V Leonard regains title -See Page 7! ;rt Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom C, he Lii: !IuiI CLEARING Look for sunny skies today with a high in the upper 30s to lower 40s. Low in the 20s. Vol. XCI, No. 72 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 26, 1980 Ten Cents Eight Pages Studer fleeing after I By STEVE HOOK Three University students captured a fleeing jewelry thief yesterday afternoon moments after he stole a case of gold wedding rings from Schlanderer's Jewelry Store on South University Street. The students, all unidentified pending the suspect's arraignment today, responded to calls for help from a Schlanderer's clerk and captured the thief in the middle of East University Street a block away from campus. The suspect, described by one of the students as a "young black guy," was then turned over to the Ann Arbor Police Department. "MY FRIEND and I were standing outside the Ann Arbor Bank, when all of a sudden this guy comes running out of the crowd;" recalled one of the students. "Somebody yelled 'Stop him!' My first instinct was that it was some kind of joke. Then I saw that he really had something," he said. "He dodged me and ran down East Univer- sity," the student continued. "As I was chasing its b nab andit leist him, he tripped and fell and I dove on him. When he fell, this little box full of rings opened. I held him while somebody else came along and gathered the rings." All but one of the nearly 100 wedding rings were returned to Schlanderer's. THE SUSPECT will be arraigned today in 15th District Court on the charge of larceny from a person, a felony which is punishable by a maximum prison term of 10 years, according to Sgt. William Canada. The store's owner, Paul Schlanderer; confir- med the unnamed student's account of the in- cident. He said that the thief came into the store and asked to look at wedding rings for an up- coming marriage. When the case of gold bands was brought out, he snatched it and ran off. "'You read so much about people who refused to get involved," the relieved Schlanderer said. "This shows that there are still people who care about others. These were honest people; they really helped me." Ar rih EMUEL AND SHIRLEY BENTON stand outside the tarpaper shack they built next to the Brooklyn housing project that evicted them last year. The Benton's, who support their five children on a monthly disability check, built the house with materials scavenged from abandoned buildings. Giving thanks A Brooklyn family celebrates in shack f NEW YORK (AP)-They call their tar- paper shack a home, their five children healthy, and themselves happy. Rejecting welfare, Emuel and Shirley Ben- ton have built and furnished a little hut with other people's garbage in the vacant lot across the street from the housing project that evicted them last year. We don't need welfare," Emuel Benton, 54, says. "What could they give me that's better than what I got?" THE PROUD PARENTS vow not to apply for welfare, and say they don't want people who -read or hear about them to send them money. Staying thi~s wekn?- "We won't take money, but we'll take food and clothing for the children if people drop them by," Shirley Benton says. In fact, that's how they got most of the turkey, stuffing, chocolate cake and sweet potato pies she will prepare in a neighbor's kitchen and serve in the family's shack on Thanksgiving.. "We have everything to be thankful for,". she says. "There's a lot of God in this little house. Otherwise we wouldn't still be alive and together." "EVERY DAY," Emuel Benton, agrees, holding hands with his wife. "We have Thanksgiving every day." The family, whose sole income is the father's $200 monthly disability check, was evicted after his second heart attack forced him to give up his job as a truck driver. For 28 weeks they all slept in their battered brown station wagon. Then Benton, mindful that his only con- struction experience was building a doghouse when he was 7 years old, announced that the family was to commence building a house. "WE DIDN'T KNOW what we were doing or how to do it," Benton recalls, "We just did it. We had to." See SQUATTERS, Page 2 By BETH ALLEN Even students staying on campus during the long holiday weekend are talking turkey and giving thanks. Af- ter all, the libraries and recreation buildings will be open and a turkey dinner with all the traditional trim- mings-dorm-style-will be served. While most students desert campus during Thanksgiving break, those who stay plan to take advantage of the peace and quiet. West Quad RA Janet Kop- meyer said she plans to "fool around, and maybe enjoy life while it's quiet around here." MANY OF the campus inhabitants this weekend will be resident advisors and directors who will be on rotating shifts to make sure thed ormitories are staffed. "I have to work the front desk," said Tim Mulavey, a resident advisor in Markley's Elliot House, "and I need to do homework-finals are coming up. West Quad RD Greg Mischel will also be on duty this weekend and he said he has work to do. "I'm going to write a resume and learn to use the plotter, on the computer," he said, adding that he plans to sleep a great deal as well. See TURKEY, Page 2 'U'gets $4 million to, study occupational safety 1 By MARK SCHUMACK A recent $4 federal million grant to the University reflects a trend toward renewed government support for op- cupational safety and health programs, according to Univer- sity professors. Engineering Prof. Don Chaffin said federal money for such programs, dwindled in the 70s, indicating that the gover- nment felt industry should bear the financial burden for safety training programs. MORE RECENTLY the government has realized that oc- O cupational medicine is not simply a concern of big business, said program director Jerom Schultz. The National Institute of Occupational Safety anI Health grant will be used by the University over the next five years to develop occupational and health training programs in the School of Public Health, the Medical School, and the College of Engineering. The grantis one of 13 that the federal agency has doled out to educational institutions around the country. A MAJOR FACTOR in obtaining the grant was the strong o link that the University showed it could provide between departments in Public Health and Engineering, said Chaffin, the director for the integration of the occupational safety and health programs. Chaffin said that although other schools in the country have, similar programs, they "don't have quite the cooperative agreement" the University has between its School of Public Health and College of Engineering. Another unique feature of the program will be the im- plementation of an "on-job/on-campus" training plan, ac- cording to Public Health Associate Prof. Lawrence Fine, the director for the occupational medicine program. Under the plan, practicing physicians will attend classes four days every month, eventually obtaining a master's degree in oc- cupational medicine. FINE SAID the on-job/on-campus program is being developed in response to doctors who desire formal training in occupational medicine, in addition to the skills they learn on the job. Some of the $4 million will go towards a pioneer chemical safety engineering program. This project will be the first of its kind in the nation, Schultz said. Classes will be developed to educate engineering students in chemical hazards they must consider in the design of in- dustrial processes. The major portion of the grant money for the chemical safety engineering program will go towards financial sup- port for graduate students. The graduate chemical engineering program currently lasts one year but will take longer for students who elect the safety engineering option, Schultz said. Schultz also said most of the incentive for the development of safety engineering projects is coming from industry rather than student demand. He said he hopes the financial awards will lure students into the program until it can "take off by it- self" after two or three years. Pope mourns 3,000 dead in Italian quake' NAPLES, Italy (UPI) - The death toll in Italy's worst earthquake in 65 years rose past 3,000 yesterday and Pope John Paul II, the ground still shaking under his feet, visited the disaster area to pray with grieving survivors. The national police office coordinating casualty reports from the more than 100 towns and villages hit by Sunday's quake east and south of Naples said 2,400 bodies had been recovered and that about 700 more were still buried under the rubble in a single village, Laviano, in the province of Salerno. By dusk, rescue teams had still not reached other villages where hun- dreds of more people were reported buried under tons of debris. AS THE DEATH toll mounted, severe aftershocks from the massive quake still shook the already devastated area, two of them last evening causing the collapse of already damaged buildings. Wholetowns were declared uninhabitable because of quake damage and authorities said hundreds of thousands of people were homeless. The pope flew through the'devastated region by helicopter, stop- ping to visit a hospital in the town of Potenza 86 miles east of Naples, then flying on to Balvano, the mountain village where worshippers were crushed in the collapse of a church. AN ELDERLY WOMAN sits in her wheelchair in front of the ruins of her home in Sant' Angelo De Lombardi, Italy, after the worst earth- AP Photo quake in that country in 65 years. :i:++::"j: 'i?:i ? h:::?: C;:;isy;:!' :;:;i':' :-:y'L: :;:-i:::-: j:::?:i? Si:}:tiiY "r: ::i "rii:i^i:^i TODAY Better late than never dept. SOMEONE SHOULD let the U of M Students for Carter/ Mondale campaign know that the election is over. A Daily reporter received some campaign literature in the mail yesterday, accompanied by a letter which announced, "We have enclosed some information that we hone is heln- that Dallas drew viewers in 53.3 percent of the nation's TV- equipped homes. That means the key episode was seen in about 41.4 million households. CBS researchers translate that figure into a projected average audience of about 83 million. Dallas' biggest ratings rival from the past was. the final episode of the ABC miniseries Roots, which drew a 51.1 rating when it was broadcast Jan. 30, 1977. For the few million of you who happened to miss the show, it turned out that Kristin Shepard, J.R.'s sister-in-law and jilted mistress shot the oil baron, played by Larry Hagman. Kristin naved by Marv Crnshv also revealed that . R. The culprits weren't spotted, but suspicion fell on the university's engineering students, who are noted for ap- plying their technological expertise to practical jokes. To add to such circumstantial evidence, the vehicle in question was last known to grace the grounds of the Engineering Undergraduate Society's campus hangout. And a band of engineering students was caught red-handed trying to per- form this same feat last year. In retaliation, they towed the wreck of a station wagon beneath the tower and filled it with quick-drying cement. To get the Beetle atop the tower, the culprits broke three locks tn o t to the ton and than trial, the jury rendered its verdict: Not guilty. Peter Markou, 21, of Pownal, Vt., was acquitted Monday in Cen- tral Berkshire District Court of charges of swallowing a gold wedding ring at a pizza shop. Markou's girlfriend, Ellen Shea of North Adams, had accused the hapless. hungry young man of swallowing her ring while they were eating pizza June 23. Shea said the ring, which is still missing, was a family heirloom that belonged to her mother. Let justice prevail ... I -i i I i