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November 14, 1982 - Image 1

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1982-11-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom

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Vol. XCIII, No. 58

Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily

Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 14, 1982

Ten Cents

Ten Pages

I'

'M' fans
go wild at
post-game
festivities
By PAUL RESNICK
When Michigan wins a Big Ten
championship, Wolverine fans
celebrate. Last night was no exception.
After screaming at the game, ripping
down the goal posts afterward, and
storming through the streets of Ann Ar-
bor, Go Blue enthusiasts carried the
party into the night. And they partied
everywhere.
AT DOOLEY'S, Second Chance,
Goodtime Charley's, and South
Quad-it lasted all evening and, chan-
ces are, well into the morning.
The air was festive at Dooley's, as
people broke into song periodically,
giving garbled renditions of marching
band favorites-Let's Go Blue included.
Two of the evening's wilder partiers-
were Dan Patterson and Charlie Nebel,
who dressed for the occasion. Nebel had
a coat of yellow paint on his face, with a
See M', Page 3

/

'M' clinches title
with 52-21 win

Wolverine fans tear down the goalposts (above) after yesterday's win over
Purdue that clinched the Big Ten title. Michigan's Anthony Carter (right)
grabs a Steve Smith pass that was tipped by Boilermaker defensive back
Don Anderson before floating into the end zone for his second touchdown of
the day.

By BARB BAKKER 34, held by Houston's Elmo Wright.
The roses were delivered a week Carter's final home performance
early this year. prompted Michigan head coach Bo
Taking his final bows at Michigan Schembechler to tag him as "the
Stadium, senior flanker Anthony Carter greatest football player we've ever had
caught two touchdown passes to lead here."
the Wolverines to a Big Ten champion- Tailback Lawrence Ricks, who
ship and a New Year's Day trip to the generated 196 rushing yards on 31
Rose Bowl with a 52-21 conference rout carries for his best career ground
of Purdue yesterday. game, also accounted for two Michigan
THE TWO-TIME All-American also touchdowns.
scored on a two-point conversion to up "I GUESS you could call it the best
his career total to 344 points and break game I've ever played," said the 5-10,
Tom Harmon's all-time Michigan 195-pound senior. "This is something
record of 337. Carter's two touchdowns you always hope for. This was my last
moved him within one endzone recep- hurrah. I got kind of teary-eyed out
tion of tying the NCAA record mark of there when they announced my name. I
couldn't ask for more to happen in a day
a than happened today."
ra The win pushes the Wolverines' con-
ference record to 8-0, 8-2 overall, and
makes the outcome of next weekend's
season finale in Columbus meaningless
insofar as Michigan's run for the roses
r is concerned. Ohio State already has
' t one conference loss and plays one less
Big Ten game than the Wolverines.
This is the 10th time Michigan has
shared or won outright Big Ten title in
Schembechler's 14-year career, but is
only the second season his team has
captured the conference crown before
R playing Ohio State.
"We still have another game to
play," said Schembechler after the
game. "We are very pleased with the
Big Ten championship and the Rose
Bowl, but we don't want anything to
take away from the Ohio State game."
PURDUE'S LOSS drops them to 3-5 in
the conference and 3-7 overall.
Boilermaker junior quarterback
Scott Campbell rewrote the NCAA
mark for most consecutive pass attem-
pts without an interception with 204
throws before rifling two consecutive
fourth-quarter interceptions which
were later converted into touchdowns
See 'M', Page 9
Mayor vetoes controversial plan

"Goal posts, goal ppsts," chanted the
ravenous fans at yesterday's game as
they gathered around Michigan
Stadium's south end-zone.
With two minutes remaining in the
game, the swelling mob spilled out onto
the field. Before the final gun was fired,
they rushed the goal post and the police
protecting it.
While the majority of revelers worked
to sack the student section goal post, a
pack of the wildly exuberant fans
charged downfield with "M" banners
raised to bring down the other uprights.
BUT NIGHT-stick bearing police cir-
cled the steel post and stopped the fans
See THOUSANDS, Page 2

Photo by Paul Engstrom

By NEIL CHASE
When the Daily informed Mayor
Louis Belcher Thursday that a proposal
the City Council had approved Monday
meant that a University class taught by
councilmember Rafael Ezekiel would
get $15,000 to do a city survey, he said
he wished he would have known, but it
didn't really matter.
Friday morning, the mayor stood by
his position that there was no problem

Ann Arbor police officer Walt Willard leads a bloodied spectator off the foot-
ball field after yesterday's game. The unidentified man was struck by a
police nightstick during a brief fight with Willard.

Council fears downtown desert

By BARBARA MISLE
The downtown area will turn into an of-
fice-space wasteland according to
Democratic members of the City Coun-
cil, if a proposal by the Downtown
Development Authority-$30 million
worth-emphasizing more parking
structures is approved.
In spite of objections from the four
Democrats on council, officials agree
that the Development Authority's
proposal probably will be passed after a
public hearing a week from tomorrow.
THE AUTHORITY, a 12-member
committee of business people appointed
by Council last May, has proposed con-
struction of three parking structures,
several office buildings, and two hotel
convention centers.
These projects, along with a lengthy

'Got to keep downtown hopping at night, too
. . . I am not anti-growth by any means, but
growth defined by whose terms is what I
object to.' -Lowell Peterson
City Councilmember

of conflict of interest, or danger of bias.
But just before leaving on a hunting trip
that afternoon, Belcher had a change of
heart and vetoed the proposal.
LAST MONDAY, Council authorized
financing of a survey by 18 University
students to determine the human-
service needs of the city's low-income
residents, but at the time the officials
didn't know the students are in a class
taught by Ezekiel (D-Third Ward).
Eventhough thestudents would not
have been paid, several Republican
councilmembers said they were con-
cerned the survey might be biased.
Still, they said, they would have ap-
proved it even if they had known all the
details at the time.
Ezekiel yesterday said he
acknowledges the error of neglecting to
mention his students' involvement to
the rest of the Council. "That was a
mistake on my part," he said.
BELCHER couldn't be reached
yesterday for comment about the veto
which, according to councilmember
Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward), is the
first veto he has made in his four-year
career as mayor.
Morris said she is confident Ezekiel
and his Psychology 516 class would
have done a good job on the survey, and
doesn't think Belcher's veto was
necessary.
"Lots of things make (Belcher)

Ezekiel
... it was 'my mistake'

list of less major renovations, would be
completed by 1988, and would be paid
for over 25 years by tax hikes imposed
on the new developments.
"Improved parking and new parking
structures are fine, but not if it's going
to be big bucks for non-retail, anti-
tenant (purposes) and displace low in-
come housing," said Lowell Peterson
(D-First Ward). Peterson said the plan

will "gentrify" the more unique spots-
like Fourth Street-in downtown, and is
part of a general trend the Republicans
are following.
"GOT TO keep downtown hopping at
night, too," Peterson added. "I am not
anti-growth by any means, but growth
defined (by) whose terms is what I ob-
ject to."
See CITY, Page 2

change his mind," she said. "He's one
of the most inconsistent people I've
met."
COUNCILMEMBER Edward Hood
(R-Fourth Ward) speculatedthat
Belcher vetoed the bill instead of letting
the council debate it again to avoid fur-
ther embarrassment for Ezekiel.
See BELCHER, Page 2

Belcher
... changes position

w

TOAYAT
Headed west?
Y THE THIRD quarter of yesterday's game,
most thoughts had turned to sunshine, California,
and the Rose Bowl. But athletic department
ticket officials won't be deciding until sometime
this week when to put individual game tickets on sale, ac-
onrdine to Al Renfrew ticket manaer .Rni tirptc will

It's the same old stuff
THE PEOPLE WHO know what is fed to students in
college dining halls say students don't like a lot of
things, but the thing they like the least is liver. More than
100 college food service directors from the East and South
gathered recently at Washington & Lee University for a
regional meeting of the National Association of College and
University Food Services. Asked to name the food students
seemed to like least, the directors overwhelmingly selected
liver-with or without onions. Other foods low on the list are
ham and otatn an uratin h ef stew onnked vellnw nnshh

what was a billboard promoting its news team doing there?
The billboard company isn't sure, but the mixup tickled
Bob Robinson WFAA promotions director. "We have an
aggressive marketing program, but not that aggressive,"
he said. "We have several of these signs up and they are
rotated regularly. Sometimes, the panels end up in the
wrong place." Joe Minervini, managing director of Foster'
and Kleiser here, said he knew nothing about the billboard
even though it bore his company's name. Minervini guessed
the billboard consisted of old panels painted on. But the
panels use WFAA's latest slogan-"always a step ahead"-
nm-l-- evthth n ll...: nAn e 4niQn- w of fi- nc f-r--

Also on this date in history:
*1934-As a result of "flagrant violations of all rules" in
the sophomore elections, 14 male students were barred
from office for one year by the Undergraduate Council.
* 1940-Nazi Germany legalized the meat of dogs for
human consumption, effective Jan. 1, 1941. Unlicensed and
unclaimed mongrels were to be used as food, while better
canines would be used for military duty.
* 1973-A U.S. district court judge ruled that President
Nixon illegally fired Special Watergate Prosecutor Ar-
chibald Cox, however, Leon Jaworski would not be
r.mnnuaa o -A ..V1. nnl..

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