Page 2-Saturday, May 23, 1981-The Michigan Daily Mitterand takes office, dissolves Parliament 4 PARIS (AP)-Socialist President Francois Mitterrand dissolved the French Parliament yesterday and named a Cabinet that did not include any of the Communists whose support made possible his election victory over conservative incumbent Valery Giscard d-Estaing. Mitterrand's Cabinet does include one radical leftist as justice minister and, for the first time, ministers of leisure time, national solidarity, the sea, and decentralization. Six of the 42 posts went to women. MITTERRAND has refused to respond publicly to Communist deman- ds that their party be represented in the government. The new Cabinet will run the country until legislative elections next month, when Mitterrand hopes to oust the cen- ter-right majority in the 491-seat National Assembly and replace it with a majority of Socialists and Com- munists who will support his proposed economic and social programs. Working with Premier Pierre Mauroy, Mitterrand named European Common Market Commissioner Claude Cheysson as foreign minister, with An- dre Chandernagor his deputy for European affairs. THE PARTY'S longtime defense ex- pert Charles Hernu was named defense minister. Although there were no communists, Mitterrand brought in Maurice Faure from the small moderate Radical Left Party as justice minister and Michel Jobert, an independent who was foreign minister for Georges Pompidou, as minister of foreign trade. He carefully balanced the various factions in the Socialist Party. His moderate rival for the presidential candidacy, Michel Rocard, was made minister of economic planning, and Jean-Pierre Chevenement, leader of the party's left wing, was named minister of research and technology. MITTERRAND also made in- novations, with a "minister of leisure time," Andre Hnry, and a "minister of national solidarity," Nicole Quesiaux. Other innovations were a "ministry of the sea," headed by Louis Le Pensec, a native of the west coast Brittany region, and the addition to the impor- tant Interior Ministry, which controls the police and regional administration, of the title of ministry for "decen- tralization." It was given to Gaston Defferre, a former Socialist candidate who as longtime mayor of Marseille, knows in- timately the problems of excessive power being held in Paris. There were four women ministers. Today Another revolution A N ARTICLE in a Peking literary magazine and a recent performance by the Peking Youth Art Theater may have kindled the flame for another revolution in China. Ten years after the Cultural Revolution, China may be entering its own Sexual Revolution. The Peking Literature and Arts Gazette advised its readers that kissing is not indecent. "Kissing in Western countries is as common as shaking hands in China,"' the journal asserted, adding that kissing should not be regarded by Chinese citizens as shameful or morally wrong. The magazine noted that a kissing scene in the Shakespearean play The Merchant of Venice produced recently by Peking's Youth Art Theater "almost caused a scandal" because of China's "ignoran- ceof the outside world." Today's weather Warm again today with a high in the mod 80s. There is a slight chance of showers in the late afternoon, but it will probably just remain hot and humid. Happenings ... SATURDAY FILMS AAFC - Coal Miner's Daughter, 7 & 9:15 p.m., MLB 3. C2-Violette, 7:30 & 9:40 p.m., Angell Aud A. CFL - Bringing up Baby, 1, 4:30 & 8 p.m.; Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, 2:45,6:15 & 9:45 p.m., Michigan Theater. CG - It Happened One Night, 7 & 10 p.m., Lorch Hall. SUNDAY Cinema Guild - The Group, 8 p.m., Lorch Hall. TUESDAY Chemistry - Sem., Dr. Eddy DeGrave, "Applications of Mossbauer Spec- troscopy to Radioactive Waste Glass Studies"; 1200 Chem. Building, 4 p.m Folk Dance Club - Beg. Teaching; Union, 7-8:15 p.m. The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 14-S Saturday, May 23, 1981 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, An Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates:$12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 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 Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and Field Newspaper Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY: Sports desk: 764-0562; Circulation: 764-0558; Classified advertising: 764-0557; Display advertising: 764-0554; Billing: 764-0550; Composing Room: 764-0556. Federal grand jury in diects Teamsters chief, 4 others From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Teamsters President Roy Lee Williams was indic- ted Friday by a federal grand jury which charged that he conspired with a reputed mobster to bribe Sen. Howard Cannon in a 1979 effort to influence trucking legislation. Williams, who succeeded to the union presidency only a week ago, branded the indictment "a damn lie." Cannon, (D-Nev.), was not charged. The 11-count indictment, handed down in Chicago and announced by the Justice Department in Washington, was Williams' fourth; he has never been convicted. ON THURSDAY, the Senate's Per- manent Investigations subcommittee issued an interim report describing the 66-year-old Williams as having been groomed by mob bosses to take over the Teamsters union and run it for their benefit. Williams, in seclusion in Las Vegas, Nev., said in a statement released here yesterday: "I have been informed today that a federal grand jury in Chicago issued an indictment against me for conspiring to bribe a U.S. senator in an effort to stop deregulation of the trucking industry. These charges are adamn lie. WILLIAMS, THREE pension fund managers - Allen Dorfman, Thomas O'Malley, and Andrew Massa - and reputed Chicago crime syndicate figure Joseph Lombardo were charged with offering Cannon a 5.8-acre tract of Las Vegas property at a low price to "in- fluence his official acts. . . on proposed legislation concerning the deregulation of the trucking industry." Cannon headed the Senate committee on commerce, science and transpor- tation. The Senate Permanent In- vestigations Subcommittee, in an in- terim report on the scandal-ridden Teamsters Central Pension Fund, Thursday recommended Williams be removed as head of the union unless he answeres allegations he is "controlled" by organized crime. N ever Re maOin s Silent 764-0558 Editor-in-Chief ............ DAVID MEYER Managing Editor ....... NANCY BILYEAU Editorial Page Director ......CHRISTOPHER POTTER Special Supplement Editors ......STEVE HOOK, PAMELA KRAMER Arts Editor .............DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor .........MARK MIHANOVIC Executive Sports Editors MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Julie Barth, Andrew Chapman, VickiEnl, Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger, Lou Fintor, Mark Gindin, Michal Hershkovitz, Sue Inglis, Susan McCreight, Gregor Meyer, Jenny Miller, Annette~iarqn, Business Manager... RANDI CIGELNIK Display/Classified . Manager ... LISA STONE BUSINESS STAFF: Aida Eisenstat, Cyn- thia Kalmus, Mary Ann Misiewicz, Nancy Thompson SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Mark Borowski, Joe Chapelle, Martha Crall, Jim Dworman, John Fitzpatrick, John Kerr, Ron PollackJimThompson. PHOTO STAFF: Jackie Bell, Paul Engstrom ARTSSTAFF: MarkDighton, FredSchill