Military research See Editorial, Page 4 I Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom iEtailQ Overcast Rain ending early Sunday morning, staying mostly cloudy with a high in the mid-60s. Vol. XCIll, No. 28 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 10, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages AC. . sparks 4 M' past Spartans By BOB WOJNOWSKI Sometime between chanting "A.C., A.C." and celebrating Michigan's four- th touchdown, the jubiliant Wolverine fans in the crowd of 106,113 gathered in Michigan Stadium yesterday surely must have been saying, "It's just like old times again." Indeed it was. With the sensational Anthony Carter snaking through the defense on punts and the Wolverine of- fense grinding out huge clumps of yar- dage in single bites, Michigan returned to the form of past teams and whipped Michigan State, 31-17, to retain state bragging rights for another year. MICHIGAN moved almost at will against the tough Spartan defense in sweeping to its third win in five games and handing Michigan State its fifth straight loss in a game that wasn't nearly as close as the final score in- dicated. "This was our best game against a good defense,"' said Wolverine head coach Bo Schembechler. "Nobody else has moved on them. We didn't think we could batter them so we rolled out a lit- tle, ran sweeps and passed a little." But on a day that saw Michigan quar- terback Steve Smith play his .finest game of the year and the Wolverine defense stifle the Spartan offense, it was the All-American Carter who stole the show. He caught five passes for 123 yards#and a touchdown and retur- ned a punt 51 yards to set up another score while setting three school and Big Ten records and tying another. "THE RECORDS are something I don't really think about," said Carter, who had been hobbled in recent weeks by groin and rib injuries but was almost 100 percent healthy yesterday. "Somebody will probably come along and break 'em." Spartan split end Ted Jones is stopped by two Wolverine defenders as he slips into the Michigan secondary. It was Carte punt return th rolling yesterdz could move th possessions, Mojsiejenko lof Carter fielded a speedy senior through a hug back at the Mic ced all the way where he was bounds. From there, r's 51-yard jaunt on a just four plays to push it into the en- at got the Wolverines dzone - with Smith going the final two ay. After neither team yards - and Michigan had an early 7-0 e ball on their initial advantage. Spartan -punter Ralf "THEY WANTED to run the ball and fted a kick 45 yards that take advantage of their kicking game," at the Michigan 32. The said Schembecher. "Then when we r from Florida burst moved the ball early, they had to e hole to his right, cut change their strategy." higan State 40, and dan- That change in strategy was down to the Spartan 17, signalled by a change in quarterbacks finally pushed out of for the Spartans. Senior Denis Lavelle started at quarterback in place of John it took the Wolverines Leister, who was nursing a sprained ankle, but Lavelle was unable to guide the Spartans to a single first down in their first three possessions. After the third Mojsiejenko punt of the first quarter gave Michigan ex- cellent field position at midfield, tailback Lawrence Ricks, who finished with 95 yards on the day, sandwiched four runs around a 14-yard reception by Carter to give the Wolverines a first down at the State 22. Ricks picked up five yards on third down to get the ball down to the seven and then rambled over See 'M', Page 10 Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Michigan State's Phillip Parker bats the ball away from the Wolverines' An- thony Carter. The Spartan defense could not contain Carter the rest of the game, however, as the Michigan senior caught five passes for 123 yards. .Unions to. use jobless rate as election From AP and UPI WASHINGTON- Union leaders and Democratic Party officials, armed with news of the 10.1 percent unemployment rate,-are prepared for a massive effort to defeat supporters of President Reagan in the Nov. 2 congressional election. They are hopeful and confident it will turn around both the vast rank-and-file defections of 1980 that gave Ronald Reagan possibly 40 percent of organized labor's vote and voter apathy in non-presidential years. AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland said his union plans to keep reminding workers of the bad unemployment news right up to election time. On Oct. 19, they will distribute leaflets at job sites, throughout the nation to keep up the momentum. Although September's jobless rate was the biggest since 1940, producing screams of outrage by Democratic politicians and labor leaders, the in- dividual statistics for blue-collar workers presented a more dismal pic- ture: " Since September 1981, total em- ployment among blue-collar workers has declined by 2.1 million, while overall employment among white- collar workers has risen by nearly a million. * Employment in transportation equipment industries such as automaking has dwindled by 200,000 in a year. See UNIONS, Page 3 One killed in attack on Roman synagogue Daily Photo by JON SNOW PIRGIM members Sam Catalda and Kevin McCormick discuss organizational strategies at the group's regional con- ference at the Michigan Union yesterday.- Co nsu-m er groups plan strategy From AP and UPI , ROME- Five swarthy men hurled grenades into a crowd of Jews leaving holiday services at Rome's main synagogue Saturday, killing a 2-year- old boy and wounding 34 people before escaping in a hail of submachine gun- fire, police and witnesses said.- Police said the terrorists threw at least five hand grenades into the crowd, two of which failed to explode, and fired several bursts of machine gunfire. THE ATTACKERS escaped in waiting automobiles. Hundreds of police, backed by helicopters, fanned out across the center of the city in a search for them. Italian officials said it was the worst anti-Semitic outbreak in Italy since the pre-war days of Fascism and one of a series in recent weeks sparked by the massacre of Palestinian refugees in Beirut last month. Immediately after the noon-time at- tack, hundreds of Roman Jews gathered outside the synagogue, shouting that the pope and President Sandro Pertini were to blame for having received Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat during his visit to Rome in mid- September. THE ANGRY, weeping mob, some waving bloodstained clothing from people wounded in the attack, assaulted several journalists including Americans. They shouted that the press .was to blame for fanning anti-Jewish sentiment in recent weeks. The angry Jews called for demon- strations outside the Rome office of the PLO. At the Piazza Venezia, police used teargas to disperse angry protesters. Government officials issued statements of outrage and condolence. Nemer Hammad, head of the PLO of- fice in Rome, condemned the attack as "an aberrant manifestation of anti- Semitism against our Jewish brothers, guilty only of being Jews." Pope John Paul II condemned yesterday's attack as a "criminal ac- tion" and a "manifestation of hate and blind violence," and Israel called for concerted international action against terrorism. Bombs rocked the city in two bloodless anti-Arab attacks about 10 hours after the synagogue assault, and police said they beefed up protection of Arab and Jewish establishments and offices. There were no arrests or claims of responsibility in the bombings on the unoccupied Syrian Embassy a few blocks from the synagogue and the Islamic Center about a mile to the nor- th. In New York, Nathan Perlmutter, national director of the Anti- Defamation League, condemned the at- tack and added, "spare us expressions of sympathy from governments and religious leaders who only a few weeks ago applauded and comforted in this very same city Rome terrorism's per- sonification, PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat." By BARB MISLE Faced with dwindling finances, low student interest, administrative ob- stacles, and a lack of coordination, representatives from Public Interest Research Groups (PIRGs) met to discuss the problems and find solutions. 'this weekend at the Michigan Union. The Michigan chapter, PIRGIM, sponsored the conference, and state .groups coming from Maryland to Missouri sent interested members. "WE'VE GOT to be prepared to play the game as hard as they will play it," said Sam Cataldo, a member of PIRGIM from Wayne State University. "You have to use whatever resources you can to fight back." Nationwide, PIRGs are struggling to find new ways of financing at college campuses because PIRG members currently spend too much time collec- ting money, hindering their effec- tiveness, according to Rick Levick, a state PIRGIM organizer. PIRG members support the im- plementation of a refusable-refundable fee system. For the plan to work, mem- bers say, university administrations would act as "collection agents" because the fee assessment would ap- pear on a student's tuition bill. The system would permit the student to refuse payment of the $2 fee and gain a refund. ADMINISTRATIONS approached about the problem have been generally uncooperative, according to C.B. Pear- son, an organizer for this weekend's fourth regional PIRG convention. "All fees are mandatory for football, student government, and health ser- vice. The only optional one is PIRGIM," Levick said. "Why don't we have our own fee, to fund issues that are important to us?" PIRGs are student-run, consumer advocate groups that give students a voice in state and national issues, said Pearson, formerly a national PIRG organizer for Ralph Nader. See PUBLIC, Page 5 TODAYt Emergency burgers for Beirut STEVE ALLEN, operations manager for radio station WDJX in Dayton, was shocked to discover that French troops stationed in war-torn Labanon were dining on gour- met meals while Americans were eating combat rations. Determined to right the injustice, he contacted the Ohio- Bite your tongue A DISC JOCKEY for radio station WNAX in Wankton, S.D., is preparing to sling hash at a local restaurant as retirbution for calling the waitresses there "fat and ugly." Two weeks ago during a sports quiz show, disc jockey Dan Christopherson awarded a gift certificate at JoDean's steak house. "JoDean's offers enjoyable dining and good food but, oh, are their waitresses fat and ugly," he commented on the air. That didn't sit well with the waitresses, and 15 of them picketed outside the radio station. It had gotten during his waitressing stint, the picketing waitreses have agreed to make him a calico blouse. And yes, Christopher- son does get to keep all his tips. O The Daily almanac ON THIS DATE in 1947, the University held that stricter regulations governing student conduct be put into effect. The University rule stated that any student who - 1968 - The Board of Governors of Residence Halls recommended that the Regents abolish the dormitory residence requirement for sophomore women. Under the suggested new ruling, women would be allowed to live in University-registered apartments with parental per- mission. " 1972 - After showing an anti-war slide exhibition to his organic chemistry classes, Prof. Mark Green was suspen- ded from his teaching duties. To protest the suspension, 10 professors showed the slide show in their classes and over 40 students walked out of an organic chemistry discussion t I