Hymans, who delivered the report to about 200 national and state business, gover- nment and industrial leaders. "The evident lack of success of the middle-of-the-road economic policies, which have characterized the past 15 years of economic turbulence, leads us to believe that we would be better off with a fresh look at problems which have been getting the best of us" Hymans said. Productivity is expected to increase slightly, with major expansion in the areas of consumer spending, and residential building. This rise is reflec- ted in the Gross National Product, 'U' budget shaps up; state still undecided By JULIE ENGEBRECHT It's a familiar story - with a distur- bing twist. Each fall the University makes a request for its share of state money for the following fiscal year. That move begins the process of deliberation among state officials about how much money the University should get. THROWING THE process of deter- mining next year's appropriation into motion, the Regents approved yester- day a recommendation to ask the state for 9.6 percent more than this year's appropriation. Regents and faculty discuss a smaller University. See Page 7. Here's the catch: Nobody knows exactly how much the University will get from the state this year. But after a year of budget revisions and economic crisis addresses by Gov. William Milliken and other state budget officials, everybody finally has a good idea. THE GOVERNOR recommended last week that the University be allocated $138.6 million for its fiscal year, which began in July: University President Harold Shapiro and state budget of- ficials say that figure is very close to what the state will be able to provide. The most recent suggestion is about See 'U', Page 7 By JOYCE FRIEDEN The outlook for the international auto industry next year is "cautiously op- timistic," said General Motors chief economist Marina Whitman. Whitman, who spoke yesterday at the University's 28th annual Conference on the Economic Outlook at Raskham Amphitheater, said the increase in the price of oil over the last decade was "the single most important eventsfor the auto industry." "THE 'OIL shock' has given us the worst of both worlds," Whitman ex- plained. "It has been inflationary because it is putting upward pressure on prices, and deflationary because it has led to a decrease in global economic activity." But Whitman cited positive economic indicators in the outlook for next year, including auto sales increases in Africa and Middle Eastern countries. Overall, the average annual growth of the auto industry now stands at five percent, Whitman said, adding that next year's car sales would total approximately 36 See GM, Page 5 which is predicted to rise to 1.4 percent after this year's decline of .7 percent, according to the report. BUT, ACCORDING to the forecast, this increase will not be enough to cur- tail the national rate of unemployment, which is expected to rise to 7.9 percent, from its present 7.6 percent level. The study~ attributes this rather "lethargic" expansion of the current economic recovery to the present "tight money" policies of the Federal Reserve Board, which make the economy vulnerable to recessionary trends. And, according to Hymans, the nation runs the risk of another serious dip in the economy later this year if the Fed continues its tight policies. HOWEVER, THE predictions, based on the econometric model designed by recent Nobel prize winner and Univer- sity alumnus Lawrence Kline, are based on certain assumptions which, if changed, could turn the economy around. According to Hymans, if interest or SeePROFS, Page 14 GM economist: Auto industry may, pikup Columbus ready for fans treme. After the Buckeyes' 18-15 optimistic that moderation willy By MARK MIHANOVIC triumph over Michigan in Ann Ar- prevail over madness this weekend. and STAN BRADBURY bor, the 12-block area was engulfed The Ohio State Undergraduate Special to the Daily by a wave of scarlet and gray Student Government is sponsoring COLUMBUS - High Street. To the fanatics. Cars displaying Michigan several events with- the intention of west, Ohio State University; to the paraphernalia were overturned; one drawing overzealous parties off the east, the rest of sprawling, was set on fire. street and into the inner campus Daily Photo by LISA KLAUSNER GENERAL MOTORS CHIEF Economist Marina Whitman says the price of oil has been the most harmful event to the auto industry in the past decade. Whitman spoke yesterday at the University 28th annual Conference on the Economic Outlook at Rackham Amphitheater. Ad-ministrator says metropolitan Columbus. The street seems to serve as a divider between - collegiate madness and commercial reality. And one occasion in particular ac- cents the division; an Ohio State football victory over the Michigan Wolverines inevitably signals the congregation of thousands of celebrants onto High Street, packing the many bars there, and rendering any transportation, whether by car or by foot, impossible. One year ago, this giant party carried itself into a dangerous ex- TWELVE HOURS and 328 arrests later, it was over. What remained was a sea of broken glass (from storefront windows and bottles hurled at police) and a city afraid of what might happen in the future. Thus, preparations began nine months ago to avoid a similar riot in 1980 should OSU win its second straight victory over the Wolverines. Everybody from student government officials to J.R. Ewing has been called into service, and the feeling here is surprisingly area, including a "Who shot J.R.?" party, where a Stetson hat with the signature of the show's star Larry Hagman will be raffled off. THIS EVENT, along with a huge post-game block party tomorrow is expected to decrease congestion on High Street throughout the football weekend. USG President Paul LaRue doesn't underestimate the positive effect Columbus police officers, whose helmets will be displaying "Go Bucks" stickers to appease the See FANS, Page 2 city in goo By ELAINE RIDEOUT Aside from occasional "pangs of anxiety, palpitations, fibrillations, and a touch or two of angina," the city is in good shape this year, City Ad- ministrator Terry Sprenkel told the Chamber of Commerce in his first state of the city address yesterday. Sprenkel said this year's economic recession, a local reduction in city rgvenues, and uncertainties about state' and federal revenue sharing programs have produced "a continual state of flux" in city operations. SPRENKEL, who took office last d shape January 20, addressed approximately 110 local businesspersons and city of- ficials over breakfast at the 10th annual state of the city meeting at the Marriott Inn. "I am pleased to tell you that the city ended its fiscal year on June 30, 1980 in one of the best financial positions it has experienced in a considerable period of time," Sprenkel said. "The city ended the fiscal year with a surplus of ap- proximately $1,900,000." ONE OF THE "highlights" of 1980, See ADMINISTRATOR, Page 14 TODAY Tonight's the night ONIGHT, AMERICANS and non-Americans alike will finally be able to answer what could be one of the world's most thought-provoking questions in this, or any other age: Who shot J.R.? Yes, fans of the dastardly J.R. Ewing, fictional anti-hero of the ,CBS television program Dallas, at long last will be able to satisfy their thirst for such earth-shaking knowledge as: '-l.a T7.:.. 4. -a I D rd R' i0P rmi n v mandfnrm.,r readers proved Farlow to be the favored suspect. In ad- dition, Air France announced Wednesday a dispatcher would monitor the show in New York and radio all trans- Atlantic flights as to who shot the villain played by actor Larry Hagman. Meanwhile, Lorimar Productions, makers of Dallas, have been relaxing and watching the bucks roll in. Sponsors are paying a reported $500,000 per minute to. bring the moment of truth to viewers. Dallas story editor Art Lewis said four different endings have been filmed to keep even the cast and crew in the dark, although he added, "The producers and I have known-since last February who the would-be killer is." which showed that San Francisco is one of the nation's most dangerous cities for people on foot, the SFPD is trying a slightly novel way of reducing pedestrian accidents. "Sir, it may be your last trip," a police officer booms over the blowhorn to an errant pedestrian. "I hope you make it." Veteran traffic control officer Ray Musanti and his partner, Efron Delgado, volunteered for the duty and write about 50 $10 jaywalking citations a week when the power of the bull horn doesn't do the job. Musanti tickets the most flagrant violators, but usually simply grabs his bullhorn when he sees someone stepping from the curb at the wrong place. No word vet on how soon the City of Ann Arbor will be adding 'a said this is the 322nd year the tribe has made the offering to Virginia's chief executive in return for their 125-acre reser- vation located in King William County, near West Point. Chief Little Eagle said the Mattaponi have the oldest reser- vation in the United States. However, some of the 77 tribe members who now inhabit the reservation, surrounded by woodlands, have been grumbling. They said they need more land to accommodate all the members of their tribe. "There's nowhere for our young people to spread out and they've got to leave the reservation," Little Eagle said. Yeah, sure, but with a tax bill like that, who would want to leave? Wonder what they get for a refund .. . i i 1