cl ble M iri au Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom 1Bai1Q Elk Vol. XCVII - No. 53 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, November 17, 1986 Twelve Pages Minnesota bumbling nips Blue By MARK BOROWSKY Christmas is more than a month away, but the Michigan Wolverines did some early gift giving. Three Michigan turnovers led to 17 Minnesota points as the Golden Gophers shocked the second-ranked Wolverines Saturday, 20-17, at Michigan Stadium. Chip Lohmiller's 30-yard field goal as time expired gave Minnesota (5-2 in the Big Ten, 6-4 overall) the win. "We haven't been a turnover team; we haven't made these mistakes in the past," said Mich- igan head coach Bo Schembechler, who saw that charity does indeed begin at home. "Today we just made one mistake after another. I can't believe they would play like that, but they did." FEW OF the 104,864 fans who saw the game could believe it, either, as Michigan's hope of a national title dissipated as Loh- miller's kick sailed through the goalposts. "This was the biggest kick I've made in my career," Lohmiller said. "I was a little nervous but I had to try block out everything." Unfortunately, Michigan quarter- back Jim Harbaugh was apparently nervous and/or distracted. The senior from Kalamazoo didn't pick up any Heisman votes by being Last-second kick lifts Gophers, 20-1 7 intercepted once and losing one fumble. The third-quarter inter- ception, as Gopher cornerback Matt Martinez stepped in front of Thomas Wilcher at the Michigan 36, was especially costly. It re- sulted in a Rickey Foggie five-yard touchdown run four plays later. "The bottom line is the turnovers and I made two of them," Harbaugh said after Michigan suffered its first loss in ten games this year. "You can't play when you're quarterback is turning the ball over like that." SUCH HOSPITALITY didn't bother Minnesota's John Gutekunst. The first-year head coach led Minnesota to its first win over Michigan since 1977, and in doing so, put itself in contention for a bowl bid. "We got our points on their mistakes, we got the turnovers and field position," he said. "Our kicking game put them in bad field position." - Expected to easily give Schem - bechler the all-time record for most wins at Michigan, the Wolverines were 23-point favorites. But Mich- igan was largely uneffective mov- ing the ball, and Minnesota's opportunistic offense, led by junior quarterback Foggie, outgained Michigan rushing 227 to 134, and controlled the ball 31:04 to Michigan's 28:56. Foggie led Minnesota in rushing with 78 yards and a touchdown, while throwing another. THE FOG descended permanently upon Michigan Sta- dium when he scrambled with less than a minute left to the Michigan 17 to set up Lohmiller's heroics. Unable to find an open receiver downfield on third and five, Foggie scrambled to his right into a huge hole for 31 yards. "I don't know how there was such a big gap there..." said senior linebacker Andy Moeller. "Whether we stayed back a little bit too much, I don't know. I don't know how he got out like that." The Wolverines had tied the See BLUE'S, Page 11 Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh coughs up the football as he gets sacked in the second quarter of Michigan's shocking 20-17 loss to Minnesota last Saturday. The Golden Gophers took advantage of four Wolverine turnovers and claimed the victory with a last-second field goal. N. Korean Pres. Republican councilmember seeks nomination for mayor reportei From staff and wire reports SEOUL, South Korea - The Defense Ministry, in a broadcast today on state-run radio, said North Korean loudspeakers along the demilitarized zone were saying North Korean President Kim II Sung had been killed in a shooting. The same broadcast said there was no confirmation of the report from North Korean radio broadcasts or sources here in the capital of South Korea. PPOLITICAL Science Prof.' Kenneth Lieberthal said that hostilities could develop between North and South Korea if the South Koreans were responsible for the reported killing. "On the negative side, we don't killed know who is responsible. The South Korean government is not a stable government, as it is in the midst of an ongoing succession crisis. There is certainly, now, instability in the North, and potential instability in the South," Lieberthal said. He added,"War on the Korean Peninsula would be a nightmare that no one wants to see realized. This could be one of the most .dangerous international events in a number of years." SOUTH KOREAN police officials announced that the entire national police force had- been placed on full alert "in connection with the recent situation in North See N. KOREAN, Page 2 By EVE BECKER Republican city councilmember Gerald Jernigan announced his candidacy for mayor of Ann Arbor on Friday. Local Democrats predicted his victory would be a longshot. Jernigan (R-Fourth Ward) would oppose Democratic incumbent Mayor Ed Pierce in a Republican effort to regain both a council majority and the mayorial seat lost in the 1985 elections. Councilmembers say Jernigan, who describes himself as "moderately conservative," will probably receive the Republican nomination. Jernigan, a University investment analyst, said he decided to run for mayor because of the lack of unity under the Deinocrats. "I just don't think Pierce provided any direction," Jernigan said. "We don't have any solid policies. There is not a strong housing policy. The city council isn't united in any way. We haven't defined.the township boundaries. There ar.e land development questions still unanswered." OTHER COUNCILMEMBERS mention Jernigan's experience from his five years on city council, but say he has not been a strong force on See COUNCILMEMBER, Page 2 Jernigan ... runs for mayor Reagan referendum 'defeated at Brown By KELLY McNEIL Students at Brown University last week barely voted down a referendum which proposed to impeach President Reagan. The proposal was defeated 477-458. About 20 percent of students at Brown voted in the election. Brown student John Bonifaz, founder of the group that sponsored the referendum, Students for Ethical Government, remains pleased with the outcome. "In only nine working days we convinced 49 percent of the voters. That is an enormous percentage," he said. Students for Ethical Government gives several reasons why Reagan should be impeached. First, the group says Reagan disobeyed Congressional orders in an attempt to overthrow the Nicaraguan government. Second, the group believes the Reagan Administration's disinformation campaign to mislead-the American media on United States relations with Libya is unconstitutional. FINALLY, the group claims the Reagan administration is hiding critical information about the 1983 Korean Airlines disaster,'and that the plane, which was shot down by the Soviet Union, may have been a spy mission. Bonifaz said he and others in the organization will gather their See REFERENDUM, Page 3 Il-sc boo I students Win national contest By MELISSA GESSNER Four University graduate bus- iness students won a General Foods Corp. contest in New York City this weekend for creating an entire marketing campaign for sugar free Kool-Aid. The students - Phil Martens, Scott Myers, Carol Pettitt, and Jack Ridge - competed against six teams from the nation's top bus- iness schools, including Stanford University, the University of Chicago, Wharton School of Finance, and Columbia University. The first annual competition entailed analyzing a product, formulating an marketing cam- See GRADS, Page 5 Doily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Friars Eric Robinson, center, leads the Friars during the Men's Glee Club concert last Saturday night at Hill Auditorium. Robinson was the soloist in the song "Sometimes Bad is Bad." Busy signal 171 capital and often the national butt of jokes, now have to worry that the television comedy of the same name won't be funny enough. "Fresno," CBS TV's prime- time send-up of soap operas like "Dallas," and "Falcon Crest," premiered last night. "If this show flops, Fresno will be seen as even more of a big dud than it e __ ,," eadFr.. ntiesT Tnnnae "P ..;..nmni. tuxedos to give the city a smarter image. "How would you like to be tied up in a tight tuxedo in 95-degree weather 12 hours a day?" Bernie Wilson, owner of Bernie's Ideal Cab Co., asked last week. Mayor Jim Maloof wants about 60 cabbies at three city taxi com- panies to wear tuxedos while on duty, year-round. The manar of a local formal-woer rntaloutlt a:.o j INSIDE LSA-SG: Opinion proposes overhauling the college's student government. See Page 4. . M IR..a . d:..... ...n.. ...A.au M#.2A 7 ecause the University's new multi-million , I 1 I I