Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom P t I at Iai SLICK More freezing rain, blowing and drifting snow, colder, and a chance of more snow showers Vol. XCII, No. 94 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 24, 1982 Te Cents Eight Pages Police still Ihave no suspects in Bitter blizzard blan kets most Econ fire of Midwest By PERRY CLARK Police and fire officials say they still have no suspects in the Christmas Eve Economics Building fire. Salvage operations are continuing, and according to University of- ficials, the building's fate will remain undetermined for at least two weeks. Lt. Duane Weber of the Ann Arbor Police Dept. said there are no new leads, but the investigation is continuing and officials are checking on several people who. have histories of arson. POLICE CHIEF William Corbett Friday called for public aid in capturing the arsonist, urging anyone with information to contact police. 'At this point both the fire department and police are. hoping somebody will remember seeing or hearing something," Weber said. One police detective and one fire inspector presently are working on the case, officials said. "IF ANY LEADS develop, they'll put more people on it," Weber said. Meanwhile, faculty and staff of the economics depar- tment are getting settled at their new quarters in the old St Joseph Hospital on Ingalls Street; salvage operations are continuing in an .attempt to preserve research materials. Despite aggravation over the facility's distance from campus, faculty and staff are upbeat about, their new, quarters. "The facilities are better than any on' cam- pus," said Prof. Robert Dernberger. "The trouble is, they aren't on campus.: STUDENTS ALSO have been inconvenienced by the new location. Senior Josie Tsio walked one-half mile to see her professor. "I wouldn't mind in the spring, just not in the winter," she said. "It's cold.", According to Associate Chairman Richard Porter, the department is hoping to move many of its classes to the Frieze and Modern Language Buildings in coming terms. This would cut down professors' traveling time to classes. See ECON, Page 2 From AP and UPI A merciless blizzard pummeled the Midwest and Great Lakes for a second consecutive day yesterday with a blin- ding sheet of snow and wind that silen- ced Minneapolis-St. Paul under 3-foot depths and -stacked 20-foot drifts on Michigan highways. At least 13 deaths were blamed on the latest storm, bringing the weather death toll to at least 388 since the first of the year when winter history was writ- ten and rewritten. FROM IOWA to Ohio, people awoke to find the great outdoors under an icing of frozen rain - compliments of bizarre thunderstorms that rumbled in the, same blizzard system south of the snow areas. Snowmobiles went to the rescue of about 200 motorists trapped on a high- way in northern Michigan, ,near Traverse City. Forecasters predicted snow showers with temperatures in the high teens in southeastern Michigan for today. THE BLIZZARD came on the heels of two previous weekends of record 'sub- zero cold in the Midwest, brought on by a different system of frigid and dry air swooping down from the polar regions.. "Along with the cold, this has been an extreme winter," said Mike Streib, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Kansas City. "We're talking about 100-year-old records being broken." Forecasters predicted another three days of snow in Minnesota, where record snowfalls over the past three days had broughtthe total for January to 44.1 inches in Minneapolis, less than 6 inches shy of the city's average for an entire year. "THEY'RE RECORDING snow up there over the hoods of cars," said Sgt. Donald Woodson of the Minnesota State- Patrol's communications office in St. Paul. In the 24 hours that ended at 2 a.m. yesterday, Minneapolis got 18.5 inches of snow to beat the all-time record of 17.1 inches for a day long snowfall that; had just been set on Wednesday. As for grocery lines: "I've never seen anything like it," a manager at an Applebaum's store in Minneapolis said. "I've got a store full of people - more than I can service. People are buying large orders, like they plan on staying home all weekend, having a banquet and watching the Super Bowl." There also was a run on liquor. "The storms and the Super Bowl are generally the big times for liquor sales°, and combined they .make things even better," said Beth Twite of Byron Liquor Store near Rochester, Minn. Daily Photo by KIM HILL Sculpture student JudyEnright begins chipping away at her alabaster sculpture in the School of Art. Wonder what it'll turn out to be? .Fire ravages HDl home ,1 From AP and UPI HYDE PARK, N.Y.- Flames raged through the roof and upper floors of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's family mansion yesterday, a week before the 100th anniversary of the famous New Dealer's birth, but Park Service employees saved most of its priceless historical items. The roof of the spraw'ling Georgian mansion overlooking the Hudson River 75 miles north of New York City was completely destroyed and the attic and third floor were badly damaged. TURNING OUT ina snow storm, Park Service em- ployees braved the flames to pull out paintings and other treasures. Officials said almomst everything in the building was recovered. But some items-in- cluding paintings, china, and furniture-were damaged by water and smoke. "We knew they were going to throw us out any minute. The fire was still going strong and the ceiling was about to collapse," said curator Emily Wright. "They told us not to go in there, but we had to." Fire officials traced the blaze to outmoded elec- trical wiring in the third-floor nursery and attic, which electricians had been replacing on Friday. DAMAGE WAS worst in the central part of the home, built in 1826. The wings added in 1915, in- cluding the library and bedrooms of Roosevelt, his wife, Eleanor, and Sara Roosevelt, were, largely spared. Thefire broke out shortly before midnight in the third floor. Most fire damage was confined to that floor, and the first and second floors were damaged by water. The house is expected to be fully restored, Wright said. "These experts can work miracles-and this will take a miracle," she added. ROOSEVELT WAS born in the house in 1882 and lived there when he wasn't in Washington or Albany. Dignitaries from all over the World have visited the house. Winston Churchill and the Duke of Windsor. conferred there with FDR during World War II. 1 08-passenger plane: skids into Boston Harbor 'U' prof interviewed for NBC documentary By DAVE PATON He will probably never guest star on Love Boat or Fantasy Island, but- University History Prof. Sidney Fine may appear on an NBC News Special on Franklin Delano Roosevelt tonight at 10. The documentary, "The Heritage of FDR," focuses on the Roosevelt years-the Great Depression, the New Deal and the Second World War. An NBC crew interviewed Fine, author of several books on the New Deal, for 20 minutes in his home. I DON'T know how long I'll be on," Fine said. "I know a colleague who was interviewed 75 minutes (for another documentary) and was on for only 23, seconds." The news feature will attempt to provide a perspective on the reasoning behind Roosevelt's social welfare reforms of the mid-1930s-many of which the Reagan administration is busily dismantling-and how they relate to today's society, Fine said. The taping of the interview did not occur without a few quirks. After Fine was interviewed, a member of the camera crew informed him that because an unacceptable amount of glare had reflected off Fine's glasses, the interview would have to be reshot. Removing his glasses, Fine again laun- ched into a discussion of the federal labor statutes of the 1930s, and the second take was later approved. ACCORDING TO Fine, Roosevelt was instrumental in defining the boun- daries of the modern presidency. See NBC, Page 2 BOSTON (AP) - A World Airways DC-10 carrying at least 108 people skid- ded off the end of any icy runway and plunged its nose into Boston Harbor last night as it landed' at Logan. Inter- national Airport, authorities said. No one was killed, police said, although some injured passengers were taken to hospitals. ALL PASSENGERS were rescued from the plane, which came to rest par- tially submerged in the freezing sea water at about 7:30 p.m. EST, police said. t"God has certainly been good to us," said a relieved woman passenger holding a small baby. Jo Ryan, a spokeswoman for the Massachusetts Port Authority, said none of the injuries appeared to be serious. WORLD AIRWAYS Flight 30 had originated in Honolulu and stopped in Oakland, Calif. and Newark,. N.J. before landing at Boston, its final destination. The cockpit was in the water and the captain was injured, according to one report. The accident occurred as- the plane landed in light rain and fog on an ice- glazed runway at the harborside air- port. The National Weather Service: said the visibility was 1% miles. WITNESSES said one of the engines continued to run as the plane rested in the water. The U.S. Coast Guard dispatched six boats to aid the rescue. A NTSB team was dispatched from Washington to in- vestigate. In California, a hidair collision yesterday plunged one plane into Vic- torville's business district, killing the pilot and the passenger, while the other plane crashed at a nearby airport, of- ficials said. IT WAS THE fourth accident in- volving light aircraft in South Califor- nia in four days. Nine people have been killed. Yesterday's collision occurred at noon over Apple Valley, a Mojave Desert community 60 miles northeast of Los Angeles. One of the single-engine planes lim- ped to Victorville, four, miles away, and slammed into a six-lane boulevard in the business district, killing the two people aboard, San Bernardino County deputy Joe Castanon said. The pilot seemed to be trying to "control' the plane, but apparently couldn't," he said. No injuries or damage were reported on the -ground, fire dispatcher Ron Jenkins said. "It, the street, was pretty empty for some reason," Jenkins said. Daily Photo by KIM HILL UNIVERSITY HISTORY Prof. Sidney Fine discusses Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the subject of an NBC documentary airing tonight at 10. TODAY Hospital quarters iPOPULAR BEER-DRINKING game has turned into a medical nightmare for some University of Iowa students, who are showing up in increasing numbers at Iowa City's University Hospitals because they have swallowed quarters. Several students have required surgery to remove the coins, which can become lodged in the esophagus or between the stomach I cidentally swallow the quarter. One student, who asked not to be identified, said a quarter became lodged in his throat at an angle and he couldn't swallow. Surgeons had to remove the coin with a wrenchlike tool. "It was kind of scary, actually," the university senior said. "It was like I had a bone sticking in my throat." Rolls away Tennessee State Library and Archives Director Katheryn Culbertson has announced a rollback on- the Asked what would happen to a state worker caught stealing. toilet paper, Culbertson said, "I'm not sure. We probably would investigate it with the security people:" Q Savings-minded robber A thrifty thief robbed a bank and strolled across the street to deposit the loot in a savings and loan office, sheriff's deputies said. Forty-nine minutes after the rob- bery of the Sun Bank branch in Port St. Lucie, Fla., Payment enough It didn't make a dime of a difference to Shirley Jean Kelly's lawyer how her husband paid the divorce fees. Truck driver Frank Kelly, of Casa Grande, Ariz., cleared the books Friday by paying the $354 tab in pennies-34,450 of them. Kelly, 47, said he threw in an extra roll of 50 pen-. nies in case his count was off. "We'll' take them,"' said Shirley Jean's lawyer, Richard Clemons, when the pennies were pitched his way. He gave Kelly a receipt. Kelly said he had been saving pennies since he was 19 and said: "I still . I I