Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom sE Sit 1 Iai GO SOUTH Partly cloudy today with a high in the mid-40s. Vol. XCI, No. 64 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 16, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages Blue Soviets kill thousands o f Afghanis, bombs, Boilermakers, 26-0 Victory assures bowl appearance Iwlots say NEW DELHI, India (AP)-Soviet warplanes and artillery pounded two major Afghanistan cities for several days, killing thousands of people, and a Soviet attempt to penetrate the rebel-. held Panjshir Valley resulted in 500 Soviet casualties, a report from Afghanistan said yesterday. The report from Kabul said Herat, the country's third-largest city, about 60 miles from the Iranian border, and Kandahar, the second-largest city, came under attack for several days earlier this month. THE REPORTS on the apparent Soviet-led retaliation for a stepped-up campaign by Moslem insurgents could not be independently confirmed. Western reporters are barred from Afghanistan. Last week, sources in Kabul reported rebels have attacked military garrisons, inflicting dozens of casualties and capturing Soviet-made weapons, including surface-to-air missiles. The homes of district gover- nment officials in several cities have been raided by rebels, who have killed and kidnapped their targets and, in one case, publicly hanged a government of- ficial in a town square, the sources said. The reports indicated that the "Holy Warriors" fighting the Soviet-backed Marxist government have been assisted by defecting Afghan troops who divert weapons and forewarn of search-and-destroy forays into the countryside. SOVIET TROOPS have been in Afghanistan since the Kremlin ordered an incursion to shore up the Marxist government in December. About 80,000 troops are believed to remain in the country, which lies south of the Soviet Union. Western military analysts estimate the Afghan government force has drop- ped from about 80,000 troops a year ago to a current level of about 30,000. Daily Photo by JOHN HAGEN PURDUE RUNNING BACK Ben McCall (13) is smothered under 1500 lbs..of the Michigan defense in yesterday's 26-0 rout. The'Boilermakers could muster only 65 yards on the ground against the tough Michigan defense. Diloats campus tour, fUrtes'Ciaties By ALAN FANGER It was the same offense that sput- tered through the early season and the same defense that was vulnerable to South Carolina's running and Michigan State's passing. But yesterday Michigan, a team that was once 1-2, played a different tune-one that may give them their fir-, st outright Big Ten title in nine years and a trip to the Rose Bowl. In stunning 16th-ranked Purdue 26-0 before 105,831 fans in Michigan Stadium, the Wolverines played like a team hungry for a trip back to1 Pasadena. AND FOR yet another year, the con- ference championship and Rose Bowl, bid will be on the line when Michigan, meets Ohio State in Columbus next Saturday. ABC-TV will broadcast the game on a regional basis, beginning at1 noon. The Wolverines are now assured of appearing in a postseason bowl. Under an agreement made yesterday between Big Ten and Fiesta Bowl officials, the loser of the Michigan-Ohib State game will automatically receive an invitation to play in the Fiesta Bowl December 26 in Tempe, Arizona, a suburb of Phoenix. Purdue last night accepted a bid to play in the Liberty Bowl December 27 against Missouri. THE BOWL bid, however, did little to satisfy the Boilermakers, who were foiled in an attempt to captute their fir- st conference title since 1967. Fullback Stanley Edwards had his best day in a Michigan uniform, as he ran for 164 yards in 29 carries and carried most of the Wolverine ground game on his shoulders. And as usual, John Wangler managed to find speedy Anthony Carter open for a pair 'of touchdown passes. Wangler finished out his final home game in style, completing 12 of 20 passes for 165 yards. MICHIGAN'S defense simply withered quarterback Mark Herrmann and the Purdue passing attack, forcing him to throw four interceptions. The Boilermakers failed to make a first down in the second half, and penetrated no further than their own 38- yard line in the final 30 minutes of the game. And on the one occasion the Boiler- makers threatened to put points on the board, Herrmann was intercepted by free safety Tony Jackson in the end zone. IT WAS just one of many plays in which the Michigan secondary, em- ploying a six-man zone coverage on almost every second and third down play, hounded Herrmann and forced him to throw over the middle and into the most, dangerous portion of the coverage. "They (the Michigan secondary) just shut us down," said Herrmann, who admitted his dismal performance probably put him out of the running for See DEFENSE, Page 10 It's fiesta or roses for Blue Michigan, by virtue of its 26-0 vic- tory over Purdue yesterday, assured itself of appearing in a postseason. bowl for the sixth consecutive year. If the Wolverines defeat Ohio State in Columbus next Saturday, they will play Washington (8-2) in the Rose Bowl New Year's Day. If Ohio State either defeats or ties Michigan, the Wolverines will play Penn State (9-1) in the Fiesta Bowl December 26, while the Buckeyes will head to Pasadena for the second straight year. The Fiesta Bowl is considered the most prestigious of the non-New Year's Day bowl games. It is played in Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Ariz. By NANCY BILYEAU A laboratory tour and a first glimpse of college, football were part of an in- troductory lecture yesterday on life atj the University for Chai Zemin, People's' Republic of China ambassador to the United States. As University President Harold Shapiro's personal guest, Zemin was led through the city and campus in a, flurry of meetings, tours, and the Michigan-Purdue football game. "This is laying the foundation bet- ween the University and the People's Republic of China," Political Science Prof. Allen Whiting, acting director of the Center for Chinese Studies, said. "THE UNIVERSITY of Michigan is a very important institution," Zemin told Whiting through an interpreter at a Museum of Art reception. "We are ready to help you whenever you want us to," Zemin said. "Just let us know." An ambassador to the United States for two years, Zemin is widely respec- ted in Washington D.C.' as a seasoned, effective diplomat, according to faculty members. EVEN BEFORE China was officially recognized by the U.S. in 1978, a num-' ber of University scholars went to China to investigate potential for academic exchanges. Zemin's Ann Arbor visit may lead to even more active research and traveling between the two countries, Whiting said. One of the Ambassador's morning stops was a meeting with Dr. Gene Higashi to discuss a vaccine being developed for schistosomiasis, a serious parasitical disease that afflicts 250 million people worldwide. "IT'S A MAJOR illness in China, that's why we wanted him to come," said Dr. Michel Oksenberg, a political science professor who made arrangements for emn's visit. Using displays of experimental mice, tubs filled with snails that carry the parasite, and books charting treat- ment, Higashi explained the develop- ment of his vaccine. Schistosomiasis is very common in the fresh water snails that inhabit See CHINESE, Page 7 Panic attack Agoraphobics fear outside world I I By LORENZO BENET While reading an essay to her eighth grade classmates, she suddenly was gripped with fear. She began to sweat profusely. Her heart pounded louder than the sound of her voice and a lump the size of a golf ball rose in her throat. "I felt like I was going to die." ALTHOUGH SHE didn't know it then, Mary Bonham, now a Rackham student, had agoraphobia, a condition in which a person suffers an incapacitating fear when away from the safety of home. But for agoraphobics like Bonham (not her real name), the fear can become so all-encompassing that any place or situation can generate an uncontrollable and terrifying panic. "AFTER THAT experience," recalled Bonham, who says she is cured of the phobia, "I began to have panics on the school bus, at the movies, at the grocery store .. . It took over my whole life. The mere anticipation of an attack usually brought it on, so I avoided places where it might happen." Arlene Hundley, a 36-year-old mother of two who lives in Milan, had to drop out of high school at 15 because of her panic attacks. She married two years later, and after she had her second child, her phobia became so acute that she refused to be left alone or venture outside her house. "For a while there I wouldn't let my husband out of my sight. He had to be with me everywhere I went," Hundley lamented. ACCORDING TO George Curtis, professor of psychiatry and director of the University Hospital Anxiety Disorders Program, a person who experiences a series of panic attacks will avoid places where an attack has occured or has the potential to occur. In serious cases, such as Hundley's, he said, the phobia can progress to the point where the person won't leave his home, or even his room. Agoraphobia is the most commonly treated phobia, Curtis continued. It generally strikes in late adolescence, he said, and, it is three times more likely to affect a woman than a man. "We still don't know the reasons for the attacks," Curtis admitted. "We can't determine who is a high risk person and who isn't,,although there seems to be some indication that if an individual's mother or father has been affected, the risk factor may increase." MOST AGORAPHOBICS spend large portions of their lives not knowing what is wrong with them. Bonham and Hundley said doctors and psychiatrists continually prescribed the wrong treatments. "After my first panic attack, I never wanted to go back to school," Hundley explained. "My parents took me to a num- See PANIC, Page 2 ;... . Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM SOMETHING AS INSIGNIFICANT as a trip outside the house may trigger an anxiety attack in an agoraphobic. -------------- Ji :: (.. e, <, n, :: O. : ::.,, un : \ . .:::: ,0, , , v. S r w:,:,oi ui:o :,,, , v.: ':n.. , .:> , ,o ,: a'.u.." :.IO.n: o , x'.rt o. xh.. 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More than 100 spectators lined Elbel Field to watch the traditional rivals in action, and they were alternately delighted and amused by the sloppily- record 2.359 million marriages is ba anced by half as many divorces. Figures recently released by the National Center for health statistics show the biggest surge in the number of weddings since 1946, when there were 2.291 million marriages. Nevada won the honor of highest state marriage rate with a whopping 173.6 ceremonies per 1,000 population. South Carolina came in second with 18.4 marriages per 1,000 population. The national rate was a mere 10.7 per 1,000. While the knot-tiers are busy so are the courtrooms, due to an apparently accelarating divorce rate: There were 1.17 million divorces in 1979, a 3.5 increase over 1978. The divorce rate had held steady during 1976 and But others apparently want to join the television moguls in their moneymaking exploits. While sales of J.R. buttons, bumper stickers, stetson hats, games, and jeans fill the cups of entrepeneurs to'overflowing, one man has decided to make his bit of J.R. money in court. The real Bobby Ewing, of the real Ewing Oil Co., is suing the producers of "Dallas" for $4 million. His suit is partially a response to a suit brought against him by "Dallas" producers, who, claimed the real Ewing was infringing on their copyright by marketing Ewing clothes. "They'll think a second time before they start walking on anybody else in Dallas," Ewing said. O tist screeched into an encore. It was all part of a "live art" experiment offering Californians and New Yorkers a chance to see, hear, and talk with each other via satellite this week. Startled passersby had stared and tentatively queried each other "Where are you? Do you see me?" when the screens flickered into life last Tuesday at New York's Lincoln Center and Century City in Los Angeles. Both groups.shuffled self-consciously and, as one Californian put it, ''We gaped at each other like monkeys in a cage." Imagination and inspiration were in good supply once the idea caught on, with New York initiating a game of charades and Californians hurling spitballs. When New Vrr nim1 chM nwA ~~-xar.A a Ii Y~dn'tti n hpogI n la ',c i,'1 in i I i