LABO R See editorial page ERvIE 6 III uI CLOUDY See Today for details NineTy Years of Editorial Freedom fi. XC, No. 90 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 20, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Supplement Talking about assault is therapeutic By ALISON HIRSCHEL When Theresa got out of her car last Friday light to walk to a fraternity party down the eet, she was thinking about her safety. In- ad of walking down the middle of the ;treet, as she usually does when she goes out lone at night, Theresa chose the sidewalk of orly-lit Lincoln Street because the road was lippery and driving conditions were bad. Just as she approached the parking lot of he frat, Theresa, a University student, heard omeone running up to her. She turned around nd saw a stranger. Within seconds, he had iumped on her back, put a gloved hand over her mouth, and pushed her to the ground. THE ATTACKER told Teresa (not her real name) he just wanted to "cop a feel," but she said, "After he copped his feel, he didn't leave, so I don't know what he was going to do next." Before he had a chance to rape her, four people appropached the sidewalk and managed to frighten him away. According to Sargent William Canada of the Ann Arbor Police Department, Theresa's case is not unusual. "We've had assaults in that area before," he said. In fact, a police spokesman reported there was another at- tempted rape on Pinecrest Jan. 14, and an at- tempted abduction behind the Dental School Jan. 15. Police say they see no connection between the three cases.. Although Theresa was not raped, she received two hard blows to the head. Canada was not surprised. "He (the attacker) has to make her shut up somehow and put the fear of God in her," he said. "He either scares the hell out of her or he slugs her." THERESA SAID her biggest struggle was deciding whether or not to fight back. "I though 'do I let him do what he wants to do and get it over with fast, or do I fight back,"' she recalled. Because she believed it was only a matter of time before someone found her, she started to scream. Theresa said she does not think the wanted to hurt her. "Rapists a passionate people too, believe it ori said. "He only hit me because I cooperate." Although Theresa had decided to only until he hurt her, she said she c to fight back instinctively even aft her. A VARIETY of thoughts ran Theresa's mind. First she wasi because she thought her fur coat wou ty when she got up, and her hair wa for victiM Then, when the attacker managed to slip his attacker hand under her sweater, but still on top on her ire com- turtleneck, she remembers thinking, "This not," she bimbo doesn't know the difference between wouldn't skin and a sweater." struggle Theresa said she was revolted by the continued pleasure the assailant seemed to be getting by er he hit touching her. "He was really excited about sticking his hand down my shirt," she said. "I thought, 'I cannot believe someone is getting through off from this, after hitting me. indignant She tried all sorts of tactics to stall for time. uld be dir- "I told him there were people waiting for is ruined. See TALKING, Page 2 W U (peakers address I' Iran sends troops to Afghan frontier issues abor By BETH PERSKY and JULIE SELBST Working conditions have improved dramatically, but ;much remains to be done in the area of national labor relations, so said Lynn Williams, Inter- :national Secretary of the United Steelworkers of America, yesterday morning at the Michigan Theatre. Williams spoke at the morning nary of the national labor conferen- held in Ann Arbor this weekend. The conference, which opened Friday evening with speaker Michael Harrington of the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee, included evening, mprning, and afternoon plenaries, and a series of discussion workshops. - WILLIAMS CALLED the National Labor Relations Act a "law that seems esigned to keep a union out of J. P. %evens," and went on to say that he thought organized labor would be better off without it. The past, the present, and the future of the American labor movement were the issues addressed at the closing session of the conference. University and Regional Planning Student Jemadari Kamara criticized American society - as well as the climate and cooperation of the Univer- qty. 4THE CORPORATE state has emerged as the dominant force - not only economically but politically as well," and is "in alliance with major in- stitutions such as the University," Kamara said. He cited the University's investments in South Africa as an example of cor- porate dominance. "The University invests over $50 million in companies doing business in j uth Africa," said Kamara. "We are ontinuing to prop up one of the most racist regimes in the world." THE REPRESSION of labor, he ad- ded, extends into this country and even into the University, where Graduate Student Assistants in the Literary See SPECIALISTS, Page 3 f Ug E NW , , e ' r.:..m .... Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY MICHIGAN'S MIKE McGEE (40) sinks two of his 23 game points as the Wolverines upended number-two ranked Ohio State 75-74. The game might be the biggest college basketball upset of the year. Wolverine Thad Garner (45) watches from above as Ohio State's Carter Scott grabs the ball and prepares to inbound it. Garner played one of his best games of the year, scoring 19 points and pulling down 7 rebounds. Nuts to the Bucks; By AP and UPI Iran has moved reinforcements to its border with Afghanistan for fear of Soviet intervention, Weste"rz diplomatic sources in Kabul said yesterday.' "We are very worried and very alarmed over the presence of Soviet tanks some kilometers from our border with Afghanistan," Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh told the French newspaper Le Figaro. AT THE SAME time, American correspondents departed from Afghanistan after being expelled by the Moscow-backed government in Kabul, which accused them of unfair reporting and meadling in the nation's internal affairs. More than a dozen print reporters, cameramen and radio-television correspondents flew from Kabul to New Delhi aboard a regulargly scheduled commercial flight. The journalists arriving in India said other American reporters took an earlier Afghan flight to West Germany and that still others were allowed to travel by land to Pakistan. There were believed to be between 50 and 60 American journalists in Kabul before the explusion order. THE EXPULSION order did not ap- ply to other Western correspondents, including non-Americans working for U.S. news organizations, according to American sources. Before the American press corps was deported yesterday, one source in Kabul told UPI correspondent William Holstein, "The Iranians must have got- ten a case of nerve because they're on alert over there." Western diplomats in the Afghan capital earlier this week reported that the Soviet Union's 66th motorized rifle division and a second unidentified division had moved toward the Iranian border. As many as 20,000 troops may be involved. "WE HAVE TRIED to make the Soviets understand that there can be no question that we would tolerate the oc- cupation of Afghanistan, wich would be a direct threat to us," Ghotbzadeh said. In other developments, Soviet tanks and armored personnel carriers were rolling back into Kabul yesterday and fresh troops were being ferried into the Afghan capital by air from the Soviet Union. In Washington, Defense Department officials said thousands of Afghan army troops have defected to the side of the Moslem Afghan rebels, who have been fighting what they call a holy war against a succession of three Marxist governments for the past 20 months and against Soviet occupation troops for the past 3% weeks. "THE SOVIETS have their hands Iranian militants blame U.S. 'Satans' for election unrest, full," one U.S. defense analyst said. U.S. reports have estimated Russian casualties at more than 1,000 killed or wounded. United News of India had reported Friday that some 900 Chinese had "in- filtrated" Badakhshan, where some of the heaviest fighting has been reported since the Soviets sent 100,000 troops into Afghanistan and helped install a new government Dec. 27. China said yesterday it was breaking off talks designed to normalize Chinese- Soviet relations. A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said the decision stemmed from the Soviet action in Afghanistan. The talks, which began Oct. 30, had been expected to resume early this year in Peking. Mich igan wins, 75m 74 By DAVE JOHNSON - In what must be the biggest upset of the Big Ten season, Michigan upended second-ranked Ohio State 75-74 in overtime yesterday, before a sellout crowd o' 13,609 at Crisler Arena. Junior forward Mike McGee again led all Wolvwrine scorers for the 12th time in 1F games with 23 points. However. it was senior guard Mark Lozier' free throw with eight second:3 remaining in overtime which proved to be the difference. THE DEFEAT was the Buckeye's first in conference play, dropping their first-place record to 5-1, a full game ahead of both Purdue and Minnesota. It also snapped Ohio State's seven-game winning streak. For Michigan, however, the upset victory was a much-needed shot in the arm after dropping three suc- cessive road games to Indiana, Pur- due and Illinois. At 3-3 in the Big Ten and 10-5 overall, the Wolverines remain in fourth place and very See BLUE, Page 9 By UPI and AP Islamic militants holding 50 hostages in the U.S. Embassy accused "the great Satan, the blood-sucking America" yesterday of fomenting unrest across Iran in order to disrupt the Jan. 25 presidential elections. Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said Iran may provide aid to anti- g overnment rebels in Afghanistan if Soviet troops are not soon withdrawn from that neighboring country. ASKED ABOUT the hostages, who spent their 77th day in captivity, Ghot- bzadeh insisted the deposed shah of Iran must be returned for trial. "Unhappily, it is for them (the United States) to make the first move, because it is evident that from the day the hostages leave here, no one will take any further measure to return the dic- tator," he said in an interview with the Paris newspaper Le Figaro. In the riot-torn city of Tabriz, an Islamic revolutionary court arrested 20 air force officers and accused them of plotting against the state, reports said. But a local leader said the unrest in Tabriz was motivated by hunger, not politcs. THERE ALSO were reports of clashes with Kurdish rebels near the Iraqi border. In the frntier town of Paveh, revolutionary guards and members of the Jash'ha workers organization took 50 Kurds prisoner, the West German news agency DPA said. Other reports quoted the Tehran newspaper Kayhan as saying several hundred infiltrators crossed the border from Iraq Thursday night and fought revolutionary guards in the region. Meanwhile, one of four black American ministers in Tehran seeking a "spiritual" solution to the embassy crisis predicted' yesterday the American hostages will be released soon. I ________________________.____________-4- r - - Candidates race toward Iowa caucuses By MICHAEL ARKUSH A Daily News Analysis DES MOINES -George Bush. George Who? NO ONE DARES say that now, but a mere six months ago, his low name recognition in the polls made Harold Stassen look like a presidential heavyweight. Since those dreary frustrating days 'st spring, when he travelled prac- tically alone to meet small and indif- ferent audiences, Bush's campaign has skyrocketed into national prominence. Exploiting his vast experience in foreign affairs and perfecting a dynamic speech style, the 55-year-old millionaire now threatens to dethrone Ronald Reagan as the Republican fron- See BUSH. Page 3 By KEITH RJCHBURG Special to The Daily DES MOINES - Senator Edward Kennedy's Iowa campaign yesterday got a much-needed boost from organized labor, amid signs that his uphill struggle for the Democratic presidential nomination may suffer a serious setback in tomorrow's voting here. United Auto Workers (UAW) President Douglas Fraser, who for- mally endorsed Kennedy last Tuesday, campaigned to UAW members at union locals in four Iowa cities. , In Washington, D.C., the leaders of 17 major American labor unions announ- ced the formation of a Kennedy for President National Labor Committee. See LABOR, Page 3 By AMY SALTZMAN Special to the Daily DES MOINES-Former California Governor Ronald Reagan, in a final at- tempt to boost what some Republican observers have called a faltering cam- paign, staged a sparkling red, white and blue rally last night in America's heartland. Before an overflowing crowd of some 1500 at the Adventureland Amusement Park, Reagan delivered a last show of force before Monday's caucus. REAGAN HAS consistently kept a lower profile in Iowa than other GOP presidential hopefuls. Including three appearances in the state yesterday, Reagan has campaigned less than 40 hours in Iowa. Since Reagan's decision not to par- ticipate in the Jan: 5 Republican debate in Des Moines, public opinion polls show his once-overwhelming lead slip- ping. Privately, some Reagan supporters here are saying they fear a victory for former CIA director George Bush. LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR Terry Branstad, a staunch Reagan supporter, said he thought Reagan "had turned it around in the last three weeks" Last night Reagan gave his standard hardline Republican pitch calling for drastic slashing of federal taxes and cutbacks in government regulations. "Too few goods are the result of punitive tax policies, which destroy in- centive, plus tens of thousands of restrictive and unnecessary regulations " he said. APP hoto CAMPAIGN WORKERS in the Iowa headquarters for California Gov. Jerry Brown continue to seek support for the candidate's Democratic presidential nomination bid in tomorrow's Iowa caucuses. I I T for the race," said Snowman Trot coordinator Warren Guillet, "although it happens to run by about six bars." The five watering holes which were part of the course were Rick's American Cafe, The Count of Antipasto, Good Time Charley's, The Brown Jug and Bicycle Jim's But although some participants may have managed to stop at those spots and still get to the finish line, many of the most satisfied competitors probably were those who never finished the race. - Qi Super screen Both loyal Pittsburgh Steeler and L.A. Ram fans may vention this summer. Michigan Bell requested the Public Service Commission consider the rates as "interim," allowing them to be collected until permanent charges are decided. Bell has claimed that it needs the rates approved as soon as possible, because customers are asking about con- vention service. If the PSC scraps the Bell request and sets lower rates, the customers will get the difference back. Although Michigan Bell normally charges business customers $56 to install a phone, it has estimated that at least $3 million would be required to establish the conven- tion's telephone network, which would be as large as that of a small city. Republican Party heads are vigorously I Deng is presently a physicist at Peking University. "He ap- plied several months ago, and we had no idea of his family's connections," Physics Department Chairman Harry Gove said. "His credentials looked good, and he was accepted. I'm delighted that he's coming. This is bound to be good for the university." On the inside An analysis of the presidential caucus in Iowa on the editorial page . . . an interview with science fiction writer Joe Haldeman on the arts page .. . and see Page 9 for ~------~--.'.... Cl } f t'4 s i , i