Ninety-five Years Of Editorial Freedom C I be Lit an i1Itii1 Cabarnet Chance of morning showers and partly cloudy in the afternoon. Highs in the mid sixties. XCV, No.46 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, October 28, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Blue jolts Illini in Bo's revenge Turnovers key in 26-18 victory By KATIE BLACKWELL Right off the bat, Jack Trudeau knew he was in for a long, long day. On the first play of yesterday's Michigan-Illinois game, Trudeau watched his pass bounce off Wolverine Kevin Brooks and into the waiting hands of linebacker Rodney Lyles at the Illinois 13-yard line. IT WAS JUST the break Michigan needed to get back on track in conference play. The 104,916 Wolverine watchers in attendance were treated to a 26-18 victory over a respected Illinois squad. "I thought I had the tight end," said Trudeau of his first of three interceptions," "but a guy tipped it and what are you going to do. It was indication of how things were going today." For the Wolverines, the "things" were going in the right direction. They capitalized on four Illini turnovers (3 inter- ceptions, one fumble) while committing none of the dreaded errors themselves. That usually spells success for the stingy team. "OUR DEFENSE really didn't shut them down, but slowed them down and forced turnovers," said Bo Schembechler. "If we don't turn the ball over, we are a hard team to beat." Quarterback Chris Zurbrugg, though shaky in the passing department, completing only five of 14, managed to steer clear of interceptions and fumbles. Instead of risking Illini steals by going to the air, Schembechler had Zurbrugg con- centrate on the ground game, using the option successfully for the first time this year. "We used the option more this game," said Schembechler "Some people think the option is conservative, but it opened up the game for us. Having Zurbrugg in there allows us to do some different things including the option." THE OPTION sparked the Michigan offense right from the start. After Lyles' interception, the Wolverines scored less than a minute into the contest. Following an excellent fake to fullback Eddie Garrett, Zurbrugg pitched to tailback Rick Rogers at the two-yard line and it was a tight footrace with Illinois linebacker Sam Ellsworth. But Rogers, who finished the day with 93 yards, held on and crossed the corner of the endzone, putting Michigan on top, 7-0, with the extra point kick. THERE WAS NO doubt in anyone's mind that Michigan needed to light up the scoreboard first. It was icing on the cake to do so with an exciting interception so early in the game. "It (the interception) was very important," said defensive captain Mike Mallory, who hauled in Trudeau's third errant pass. "It got us rolling and really got the crowd jacked. That helped us get into it." Mallory and his defensive teammates continued the in- spired play by holding the explosive Illini offense to a mere field goal on its next possession. Illinois drove to the See WOLVERINES, Page 8 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Michigan holder Todd Schlopy congratulates kicker Bob Bergeron after one of his record-tying four field goals yester- day. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB. Wolverine quarterback Chris Zurbrugg takes off on the option leaving Illinois tackle Steve Nelson behind. Zurbrugg ran for 51 yards on fourteen carries in Michigan's 26-18 victory over the Illini yesterday. Plans ironed out for Students may .0 top educat By GREGORY HUTTON The LSA student government is. breathing much more easily after finally working out plans to bring Dr. Ernest Boyer, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, to campus on Tuesday. Boyer, former U.S. Commisioner of Education, was originally scheduled to speak at 7 p.m. that evening, however the time was changed to 4 p.m. after communication problems between the LSA Student Government (LSA-SG) and Boyer's agent nearly cancelled the ap- pearance altogether. THE UNIVERSITY community has M been looking forward to Boyer's ap- [ )rs's speech pearance for a long time, said LSA-SG coordinator Lisa Philipsborn. Boyer is a respected educator, and his decisions and opinions on education are respec- ted by many in the University, she said. According to Eric Berman, LSA-SG president, agent Gary Much of The Greater Talent Network of New York asked that the speech be changed to 4 p.m. so Boyer could make a scheduled airline flight. The LSA-SG refused, and assumed the original time would still be valid due to a contract signed between the LSA-SG and the Talent Network. However the Network thought the event had been rescheduled and did not See BOYER, Page 3 ask 'U' to, stock suicide pills ON r0 Wayne Christensen / DAILY Clocks should be set back one hour today to mark the end of Daylight Savings Time.. By NANCY DOLINKO The Brown University students who two weeks ago led their student body in asking the school to stockpile cyanide pills will announce tomorrow a list of at least fourteen other schools where similar propositions may be in- troduced, including the University of Michigan. "Brown is right," said Michigan organizer Karen Mislewick, an LSA senior. "We believe, like Brown studen- ts, that nuclear war is suicide." The Brown proposal asked the university's health service to issue cyanide to students in the event of a nuclear war. MISLEWICK said students organizing a suicide pills campaign here plan to pay for Jason Salzman, the Brown student who helped lead the campaign there, to fly to Ann Arbor on Nov. 8 and speak to an English class. Although the campaign is getting un- derway slowly, it is gaining momentum elsewhere. At the University of Colorado students will vote Tuesday and Wednesday on a proposal similar to the one passed at Brown. Friday organizers of the national Students Against Nuclear Suicide movement hope there will be rallies on several campuses in support of the stockpiling of cyanide. "PROMOTION is ready and press releases are going out," said John Weissman, a campus organizer at Nor- thwestern University and writer for The Daily Northwestern. He said the group there tried unsuccessfully to get well-known speakers like Rev. Jesse Jackson to appear at the Friday rally. "Northwestern is a very staid, con- tent community," Weissman said. "Something has to inject en- couragement. . . We've done all that we can, but now it's up to the students to get up off their rears." The students at Brown are working hard to promote their idea on other campuses. They are offering help to organizers both at Brown and See MOVE, Page 2 Oooooh, that's scary Halloween happenings start early as University students await the annual costume contest and dance at East Quad last night. See story, page 3 TODAY Six pack finalists ES, THAT WAS A six pack of generic beer cans you saw running through the Arboretum yesterday. That's right, chasing Playboy Bunnies, Cyndi Lauper look-a-likes, and several men dressed as women. All were participating in the Halloween Fun Run, cial success, but was struck by the large number of men who ran dressed as women. The race began at Mary Markley dormitory, wound through the Arb, and ended back at the dorm. For the birds THE JUDGE'S first inclination was to let the uninvited tenants stay in a federal building. But in a matter of weeks, their behavior so annoyed him that he or- dered them evicted without notice. He could do that without bringing charges of judicial abuse because it was a case of emanated from behind the walls. "It was distracting," said Moore. "So I asked the GSA to evict them." GSA workers squeezed into a crawl space this week, and shooed the pigeons. The feathered pests took flight right out the win- dow. Cash calls JAY ROCKEFELLER, the wealthy governor of West Virginia, has been flooded with telephone calls from constituents asking for a "fair share" of his Senate cam- paign war chest. The requests are a result of an editorial in the Becklev Post-Herald. which urged voters to become and called the editorial"the most despicable thing I have ever seen in campaign journalism." The office received about 100 telephone calls within a day concerning the editorial, the spokesman said. Rockefeller faces Republican John Raese in the Nov. 6 election for the Senate seat being vacated by Democrat Jenning Randolph. Cam- paign financial reports show Rockefeller has spent about $9.28 million so far, about 12 times more than Raese. Post- Herald Editor Walter Massey, who wrote the editorial, said citizens who have a rich governor deserve to cash in on the campaign process. "We've got to get the right focus on this thing," Massey said. "Jay is wealthy and is spending millnne ofdi me T 1 aPQc i[7[Yi, n +},n nnrnln %x1l... .. T.,n r i i i