Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom i:l;. be Ltc ivan 1 ItlQ Blue SSunny to partly-sunny today. Highs in the upper sixties. Vol. XCV No. 10 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, September 16, 1984 15 Cents Eight Pages H skies bring 232t, Bliiedown to {q By KATIE BLACKWELL field goal in the team's history. How the tables can turn. In just seven short BUT ON Michigan's next possession, the days, Michigan has come full circle from an dreaded interception took its toll. Quarterback exciting upset of Miami, to the depths of Jim Harbaugh dropped back on a third-and-12 humility as the Washington Huskies dominated situation and threw a perfect strike over the the Wolverines, 20-11. middle' into the waiting arms of inside Last Saturday, Michigan manhandled super- linebacker Joe Kelly. star Bernie, Kosar and the Hurricanes, forcing The Huskies took advantage of their field eight turnovers in the 22-14 victory. But yester- position deep in Michigan territory. Tailback day, the Huskies played that spoiler role. The Jacque Robinson led the drive to the endzone, Wolverines coughed up the pigskin five times in churning up 17 yards on four consecutive the afternoon, leading to 10 points for the carries before fullback Rick Fenney took it in visitors, from the two. I'VE SEEN US play worse, but I can't The Wolverines were saved by the bell, for remember when," said a fiery Bo Schem- the moment, as the first half clock ran out, the bechler after the game. "It was just one score still 10-3 in favor of the Huskies. mistake after another. We were about as bad as BUT THE HALFTIME rest apparently was we could get.' not enough for Michigan as it was forced to Surprisingly, Michigan dominated the final punt away it's first opportunity in the third statistics, in nearly every category. It just quarter. As it did twice in the Miami game, thealdtsprthlitsotescebr.lngly-ebm-etteWlviesnte- Sd spark the lights on the scoreboard. lut ong play-the bm-eft the Wolverinesi te Except for the final touchdown drive, the dust. Washington quarterback, Hugh Millen, a Wolverines could easily have been shut out, former Ann Arborite, unloaded a 73-yard spiral Placekicker Bob Bergeron must have been to his dangerous split end, Mark Pattison, who saying prayers of thanks after his weak-looking caught the final touchdown in last year's 25-24 . field goal attempt miraculously sailed through Washington victory over Michigan. Pattison Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER the uprights in the second quarter. The 52-yard plagued Michigan's secondary all day, this boot tied the game at 3-3 and put Bergeron in time eluding two tacklers, putting his team on Washington linebacker Joe Kelly breezes by Michigan's Gerald White after hauling in the first of three Husky interceptions in Washington's the Michigan record books with the longest top17-3. 20-11 victory yesterday. Kelly's pickoff keyed the Huskies' first touchdown. See WASHINGTON, Page 8 Amtrak train kills man near North, Campus From staff reports A 27-year-old man was killed last night when he stepped into the path of an Chicago-bound Amtrak train as it passed the University's North Campus. Norbert Postill, of Trenton, was walking along the tracks with a friend when he "apparently bent over to put a coin on the rail," according to Amtrak spokesperson Sue Martin. THE TWO were walking along the two paiallel tracks which follow the Huron River below the University's. Mitchell Field on Fuller Road. "They thought the train was on the same track they were on," Martin said. "The engineer apparently did see the man, blew the horn, and slowed' the train," she said, but "it was impossible to stop the train in time." Ann Arbor Police Capt. Harold Reedy said Postill and his friend apparently See MAN, Page 2 Some forget finances when finding a sorority By SUE BARTO They brush their hair, iron their- blouses and beat their brains for conversation starters. But of the 1,100 women who will rush sororities this fall, few pay heed to the high cost of joining the Greek circles. Though the average cost for participating in a sorority's social functions for one year-$495-is printed ina booklet distributed to all rushees, few women take the time to tally up all the expenses for four years. "WITH THE HUSTLE and bustle of meeting people, they're not thinking about the possible financial and prac- tical problems," said Diana Faulk, a junior in nursing and resident advisor in Mary Markley dormitory. Instead, Faulk said the women who approach her have questions like, " 'Are you a no one if you don't rush a sorority?' They really want to know if it's the thing to do," she said. Faulk added that one resident worried she would not make a good impression on sorority leaders if she inquired about membership costs. THE FEES start adding up even before a rushee picks a sorority. In order to pdrticipate in rush, a student must pay a $10 non-refundable fee that covers mailings and a rush booklet. Living expenses and social dues vary from house to house and usually aren't publicized until after a rushee has narrowed down her choices to two sororities. A registered rushee, however, can check the fees at any time filed at the Panhellenic Association office. The cost of room and board runs about $2,714 a year, a year's social dues for parties, formal dances and other ac- tivities range anywhere from $150 to $500, and in most houses there are "pledge" fees and other charges in order to become initiated. Sara Theit, a sophomore who is rushing this fall; said she hadn't read the financial information in her rush booklet. She guessed the first year would cost her about $100 or $200. "Anything more than $400 or $500 is a lot, but I would pay it because I can afford it," she added. JANESE ANDERSON, a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, echoed Theit. "I don't think I (joined) because I thought I was overly rich, but that was where I wanted to put my money. You get a lot out of it," Anderson said. Although she admitted the expenses of staying in her house have traditionally fallen "in the higher range," she said she has no qualms about belonging to a group some people cannot afford to join. "IF SHE CAN'T afford it, I'd be surprised if (the house) would even interest.her," Anderson said. As the sorority's rush chairperson, she said the house does not post its dues during rush. "We didn't, not because we don't want to, we've just never done it," Anderson said. For those women with limited budgets, there are few alter- natives. Unlike fraternities, which boast a broader range of dues, most sororites fix their costs around the average. SORORITIES OFFER scholarships and grants, but none are available to pledges or women considering rushing. The money is only available "once they're in the house and there is more of a commitment of both sides," Seiler said. See COSTS, Page 2 On strike Associated Press Picketers walk the line yesterday at General Motors' Linden, N.J. assembly plant where about 4,800 workers are part of a selective national strike. See story, page 3. Soviets may run low on energy in 1990's WASHINGTON (AP)-The Soviet Union-the world's largest oil producer-is approaching an energy crisis sure to strain a major foundation of its political, economic and military power, according to a study released yesterday. And while its vast oil, natural gas and coal reserves will enable it to remain a net energy exporter well into the 1990s, the Soviet Union cannot continue to maintain the "growth machine" its on- ce-cheap energy fueled without major sacrifices, said the study written by Ed Hewett of the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based research center. BUT HEWETT also dismissed the notion, recounted as late as 1982 by Defense Secretary Weinberger, that the Soviet Union is running out of energy and, in Weinberger's words, might "move down through Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan and try to seize the oil fields" of the Middle East. With 40 percent of the world's proven and probably oil and natural gas reser- ves, the Soviet Union likely will never need the Middle East as an evergy source, Hewett said. "Oil output will probably stagnate in the Soviet Union, but energy output will not," Hewett wrote in his 222-page study, "energy Economics and Foreign Policy in the Soviet Union." ACCORDING TO July 1984 CIA figures, the Soviet Union's crude oil production in 1983 was a record-high 11.95 million barrels per day, compared with 8.68 million barrels by the United States and 4.87 million barrels by Saudi Arabia. Using only three-fourths of their production themselves, the Soviets have traditionally relied on oil as a major foreign policy tool. In exchange for their loyalty to Moscow, the East European allies are getting two-thrids to three-fourths of -their oil from the Soviet Union at subsidized prices estimated to have cost the Soviet See EXPERT, Page 2 New stores flourish as students return By GINA PUNCH The change from summer to fall brings a welcome increase in business for established Ann Arbor merchants, but for those new merchants who opened over the summer it is the time when they learn whether their store will be a success. This year many new stores seem to passing that test. "AS SOON as the students came in we did great," said "Cousin Larry," manager of the new Barry's Bagel Place store on State Street. "All we needed was people. Cousin Larry, the manager who describes himself as "head schlepp" at Barry's, spent time earlier this month on the front step of his store giving out See STUDENT, Page 2 TODAY I Sqm -' . U Vol } S Y WX U r at If, , 4* --. i::: . _._ :::_:W s -.- = u, - k - ; f . a St. Bo.? A DEITY IS rising from the hills of Ann Arbor. Every Saturday, over 100,000 frenzied worshippers block to Bo Schembechler's Michigan Tem- out of line." Saint Mike (White of Illinois) for example fell from grace by recruiting too many junior college altar boys and by losing to UCLA in the Rose Bowl. So ap- propriately, Baldwin, portrays St. Mike spilling his sacrificial, aided in embarrassment by Terry Donahue of UCLA. On the inside... . } . , . ;. ; .: :4;> i'"" "a i ,I