cl ble Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom .441wr 43 tt I tItl Vol. XC VII -No. 48 Cop' No etup ol at Purdue; 'Il'wins yright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, November 10, 1986 Ten Pages ongress m criticizes big, 31- 7 By ADAM MARTIN Special to the Daily WEST LAFAYETTE - In the wake of Purdue coach Leon Burtnett's resignation last Thurs- day, Michigan's 31-7 victory over the Boilermakers Saturday was anti- climactic. The win, coach Bo Schem- bechler's 165th, tied him with Fielding "Hurry Up" Yost for most career victories at Michigan, but as usual Schembechler downplayed his accomplishments. "I'VE been around a long time and that's all (the record) means," 'Schembechier said after the Wolverines (6-0 in the Big Ten, 9-0 overall) dominated the Boiler- makers. "Since the turn of the century, there's been only six coaches (actually nine) at Michigan and that's got to speak well for the school more than my breaking the record." While Schembechler blushed the Boilermakers (1-5, 2-7) managed only 184 yards in total offense, and most of that came on a 17-play, 94- yard touchdown drive late in the second half against Michigan's second-team defense. The 61,323 fans at Ross-Ade Stadium saw the Boilermakers offense for only 24 minutes. Purdue was forced to punt six times while converting just five of 12 third down opportunities. The first-string Wolverines simply outmatched Purdue in all phases. "Michigan's offense is explosive and they always play great defense," said Burtnett. See MODEST, Page 10 arms deal Sihultz may resign over Iran blunder' WASHINGTON (AP) - Con - gressional leaders accused the Reagan administration yesterday of keeping them in the dark about reported White House deals to send arms to Iran, and some suggested its power to conduct such Ayatollah Khomeini says his death would not end Iran's: rev- olution. See In Brief, Page 2 operations should be curbed. The criticism came amid speculation that Secretary of State George Shultz, who also apparently knew little about the contacts that reportedly produced arms deliveries in return for hostage releases, could resign over the matter. Shultz called an unusual meeting of State Department experts yesterday at his suburban Washington home, but officials said the session on Syrian- sponsored terrorism was unrelated to questions about Iran. A New York Times report quoting Shultz aides raising the possibility of a Shultz resignation "is pure speculation, as the story itself says," spokeswoman Sondra McCarty said. "I am not going to have further comment." SEN. RICHARD LUGAR, (R-Ind.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he had spoken to Shultz on Saturday. "In my judgment, he will not resign," Lugar told interviews on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley." News reports last week said former National Security Advisor Robert McFarlane traveled to Tehran earlier this year and arranged to ship arms to Iran in exchange for the release of U.S. hostage kidnapped in Beirut. An embargo on arms shipments to Iran, which is at war with Iraq, has been in effect since 1979. The official U.S. position on the war is neutrality. If the press reports are true, said Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd, the arms trade was "a major blunder" that guarantees hostage- taking will continue and could tip the balance of power in the Middle See SCHULTZ, Page 5 Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh scrambles away from Purdue's Bill Gildea in the first quarter of Satur- day's game. Harbaugh passed Steve Smith in the 31-7 win to become the Wolverines' all-time completions leader with 332. 1 1- g Havig it their wax Fast food workers are in demand By CARRIE LORANGER Gone are the days when replacing fast food workers was as easy as flipping a hamburger. Since Michigan's recession eased, fast food restaurants have resorted to printing job applications on tray liners and offering higher salaries to attract new employees. According to Dorothy Bleich, assistant manager of the Michigan Pmployment Security Com- mission's (MESC) Job Service in Traverse City, Mich., restaurants all over the state are having a hard time recruiting employees because they offer low pay and few benefits. Michigan's improving economy makes it easier for people to find jobs above the minimum wage, she In a radio ad last spring, McDonald's encouraged housewives and senior citizens to apply. "We hired one senior citizen and he was great,' said Rosie Fellhauer, owner of the McDonald's on Maynard Street. said. The Michigan Union Grill in the basement of the Union is no exception. Two months ago, the MUG was forced to pay Kelly Services $6.50 an hour per employee while it continued to pay its student employees $3.35 an hour, said Nick Sheath, general manager of the MUG. IN RESPONSE to the dearth of student applications, the MUG raised its starting wage from $3.35 to $4.00 an hour, arnd the number of student applications increased. In addi * in to their pay, students who work at the MUG receive a 10 percent discount- at Barnes and Noble bookstore, a 50 percent discount on their food, and free passes to the U-Club. See HIGH, Page 5 Daily Photo by DEAN RANDAZZO Israeli author speaks Renowned Israeli author Amos Oz speaks to a crowd of several hundred at Rackham Auditorium last night. See story, Page 3. Arabs, Jews create Middle East dialogue By TIM DALY While diplomats search desperately for peace in the Middle East, a Palestinian and a Jew are traveling across the country promoting dialogue between Arabs and Jews living in the United States. Walid Mula, a Palestinian living in Israel, and Ronny Brawer, a member of the Progressive Zionist Caucus (PZC), will visit about 70 universities and 25 cities during their two-year national speaking tour, which began in September. At the University, Jews and Arabs have already formed an informal discussion group, which met over the weekend. It offers Jews and Arabs a chance to get to know each other as people - not as members of an ethnic group. Mula and Brawer, who spoke at the Law School last week, urged Jews and Arabs interested in the Middle East conflict to take part in the workshop, which was directed by Len Suransky, a former University faculty member, and Mula. WORKSHOP participants discussed Jewish and Arab culture, group stereotypes, and how their identity as a Jew or Arab affects their lives. Miriam Roth, a PZC member, has been participating in an Arab-Israeli dialogue group since November. She said the new dialogue group is being established because so many people seemed interested in joining it. The groups begin with introduction exercises in which people are placed in smaller groups so they can get to know each other. "The small groups allow people to get to know each other as individuals instead of knowing each other as an Arab or a Jew," Roth said. The dialogue group's main purpose is to emphasize the importance of personal relationships between Jews and Arabs, Roth said. Political issues are discussed, but only after the participants have gained a better understanding of each other, she added. See STUDENTS, Page 5 INSID CULT GROUPS: Opinion criticizes the looney Moonies. See Page 4. Center trains women to teach self-defense By DEBORAH SOBELOFF The sexual assault center is training female students to lead self-defense workshops for other women to provide them with physical and psychological skills for defense against sexual assault. "We are not training black belts in karate. We want to give women a sense of their own power," said Julie Steiner, head of the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center. The trainers will complete their training after Thanksgiving and begin offering one and one-half hour self-defense workshops to women next semester. THE workshops are not designed to teach self-defense in every situation because that would take years of training. Instead, the emphasis is on developing confrontation skills, assertiveness, self- confidence, and the ability to deal with date rape situations, Steiner said. The workshop focuses on four topics: prevention,, such as locking doors and checking the back seat of the car for an attacker; avoidance, such as staying away from situations or people which intuitively seem dangerous; assertiveness; and physical techniques. Self-defense is believed to be an effective rape deterrent. According to a study called "Prevention of Rape," 85 percent of the women who yelled and physically resisted an assailant escaped unharmed. The study appears in Stanley Brodsky's book Sexual Assault. CONVENTIONAL self-defense classes often focus only on fighting back physically, but in date rape situations assertiveness and avoidance can prevent the need for physical defense, said workshop trainer Pam Shore, a black belt in karate. Steiner said self-defense classes are generally taught by men, but it is more helpful if the class is led by a woman. "Confrontation and assertiveness are difficult for women because of their socialization," she said, but these skills are easier to learn by modeling after other women. Men are already socialized to be aggressive, she added. Jessica Dickstein, a facilitator for workshops on date rape, said it is easier to relate to a woman teaching self- defense. It is important for women to become empowered by other women and not to need a man to protect them from sexual assauls, she said. See WOMEN, Page 5 TODAY Voting incentive A U U the councilman said, citing a 59 percent voter turnout in California Tuesday and only 37 percent nationwide. Alatorre asked the council to have the city sponsor state and federal legislation for a voter holiday. But his colleagures balked at the idea, referring it instead to the council's Charter and Elections Committee, which Alatorre heads. Caren A Los Angeles city councilman's "bold and innovative" proposal to get voters to the polls is didn't finish that book and they wouldn't give me my diploma. That was the driest junk I ever saw," she said. "I think I've read every one of Shakespeare's, though." Bolling, 85, who lives in Tulsa, Okla., attended Centennial from 1917 to 1920 and had racked up more than enough credits to graduate when she left to marry an Oklahoma oil i I