i~:u I.E Page 2-Friday, October 19, 1979-The-Michigan Daily r 2 I I I. I I I L EARLY BIRD SAVINGS $100 OFF d PHOTO GREETINGS FORMER 'U' PRESIDENT UNDER CONSIDERA TION: Fleming: Ed. det. chief? Beast's a hit ten thousand yrs. later JOHN GOjYER ! -- ------- -- - --. COUPON GOOD FORI $1.00 OFF ANY ORDER OFI 25 MORE PHOTOI GREETING CARDS I COUPON REDEEMABLE WHEN ORDER IS PICKED .UP LIMIT ONE COUPON PER ORDER. VAILID ENTIRE MONTH OF OCTOBER, 1979. f - - - - - - -- - - - - *On processing done by Guardian Photo only. PURCHASE CAMERA SHOP ii 1115 SOUTH UNIVERSITY AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN PHONE: 665-6101J From wire and staff reports WASHINGTON - Former University President Robben Fleming is under consideration tobe the first secretary of education, White House sources say. Clifton Wharton Jr., former president of. Michigan State University (MSU) is also under consideration, the sources said. Wharton, who left MSU in January 1978, a year before Fleming took a post as head of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in Washington, is currently head of the State Univer- sity of New York. THESE SOURCES, who declined to be identified, said that at least seven names are on various lists, but that no list has been sent to Carter. No consen- sus candidate has emerged among the White House staff, they said. "I don't know about it," Fleming said last night. "I never really thought about being considered for the job. "I wouldn't take the story too seriously," he added. "This is a great town for rumors, and my name gets thrown around a lot." A DAY AFTER President Carter signed a bill creating the Department of Education, White House aides said the search is far from complete. Some of the best-known names in public education are under consideration, they indicated. The sources said that prominent on the lists are: Fleming, Wharton, Alan Campbell, director of the Federal Of- fice of Personnel Management; Mary Berry, who has been assistant secretary for education in the Depar- tment of Health, Education, and Welfare; Wilson Riles, superintendent of California's school system, and; television journalist Bill Moyers. The Carter administration has broadened its search.for a secretary of education after former New Mexico Gov. Jerry Apodaca apparently talked himself out of the job, White House sources say. INTERVIEWED BY telephone yesterday, Apodaca, whose guber- natorial term expired in 1978, said he met with Carter in the Oval Office for half an hour in early August and again aboard Air Force One on Oct. 10 during a flight to New Mexico. Apodaca, 45, originally promoted by White House political aides interested in seeing more appointments from the Hispanic community, had been thought to have education still nn th The University of Michigan Department of THEATRE & DRAMA presents . . The game that never means anything...and never ends October. j-09 4 Re~isfl EieCt e300 com an 1t Fortune 300 ' r D by Robert E. Sherwood Sm Featul"aGestAris n Res - n s . -s. A echr~~al ~POWER CENTER Placement Offlcetoarrange Wed.-Sat. Oct. 17-20 at 8pm on. ntVIW- Sun. Oct. 21 at 2pm ToihihruhStrOt 0at8pm&Sunr Oct2Satatem.sicetsavilaleat hePT W re 'iN Ticket Office, 764-0450 in The M League week - x 1P 'ctdays. 10-1 & 2-5 p.m. k a all Hudson's & e a The qual Cpportutity Employer M/F/H Power Center 6.8 p.m. the inside track on the post. While he is formally e lists of candidates, he ac- Fleming tually is out of the running, these aides said. "He didn't impress the president in a meeting they had," said one aide. "He apparently wasn't that heavy substan- tively on education issues." AFTER APODACA met with Carter, the sources said, the whole process started over to find a chief to run the department, which will have 17,000 em- ployees and a $14.2 billion budget. Forget for a moment that University scientists hear of Mastadon discoveries about once a year. Pretend Mastadon skeletons have not been found in every county in the bottom half of the lower peninsula. Now put yourself in the place of Douglas and Shannon Johnson of rural Richfield, Mich., last Saturday when a neighbor wandered over to their place with a four foot thigh bone he'd found. AN' EARTHMOVING machine digging a pond on the Johnsons' pond had exposed a femur, or thigh bone, belonging to a giant wooly ancestor of the elephant who died on what would 10,000 years later be the Johnsons' place. "I just can't believe how much they. found," said Shannon Johnson of the archeological dig that has replaced the construction dig on her land. "It keeps going on and on." Monday morning the Johnsons calle' Ann Arbor. THE SKELETON of the beast who once roamed the lower peninsula is "exceptionally large," according to University Paleontologist Gerald Smith who is at the site with other resea-rchers to determine when and how the animal died. So far, Gerald Paulsen, -a preparator from the University and, others have removed the front half of= the skeleton, including two nine-foot' tusks found in their proper positions in the Mastadon's skull. "Much of the skeleton is there and in place," Smith said. The job should be completed by the weekend, he said. The Johnsons are providing a trailer for Paulsen to live in while he works. Johnson, who seems to know as much about Mastadons as any zoology major, was effusive in her thanks to those who had helped the family. Not only had police worked overtime to keep looters away, but townspeople had helped with the digging, and one person even bought a tent so the ex- cavatiork could go on in the rain. HEW offers 'U' ichigamu Roptions SContinued from Page 1) cortinued. "At this point, the only thing that can be said is that the University will take them into consideration under advisement from the University attor- ney and will respond in due course." The vice president said he had no idea how long it would take the ad- ministration to get back in touch with HEW and that he has not discussed the matter with Interim University President Allan Smith. Easthope, however, said he was certain talks bet- ween the federal agency and the University would continue and could result in a meeting between the two parties. The administration was given 90 days from the issuance of the decision on' Sept. 20 to come into voluntary com- pliance with Title IX. OVER 300 GA THER A T FEDERAL BUILDING: Crowd protests against rape 0 7 Solution To Your Problem Use these numbers to call the Michigan Daily BILLING ..... 0 0 CIRCULATION .... CLASSIFIED.... DISPLAY. ...... SPORTS......:.. 0 764-0550 764-0558 764-0557 764-0554 764-0552 764-0562 764-0556 (Continued from Page i) Coha pointed out, however, that women are still afraid to go to the police, and rape still is a stigma to the woman who is victimized. "We as a society," said Coha, "are responsible for the rap- victims." "Our anger," said Cathy Keresztesi, one of the Women in Action organizers of the rally and march; "should be directed at the system that forces violence out- of its people and needs violence to survive." The message that consumerism and the negative representation of women in the media are reasons for the vic- timization of women was loud and clear on Liberty Street. After the rally, men were asked to step aside in solidarity as. women marched through the streets chanting, "Take back the night. Take back the night!" Rice stressed that the women mar- ched without men as a symbolic THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-90) Volume L.XXXX, No. 38 JF iday, October 19. 1979 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, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters) ;$13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. G 1 gesture; the area they traversed usually is considered unsafe for women to walk unescorted at night. Their route tools them past Washington, Ingalls, Observatory; Catherine, and Huron Streets, passing the Adult Bookstore, MLB, the Univer- sity Hospital, and some downtown bars, then back to the ,Federal Building. These sites were chosen because, ac- cording to Women in Action member Jackie Rice, they are the areas with the highest incidence of rape. There will be a mass meeting as a follow-up to last night's rally and mar- ch in the Kuenzel room of the Union Monday, October 22, at 7:30 p.m. The meeting is intended to form strategies to work on the long-term problem of rape and societal changes. - Also at the rally was the Theater Company of Ann Arbor, which pefor- med 'Judy Grahn's "A 'Woman, is'; Talking to Death," about a 55-2year-old woman found in the snow after being raped. Paula Amann sang "Take Back the Night," a song about rape by Sue Fink and Joelyn Grippo. Barb Christansen, a black belt in karate, per= formed a self-defense maneuver called a kotta. Last night's rally was one of many Take Back the Night rallies and mar- ches that have been held on campuses and in cities throughout the country. This was the first "Take Back the Night" in Ann Arbor, although similar ones have taken place recently in Yp- silanti and Lansing. Profs., administration disagree on pay hike COMPOSITION 0 0 0 Ib + Sban+ 1OuI HELD OVER By Popular Demand- - THREE DA YS ONL Y- SENIOR PORT RA IT S THRDARE CONTINUING ITHROUGH WEDNESDAY (Continued from Page 1) University should ask the state for "that which we need now." "I'm personally very supportive of the suggestion," said Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arborl). "My question is: How do we do it?" HIGHLIGHTING the annual after- noon visit to Flint were presentations on the riverfront campus, and its new and projected facilities. The Regents and executive officers journeyed through the newest areas of the Univer- I STAR BAR sity branch campus when they com- pleted the day's business. The Regents also tabled an item con- cerning a small construction project at Flint. They said they were concerned about the lack of bids. The lowest bid- der is a company, Sorenson-Gross of Flint, which has taken the University to arbitration in a construction dispute. Edgar Holt, a member of the National Association for the Advan- cement of Colored People (NAACP) in Flint was the only speaker to address the Regents during a public comment session. Daily Official Bulletin FRIDAYOCTOBER 19, 1979 Daily Calendar: Guild House: Luncheon, Helen Howe, Exec. Dir.. Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights: "Whose Body, Whose Decision?", 802 Monroe. noon. Industrial and Operations Engineering: J. Weglarz, "Control Theory Models for Resource Allocation Problems," 229 W. Eng., 3 p.m: Career Planning and Placement: George Har- tshorn, Ford Motor Co., "Training and Develop- ment," E. Lee. Rm., Rackham, 3 p.m. Astronomy: Eliot Malumath, "Giant Galaxies-Cannibals of the Universe," Aud. B, Angell, 8:30 p.m. 109 N. Main St.-769-0109 APPEARING TONIGHT: DICK SIEGEL and his MINISTERS OF MELODYS "Ann Arbor's Original Honky Tank Dance Bar" The Uion Nhsbeen found Yes, JENNIFER SIMON will be sitting prettier than she expected to be at the Ohio State Game. As WINNER of-the m