ECONOMIC DEMOCRACY See editorial page P Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom ~Etail BALMY See Today for details Vol. LXXXX, No. 38 AnnArbor, Michigan-Friday, October 19, 1979 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Angry C By MARK PARRENT AdooI -' When Viewpoint Lecture officials agreed to provide Tom Hayden and Jane Fonda with transportation from Southfield to Ann Arbor Monday night for their speech at Hill Auditorium, they decided to send a staffer who had access to a Cadillac. But riding in a luxury car would "hurt the image" of the millionaire husband and wife team, Viewpoint Lectures Chairperson Steve Gools said he was told, so he sent a Volkswagen instead. The Volkswagen wasn't quite right either, so the two ac- tivists rode in their own car to the lecture. THAT WAS ONLY one in a series of headaches Hayden and Fonda gave Viewpoint staffers, Gools said yesterday. The student-run University Activities Center. (UAC)-Viewpoint's parent organization-is so angry with the couple it's considering withholding some. of the $5,000 honoraium originally promised to their agents. "We have never had such difficulties with speakers in the history of Viewpoint Lectures," Gools said, despite the fact that Fonda and Hayden "came out looking like a rose." wUmay cI GOOLS AND UAC Public Relations Vice-President' Patrick Day said that ever since UAC began negotiations for the lecture last May, the affair had been plagued with "misrepresentations" and broken verbal agreements.. "It became clear that Fonda and Hayden were only in- terested in raising the money," Gools said. Fonda and Hayden lectured in Ann Arbor Monday night as a part of their 50-city, 35-day tour of the eastern portion of the nation. More than 4,000 spectators who paid $2 each jammed Hill Auditorium for the two-hour event. Even standing room tickets were sold. LISTING WHAT they called justifications for the possible honorarium reduction, Gools and Day said: Fonda and Hayden arrived some 45 minutes late for the lecture, causing obvious irritation in the audience and post- poning a news conference. "They didn't even apologize for being 45 minutes late, which I think is outrageous," Day said; * Organizers for the California-based Campaign for Economic Democracy "gave the impression that it (the visit) would entail much more than the lecture. A lot of the program that we had planned had to be curtailed"; I t Hayden * What was contracted as a lecture turned in a "political ,rally"; " Fonda and Hayden initially appeared ill-prepared for the lecture and Fonda only spoke for 15 minutes; " Fonda and Hayden advance people were "curt, deman- ding, and unresponsive to our needs"; * An electronic "bomb-sweep" of both Hill Auditorium and Alice Lloyd Resid~nce Hall (where a post-lecture recep- tion was held) were demanded at the last minute, and; * Advance persons continually changed their requirements for both a scheduled press conference and reception. DAY SAID THAT aside from the late arrival of the couple, it would be difficult to prove specific violations of the con- tract because he said most of the difficulties arose from "verbalagreements." But the tour's national coordinator, contacted late last night at Illinois State University in Normal, Illinois, termed the UAC complaints "childish, silly, and petty." "There are always little hitches and logistical problems," said Stephen Rivers, who has travelled with the Hayden- Fonda tour since it began last month. talk fee "I'M SORRY THEY had misconceptions, Rivers said. But "there's no such thing as an impression. We have a legal contract." Rivers said the "bottom line" in judging such an event should be the'reaction of the students. "I've never seen that level of energy, enthusiasm, and excitement," Rivers said of the Hill Auditorium crowd. Stephens said he regretted the late arrival of Fonda and Hayden, but he said the couple made up for their tardiness by staying on stage even longer than usual. He also said the ad- vance group required the bomb search because of threats received at other tour stops only days earlier. ALAN WALKER, president of Programs Corp. of America-Fonda and Hayden's booking agency-said his company would probably resort to legal means if UAC did not pay the contracted honorarium. "Many times people want more than the contract (specifies)," Walker said by telephone from Hartsdale, N.Y., last night. See HAYDEN, Page 12 Crowd rallies, marehes against rape By MARION HALBERG Last night the usually deserted Liber- ty Street between Fourth and Fifth Streets was crowded with more than 300 people, most of them women, demon- strating their anger at rape. At the Federal Building, one of the more dangerous areas in Ann Arbor for women, they marched and. spoke of "taking back the night" from sexual assailants. "Take Back the Night" was a rally sponsored by Women in Action, a University group comprised of students and area residents, which succeeded in arousing the crowd against the problem of rape. "The streets are becoming a battle ground," said speaker Bette Skandalis, an instructor in the Women's Studies Department. None of us is safe. I want to take back the night as a way of taking back some of our power. Rape is a crime of domination, it is not a crime of sex." Amy Coha of the Women's Crisis Cen- ter addressed the crowd on the 'legalities of rape and the Michigan rape law of 1975 which states that both men and women can be raped and that the degree of the sexual assault is deter- mined by how much violence is in- curred. See CROWD, Page 2 Carter to fiht Taiwan treaty ruling Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS WOMEN WENT OUT LAST night to "Take Back the Night"-a rally and march where women protested against rape. The faces of these women exhibit their fear of the night, which is usually when women are in most danger of being raped. FACULTY ASKS FOR116% INCREASE: Regents discuss. salaries From UPI, AP, and Reuter WASHINGTON - The Carter ad- ministration took the first step yester- day to try to overturn a court ruling that has thrown future U.S.-Chinese relations into limbo. The Justice Department told the Court of Appeals in a one-sentence notice that }t would appeal a lower court ruling'made late Wednesday night that President Carter acted im- properly last December in ending the 1954 Mutual Defense Treaty with Taiwan as part of, the agreement to normalize relations with China. ATTORNEY GENERAL Benjamin Civiletti said the Justice Department would appeal U.S. District Judge Oliver Gasch's ruling "as expeditiously as possible" to the appeals court, a depar- tment spokesman said. There was no indication that the ad- ministration would seek approval for Carter's action from Congress unless it loses the suit in higher courts. If the Taiwan treaty were reinstated, it could pose major implications for future U.S. relations with the People's Republic of China. SOME ADMINISTRATION officials fear that if the Taiwan treaty is con- tinued, Peking will close its Washington embassy. But Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.), who made the suit with 25 other conser- vative Congress members, opposes cut- ting off ties with America's longtime Asian ally. He said he was elated at the ruling - which he said stops the ad- ministration from breaking the law. By JULIE ENGEBRECHT The Regents discussed faculty salaries and toured the Flint campus yesterday, making for a relatively uneventful beginning to their October meeting. During a morning session in the Ad- ministration Building in Ann Arbor, the eight-member governing board heard comments on a report from Harvey Brazer, an economics professor and chairman of the Committee on the Economic Status of the Faculty (CESF). The faculty group is asking the Regents to make provisions in the University's budget request to the state for a 16 per cent salary hike. TODAY, THE Regents will be asked to authorize a $30.4 million request for state funds in the 1980-81 fiscal year. The state requires the request by Nov. 1. The executive officers are recom- mending an 11 per cent salary increase because they feel a 16 per cent hike is too much to ask from the state. The dif- ference between the faculty and ad- ministrative recommendations is about $3 million. The faculty, Regents and executive officers all agreed that the faculty deserves such an increae. The conflict, however, is over the figure to present to the state legislature. "I DON'T TIINK the (16 per cent) figure is too high relative to the needs of the 'faculty," Brazer said. "The question is of strategy in approaching the governor and legislature." His committee's view is that the See PROFS., Page 2 "It is the first time in this nation's almost 200 years of constitutional history that a federal judge has ruled directly on the power of treaty te- mination and it means that no American, not even the president, can break the law of the land," Goldwater said. STATE DEPARTMENT officials who asked not to be identified, said the ad- ministration is confident there will be no interruption in relations between China and the U.S. The officials said they are still assessing the impact of the decision in which Gasch declared that Carter needed the okay from two- thirds of the Senate or a majority vote in both houses to end the defense treaty. See CARTER, Page 12 Greek poet wins Nobel in literature From Keuter and AP STOCKHOLM - Greek poet Odysseus Elytis, best known for his vivid lyrics about the islands and waters of the Aegean Sea, was yester day named winner of the 1979 Nobel Prize for Literature. The 68-year-old Elytis, little known outside the Greek language, edged out a half-dozen internationally acclaimed writers who had been highly touted favorites for the prestigious honor. THlE LITERATURE prize, awarded by the Swedish Royal Academy of Let- ters, was the last of the six 1979 Nobels to be awarded. Each is worth $190,000. Five of the 10 laureates are Americans; including four of seven science prize- winners. The awards ceremony will be conducted Dec. 10 in Stockholm. Elytis - a. pen name for Odysseus Alepoudhelis - is the second Greek to win the Nobel for literature. Giorgos Seferis, a fellow poet in the surrealist influenced Greek school of the 1930s, was the laureate in1963. He won the award "for his poetry, which against the background of Greek tradition, depicts 'with sensuous strength and intellectual clearsighted- ness modern man's struggle for See GREEK, Page 5 Anti-nuke rally to-be peaceful, leader says LANSING (UPI)-Anti-nuclear activists strove yesterday to refute reports that civil disobedience is plan- ned at their upcoming demonstration, fearing it could cut attendance at the event they hope will draw 10,000 to the capital.- The demonstration, set for Sunday on the Capitol grounds, is designed to bring pressure -on the legislature and state government to shut down Michigan's three operating nuclear plants and ban construction of new ones. It also is aimed at getting nuclear weapons facilities out of the state. THE "MARCH for a Non-Nuclear Michigan" will be the largest anti-atom protest yet -in Michigan if it makes organizers' expectations. The event is being planned by the "Oct. 21 Coalition"-a collection of about 30 anti-nuclear, environmental and labor organizations including many which were involved in last spring's march on the Consumers Power Co. Midland plant which drew about 5,000. "There will be no acts of civil disobedience at the demonstration con- See ANTI-NUKE. Pale 9 Feds offer Michigamua options to University administrators By TOM MIRGA The federal government has told University officials how it would like to see them alter the University's relationship with the all-male Tribe of Michigamua to meet Title IX guidelines which prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex. "In essence," said Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson, "HEW (Health, Education and Welfare) has offered the University several options. One is that Michigamua agree to become a co-ed organization. The other option is that the group remains as is but that the University withdraw any and all sup- port from them."~ ASSISTANT Vice-President for Student Services Thomas Easthope said it was unclear whether HEW was requesting that the University evict Michigamua from its traditional meeting site in the Michigan Union. "But by the wording of the conciliatory agreement," he continued, "one would be led to believe that's the case." Last month the federal agency found the University in violation of Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972 for providing "substantial assistance" to the secret, all-male society for University seniors. Title IX prohibits recipients of federal assistance from discriminating on the basis of sex. The University's position in the com- plaint, which was initiated in Septem- ber 1976, has been that the question of Michigamua's receiving significant assistance from the University is open, seeing that the only aid the society now receives is a rent-free room in the Union. JOHNSON ALSO said the proposals from HEW, which were received in his office earlier this week, discounted the possibility of Michigamua paying the University rent for use of the room. "The University has not decided on how it will respond to these offers," he See HEW, Page 2 Frane .ix:?u..N... _.._..:.:::.x'::.:, : . .::: . ;: :. :.:.: :.:: .. .... ... .. :: iJii iii ...__ .. .. ::+ ' _ .. .... 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J ?x}?yti$'r3 " }'v '+f .ti3:,: };;; ;i-: %i.".: . v:<>i ti i:{ti :: rr 'i ri..3':i.}?' y::?f':+::3 v::":% 'Sviir ":::,t{::j;.r :;:; +.: i$>iiifi <::% ?,'" %% :"}:"%: v?$%iii: i:' : iY:4:t r"" rr:3. P r.}.. s e e e ..r . sit s .ra s-Yf /l /1 It"1 s+ ,t. mon farone or two University graduates to be clerking in any given year, this will be~the first time in recent history that three will serve. Clerk-hopefuls apply directly to the Justice for who they wish to work for, and generally serve one year clerking for a U.S. Court of Appeals before moving up to the Supreme Bench. Presently one University graduate, Philip Frickey, is clerking for a Supreme Court Justice. MSU welcomes ABC The Oct. 6 football/ l r televised. Being in the celebrity spotlight was so ex- citing for the Spartans that a picture of an ABC cameraman was on the front page of the Oct. 11 MSU News Bulletin. But there was just one proble~m: The cameraman in the picture was wearing a University of Michigan cap. One wonders if this cameraman had an unbiased view of the game as he zoomed in on the clash between the fierce rivals. n Russian intelligence Eight Soviet social scientists arrived in town yesterday to noirticiaite in a three-day "Soviet-American Conference on I change data, and set up research methods between the two countries to provide for cross-national data. In the course of their two-week, six-university tour, the Soviets have already visited Columbia University and New York University, Campbell said, and will go to the University of California's campuses at-Berkeley and Los Angeles and the University of Chicago. Q , On the insidIe The Illinois scouting report is on the sports page .. . a review of the new film Rich Kids on Page 6 ... and the hompi'. f n University, RP cudccneta Hall Concil are e- 1