The Michigan Daily Vol. XCII, No. 22-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, June 4, 1982 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages 'Playgirl'Big Ten search is on By FANNIE WEINSTEIN University males looking for lots of exposure, here is your chance. Playgirl is coming to Ann Arbor. The magazine will be in town from June 7 to 10, seeking both clothed and not so clothed models for its October and November issues, to be titled "Playgirl Comes to the Big Ten." "A HEALTHY guy, in good shape, who has good muscle tones," is how Playgirl's talent coordinator Linda Horwitz described the models the magazine hopes to find. The male must also have good photogenic qualities, she said. In a required interview, prospective models are asked why they want to ap- pear in the magazine, how they feel about posing nude, and how sincere they are. Personality is an important factor, Horwitz said, but "of course, you check them out physically." In the past few years, the magazine has done spreads on both Ivy League and Pac-Ten men. In its quest for Big Ten men, Playgirl has been to Ohio State University and, after coming to Ann Arbor, will move on to the Univer- sity of Wisconsin. ABOUT 200 men, slightly more than expected, turned out for interviews yesterday at OSU, according to Hor- witz. Eight men, who will earn $100 for roughly an hour and a half of work, will be chosen from each college. The men at OSU were extremely en- thusiastic, Horwitz said. "They've gone crazy over here in Columbus. . . They all sort of look at it as a once-in-a- lifetime thing." In addition, the magazine, with its estimated four million readers world- wide, will give those selected for the spread "a lot of exposure," Horwitz said, excusing the pun. THE THREE-woman judging com- mittee, composed of Horwitz, her assistant, and a photographer, has had a lot of trouble picking the winners at OSU, she said. "We can't make any decisions. We have so many good- looking men." Wes Querns, a graduate student at See PLAYGIRL, Page 10 Milliken accused of stalling budget efforts LANSING (UPI)- Senate Democrats blasted the Milliken ad- ministration yesterday for stalling ef- forts to draft a fiscal 1982-83 budget at the same time it pressures lawmakers to pass the spending plan this month. Senate Democratic Leader William Faust of Westland said the Senate would do no further work on the budget until Gov. William Milliken releases revised target figures for ap- propriations bills. "IF THE governor is serious about getting quick action on appropriations bills, he would do well to convey that message to budget experts," Faust said. Faust's statement, issued in conjun- ction with Appropriations Chairman Jerome Hart (D-Saginaw), came as three senators met with Moody's In- vestors Service officials in New York. The Senate, saying it no longer trusts the Milliken administration's statements, sent Democrats Thomas Guastello of St. Clair and David Holmes of Detroit and Republican Harry Gast of St. Joseph to meet with Moody's. THE SENATE is seeking more thorough explanations as to why Moody's dropped Michigan's short term credit rating to the lowest in the nation as well as some guidance on how passage of a budget could be used to improve the state's financial status. Rep. David Hollister, one of three House members who also made the trip, said in a telephone interview the financial service gave indications Michigan would be better off to wait un- til fall-when spending projections were clearer-for final passage of a budget. DailyrPh y oto'fMR HLVI Greek gala These young spectators view folk dancing performed by the St. Nicholas Dancers yesterday during the city's Ya'ssoo Greek Festival. The festivities will continue through tomorrow. Scholars' material returned By SCOTT STUCKAL The technical material seized last month from Chinese scholars who were visiting the University will be returned to them, according to a State Depar- tment official. Customs officials at New York's Kennedy Airport detained the luggage of three scholars, who were returning home to the communist People's Republic of China, under suspicion that sensitive technical information was being taken out of the country. The materials in question came from the University's aerospace engineering department. BUT THE Commerce Department's export division examined the materials and found they were neither sensitive nor classified, said Conrad Bellamy, China desk officer for the State Depar- tment. The materials - which included lecture notes, slides, computer programs, and a disk used to store computer information - have been given to China International Airlines and soon will be returned to the scholars. Government sources have attributed the seizure to an ongoing effort to con- trol the export of sensitive material from universities with random airport checks, said Political Science Prof. Michael Oksenberg, a coordinator for the- University's chinese studies program. The U.S. government recently has cracked down on the activities of foreign scholars at universities throughout the nation. During the past. year, the State Department attempted to restrict the activities of a Chinese exchange student at the University of Minnesota and Soviet scientists at Stan- ford University and the University of Wisconsin. IN FEBRUARY, FBI agents visited the University of Michigan's Engineering-Transportation Library in an attempt to find out what materials a visiting Russian scholar was reading. The three Chinese scholars, Chuan- jun Yan, Shi-jie Yu, and Bo-hu Li, had open access to the University's aerospace materials, all of which are non-classified and available to the public, said Prof. Robert Howe, chair- man of the aerospace department. "What they (custom officials) did ws legal under the law. The return of the material just confirms what we knew all along - that the documents were not sensitive." Howe said.