Ninety-One Years Of Editorial Freedom SirP :E3aitj COLDER Partly cloudy and colder this afternoon with highs in the upper 34s. Vot. XCI, No. 71 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 25, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages AATA official fired after budget irelease By ELAINE RIDEOUT Marge O'Malley, chief accountant for the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority, released financial records to a University student last Wednesday outlining the financial status of the authority's Dial-A-Ride Service. That afternoon, she said, her super- visor told her not to come to work the following day, or any other day thereaf- ter: ,THIS IS a real blow to my career," O'Malley said yesterday. "I'm pretty wiped out by it." AATA Executive Director Richard Simonetta said that although the authority has no written policy regar- ding , the ,release of financial infor- mation, O'Malley's actions were in Oclear violation of a company mandate requiring that all such information be channeled through the office of the executive director. See AATA, Page 2 Death toll climbs " in wake of Italy From AP and UPI NAPLES, Italy - The death toll climbed above 1,880 yesterday in the earthquake that spread destruction and terror in poverty-stricken southern Italy. Rescue teams combed the rubble in 97 damaged towns, villages and cities searching for more victims from Italy's worst quake in 58 years. The government said rescue workers reported they had found 1,012 bodies by last night. Several thousand people were reported injured in the quake that battered the region Sunday night. Thousands more were homeless. Rescue efforts were hampered by blocked roads, downed telephone lines and heavy fog. But as army helicopters and truck convoys reached isolated AP Photo mountain areas east of Naples, the full TWO WOMEN GRIEVE in the southern Italian town of Balvano yesterday scope of the disaster became clear. after viewing the body of a relative killed in one of a series of devastating QUAKE DAMAGE spread over 10,156 earthquakes that struck the area Sunday. Fifty-nine people, mostly children, square miles, an area that includes died when a church collapsed on them during the quake. Naples, Salerno, Mount Vesuvius, and the ancient cities of Pompeii and Her- culaneum. The village of Balvano, 60 miles east of Naples, was one of the worst hit. Searchers found 59 bodies - half of them children - and reported as many as 100 people were missing. Most of those killed were crushed when the roof of the Church of Santa Maria Assunta caved in during evening Mass. The observatory on the slopes of the Vesuvius volcano, near Naples, repor- ted about 100 aftershocks during the night and day following the first tremor. The initial shock registered between 6.5 and 6.8 on the Richter scale, a scale on which anything over six can destroy buildings. TILE EARTHQUAKE was the most powerful in southern Italy since the turn of the century and threatened to exceed the death toll in a 1930 quake east of Naples that killed 1,425 people., Sunday's quake was the most exten- sive in Italy in living memory, experts quakes said. Damage spread over an area roughly 120 miles by 40 miles and it was felt all the way from Sicily to the nor- thern frontier and into Yugoslavia. From all stricken areas came reports of people killed by falling bell towers and masonry from decrepit buildings. The "historic center" of Potenza was 50 percent destroyed. Many hospitals in small towns were damaged, placing an extra strain on others in the mountain region. Typical of scenes across the stricken area were those in the mountain villages of Sant' Angelo dei Lombardi and Lioni, some 50 miles east of Naples. Each town suffered at least 100 dead and hundreds injured. n the heelsj of the devastation in Italy's most poverty-ridden areas came the danger of disease and epidemic. Water supplies were cut or rendered dangerous in many places, including Naples, where part of the ancient aqueduct was destroyed. Rose bowling. New Year's, Pasadena- if you can afford it Campus comput By BARRY WITT Michigan's Wolverines already know what they'll be doing New Year's day, but the rest of the University community has to decide soon if it's worth the money to follow the gridders to Pasadena. Michigan has 21,000 Rose Bowl tickets to sell, with fir- st dibs going to students, faculty, and staff from Dec. 1 to Dec. 3 at the Athletic Department ticket office. TICKETS REMAINING after Dec. 3 will be made available to members of the University Alumni Association. The actual tickets must be picked up'by the purchaser in Los Angeles the day before the game. University Ticket Manager Al Renfrew said he expec- ts the ticket supply to meet the demand of students, staff, and faculty. THE UNIVERSITY is also sanctioning a complete Rose Bowl package, including air transportation, hotel accommodations, and game and parade tickets. The "official" tour, arranged by Conlin Dodds Travel, costs $584 for students, based on three or four persons per, room, and$621 for staff and faculty, based on two persons per room. This is the only tour for which the University guaran- tees game tickets for the participants. University spokesman Joel Berger said non-University sanctioned trips in previous years have failed to follow through on promises to provide tickets. THE CONLIN DODDS tour is available until Dec. 5, with tickets being sold in the lobby of the Michigan Union. Tour officials said 50 tours were sold today, although they said they expect an increase in demand after potential Rose Bowlers have a chance to round up the money over Thanksgiving. The tour features six nights in the Los Angeles Hyatt See PASADENA, Page 2 By JOHN PALFFY Bob Schwarz, a student seeking a masters degree in the School of Business Administration, has computer assignments in his Statistics and Management Science 500 course due every Monday at 9:30 a.m.. - no excep- tions. Schwarz, naturally, was pleased when a computer terminal he had been waiting for more than 15 minutes to use finally became free last Wednesday af- ternoon. His appreciation soon turned to frustration, however, when he found that "the only reason the person ahead of me left the terminal was because the system had 'gone down'," or become inoperative. SCHWARZ, ONE of approximately, 7,000 students who uses the University's computer system, was fortunate con- sidering that the system shut down for only 15 minutes, which has been about average for the past several weeks. He was able to complete and hand in his BASIC language program the next day. The problems that surface when students face computer breakdowns, Breakdowns part of life , say offici*als however, can be extremely frustrating, and to some students, computer down- time seems to be increasing. Sara Aliber, another graduate student in the School of Business Ad- mimstration, had almost finished editing a COBOL language program earlier this month when the terminal she was using indicated that the com- puter would go down in five minutes. THE COMPUTER went down before Aliber could finish her assignment. Not only did she lose some of ier most recent input into the computer, she said, but the system remained inoperative for more than 30 minutes. Such delays have been the norm with crash the computer system for the last decade. Gary Pirkola, associate director of the University Computing Center, said the computing system has lost 4.39 per- cent of its scheduled hours of operation to downtime this year. He added that the computer is one -of the few Univer- sity operations that runs 24 hours per day. Pirkola, however, also pointed out that during October the system suf- fered an unusually low amount of down- time - only 0.72 percent of scheduled~ hours. BUT MOST students may have noticed that a large portion of down- time occurs during prime user hours - between 11 a.m. and 8 p.m., when an average of 240 persons have signed on to the computer. According to Pirkola, these shut- downs are the product of four types of breakdowns: unscheduled system failures, scheduled system shutdowns, power failures, and late start-ups. Most of October's downtime was due See COMPUTER, Page 3 i Relaxed Bo discusses team Cinderella football season 's By MARK MIHANOVIC Michigan coach -Bo Schembechler, perhaps more relaxed and jovial than he has ever been during a football season, reflected on his team's Cin- derella year during the last press lun- cheon-of the year yesterday at Webers' In. Following a campaign during which his team won eight straight games and the Big Ten championship despite a 1-2 start, Schembechler opted to discuss the Wolverines' accomplishments rather than look ahead to New Year's Day and the Rose Bowl against the Washington Huskies. "IT'S FUNNY how the season changed from where I had no confiden- ce in the defense to where I relied totally on the defense to win it," Schembechler said of the unit which yielded a mere three points during the last 18 periods of play. "Theyt(the players) did exactly what they had to do to win," he continued. "They won, and they improved as they did. At the very outset of the season and through those two losses, we knew that we were going to have an effective of- fense. The remarkable improvement of the defense, particularly in the secon- dary and the defensive line, was the key." It was a defense that had improved itself enough to pressure Ohio State quarterback Art Schlichter into an eight-for-26 performance in Saturday's 9-3 victory over the Buckeyes. BUT SCHEMBECHLER was not about to kick the OSU junior while he was down. "Schlichter's good," he said. "Don't ever underestimate that guy. Schlichter's much moredifficult to See SCHEMBECHLER, Page 8 Schembechler ... relied on the defense i GRADUATE STUDENT Iee Strahs completes his computer assignment at a terminal at the North University Building Station. TODAY Student Verification Forms The registration ritual began yesterday for Winter term 1981. Student Verification Forms, which include CRISP appointment times, are available through Dec. 12 in thelobby of the LSA Building for LSA students, and various other campus locations for students in other University' schools and colleges. Students must have their Michigan ID cards to pick up their forms. After that, all you have to do is the monkeys from going through the teenage dating rituals we've all experienced. The life of a great ape in captivity increases chances of survival, Beck said, but "lacks proper learning experiences for them to be sexually competent." Beck tries to match up the more naive orangutans at his zoo with those apes knowledgable in the ways of the world. This "social rehabilitation" program has its drawbacks, though. The'apes are often less than receptive to the blind dates set up by the zoo. The apes have shown very human preferences when choosing their mates. "Usually if the choices is just one male, and if the females don't like him, in her role as Miss Alaska." Now Lashbrook's clothes don't fit, the board complains, and the weight gain reflects "a deeper problem - a problem of attitude." The beauty queen said she decided to "let myself go a little bit" after failing to make the top 10 in the Miss America pageant. The board is overreacting, she said, "I just think they're going to extremes." After all, "I carry it very well . . . I don't walk around in a bathing suit," she said. Lashbrook has had to lose weight before - for the Miss America pageant she dieted, exercised, and used water pills to weigh in at 128. "I could gain or lose five pounds in one day . . . I would have six-to-eight minute live belly-danced greeting. Owner Wilma Papsidero, a dance professor at Lansing Com- munity College, said belly grams are popular for birthdays, anniversaries, even weddings. "I recently sent out male and female dancers to a wedding reception," Papsidero said. Last Friday a Wolverine football fan used the belly gram to deliver a peculiar form of punishment to a Buckeye enthusiast. A dancing "valiant victors" message was sent to the Ann Arbor home of an Ohio expatriate, where belly dancers wearing alluring maize and blue costumes cheered for the Wolverines. I + I I , I