Page 2-Friday, April 15, 1983-The Michigan Daily Center aids rape victims, families (Continued from Page 1) and family, the center operates a 24- hour crisis line. The center, located at 4009 Washtenaw, also offers legal, medical, and rape-prevention infor- mation. It was opened in 1976 under a federal grant, and now operates with county, city and state grants. Both individual and group counseling is offered by appointment, although Price said the center has not received enough simultaneous response to form a crisis group for family and friends. She said group therapy is helpful so "people can realize they are not alone. There is a lot of supportive sharing that can happen in a group atmosphere. FAMILY AND friends receive help from a different counselor than the vic- tim unless otherwise requested. Counselors at the crisis center help friends and family members deal with their reactions following the rape. "We help them first identify what their feelings are. We help them accept them," Price said. "We give them in- formiation about crime and what they can expect as a normal victim respon- se." COUNSELOR Theresa Foley said part of her function is to guide people through their recovery. "You encourage psychological healing processes," she said. "(Friends and family members) need to know that it's okay to be depressed. They've suffered a loss. They need to be able to grieve.'' Price said some of the problems friends and family encounter involve a misunderstanding about what rape is. Friends and family of the victim may try to keep the rape a secret. "(THE RAPE is) misperceived as a sexual act rather than as a violent crime," Foley said. "Most of society believes myths about rape and blame the victim, so the family is trying to avoid the social stigma." She said such misperceptions can cause friends and family to direct their anger about the assault toward the vic- tim, instead of the attacker. "(One) University student was raped by a man she saw at a football- game. He was very violent at the game. She didn't resist during the assault because she had seen the violence," Foley said. "Her parents blame her (for the rape). " PRICE SAID this kind of reaction is common and often makes people reluc- tant to seek help. "They may fear that the victim caused this to happen. They don't realize that sexual assault is a random event," she said. "They have to realize that you can't do anything about something that you cannot control. For some people, this is a hard step to take." Price said friends and family mem- bers "sometimes find it hard to accept the fact that victims aren't angry and that they're just thankful to be alive." Gloria Krys, another counselor at the center, said people close to the victim can experience the horror of the attack vicariously. "Anyone who has someone near to them that is sexually assaulted has to deal with their own mortality," Krys said. "It puts everyone into their own crisis." Police. notes A man wearing a ski mask and wielding a gun robbed Zingerman's Deli at 422 Detroit St. late Wednesday night, Ann Arbor Police said yesterday. The man, whom witnesses described as being in his late 50s, entered the restaurant and demanded money. After receiving an unknown amount of cash he orderedathe employees into the basement and fled. Police have no suspects in the case. - Halle Czechowski IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Nuclear missiles in Cuba not needed, says Soviet general MOSCOW - The Soviet Union has "no need" to put nuclear missiles in Cuba in retaliation for U.S. deployment of new medium-range rockets in Europe later this year, a top Soviet general says. It was the clearest signal yet from the Soviets that Cuba does not figure in their threat to retaliate for the planned "Euromissile" deployment. The comments were made by Maj. Gen. Yuri Lebedev, a military adviser to Soviet arms-control negotiators, in an interview. Kremlin officials have warned repeatedly they will put the United States:' in an "analogous position" if the American missiles are stationed in Western Europe, within a few minutes' striking distance of Soviet territory. These statements raised speculation in the United States that the Soviets were considering deploying mid-range rockets in Cuba. Lebedev, dismissing that possibility, did not make clear exactly what the Soviets planned to do if the U.S. missiles are deployed. But he said one of the retaliatory options available to Soviet leaders would simply be expanding their own intermediate-range nuclear forces in Europe. Budget Committee deadlocked WASHINGTON - A bitterly divided Senate Budget Committee deadlocked yesterday over a possible tax increase for 1984 after a Democratic-led move to dismantle much of President Reagan's tax program failed on a tie vote. The 11-11 tie came when Sen. Mark Andrews (R-N.D.) joined all 10 Democrats in calling for a $30 billion tax hike, the amount that would be raised if this year's 10 percent personal income tax cut were repealed. "I think we're going to have to increase taxes if we're going to be honest with ourselves," Andrews said. The committee's 11 other Republicans voted no. In addition to rejecting the $30 billion proposal, the committee rejected proposals for a smaller 1984 tax increase, a larger one and no increase at all. Scientists plan artificial heart SALT LAKE CITY - As doctors prepare for the next artificial heart im- plant, researchers are making strides toward developing a heart for small people and an implantable electric motor to replace the bulky air pump now required. Work began in November at the University of Utah on a heart with oval in- stead of round ventricles that researchers say could be critical in making a heart compact enough for smaller adults and still have adequate pumping capacity. "It's just an improvement of the output of the heart with smaller size and better fit," said Walter Rohloff, head of the school's Artificial Organs Division machine shop. Furthermore, doctors anticipate implanting in five to 10 years a heart carrying a tiny motor that would be-powered by a battery pack worn on a recipient's belt. Vietnamese call for peace talks BANGKOK, Thailand - Vietnam, apparently shifting from the battlefield to the diplomatic arena yesterday, called for talks with its anti-communist opponents in Southeast Asia to end the four-year-old guerrilla war in Cam- bodia. Theproposal followed a Vietnamese announcement the day before that it was withdrawing some of its estimated 180,000 troops in Cambodia. Thailand's military government and army gave little credence to the latest move. 'To all countries in the region, dialogue is useful while confrontation is harmful," said the Vietnamese Communist Party newspaper Nhan Dan in calling for talks between the Communist governments of Vietnam, Cam- bodia and Laos and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, ASEAN, which includes Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore and the Philip- pines. The party paper claimed that some leaders in ASEAN have realized that dialogue would be useful in solving the Cambodian problem, which began when Vietnamese troops invaded Cambodia in late 1978 and drove the Com- munist Khmer Rouge government from Phnom Penh, replacing it with pro- Vietnamese Communist regime headed by Heng Samrin. "We are not interested in Vietnam's proposal," said a Thai army' spokesman, Col. Pobsuk Suthanunda. "Vietnam has made such pledges before but nothing happened." Pitb r hi m t ssa ee c p PITTSBURGH - Two inmates armed with weapons smuggled to them ins an apparent escape plot took a jail guard and a civilian employee hostage yesterday at the maximum-security Western Penitentiary state prison. The inmates were identified as Richard Henkel, 45, of Pittsburgh, a con- victed felon accused in bizarre murder and extortion cases, and Louis Coviello, 26, of Dunmore, Pa., a convicted murderer and robber. Henkel is charged with plotting to extort money from prominent Pit- tsburgh residents, including Pittsburgh Steelers' owner Art Rooney, by at- taching bombs to them. An Allegheny County Sheriff's Department spokesman said the two were in a basement identification center' being readied for transfer to a pretrial hearing for Henkel when they overpowered guard Daniel Kohut, 39, and Kostas Mastros, 51, a data supervisor, at about 8:30 a.m. The sheriff's office'said it was tipped Wednesday that Henkel and Coviello were planning an escape around the hearing. Prison officials said no weapons or contraband were found in a search of their cells. Vol. XCIII, No. 155 Friday, April 15, 1983 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $13 September through Aprjl (2 semesters); $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday Mor- nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8,by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI148109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 763-0375; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. S w S f 3 4. r. 4 S L Q !. £ 4 V V. l. v. r. t. 4. N. ; k~ ::": t .. ,:a : .:: w ,> :.. . 4 When the Daily breaks __ the news... P-O-! VurofOver AdmSSI4 The oR am re ur suall" C ) >p h Lh tc Fd"partles r todrveCo vdeeAint 14 . fl _r,.l lbthe pharti i o n co ae spe 1 j o 0 y 'j ... -TerpoveRE sdHen'r- a ica es Cid the adn ar r tC mi Por% n Dpt t atnr d a fet t t he eight eft as a jet \4t1 cihotsi $IbR % o otaf c3 h 0)s ' .x\. 'ren )( a St ,rd tetes rePoe ase lt Oe es lr" and oddy t'.s ban'd e tir i f Aichigan's admission stanards - ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - released uness a student ves the article. "' think both of. Si t d o5t se ghe igh ersity o m sicgn permission are approaching our jobs na physical education p ' ' a c tandards x> that highly sought The artic', one of a series, was prfs6n\ eesbewy .elo talteO% co\ s act.'asO r-% s thietes cat be enrolled. 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