Vol. XCVII - No. 3 Copyright 1986, The Mic M' kick boots Iowa, 20-17 By BARB McQUADE The rivalry is quickly becoming a classic, but for Iowa, Saturday's clash with Michigan read like a tragedy. Mike Gillette's last-second field goal gave the Wolverines (6-0, 3-0 in the Big Ten) a 20-17 victory Saturday at Michigan Stadium. Many of the 105,879 fans stormed the field as soon as the 34-yard kick sailed through the goalposts. "I SAW the game winner and that's the last thing I saw," Gillette said. "When they mobbed the field I thought I wouldn't live to enjoy it." The game's plot was eerily similar to last year's contest. Iowa place-kicker Rob Houghtlin hit a 29- yarder in 1985 with no time left to defeat Michigan, 12-10, in Iowa City. "We were denied last year and that's the worst feeling in the world," said Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh, who passed for 225 yards Saturday. "You've got to watch those game films for a year and not go to Pasadena." IOWA HEAD coach Hayden Fry saw parallels to 1983, the year Michigan beat the Hawkeyes 16-13 with another last-second field goal -- Bob Bergeron's 45- yarder. "It was very similar to that, (and) similar to IE LI tgaU Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom ? Iati1 chigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, October 20, 1986 Ten Pages } 1 what we did to Michigan in our place. It's what Bo said, 'We're even now.' My congratulations to Michigan." Wolverine head coach Bo Schembechler was happy to take the kudos. "Iowa's got such a great program that it's becoming a big game, and it always means so much," he said. "This is the second straight time we've played them when we're both 5-0." THE WOLVERINES almost put a notch in their loss column themselves instead due to a poor first half Saturday. Harbaugh committed three of the game's seven turnovers in the second quarter, fumbling twice and tossing an interception, one of two he threw on the day. Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler was obviously displeased with his team's first half execution. "I thought we played very poorly in the first half and we very were fortunate to go in 10-3 at the half," the 18-year head ,coach said. "It was almost like we didn't practice last week." See FINAL, page 10 Reports tie crash to CIA WASHINGTON (AP)-Documents found on an American-manned cargo plane shot down over Nicaragua two weeks ago suggest an extensive supply network for the Contra rebels that involved a variety of planes, a pilot who also flew in U.S. military bases, and possibly even combat support operations. The documents tie the supply network closely to Southern Air Transport of Miami, a company once owned by the Central Intelligence Agency. Wallace Blaine Sawyer, a pilot killed on the flight, had worked for Southern Air but quit in 1985. Sawyer's flight crew logs, however, show him flying two Southern Air planes last February. One flight went to El Salvador's Ilopongo military airport, which has been identified as the center of the Contra supply network. Southern Air spokesman William Kress refused to comment on why Sawyer flew Southern Air planes if he no longer worked for the company. According to the Defense Department, Southern Air became a major private contractor for flying U.S. military supplies beginning in 1983, with contracts in the new fiscal year expected to reach $42 million. The CIA sold Southern Air in the early 1970s. After Congress cut off covert CIA aid to the Contras in 1984, a private aid network of Americans, many with longstanding ties to the U.S. government, emerged to raise funds and provide other assistance to the rebels fighting to overthrow Nicaragua's Sandinista government. Reagan administration officials, American Contra backers, and rebel leaders have said the White House, using outside intermediaries, managed the network that kept the rebels supplied while President Reagan pushed Congress to renew military aid. The sources, who insisted on anonymity, said Lt. Col. Oliver North, a deputy director for political military affairs on the National Security Council staff, had overall responsibility for the operations. His chief intermediaries were identified as retired Maj. Gen. John Singlwaub and conservative activist Robert Owen. The White House has denied that North's actions violated the congressional ban on U.S. government military assistance to the Contras. That ban existed from October 1984 until Saturday, when Reagan signed a catchall spending bill including $100 million in military and other assistance for the Contras. Law library addition. dedicated BY STEVE BLONDER Before an addition to the University's Law School library was completed in 1981, law students seeking law books often found themselves searching through nooks and crannies. But the $9.5 million addition, which was officially dedicated by the Board of Regents last Friday, provided shelving for more than 200,000 law books-50,000-80,000 of which had been "shelved in places where it was not a good idea to put them, such as stairways," according to library Director Margaret Leary. THE ADDITION was officially named the Allan and Alene Smith Law Library. University President Harold Shapiro called it "an essential addition for the educational program of the law school." Law School Dean Terrance Sandalow said, "We at the law school have learned that it is important to bring distinction whenever possible. With the name, we are attempting to bring distinction to the building." The Smith Law Library is a 77,000 square-foot, three-story underground structure, featuring two light wells sheathed in a bronze curtain wall with tinted See REGENTS, Page 5 INSIDE PURSELL: Opinion interviews the Second Dis- trict's congressman. See Page 4. . A77. is.... e..4 m s.maaa.at the Power aiy rnoto by JOHNf' MUI Business student Dean Glossop takes a ride on a friend's shoulders as he celebrates Michigan's 20-17 win over Iowa Saturday. Retirement bill excludes By MARTHA SEVETSON A bill that eliminates mandatory retirement ages for most professions will not affect the University due to a seven-year exemption for tenured faculty members. "With the transition rule which gives us seven years to adjust to this new retirement, I think we will have the opportunity to plan well enough that it won't be a serious problem for us," said Richard Kennedy, vice president for government relations. The bill passed the Senate on Friday and needs President Reagan's signature - to become law. ALTHOUGH he did not specify what steps the University would take, Kennedy indicated that officials would conduct studies to determine the possible effects of the legislation. . During the seven-year exemption period, the current mandatory retirement age of 70 will remain in effect for University professors. According to Thomas Butts, the University's Washington lobbyist, a study will be conducted by the National Academy of Sciences to determine whether to actually lift the cap on tenured faculty retirement after the seyen-year period. Charles Allmand, assistant to the provost in charge of personnel relations, said an elimination of the retirement age would not affect the University. The average retirement age of the faculty is 67, so most faculty members retire voluntarily before they reach the mandatory age. "They're retiring earlier rather than later," he said. IN ADDITION, the University asks retired professors to return as emeritus professors on a yearly basis. profs The American Council on Education, which pushed for a 12-year exemption for tenured faculty, said 'lack of a mandatory retirement age could negatively impact colleges and universities. The council argued that they must require retirement to make it possible to hire young teachers. Kennedy agreed, saying, "I think it would create a problem in the kind of turnover you need to have positions for young faculty members, especially in this period when we have so many See PROFESSORS, Page 5 U' President gets $10, 000 pay raise By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN_ Although University President Harold Shapiro is not planning to leave his position, the "golden- handcuffs" and $10,000 pay raise he received on Friday are intended to keep him at the University if he decides to pursue a career in academia. The handcuffs give Shapiro, an economics professor, incentive to remain at the University as president-the longer he stays in his position from this point on, the larger his salary will be if he decides to return to his former profession. FOR EXAMPLE, if Shapiro decides to remain University president for five more years, the University will continue to pay him the presidential salary for five years if he decides to go back to teaching economics. After five years, his salary would be reduced to that of other senior economic professors. Shapiro, who has been president See FACULTY, Page 2 Police crack down on parties By MELISSA BIRKS Ann Arbor police issued approximately 26 code violations to partiers Saturday evening in an effort to curb uncontrolled weekend activities, according to Sgt. John King. In addition, officers wrote about 20 code violations on Friday evening and the Streets and Traffic Department towed more than 20 vehicles Friday and Saturday night, King said. But he said police did not target fraternity houses, which were sent a letter by Ann Arbor Police Chief William Corbett last week asking for their cooperation in keeping parties under control. AN INCREASING number of neighborhood complaints about the high noise level during See POLICE, Page 2 Shapiro ... gets a raise TODAY Philanthropy CI S outh Quad residents showed their generosity recently when they contributed more than $1000 so a about today's college students: how selfish they are, and how they don't care about anyone but themselves.... you certainly proved them wrong... and Myrtle, who has no other living family, feels loved." Red hot On their first day in the United States, some got to play with these real black American jazz mucisians," said David Lapeza, a Slavic lecturer who saw the performance. The Soviet swingers played four tunes with the trio, including "Summertime," from George Gershwin's opera "Porgy and Bess." Lapeza, who translated for the Soviets during their stay in Ann Arbor, said the twm Soiet whn nived belono toia 1 zz oron