1# A Ninety-four Years ofr Editorial Freedom p . I Sit Wan 43 all I Deliverance Partly sunny today with a high in the mid-20s. Vol. XCIV-No. 93 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Arn Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, January 22, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Hoosiers humbled by Blue, 55-50 Record-low temperature puts city in By JEFF BERGIDA Only Bobby Knight could upstage a down- to-the-wire Michigan victory over the defending Big Ten champion Indiana Hoosiers. Although the technical fouls and emotional outbursts by the Indiana head man commanded much of the crowd's attention, a game was played at Crisler Arena yesterday. Tim Mc- Cormick had 16 points, including four on technical free throws, to lead the Wolverines past Indiana, 55-50. THE TONE was set with eight-and-a- half minutes remaining in the first half and Michigan holding a 16-7 lead. In- diana's Stew Robinson was charged with a personal foul and Knight's protests led to his first technical foul of the afternoon. Knight felt that Michigan coach Bill Frieder interfered with his coaching. That incident prompted a post-game tirade by the dean of Big Ten coaches that included several descrip- tions of Frieder in language one would not normally hear in- a house of wor ship. The technical also fired up the Hoosiers. After McCormick converted the free throws and Dan Pelekoudas hit a 12-foot jumper, Frieder's club was out to a commanding 20-7 lead. But Knight hasn't compiled 376 career wins by letting his teams roll over and die. Indiana outscored Michigan 15-6 during the last eight minutes of the half, sparked by the play of guards Steve Alford and Chuck Franz. The pair ac- counted for 14 of the Hoosiers' 22 points in the first half. FOLLOWING intermission, during which Knight allegedly called Frieder a name implying he had relations with a close family member, fine team defen- se on both sides helped keep the score down as Michigan could not stretch its lead beyond two points. Michigan's defense shut down Alford. The freshman; who is averaging 19.5 points a game in the league and shooting 58 percent, made only one of his five shots in the second half, largely due to the efforts of Michigan's Leslie Rockymore. The junior guard shrugged off a horrendous offensive game (1-0 from the floor, three points) and did an outstanding job on the sharp-shooting freshman. "(I had to) pressure him all over the See McCORMICK, Page 8 deep By CLAUDIA GREEN A record low temperature freeze of 21 degrees below zero yesterday sent Ann Arbor citizens to University Hospital for frostbite treatment and students to bars for hot drinks. Yesterday's temperature shattered the previous record of nine degrees below zero set in 1924, a spokesperson at the National Weather Service said. In Detroit, Henry Ford Hospital has set up a 24-hour hotline on winter health care which warns anyone venturing outside to first stretch their hamstring muscles and always tell~a friend where they are going. At University Hospital, Clinical Nurse Specialist Barbara Delancy estimated that nearly ten'frostbite victims showed up in the emergency room during her eight-hour shift yesterday. DELANCY SAID the very young, the very old, drinkers, smokers, diabetics, and people with vascular disorders are most susceptible to frostbite. Many students are apparently ignoring her advice about drinking, however, as students filled more bars yesterday than libraries. Rick Novak, manager of Rick's American Cafe, said Friday afternoon's happy hour was "one of the biggest ones we've had." Novak said customers are ordering more shots of whiskey and coffee drinks, and seemed content to stay in one place rather than bar-hop. CARS ARE ALSO suffering in the cold, according to David French, a dispatcher for the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department. All over the city, stalled cars were hooked together with the infamous red and black cables. There are a "vast increase in problems caused by gasoline freeze," he said. Ron Hieber, Batallion Chief for the Ann Arbor fire department, said that See ALL-TIME, Page 3 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Roy Tarplev controls the ball between his legs as an Indiana player hits the deck. Michigan beat Indiana, 55-50. 'Speak Up' tests out free speech By GEOFF JOHNSON Bundled up to brave the cold yester- day, about 20 people took turns standing on a soap box at the corner of North University and State Streets in a free speech exercise called "Speak Up." Modelled after the Hyde Park Speakers' Corner in London, the hour- long rally gave audience members the chance to speak out on topics, ranging from the University's proposed code for student conduct to the presidential elec- tion. "THE AIM OF (Speak Up) is to celebrate the First Amendment and the rights it guarantees us," said Jonathon Rose, director of student legal services and one of the rally organizers. Speaking from the soap box, Rose criticized the University's recently proposed code for non-academic con- duct which would allow the University to punish students for disruptive behavior such as vandalizing the cam- pus or another student's property. Rose said the code is unnecessary and infringes on students' rights. AFTER ROSE spoke, a student step- ped onto the soap box to assail President Reagan's economic and military policies. "Reagan scares me. He's going to get us all killed," said the student, who recommended an unusual replacement for the President. "Forget (Walter) Mondale, (John) Glenn, and whoever else might be run- ning. There is only one man that has a chance to beat Reagan. "He's recognized throughout the country and is popular with everyone and is qualified for the job - I am speaking, of course, of Walter. Cronkite." Less than 10 people spoke, but the audience was lively, hopping and jum- ping to keep warm and freely throwing in comments during each speech. Most of the speeches were brief and many people scurried into nearby stores and restaurants to escape the cold. The second Speak Up is scheduled for early March, Rose said. Anti-abortion protest marks high court ruling By ALLISON ZOUSMER Asking for God's help to make them effective, a group of 50 abortion op- ponents marched from the Diag to Planned Parenthood on North Main Street yesterday, marking the 11th an- niversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's. decision to legalize abortion. Singing hymns and waving signs that said "Some people make a living killing children," the group of students and city residents endured the frigid weather to protest state-funded abor- tions. MIKE HOPPE, leader of Students for Life, the anti-abortion group on campus, said their main goal is to prove "that pro-life exists and we're numerous. We're not just an old ladies' tea group.", Hoppe, an LSA junior, said he hopes the rally and a series of pro-life com- mericals which have recently appeared See ABORTION, Page 2 ":":v".....:" i;ii :i4: :":: " i":::ri-. ..n..:. . .. ...::. :::::_:i: ...... ....... ........ .... ........... .................................. .. Reagan say c won't liefic its hurt From AP and UPI President Reagan, resisting advice from aides that red ink in the budget will keep flowing without new taxes, yesterday railed against "doom criers" and' their "hysterical" deficit warnings. He said he would press forward -to reduce the deficit through more spending cuts and economic growth instead of new taxes while "doing things more efficiently without hurting people in need." LAUNCHING the opening salvo in this year's bud- get battle with Congress, Reagan used his weekly radio address from Camp David, Md., to criticize economists, Democrats and, apparently, some of his own advisers. "If recent history is any guide," he said, "the ex- perts have some explaining to do" about their claims that his tax-cut and budget-cut policies wouldn't work. "Many of the doom criers had warned it would push inflation through the roof." Instead, he said, inflation has plummeted in his administration from 12.4 percent to 3.2 percent, with a halving of the prime interest rate. of future deficits, too." And the way to cut deficits, he said, is not to raise taxes but to cut spending. Reagan came into office promising to balance the budget by 1984, but after implementing the bulk of his budget cuts, tax cuts and defense increases, 1084 is expected to produce the largest federal deficit in history. Although White House officials have not said publicly what will be in the election-year budget request going to Capitol Hill Feb. 1, it has been widely reported that he will ask for relatively small spen- ding cuts-about $5 billion or $6 billion, compared to $38 billion last year-and will propose no big new taxes to alleviate a deficit projected at more than $180 billion. IN MAKING HIS decision, Reagan rejected the ad- vice of his chief economic adviser, Martin Feldstein, and budget director David Stockman, who had ad- vocated tax hikes in future years to wash away some of the red ink. Analysts worry that the government's huge demand for credit to finance the deficits will pinch businesses and consumers also wanting credit. competition for cash likely will lead to higher interest rates, which could stifle the economy as soon as 1985 or 1986, they warn. recovery ALTHOUGH HE acknowledged .that "deficits do matter," Reagan told his weekly noontime radio audience he believes "those who underestimated the strength of this recovery may be wrong about the size ...h..{..:....:...... ...............:.............................. ,................. ....:..... ...:.......,...........:........ ................. :.. . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Daily Photo by DAN HABIB It may not make the fashion page,. but this man's mummy-like get-up shields him from yesterday's record-breaking low of 21 degrees below zero as he heads for the Diag. TODAY Parking problems ANN ARBOR drivers aren't the only ones who have problems with excessive parking tickets- Park Ridge, .Illinois, requires police officers to issuesa certain number of tickets each day. The ............... .................. .......... quota. The quota system, begun in 1977, required an officer to issue an average of .8 traffic tickets a day during a three- month period. Begg gave out an average of .4 tickets per day in 1979 and .15 tickets a day for the first three months of 1980. Medicine man D ESPITE CRITICISM from a prosecutor, Sheriff Julius DeLaughter says he'll continue to dole out confiscated liquor to old folks who say they need a shot of high-proof Low-cost lovers PALPH AND Alicia Ditzel won't have much in the way of wed-. ing debts to pay. The couple opted for a budget-plan wed- ding Friday at Sears. They chose the site because they met at the store where they both work and because they wanted to invite their co-workers to the ceremony. Knothe, 27, a shipping manager, and Ditzel, 30, a secretary, were flanked during the 10-minute ceremony by a store manager as best man and a sales clerk as maid of honor. "We were on a tight justify their choice of a pass-fail course." Students usually performed as well (or as poorly) as they did in their graded classes. Also on this date in history . * 1981- University President Harold Spapiro told studen- ts that declining state support and imminent shrinkage of the University would have a significant impact in the enxt decade. *"1973 - Activist and former Daily editor Tom Hayden and actress Jane Fonda were married in Los Angeles. " 1970 - The Residence Hall Board of Governors voted to I I