Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom C bt I I LitP :43 ti1tj Rolaids Mostly sunny and a little warmer with a high around 40. Vol. XCIV-No. 59 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan- Sunday, November 13, 1983 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Blue is golden In Gopher rout Smith leads attack with six TD plays By RON POLLACK Special to the Daily MINNEAPOLIS - The Steve Smith highlight film now has enough ad- ditional footage to be deemed a full- length movie after Michigan's 58-10 rout of Minnesota last night. In little more than two quarters, Smith riddled an undermanned Min- nesota defense for three touchdowns and 147yards on four carries, as well as three touchdowns and 180 yards through the air. "THAT'S STEVE Smith," said Michigan assistant Jerry Meter, "That's the way he should play. He's that good." Ohio State scout Mark Dantonio, who was at the game to get one last look at Michigan before next week's clash bet- ween the two rivals, also was im- pressed by Smith's play. "Steve , Smith is what makes Michigan go," Dantonio said. "He can turn it up on the option and was throwing very well tonight. He can put it on the money." BEFORE SMITH went wild, however, the Wolverines had a few anxious moments. On the first play of Michigan's opening drive, tailback Rick Rogers could not handle a Smith pitch and Minnesota middle linebacker Joe Christopherson recovered at the Wolverine 23. The Golden Gophers were able to, gain one first down and,.settled for a Jim Gallery 29-yard field goal to go ahead 3-0. Michigan's next possession stalled af- ter two first downs, and when Don Bracken's punt was blocked, Minnesota had the ball at the Michigan 49. On the first play after the blocked punt, Min- nesota quarterback Brett Sadek's pass was intercepted by Brad Cochran on an attempted flea flicker. SMITH THEN PUT Michigan ahead with a 75-yard touchdown run. The next time the Wolverines had the ball, placekicker Bob Bergeron booted a 39- yard field goal to tie Ali Haji-Sheikh's single season mark of 12 three-pointers and give Michigan a 10-3 lead. "Oh well, see you," said an exiting Minnesota fan who knew the start of a blowout when he saw one. Michigan took a 17-3 lead when Smith and receiver Triando Markray hooked up on a 53-yard scoring stike in which Markray caught the pass at the 38 yard line, spun away from a tackler, and sped into the end zone. Smith then scored on a 20-yard option run, hit Markray with a 26-yard touch- down pass and found tight end Sim Nelson alone in the end zone for an eight-yard score to give Michigan a 38-3 See M', Page 8 Michigan quarterback Steve Smith scrambles from Minnesota linebacker Scott Tessier in last night's football action. Smith accounted for six touch- Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER downs, running for three and passing for three, as Michigan routed the Gophers 58-10. .., w. .. a .w.. ... ... .NEl~iEINNiNIEEiilliEN~lNE~lSlieE~iliENNSl~ill~li!iilll!!llliiilslE~lBilliillliEI~ll~illl~illil~li ..... ..... ...... .: {.::. .. .:::: r: "::.vn.. nv. v:. r:. "::. n1". ":N.::>n::: "::n.. , ...... ...... ...... .... .. ... .... ... .... ..... .... ..... ...... ......................... . .........1 ..n.. . GE extends deadline to vote on eontraet By JAN RUBENSTEIN Problems with membership counts have forced the Graduate Employees Organization to extend yester- day's voting deadline on a contract agreement with the University. Membersnow have through Tuesday to get their ballots in to either the GEO office or a drop box in the lobby of the LSA Building. THE CONTRACT vote, only the second since the union's last contract with the University expired in 1976, was extended "due to problems with University processing of membership," said Gene Goldenfeld. elections committee coordinator for GEO. He and other GEO leaders, who met yesterday af- ter the original 1 p.m. deadline, refused to elaborate on what those problems are. They said theyplan to release a statement for the press sometime this mor- ning. But Dan Gamble, manager of the University's per- sonnel office, said GEO leaders think the University neglected to deduct membership or representation service fees from some graduate student assistants' paychecks, a process required by an agreement bet- ween the University and the union. Gamble said GEO leaders are questioning whether the University complied with all the deduction requests. We don't know for sure if there's.an error or not," he said, although he said, "there can always be an error." In order for the payroll to verify GEO's claim, Gamble said the union would have to submit names of people who authorized a deduciton but who have not been listed as GEO members. GAMBLE earlier estimated that the union has 800 members, but that estimate could increase if a mistake has been made. Gamble's count does not in- clude students who paid dues directly to GEO. The count is crucial to finishing the vote because the contract must be approved by a majority of the union's members. But, until GEO has an accurate membership list, the elecitons committee cannot determine how many "yes" votes would constitute a majority. - Goldenfeld declined to comment on how many ballots GEO has received already, and also would not say whether the elections committee has begun to open any of the ballots. . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3n . F': o i. '" S .::.,R. . cc ~e. : ..... 5 Y........... ...... ,. " :.;.,z:. ,: ':b:, n.%,7 0. . ... sr ,, .- ~~~. ..... .................. ... ...... .... ......... . . . ....... .,.....1... ....*:. &........,.....a0...o......J z ..i 'U' students protest U.S. troops abroad ............... ........................ .............. AM I- F By MARIAN ABERNATHY and CLAUDIA GREEN Special to the Daily WASHINGTON - An Ann Arbor con- tingent joined forces with, protesters from all over the nation yesterday to rally against U.S. intervention in Cen- tral America and the Caribbean. Approximately 120 University students made the ten-hour bus trip to take part in the rally, which was atten- ded by more than 50,000 demonstrators. MOST OF THE student demon- strators gathered near the State Depar- tment at 10:30 a.m. to hear Latin American music and to listen to speakers before beginning to their march to the WhiteHouse at 12:30 p.m. At the same time, two additional groups of demonstrators rallied at the Department of Health and Human Ser- vices and the Department of Im- migration and Naturalization. The three groups, which called them- selves the "November 12 Coalition," convened at the White House to parade down to the Ellipse, a park south of the White House. AS THE THREE groups came together, the chants of "No more draft, no more war, U.S. out of El Salvador," grew louder. Many protestors carried signs and banners, and one group from North Carolina carried a coffin from the State Department to the White House. In the chilly November weather, the crowd stood shoulder-to-shoulder to keep warm as they listened to the folk group "Peter, Paul and Mary," and several speakers, including Democratic presidential candidate Jesse Jackson. "WE ARE HERE today because poor Black, Hispanic (and) white people are the ones being used as cannon fodder in Grenada and Lebanon," Jackson said. "We are here today to make a firm stand against a foreign policy of in- justice, inhumanity, and intimidation." Jackson, his voice hoarse, drew ap- plause throughout the speech and was greeted with the chant, "Run, Jesse, Run." Demonstrators said they braved the cold because they wanted to show Reagan and the rest of the country that they believe U.S. intervention in Cen- tral America is wrong. "I feel a sense of urgency as far as the world sits. For me not to do anything would be to support the government," said University student Molly Adams. "MOST PEOPLE here already know the problems. Others need to be convin- ced that the blood of the people of Nicaragua is on their hands," said graduate student Patrick Jones. In addition to the march, some protestors set up a mock "graveyard" near the Lincoln Memorial. At the en- trance to the mock cemetery, each rallier received a card bearing the name of a person killed in Central America which they were asked to place in front of six-foot caricatures of Secretary of Defense Caspar Wein- berger, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick, and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. No cameras were allowed inside the graveyard, and ralliers were not allowed to break the solemnity of the ritual with chants or banner-waving. The University students traveled to Washington on a bus sponsored by the Latin American Solidarity Committee. AP Photo The Latin American Solidarity Committee of Ann Arbor join the November 12 Coalition yesterday near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. in a national march to protest against U.S. intervention in Central America and the Caribbrean. TODAY And the score is... WHEN IT REALLY counts, that maize and blue spirit really shines through. The latest count in the Michigan-Ohio State University Red Cross blood drive con- test is. drum roll please. 2.416 pints for Michigan and 2.252 the Dade County Jail. Howard Penn, 28, admitted in court he baked the brownies that made the other courthouse workers ill. He pleaded guilty Monday to a felony marijuana possession charge. Although Penn could be sen- tenced to six months in jail and five years probation, Circuit Judge Thomas Scott agreed to withhold adjudication, leaving him without a criminal record. One court clerk supervisor suffered a mild heart attack and was hospitalized several days after the incident. Another worker was hospitalized overnight. Twenty others were taken to the hospital, treated and released. Penn said he ficials said earlier this week. A federal agent testified about the alleged takeover plan in a bond hearing for the suspec- ts, Rawleigh Wilson, Jay Wright, and Shane Pringle, U.S. Magistrate Thomas Faulconer said Tuesday. Faulconer said James Quearry, an agent of the U.S. Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms division of the Treasury Department "testified that there was a plan to take over the town. That was the only reference, but I assume they have evidence," he said. The suspects were arrested last week and charged with manufacturing an explosive, a federal offense, and for allegedly making a pipe bomb to use against a federal in- Also on this date in history: "1973 - Adjunct theater Professor-in-residence playwright, Arthur Miller told a luncheon audience at the Michigan League that "the best theater is that which reflects the whole society as much as possible. The rest of- ten weakens itself." .1976 - The Michigan Wolverines swamped Illinois 38-7 to set up the annual battle for the Big 10 championship and Rose Bowl berth against arch-rival Ohio State. *1979 - Bertell Ollman, a Marxist political theorist and associate political science professor at New York Univer- I i i i