Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom P altn Iai1Q Drowsy Cloudy with showers and possible thunderstorms and a high near 65 degrees. WVol. XCV, No. 28 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, October 7, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages MSU mauls M'" w Harbaugh out By DOUGLAS B. LEVY For Michigan State it was the ultimate triumph. For Michigan, the most bitter of defeats and a hear- tbreaking downfall from intra-state supremacy. The Spartans., under second-year head coach George Perles, dismantled the Wolverines, 19-7, yesterday afternoon before 105,617 Michigan Stadium fans. FOR MICHIGAN, the loss took} on even grimmer proportions as starting quarterback Jim Harbaugh suffered a broken arm and is out for the remain- der of the season. It was the first time a Spartan head football coach had won his inaugural game in Ann Arbor. Michigan State is now 2-3 in 1984, 1-2 in the Big Ten. Michigan falls to 3-2, 2-1 in the con- ference. "This is the best feeling I've ever had in my life. I'm so high," said a jubilant Mark Napolitan, MSU's senior center and a Trenton native. LOCKING heads with Napolitan all game long was Michigan's fifth-year senior inside linebacker, Tim Ander- son. "It was worse than anything you can imagine. Right ,now I'm pretty depressed," said Anderson, who went to Ann Arbor Pioneer high school. "We'd (the seniors) like to go out on a high note, go out with a bang. We'd like to go out with bragging rights of the state," concluded Anderson. In Anderson's first four years as a Wolverine, Michigan had handled the Spartans with ease, especially in last year's 42-0 annihilation in East Lan- sing. But in 1984, it was not to be. MICHIGAN received the opening kickoff, but the offense stalled after picking up one first down. Monte Rob- bins punted 41 yards and MSU made a fair catch to start its opening drive at its own 15-yard line. The Spartans promptly marched 85 yards on 14 plays in 6:45, scoring on a one-yard dive by tailback Carl Butler. ,Quarterback Dave Yarema accounted for 65 pf those yards, completing all five of his passes in the drive. In that streak, Yarema completed three third down passes - two to reserve tight end Veno Belk and one to tailback Bobby Morse. "We know it's important to get out of the blocks fast," said Morse, a sophomore from Muskegon. "Our goal was to score first, and we did." RALF Mojsiejenko nailed the extra point and MSU was out of the blocks with a 7-0 lead. Neither the Wolverines nor the Spar- tans could get anything going on their next - possessions, trading punts. Following its third possession in which it failed to sustain'a drive, Michigan went once again to punt formation. Robbins booted a high, 44-yard punt, which tailback Morse fielded at the Spartan 13-yard line. Morse' easily eluded Michigan's Eric Kattus and took off toward the Spartan sideline, along which he raced unmolested for a touch- down. The 87-yard jaunt stunned the Wolverines and put the Spartans in command at 13-0. Mojsiejenko missed the extra-point attempt. "THAT I don't accept," said a displeased Bo Sdhembechler about the punt return. "That's one thing I won't be a nice guy about. That's just terrible." "We had a return left on," said Morse about the play which was returned up" the left side by design. "At the 40-yard line I saw (Brad) Cochran, but there was no way I was going to let him get me after running that far." Mojsiejenko's ensuing kickoff was downed by Jamie Morris in the en- dzone. But once again the Wolverines were forced to punt after three plays failed to yield a first down. see SPARTANS, Page 8. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB MSU tailback Carl Butler dives over Wolverine defenders Andy Moeller '49), Mike Mallory (42), and Kevin Brooks (52) to score his first quarter touchdown yesterday at Michigan Stadium. Butler's score gavel lead and the Spartans went on to defeat Michigan, 19-7. MSU a 7-0 Voter 's Choice:' A crucial decision for the, U' By LAURIE DELATER The issues surrounding the Voter's Choice proposal on the November ballot boil down to one question: Who should set Michigan's tax levels - the voters or their elected representatives? VOTER'S CHOICE, designated as Proposal C on the ballot, would roll back all state and local taxes and fees to their Dec. 31, 1981 levels. Any future tax increases would have to go. before voters. Voters would also decide on any state fee hikes unless they were first approved by four- fifths of the state's representatives and senators. And non-resident income tax would be limited to one half of one percent. The proposal would also require that ballots describe the tax, how much money it will raise, where the money will be spent, and when the tax ends. The impetus behind the ballot question stems from a growing anti-tax sentiment in Michigan's southeastern communities that last fall led to the recalls of Sen. Phillip Mastin (D- Pontiac) and Sen. David Serotkin (D-Mt. Clemens). Both men voted for a temporary in- come tax increase of 38 percent in 1983. THE PROPOSAL would lower personal in- come taxes from 5.35 to 4.6 percent. Supporters of Voter's Choice, led by a group of 25 tax- payer groups, say the measure would allow voters to decide where their money should be spent and hold legislators accountable for those decisions. But Gov. James Blanchard, former gover- nors, and other opponents of Voter's Choice say the expected $1 billion drop in tax revenue would block the state's road to economic recovery and cancel plans to pay off the state's debt by the end of 1985. But more importantly, they fear the proposal would destroy representative government in this state by taking the responsibility for set- ting tax levels out of the hands of elected of- ficials. THEY SAY voters won't approve tax in- creases to support state programs from which they are often far-removed - especially men- tal and correctional institutions and higher education. And though supporters of Proposal C say voters would make education a spending priority, Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) said higher education, like many social programs, is "out of sight, out of mind" to most voters. In September; the University's Board of Regents overwhelmingly adopted a resolution condemning the measure. The regents asked President Harold Shapiro to spearhead a cam- paign to educate voters about the huge losses in state aid and probable tuition hike the Univer- sity would face if the measure passes. See PROPOSAL, Page 2 M' - - - - - - 'M' glee club, band to perform at World Series By JERRY MUTH Forget Toni- Tenille singing the National Anthem in Dodger Stadium. Or Harry Caray singing "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" in Chicago. gWhen the Detroit Tigers play host to the World Series, the Michigan Men's Glee club and the Michigan Mar- ching Band will be performing for fans. BOTH THE marching band and the glee club have been in- vited to perform in pre-game ceremonies at the upcoming World Series. The glee club will sing the National Anthem in theirs Tiger Stadium debut while the marching band will put on a one-half hour pre-game show as well as play the National Anthem for a nationally televised game. If the Tigers meet the Chicago Cubs in an I-94 World Series showdown, the glee club will perform in game six on Tuesday, October 16. The band, meanwhile, would play Wed- nesday night for game number two. IF, HOWEVER, the Tigers meet the San Diego Padres, then the glee club and the marching band will both perform on Sunday, October 14 in game number five of the series. The opportunity for the glee club to sing in front of a national television audience arose when the club's faculty advisor, Dr. Jim Shortt, talked to Tigers General Manager Jim Campbell. After Campbell pondered the idea, the glee club received official notice Monday that they had been in- vited to per rm. Likewise, the band received their opportunity when Band Director Eric Becher discussed the possibility with Lou Matlin of the Tiger staff. Actually, according to Becher, the band had received an invitation to play at a World Series game last year, but the Tigers never won the division..Near the end of this summer, however, with the Tigers rapidly ap- proaching a pennant, Matlin and Becher talked again about having the band perform in this year's series. NEVER HAS the glee club had such an opportunity as the World Series. The last time the club sang in Michigan Stadium was more than five years, according to Club President John Birchler. For the band, however, big performances have become almost routine. Pasadena's Rose Bowl, New Orleans' Sugar Bowl, and even the Pontiac-hosted Super Bowl are all entries on the band's travel log. For everyone involved with the band and the glee club, the World Series means excitement. Birchler says he was in Shortt's office when the formal invitaton came. Birchler described Shortt, an assistant to University President Harold Shapiro, as "very excited" when the invitaton arrived for the club to sing. See WORLD, Page 3 Purdue students riot after rparty From AP and UPI WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Young people at a pre-game party near the Purdue University campus threw rocks and bottles at police early yesterday and pulled a passing motorist from his car and beat him. Twenty people were arrested and two suffered minor injuries in the three- hour disturbance at a party held before today's Purdue-Ohio State football game, West Lafayette Police Sgt. Robert Brown said. "NOT SINCE 1969 or '70, during the (Vietnam) war," had there been a comparable incident in the town, See PURDUE, Page 2 Fritzbusters Doily Photo by DAN HABIB A member of the College Republicans sells "Fritzbusters" t-shirts at a Reagan rally yesterday in front of the Chi Phi fraternity house on Washtenaw Avenue. I TODAY Fair weather friends views toward the state in which they live. When asked if they feel proud to be from Michigan, 91 percent answered yes. However, given the choice of living anywhere in the United States, about 54 percent of the respondents indicated they would like to pick up and move someplace warmer. One respondent put it this way, "Someplace warm. I don't know where." Flag foul-up about 7 p.m.," Veters said. Veters said he hadn't noticed it himself because he went to work before dark. And because the electrical crew is off for the Columbus Day. weekend, "we probably won't be able to do anything about this until Tuesday," the day after the Columbus Day Parade, Veters said. "It takes about 10 men to put the color transparencies. on the lights and I don't think we're going to call that many men in on the weekend," he said. Another rivalry "I" on their front lawn and decorated their garage door with a *"Scale the Badgers" banner of Chief Illiniwek, the Illini mascot, chasing the University of Wisconsin's Bucky Badger. "That was very different," said Barbara Bauer of Waunakee, Wis., one of the contingent of Badgers fans who arrived Friday. "I was shocked," said Bauer, whose family built the outhouse last year. "We never thought they'd do something like that. Not too many people paint their lawn." Although the idea was good, "ours is better," she said. The friends now plan to go on a Caribbean cruise in February "if they'll let us on a ship together," she said. I i