Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom cl ble Sitv iE ail Chicago Cloudy and windy with a high in the low 30s. Vol. XCV, No. 851 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, January 13, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Michigan, Tarp ley 'end Purdue jinx, 81-65 By JEFF BERGIDA Special to the Daily WEST LAFAYETTE - Michigan coach Bill Frieder denied that his club's 1 81-65 victory over Purdue at Mackey Arena yesterday was any more significant to him than any other win on the road. Even if it was his first victory ever over the Boilermakers. "I never look at the personal side of it and I don't believe in jinxes," said Frieder, referring to Michigan's 0-8 record against Purdue since he took over the Wolverine helm in 1980. DON'T BELIEVE a word of it. "(Frieder) said he wanted this one. He really wanted it," said Garde Thompson, who had a career-high 13 points. "We more or less won it for him." The 16-point margin of victory did not reflect how tight the contest was for 28 minutes. Michigan led by no more than six during that period as the teams traded baskets and the Boilermakers did a good job in the rebounding depar- tment. THE FIRST sign that the roof was going to cave in on Purdue was when See WOLVERINES, Page 8 ChinC PEKING - China's top military of- ficer yesterday welcomed his American counterpart with a pledge to work for peace and a warning that Washington should treat seriously "ob- stacles" to better relations such as Taiwan. In a glittering banquet for Gen. John Vessey, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Chinese Chief of General Staff Yang Dezhi said he looked forward to talks that would ex- pand relations between the two armed forces. In addition to Yang, the Chinese side included Deputy Chief of General Staff Zhang Zhewg, who greeted Vessey with a warm hug, and representatives of the navy, army, and air force. Vessey, who arrived for a one-week visit early today, stood at attention with Yang atop a red-carpeted podium, saluting while the national anthems of both countries were played. Vessey, 63, the first chairman of the Joint Chiefs to visit China since the communist revolution in 1949, arrived in Peking yesterday for a one-week familiarization tour that aides said could include talks on an unpreceden-. ted port call by an American warship. a welcomes reneral Chinese military chief wants better relations The Washington Post quoted Reagan administration officials as saying China has agreed to buy submarine- hunting sonars, Mark-46 torpedoes, gas turbine engines, and the Phalanx rapid- fire gun designed to down anti-ship, missiles. Neither Chinese nor American of- ficials would confirm a report that three U.S. Navy destroyers would make a port call in Shanghai in April. It would be the first such call by an American warship in more than 35 years. Without mentioning Taiwan by name, Yang said in a banquet toast that ob- stacles remained in the way of stronger Sino-U.S. ties. "Naturally, as it is known to all, there are still difficulties and obstacles on the way of developing the relations bet- ween our two countries," said the 76- year-old Yang, who commanded Chinese forces against U.S.-led U.N. troops in the Korean War. "This should be treated seriously. We believe that so long as we all abide by the principles of every Sino-U.S. joint communique, work hard and sound, and solve concrete problems conscien- tiously, we'll be able to overcome dif- ficulties gradually, eliminate obstacles, and the relations between our two coun- tries will develop soundly, thus bringing about the growth of relations between our two armed forces." Associated Press Michigan forward Butch Wade snags one of his five rebounds in yesterday's game as Purdue's Todd Mitchell tries to avoid a foul. Michigan rolled to an 81-65 victory over the Boilermakers. Reagan 1o, WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan is losing the battle to hold together his Cabinet and staff for his second team with the inroads of official life taking their toll. Unlike President Nixon, who called for resignations from his entire Cabinet after he won re-election in 1972, Reagan passed the word that he wanted all members to stay on deck. At the time, he also told Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, who is moving on to be White House chief of staff, that he wanted to "shackle" him to his desk. BUT WHETHER he wanted it or not, Reagan's closely knit team is suffering the same fate as Nixon's second-term sing in Cab Cabinet with big changes in the works. Nixon's chief of staff H.R. Haldeman told the Cabinet the morning after the election in 1972 "you're all a bunch of burned out volcanos" and demanded their resignations, much to the shock of several of them who had been Nixon's surrogates on the re-election campaign trail for many months. Several were kept on, however. By the time Nixon was forced to resign from office in August 1974 due to the Watergate scandal, there were only two officials who had been in his original Cabinet Interior Secretary Rogers C.B. Morton and Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz. imet shuffle SOME OF THE familiar faces stayed on with Henry Kissinger, who had been national security affairs adviser, becoming secretary of state in Nixon's short-lived second term. George Shultz, currently secretary of. state, served in two Cabinet posts during the Nixon years, starting as labor secretary, and moving on to be Treasury secretary when John Con- nally vacated the job. The speed of the dramatic turnover of the Reagan Cabinet in the past few weeks has stunned Washington. There are indications more shoes will be See PRESIDENT'S, Page 2 King to be honored in local march, talks By JODY BECKER Local civil rights activists will narch from the County Building to the Second Baptist Church today to commemorate the Jan. 15 birthdate of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. King's ability to mobilize blacks and his understanding of the vast potential of the black church will be the focus of University sociology Prof. Aldon Morris's speech to follow the Third An- nual Martin Luther King Unity Walk sponsored by the Second Baptist Chur- ch of Ann Arbor. Ding ..honored today Casablanca: fix for cult MORRIS, WHO has recently published a book on the origins of the Civil Rights Movement, will trace the history of the movement in what he called a series of "vivid images describing conditions of the black people, especially in the South, prior to the mid 1950s." Morris said he will address recent developments, such as the candidacy of the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the built- in support base Jackson used to his benefit in campaigning and mobilizing See ACTIVITIES, Page 2 Women give up sexual revolution PALM SPRING, Calif. (UPI) - A backlash against the sexual revolution has been a driving force behind the new conservatism that has swept the count- ry as women grow disillusioned with their sexual freedom of the past 20 years, sex researchers Shere Hite said yesterday. The continuing double standard that accepts sexual freedom for men but stigmatizes women as tramps, has caused many women to look back to the "good old days," Hite told the Society for the Scientific Study of Sex. "THE DIRECTION (of the 1980s) I see is people rushing back to past roles because of the current situation," Hite said. "And I can sympathize with that See SEX, Page 3 ilmju By DAVE DEAVER For the cult film junkie, Ann Arbo with its myriad of movie theatres an cinema organizations, presents unique opportunity to view many film from Hollywood's past. And of the movies the cinema buff flock to see, Casablanca always draw a sizable crowd from within the Univej sity and the surrounding community. AT LAST NIGHT'S 7 p.m. showing c the film over 450 people came to th Michigan Theatre to see Bogie an Bergman in the 1942 classic. Most of the movie goers had alread seen Casablanca at least once, some u to "a couple of dozen times." Craig Shere, an LSA freshman, co nkies )r fessed to seeing the film over 20 times d thanks to his video recorder. Shere's a favorite line is "Louis, I think this is Is going to be the beginning of a beautiful friendship." fs HELEN MOSER, who had seen the vs film only once about 40 years ago, said r- she was seeing it for the second time because of "the song, you know. A kiss of is just a kiss," she said as she continued he to hum the tune. id Moser hurried off saying, "I've waited forty years to see it, I wouldn't y want to be late." ,ip Eastern Michigan University graduate student David Kelley entered n- See CASABLANCA, Page 3 Associated Press A splash of champagne Catherine Stevens is splashed with champagne while christening the Trident submarine Alaska in Groton, Conn. yesterday. At right is her husband, Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), the main speaker at the event. TODAY Barberism S ENIOR CHIEF Petty Officer Fletcher Tucker ran his fingertips along his cleanshaven cheeks and said, "My wife and two kids back East have never seen me without it." Tucker's beard of 17 years had a close encounter with a sharp razor recently. Since Jan. 1, naval personnel have been getting shipshape by shaving their beards-although they can keep their mustaches-to comply with new regulations. Tucker, a 24-year Navy man attached to the chaplain's office at North Island Naval Air Station in San Diego, spoke of his late beard like a lost friend. "It was well kept," he said. "It met all uniform regulations. It complied with grooming standards. I miss it. "I feel like I'm being punished for something and I don't know what." Many Navy people say the new grooming I "But the men never really went along with that." Zumwalt is now retired. Not only are beards disappearing but Navy personnel now eat in a "mess hall" again-not a "dining facility." It's all part of a return to earlier traditions. Navy barbers used to do a brisk business keeping beards trim- med to conform with grooming code. "We lost a lot of business when Zumwalt sent out his Z-gram back in the 1970s permitting long hair. Now we'll lose the beard- trimming business," said Art Giverson, one of 21 civilian barbers in three post exchanges at the 32nd Street Naval Base, where many of San Diego's 85,000 active duty sailors are based. "But haircuts are back in. I like that." Lucky maid T HE FIRST Family has a dirty little secret: Lucky, the popular little puppy Nancy Reagan gave her husband before Christmas, still isn't White House-broken. "That," sniffed spokeswoman Sheila Tate, "is an unauthorized leak." Mrs. Reagan's press secretary refused to discuss the Pooper Scooper" and sample packs of "Puppy Piddle Pads." Ralson-Purina has informed the White House the feed manufacturer plans to bring out a new line of Lucky dog food in honor of the presidential pooch. Officials said the Reagans turned down an offer of a free lifetime supply of the dog food but agreed to let Lucky do the official tasting. The White House always has been hush-hush about its Auto-Pens, the machines that sign the president's and first lady's names to routine correspondence. But it was learned that Lucky, too, has an automated signature. In response to a virtual avalanche of mail addressed to the dog, one source said, Lucky was taken over to the correspondence unit last week to have her paw print copied. Now, when the White House receives mail addressed to the dog from the nation's school children, it sends back a signed photograph of the black French sheep dog. On the inside... insisting on anonymity for fear of invoking the Reagans' wrath, said the president isn't trying to sweep the problem under the rug. "We have a professional trainer coming in once a week," the informant whispered. Lucky reportedly is not a chronic violator; she simply isn't very reliable yet. "It was a problem at Camp David over the weekend," one source said. "The dog messed up the rug in Aspen Lodge." I . I I