Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom j:1; b E Litvi4au ~~IaI Hypothermia Clear with a high near 20. Vol. XCV, No. 103 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan- Sunday, February 3, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pges Joubert scores 24; 'M' who mps Wisconsin By JOE EWING Special to the Daily MADISON - When you're on top, everybody guns for you a little harder. But sometimes that still doesn't matter. Cellar-dweller Wisconsin came out looking to upset Big Ten leader Michigan here yesterday but all the ex- tra effort got the Badgers was a 94-81 loss to the Wolverines. It was the eighth consecutive conference loss for Wisconsin, while Michigan won its sixth league game in a row and jumped to 7-2 for a share of the league lead with Iowa. It was the Wolverines' seventh straight win overall, winning two on the road. THE VICTORY capped off a suc- cessful road trip for the Wolvernes, who won at Northwestern, 76-52, on Thursday night. It was the first time in four years that a Michigan squad has swept a series on the road. "It was a big week for us, winning two on the road," said Michigan coach Bill Frieder. "Now we just have to go ' home and hope we can sustain it." "It feels good to win two (road games) in a row," Wolverine center Roy Tarpley, who finished the after- noon with 22 points. "We haven't done that in awhile." ANTOINE Joubert led Michigan with5 24 points, and added four rebounds and five assists. The sophomore from, Detroit hit on 11-of-16 field goal attem- pts, most from the upper left corner of the key, and was 2-2 from the charity stripe. The Wolverines pulled away right from the opening tip-off as they scored the first eight points of the contest,r dominated the boards and took a 50-30 lead into the lockerroom at the half. Wisconsin staged a valiant comeback effort in the second half, but it was already too late. "I thought that we played a real goodf first half," said Frieder. "I thought our offense was good. I know we shot well, and our defense was steady. It kind of set the stage for the rest of the game,f having a 20-point lead." Daily Photo by DAN HABIB See 'M', Page 8 lMichigan center Roy Tarpley is sandwiched by Wisconsin's John Ploss (50) and Jay Laszewski (54) in action from last night's 94-81 Wolverine victory. Tarpley scored 22 points. RETIRING AFTER 34 YEARS Reagan sends budget to Congress From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Reagan sent advance copies of his 1986 budget to an already skeptical Congress yesterday and said his plan - which would cut domestic spending by nearly $40 billion next year-is "the most exhaustive effort ever made to rein in government's chronic overspending." Reagan defended his call for in- creasing defense spending even while cutting or eliminating many popular domestic programs. "EVERY proposal is based on a careful review of what government should and should not do, what's worked and what hasn't, what we can and can no longer afford," he said of his $974 billion plan. Meanwhile under the proposed budget, defense spending would grow by nearly $30 billion. Majority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas and Sen. Pete Domenici of New Mexico met with Budget Director David Stockman, who expressed optimism that the bulk of the president's proposals would be accepted. "The initial reading is that a great majority of the freezes and cuts that we have in, the budget will be acceptable," Stockman said. "THERE ARE some problem areas," he added. "I'm not going to list them . . . We're aware of defense." Domenici agreed there were some problem areas and repeated his position that it would be "very, very difficult" for Senate Republicans to reach their target of cutting the federal deficit by $50 billion in fiscal 1986 "with the defense outlays that are proposed in the president's budget." However, the Budget Committee chairman also issued a stern warning to fellow lawmakers and others who feel that cuts in defense may allow domestic programs to escape without' serious reductions. "For those who think we're going to bail this budget out and all its problems on the back of defense - they're mistaken," Domenici said. "We're going to have to get substan- tial savings, but this budget points out. . . that you can't get where you have to go by just attacking defense spending." The president's budget was due out formally tomorrow, and copies of the plan were distributed to Congress and to reporters on Saturday with the un- derstanding that the material not be made public until 1:30 p.. EST Monday. Even so, most budget details - ranging froma wage cut for federal workers to reductions in mass transit aid - were leaked well in advance. And Friday night, some reporters obtained access to an administration summary. 'Coach' devoted life By LAURA BISCHOFF The University community is losing a coach today. But this coach doesn't head up the football, basket- ball or hockey teams. And it won't be the University star athletes who miss him. RATHER, Luther Buchele, a self-proclaimed "coach," will retire this month after serving 34 years as the executive secretary of the Inter-Co-operative Profile Council, (ICC), the governing body of the co- operatives on campus. Co-op members will hold a retirement party to honor him this afternoon. By strategy and inspiration, Buchele, 64, expanded the five-house, 170 member co-op system on campus to the 23-house, 512-member organization it is today. He developed bookkeeping systems, led training sessions, sat through "hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of meetings," and oversaw the general financial end of co-ops. More importantly, he made sure he kept his hands off the day-to-day operation of the primarily studen- t-run co-ops. "Luther doesn't do something for someone else," said John Hopper, vice president of the ICC for two years. "That's how he survived . You can't get caught up in everything. Instead he tries to inspire." "(I am) sort of like a coach in this position," said Buchele, enthusiastically waving his hands and wearing an earnest grin. 'I throw out the ball and let the players play. If they drop the ball, I throw it back in but you don't get into the game." LIKE ANY good coach, he knows the "game" for- ward and backward and is fiercely loyal to the values it represents. Buchele, who will celebrate his 65th birthday in March, grew up on a farm in Kansas during the Great Depression. To save money, his parents belonged to about 10 farming co-ops, buying fertilizer and feed at cheaper bulk rates and selling products with a group of other farmers to reduce competition. "CO-OPS FOR farmers were a part of growing up, so naturally I was interested in the (student housing) co-ops," he added. Buchele lived in a student housing co-op while he was a student at the University of Kansas in Lawren- ce. After undergraduate study, and at the onset of World War II, he entered the masters program in micro-biology. Partial deafness in one ear barred Buchele from the draft. But he was required to work on a team of military scientists who were researching germ war- fare. He tested the effectiveness and means of ap- plication of using a particular bacterium for a weapon of war. "I WAS APPALLED by it," Buchele said vehemen- tly. His co-workers, he said, "weren't very caring, they were almost wooden." to co-ops As a result, Buchele grew disillusioned with scien- tists and scientific research. He decided to toss aside a career in micro-biology in favor of working the student co-ops. In 1946, he helped found the North American Students Co-operative League and from 1949-51 ser- ved as executive secretary, the top position. The league to this day acts as a network of housing, food, co-ops and credit unions. IN SEPTEMBER of 1951, he moved from Kansas to Ann Arbor, guiding the University's small co-op system through 30 years of economic and political upheaval. And always, he has remained a constant figure to the transient co-op population, whose at- titudes are continually changing. "For 20 years he did everything and set up many of the systems that we use," said Margaret Goldstein, president of ICC. Though he has served in that capacity for so long, Goldstein said Buchele is still "a lot of fun ... young at heart." Membership in the co-ops here was scant when Buchele arrived - the Korean War draft had robbed the campus of its male students. SEVERAL houses closed during World War II and the Korean War due to a lack of organization, publicity, and, of course, members, Buchele said. He called the war years a "very demoralizing time. It was demoralizing in more than one way. See BUCHELE, Page 3 Daily Photo by MATT PETRIE Luther Buchele, "coach" of the Inter-Co-operative Council for 34 years retires today. Under his leadership the co-op system grew from 5 houses in 1951 to 23. TODAY- unxsutawney Phil is just a groundhog 364 days of the year. But at daybreak Saturday, he enthralled P hundreds of spectators as he spotted his shadow and sentenced the crowd to six more weeks of winter. "At 30, you can't believe in Santa Claus, but you can believe in P11nc,--n- hil" ca mia ,er nPen l-, de,,_ The crowd went wild, chanting "We want Phil" and snap- ping pictures. Dunkel held Phil close to the ears of James Means, president of the Groundhog Club and reportedly and only human who can understand the furry forecaster. "Punxsutawney Phil declares there will be six more weeks of winter," Means proclaimed as the crowd booed. Although Phil appears to be America's premier groundhog, similar rituals were held elsewhere in the country, with somes results at odds with Phil's forecast. North of the bor- der, Canada's grand old weather forecaster, Wiarton Willie of Ontario, saw no shadow and decided it will be an early spring. In Chicago it was so cold outside that not even a American client has been fired for "obscene conduct." The t worker, who was not identified, had scribbled drawings of male and female parts on the glass. The management of Cristalerias Espanolas, tracked down the culprit after receiving a complaint from the American client. The disgruntled U.S. company, which was not identified, sent photographs of the misdeed to back up its charge. A glassworkers spokesman said the factory would call a strike for next week to demand the worker's readmission. He said the dismissal was "totally out of proportion to the fault committed." It truck on the Pomono Freeway about 50 miles east of down- town Los Angeles, officials said. "We don't know whether the Caltrans truck was stationary or moving, but about 15 cattle spilled onto the highway and they had to be rounded up nd put in portable corrals," one official said. The ac- cf&pt backed up traffic for miles, and left one driver with minor injuries. On the inside*.* .i i i I