Ninety- Two Years Of Editorial Freedom E LIE ian IEIUiQ WARM Partly sunny today-with a high around 600. Vol. XCIl, N o. 28 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 11, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages The crisis of couple abuse. .,' t. Jife 's escape not easy Student problems pile up By KATHLYN HOOVER 'The young woman brushed back her long dark hair and flicked her cigarette as she recalled a painful and distant memory. "I don't remember how it all happened. He hit me in the mouth. I was terrified and I tried to call the police, but he ripped out the phone. Then he went upstairs and mutilated #e other one. "I'M NOT SURE what happened after that. I know he hit me again because I was unconscious for a few minutes. When I came to, I ran to the neighbor's and called the police." No one broke into Rachelle Woods' home and attacked her. Her assailant was her, husband of two years. When the 23-year-old mother arrived at the hospital she had two black eyes, a busted lip and bruises all over her body. "WE BROKE UP after that bad fight and about four weeks later he came over with Christmas presents. I was so lonely and I really missed him. So we decided to1try again. "We wrote out a contract and called it a new beginning," Wood said. "We moved out to the country, where no one could interfere with our lives. But we weren't happy and we both knew it wasn't going to work. I went to SAFE House (a shelter for battered women) once during that time for a weekend. I went back home but then after a while I knew I had to leave. After two months I was back at SAFE House. "I said, 'I'm back,' and they knew all along I would be." WOOD TALKED of how there were more good times than bad with her ex-husband, of See MANY, Page 5 By JULIE HINDS Campus dating - sometimes idealized as carefree romance - has become the subject of research that indicates a startling num- ber of college couples have physical abuse problems. A survey conducted at a Minnesota college reveals that abuse is not limited to the common domestic violence situation. One out of five students reported having been involved in some abusive situation. THE MOST common reasons cited for abuse were jealousy over a third party, disagreements over drinking and disagreements over sex. Additional resear- ch revealed that negative life events - in- cluding academic and family problems - also play major roles in provoking abuse among student couples. Although no statistics are available at the University on the rate of student abuse, of- ficials from the University and local organizations such as the Domestic Violen- ce Project and the Assault Crisis Center say that student abuse is a prevalent, and often unreported, roblem. Figures From the Domestic Violence Project show that five percent of women using the local S.A.F.E. house shelter for abuse victims are students from the Univer- sity, Eastern Michigan University and Washtenaw Community College. But the program's director Stephanie Vail pointed out that these comparatively low figures may be deceptive, since female students can turn to friends in apartments, dorms and sororities, instead of the S.A.F.E. house. See ABUSE, Page 5 Domestic violence has no boundaries. It cuts across race, class and educational levels. Student couples-because of pressures particular to academic and personal situations while in college-can be especially prone to problems of physical abuse. One out of five students recently reported having been involved in an abusive relationship. ; "K Blue surge bombs su, 38-20 Woolfol By MARK MIHANOVIC ' iSpecial to the Daily EAST LANSING - ItwasMichigan's ground game versus Michigan State's aerial attack yesterday. Behind i..,tailback Butch Woolfolk's record- setting rushing performance, the Wolverines prevailed, 38-20, before 77,923 fans at Spartan Stadium. Woolfolk entered the record books J y . 4 early in the second period, when a 12- yard gain off right tackle made him the first back in Michigan history to rush e for more' than 100 yards in seven straight games. He devastated the Spartan defense for a total of 253 yards on 29 carries overall, confirming him- self as a legitimate Heisman Trophy candidate. Gordon Bell was the last. Wolverine to gain 200 yards in a game, with 210 yards in 1975. Woolfolk is now 111 yards away from Rob Lytle's all- 4 time Wolverine mark, S"BUTCH IS going to be the all-time leading ground gainer," Wolverine coach Bo Schembechler said after the game, "so tab him as Michigan's best 4.! back ever." The Wolverines, who were riddled for 316 yards through the air by MSU quar- terback Bryan Clark, in his first start, ' AP Photo and trailed 20-16 until late in the third MIC1 A& ATE UNIVERSITY quarterback Bryan Clark grimaces as the Wolverines' Ben Needham sacks him period, are now 4- on the year and 2- during first-half action in yesterday's game in East Lansing. Michigan's Robert Thompson (99) looks on. in Big Ten play. They trail Wisconsin (3-0 after a 24-21 win over Ohio State) gains 2 and Iowa (which outscored Indiana, 42- 28, to advance to 2-0) in the Big Ten. With today's victory, Wisconsin has completed a sweep of traditional con- ference contenders Michigan, Purdue and Ohio State. Iowa travels to Ann Ar- bor for a showdown with the Wolverines next Saturday. MICHIGAN STATE implemented a ball-control type of passing game, with Clark (21 for 38) throwing short passes in front of a hesitant, injury-riddled Wolverine secondary to keep the Spar- tans close. Neither cornerback Brian Carpenter nor safety Keith Bostic were able to play at all yesterday, and in- juries to Marion Body, Evan Cooper, and Jeff Reeves during the course of the game forced the Michigan coaches to use several different combinations. Defensive tackle Winfred Carraway's sprained ankle kept him out of action. "I was a little worried," Schembechler said. "We are hurting a little defen- sively. We started this game with three starters from the Rose Bowl defense - then (Marion) Body got jarred, and then (Evan) Cooper got hurt. "We are down, but we'll be alright," Schembechler continued. "Don't feel sorry for us. I'm just surprised we did as well as we did with the defense the way it was. Let's give that kid (Clark) some credit. He had some right on the 53 yards money." TWO FIELD goals by Spartan kicker Morten Andersen, one a 26-yarder with five seconds remaining in the first half, and the other a 31-yarder early in the third quarter gave MSU its 20-16 lead. With six-and-a-half minutes remaining in the third quarter, however, the Wolverines launched an 83-yard scoring drive and took control of the ballgame. Two Woolfolk runs net- ted the Wolverines 27 yards, and then, after an illegal procedure penalty and a Steve Smith incompletion, the senior tailback zipped around left end for 20 more to the Spartan 41. Seven-yard runs by Smith and fullback Stanley Edwards, sandwiched around a crucial fourth-and-five pass from Smith to tight end Craig Dunaway on the right sideline, set up Lawrence Ricks' three-yard touchdown plunge. SCHEMBECHLER NEVER hesitated in his decision to gamble on fourth down from the Michigan State 23. "I felt I needed to score," he said. "Our offense moved the ball well. The only times we got stopped, we stopped ourselves." After the touchdown, Michigan was successful on a two-point conversion when Smith handed off to Anthony Car- ter around right end and drifted left into See MICHIGAN, Page 10 Egypt, world leaders bury Sadat t 4r\ CAIRO, Egypt (AP)- Egypt buried its fallen leader An- war Sadat yesterday to the homage of world leaders, the comforting words of the Moslem holy book and the sorrowful fury of thousands of ordinary Egyptians kept from bidding a final farewell. At one point during the stately ceremony, gunfire briefly clattered as police had to drive back a surging crowd trying to reach the burial site. THE ASSASSINATED president was laid to rest at Egypt's tomb of the unknown soldier, on the desert outskirts of Cairo, beneath a black monolith memorializing him as a "hero of war and peace." But his Arab enemies, who saw treachery in Sadat's- separate peace withIsrael, rejoiced. "The traitor is buried forever!" proclaimed Syrian state radio. THREE FORMER U.S. presidents and dozens of other world leaders paid final tribute to Sadat and then flew home, leaving behind an Egypt stunned by its loss, anxious over the future and seething with unrest among Moslem fundamen- talists, the religious extremists blamed for Sadat's assassination. Security was so tight that the Egyptian public was barred from the funeral ceremony, which took place under the mid- day sun on the same military parade ground, in suburban Nasr, or Victory City, where the president was fatally woun- ded in a blaze of gunfire last Tuesday. The three ex-presidents-Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter-got a first-hand look at the violent grief when their motorcade brushed within 20 yards of a stick-waving throng of Egyptians being pushed back by police. ALTHOUGH THE three former chief executives left Cairo immediately after the ceremony, the head of the U.S. delegation, Secretary of State Alexander Haig, stayed behind. He was to meet with Sadat's handpicked successor, Vice President Hosni Mubarak, and with other delegates to the funeral, including Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. The day's ceremonies began with a prayer service over the casket in a mosque at the Maadi military hospital, where the body had lain since the assassination. THE CASKET WAS then flown nine miles by helicopter to a stadium at the Nasr parade grounds and, draped in the red- white-and-black Egyptian flag, was loaded onto a caisson drawn by six black stallions. Jihan Sadat and her three daughters were seated in the reviewing stand where Sadat was sitting last Tuesday when his assassins sprung from a passing military parade and opened fire. "Remember that God created you and God will call you back to him," a Moslem preacher recited from the Koran. "For life and death are not your right to decide. God chooses the hour. And in your life as in your death you should acknowledge that God is great." AP Photo ASSASSINATED EGYPTIAN President Anwar Sadat is buried yesterday at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior in Nasr City in Cairo, near the location where he was slain. Security was tight and the Egyptian public was barred from the funeral ceremony. Jihan Sadat ... watches burial TODAY Applied econometrics N A RADIO INTERVIEW between halves of the Michigan-Michigan State football game in East Lansing yesterday, economist and University Presi- dent Harold Shapiro offered some good words on the future of the state's economy. With government and citizen effort, Shapiro said, there are "great days ahead for the State of Michigan and the Michigan economy." Maybe 0^ dernef n nrA;.,f fh n.fn4rn of fhPfnnrallii it-an advertising blimp. Art Chiistensen, a Newark, N.J. repossessor who played host last week for the American Recovery Association's national convention, told the sad tale Friday after filing a police report. "We checked everything out, searched everywhere and then had to go to the police," he said. The 4-foot by 6-foot balloon, filled with helium and valued at approximately $1,300, was last seen Oct. 3 in the Grand Ballroom of the New York Statler Hotel, he said. It is white with red, white and blue fins, has a large ARA logo and a banner saying "Repossession Specialist- s." "It's a little embarrassing, not only for us but for the Statler as well," Christensen said. "After all we're ..nne-ac wvamh of t1 nMn c, e vnni a fromnwham Friday that Jennings, 29, of French Lick, dialed policeman David Moffatt's home by mistake Thursday night. Not realizing to whom he was talking, Jennings offered to sell some stolen television sets for $175, McClure said. Moffatt "played along" and learned the location of the loot taken in burglaries of recreational vehicles at a camp site near Patoka Lake, the trooper reported. Police checked a bar ad found television sets, portable ovens, a toaster and several other kitchen appliances, Then they went after Jennings and arrested him. Investigators are still trying to figure out who Jennings was trying to call. D Going straight 'Ordinary People' back The book "Ordinary People" will be permitted back in an Ohio high school class despite the protests of a parent and a student that led to a temporary banning of the work. The Mad River-Green Local Board of Education reversed its vote of-two weeks ago banning the book from a literature class atGreenon High School in Enon. The novel, which was made into a film, is about a young man's problems with his parents and the death of his brother. The board banned the book because of objections by one student and parent Terry Craig, who said it contained needless profanity. "You're all sick," Craig told the school board. "You've got no morals at i i ,'