Ninety- Three Years of Editorial Freedom C, tr Litrbga 1~Iai1Q Rerun Looks like the warm weather may be heading this way again. Partly cloudy but warmer today with a high in the dower-50s. ol. XCvil, No. 127 ges Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, March 13, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages 'M' ends season with 64-57,win 'over Wildcats By LARRY MISHKIN The Michigan Wolverines ended their mediocre season with a touch of style yesterday dumping Northwestern, 64-57, before 11,105 appreciative Crisler Arena fans. The win boosted the Wolverines' record to 6-12 in the con- ference (ninth place) and 15-13 overall. The better than .500 record is an improvement over last year's poor 7-20 mark, but probably won't be enough to propel Bill Frieder's squad nto the NIT, which will begin extending bids after the NCAA picks it teams this afternoon. "WE'RE NOT expecting (a bid)," said Frieder after the game. "I'm not going to sit around all weekend and worry about it." And well he shouldn't. Instead, Frieder can reflect on a fine team effort that sparked Michigan back from an early first- half deficit and kept the Wolverines close going into the lockerroom at halftime. An Eric Turner steal followed by his own pull-up jumper made the score 40-39 and gave Michigan the lead for good with 14 minutes left in the game. The Flint native finished with 18 points, good enough for game high honors, but one point short of beating Indiana's Ted Kitchel for second place in Big Ten scoring average. Turner finishes the season with 20.2 points per game, one-tenth of a point short of Kitchel's 20.3. Minnesota's Randy Breuer needs only 12 points in his game with Illinois today to win the scoring title. BUT THE game didn't belong to just one player. Freshmen Paul Jokisch, Robert Henderson, and Butch Wade all made key contributions in the victory and showed some of the pre- season media-hype talent everyone said they had. Jokisch, playing his finest game as a Wolverine, according to Frieder, scored 12 points, hitting six of eight from the field, Sand gave the team the spark it needed midway through the W See M', Page 8 Reagan ur ]back to ]basics schooling By AP and UPI Board of Princeton, N.J., which ad- .-nministers the SATs, has said. The WASHINGTON - President Reagan scores on both math and verbal exams said yesterday that "welcoming God leveled off in 1981 and rose last year for back in our schools" and improving the first time since they reached an all- basic skills, discipline and competition tiehg n16,sxyerafrth can evese hathe clle a wo- time high in 1963, six years after the decade deelne wn Americaneducatio-n Soviet launch of a Sputnik satellite set A Democratic spokesman, citing ad- off a crash re-evaluation and re- ministration cuts in federal education directing of American educational programs, promptly denounced priorities, the board has said. Reagan's proposal as "shortsighted EVEN IF THE rise continues as ex- and doomed to failure." A spokesman pected, however, it is unlikely the test for school administrators termed the scores will achieve their level of 20 president's cuts "calculated attempts school ago, if onl eams high to destroy public education. . . ,, shenior tae the xam s today, "IT'S TIME to face the truth," whereas only the academically inclined Reagan told a noontime radio audience third that planned to go to college took in his regular Saturday broadcast. the standardized SATs in 1963, "Advocates of more and more gover- academic experts have said. nment interference in education have strengthen sthe national. def ense had ample time to make their case, and strente therial des , they've failed." modernize American industry, and hyle feralpemove into the era of high technology, .While federal spending on education "we need a smart and highly skilled increased eightfold in the last 20 years, wek ee tndyhinesi led Reagan said, "Scholastic Aptitude Test work force. Yet, only one sixth of our scores went down, down and down." high school graduates have taken Actually, the long slide in high school junior- and senior-level courses in seniors' SAT scores is over, the College See REAGAN, Page 5 Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Northwestern's Andre Goode gets the ball as he ties up Michigan co-captain Dan Pelekoudas to force a jump ball. The Wolverines regained possession of the ball and the game, as the Wolverines closed out the regular season with a 64-57 victory. I Women set Strategies Goals key to success, says exec. By JACKIE YOUNG Special to the Daily DETROIT - "The challenge for the ambitious woman of today is moving up the corporate ladder, not just getting on the ladder. That has already been ac- complished," said corporate executive Mary Cunningham yesterday. Cunningham, who is now vice president for strategic planning and development for Joseph Seagram Sons, Inc., spoke yesterday at "Strategies: Second Annual Conference for Women" at Cobo Hall. CUNNINGHAM, who became a familiar figure to the nation because of her relationship with 'her former boss and present husband, William Agee, former chairman of Bendix Corp., gave her advice onl "Strategies for the Cor- porate Woman in the 'B0s." Although drawing upon her own per- sonal success strategy in the business world, the Harvard Business School graduate told others to plan their own career maps based on personal needs and values. Cunningham compared the situation 'of women in today's corporate market- place to the situation of an individual in combat whose success depends on the ability to adapt to the terrain. Sometimes, Cunningham said, "the situation for corporate women can be downright hostile." BUT DEVELOPING long-term career goals can counter that hostile environment, she said. Her own strategy involves maintaining a delicate balance between practicality and idealism, which involves an honest and realistic assessment of career op- portunities. She suggested that setting goals too high will only bring about frustration and loss of self-confidence. See GOALS, Page 2 Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL President Shapiro and his wife,Vivian,were good sports at a roast held Friday night in the Michigan Union. The after- dinner expose gave eight speakers a chance to give the president some constructive-and not so construe- tive-criticism. Roasters feast on U'president Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Mary Cunningham yesterday told women to develop long-range goals in or- der to succeed in the corporate world. She spoke at the "Strategies for Women" conference in Detroit. Steinem: Women's movement moves on By BARBARA MISLE and SHARON SILBAR What makes Harold Shapiro tick? Don't ask his daughter Karen. She doesn't know. "I don't even know what he does for a living," she told a crowd of 100 gathered in the Michigan Union's Pendleton Room for a one-and-a-half hour roast of the University's fearless leader. SHAPRIO'S DAUGHTER was one of eight roasters who jumped at the chance to poke a little fun at the University's president. A few of the quips were a little biting but it was all in the name of fun and the $5 admission went to a needy cause - student financial aid. Shapiro, sometimes known for his lack of humor when it comes to University business, laughed throughout the evening. "It's all in good fun," he said. THE FIRST "comedian," Shapiro's long-time friend and economics professor Saul Hymans, described Shapiro's climb to the top as a long, hard road. Shapiro's mother always intended her son to lead Michigan, according to Hymans, who said she warned, "If you neglect your 'two plus two,' you might end up at MSU." Michigan Student Assembly President Amy Moore chided Shapiro about recommended budget cuts to the Schools of Art and Education and even threw in the long- lost geography department. Some of Moore's criticism, however, was constructive. She suggested cutting off the top five floors of the Graduate Library because Shapiro's wife Vivian says "it blocks off the view from the sun roof." WHEN REGENT Thomas Roach (D-Saline) had his chance to ridicule the president, he said he would repeat all the funny things Shapiro had said at the last 68 Regents See JOKES, Page 3 By GEORGEA KOVANIS Special to the Daily DETROIT-The battle for equal rights for women has reached the "second wave," and the majority of the population now backs the women's movement, noted feminist Gloria Steinem told a crowd of more than 1,000 yesterday at Cobo Hall in Detroit. The almost all-female audience gathered for "Strategies: The Second Annual Conference for Women," a forum aimed at exploring career challenges facing women today. "WOMEN NEED to seize control of our lives," said Steinem, explaining* that women are now able to achieve goals previously associated only with men. "We can become the man we want to marry." The fact that women's instincts for activism peak later than those of men plays an important role in the women's movement, she said. Female college students are often reluctant to become active in women's issues, according to See STEINEM, Page 2 TODAY Bare facts OME OF THE world's best strip-tease artists will gather this summer on the Las Vegas "strip" to discuss their take-it-off technique. But the Golden G-String Award competition will be the main focus of the First Annual, STAR '83 (Strip-Tease Artist Roun- dup)Conference June 16 at the Sahara Hotel, JoAnne Hat- ch, a stripper and, principal partner of Burlesque Promotions of Calgary, Canada, said recently the main r >w ~riL.....f-..+1..a nlr .n A ^ ni. +1,n 1"+.... Herald Tribune on Thursday which said he is looking for a job with a starting salary of $100,000 a year. The adver- tisement in the English language newspaper published in Paris and circulated around the world read: "Aggressive American: Bon vivant, 27, seeks post anywhere in the world with annual salary of $100,000. Creative, competent, resourceful, and intelligent. Speaks French, previously lived in Switzerland and Iran." Goldman, who works part- time as a waiter, does not think his request is excessive. "Why would I ask for anything less than $100,000? There:'s nothing to lose except the $35 it costs to run the ad," he said. on the streets again, this time in Washington. "You meet a lot more people on the streets down here than you do in Baltimore," George Elliott said. Elliott, 40, of Cockneysville, Maryland, lost his job as a medical supplies salesman in early 1981. He began begging in Baltimore's financial district - in coat and tie. The Baltimore Sun did a feature on him and last spring he got a job as a salesman for a paint stripping company. He was fired in November for not bringing in enough business and turned to the nation's capital in December. "I think the people of Baltimore have, had enough of me," said Elliott. "If I stood down there now negotiators. GEO leaders described the contract as "not perfect . . . but a very good beginning." Also on this datein history: * 1918 - After being approached by the Women's Club, Ann Arbor Mayor Ernest Wurster said he could not stop the showing of the film Cleopatra starring Theda Bara at the Majestic Theatre "until it has been shown and proved unfit for the public." * 1958 - The Union Board of Directors approved the "concept" of a student bookstore in the Michigan Union and instructed the bookstore committee to prepare a proposal to .1 I I I I ,