The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 11, 1979-Page 7 U.S. DOUBTS VALIDITY OFJIOSTAGES' STATEMENT Embassy seige continues Doily Photo by DAVID HARRIS MEMBERS OF SIDDHA Yoga Dham chant during a Sunday morning meditation service. (Continued from Pase 1) three-man delegation in Tehran con- ducting behind-the-scene talks for the release of the hostages. The officials, who asked riot to be named, said some of the embassy in- vaders argued for setting a deadline on their demand the U.S. government send deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi from his New York hospital back to Iran to stand trial for his life, while others wanted to release some hostages as a good-will gesture. In another development, one of the embassy militants, asked in a telephone interview with a Swedish reporter whether the students might kill their hostages if their demands were not met, responded darkly, "Maybe." THE LEADERS of the militants and Iranian officials have repeatedly assured the world that the embassy captives would not be harmed unless the United States mounted a military operation to free them. This unidentified student's statement may have been unauthorized, but it may also have reflected growing frustration among the anti-American mob at the embassy. Angry Americans staged new anti- Iranian protests and marches across the United States yesterday. American longshoremen continued to refuse to handle Iranian ships. THE STATE Department says there are 60 to 65 American hostages and 35 to 40 others. It had been presumed the non-Americans were mostly Iranians, but it was reported in Washington yesterday most were Indians or Pakistanis. Iranian religious leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini told an envoy from Pope John Paul II that if Jesus Christ, were alive today he would condemn toe Carter administration's refusal to ex- tradite the ousted shah, Tehran Radio said. It broadcast a recording of the ayatollah's remarks. The pope sent Ar- chbishop Annibale Bugini to Iran to seek the release of the hostages. Khomeini gave Bugini permission to visit the embassy, but told him the shah plundered Iran for 37 years and should face revolutionary justice. The broad- cast, monitored in Kuwait, also said Khomeini went into seclusion in the holy city of Qom, 100 miles south of Tehran, and would not receive any visitors for a week. BUT ABOL Hassan Bani Sadr, the man Khomeini put in charge of the Foreign Ministry after the Iranian government resigned last week, said Khomeini met with Bugnini only because he was a fellow clergyman and the meeting "shall not alter anything" regarding the embassy stalemate, Tehran Radio reported. Bani Sadr, believed to be a member of Khomeini's powerful Revolutionary Council, said the ayatollah has no desire to discuss the embassy takeover. The government-run radio said' the Roman Catholic prelate later was sent Landowners oppose TVA, dam closing' to the embassy in Tehran, 100 miles north of Qom, so he could report to Pope John Paul on conditions there. Copies of the embassy petition were given to four foreign ambassadors who visited the embassy yesterday to check on the hostages' well-being. The -document purportedly was 'signed by 33 of the American hostages. The students said only two persons had refused and the rest of the hostages would be asked to sign "later," Japan's Kyodo news service reported from Tehran. "We request our nation to release the Shah of Iran. In this way, we will be free," the document said, according to a Tehran source reached by telephone from Nicosia, Cyprus. Non-traditona1A2 religion marked by man tras, meditation (Continued fr'm Page 1) walk quietly to the front room. They are .a diverse-looking group of men and women, mostly in their twenties, with few features in yommon except the - 'deeply spiritual epressions etched on "their faces. The( seems to be an in- timate seriousness between them. THE WOMEN-and men settle onto their cushions ir opposite rows, facing the altar at the end of the room, and prepare for the morning's chanting. They also face several musicians, who will play the flute, 'bells, and har- monium alongwith exotic instruments like the "tanbours" and "mridung" along with thechanting. Someone bbws a horn in the outer hallway, and without a word the chan- ting, of "Swadhaya" begins. According to the Swami Muktandanda in his book 'The Nectar of Chanting': "Swadhara increases inner radiance, mental vigor and agility . . . this is concentration of high order, since all mental energy is collected and directed towards man- tras-reciting, hearing, and seeing them. One then enjoys the flow of love released by mantras." The men and women alternate chan- ting half-verses, repetitive melodies that do not vary as the chanting goes on slowly for more than an hour. Verses like: "Nityam shuddhom nirao- bhaosam nirao-kaaram niranjanom, Nitya-bodhom chidaa-nandam gurum brahma nomaa- rnyaham." are followed by translations: "I bow to the Guru who is Brahman, eternal and pure. He is beyond perception, formless, and without taint. He is eternal knowledge, consciousness, and bliss. "- The chanting continues until the last verses have been recited. The mem- bers, by bending over from their lotus position until their heads reach the floor, offer a final gesture of devotion to the Swami and leave the room. KNOXVILLE, Tenn.(AP) - After a decade of legal wrangling over such diverse interests as the three-inch snail darter and sacred Indian burial groun- ds, the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) is finally ready to close the gates of the Tellico Dam. But the federal agency still faces last- minute court challenges to the project and the possibility of having to use U.S. marshals to evict some landowners. "MY NEW YEAR'S resolution will be not to talk about the Tellico Dam," TVA chairman S. David Freeman said yesterday. "The controversy is over, the full process of the law has been,' exhausted." Following Friday's two legal rebuffs to dam opponents, Freeman appeared optimistic that the seven-state agency would soon be able to close the gates of its 24th dam and flood 16,000 acres of rich farmland in the Little Tennessee River Valley. However, attorneys for two groups of Cherokee Indians and former lan- downers who have waged a 14-year fight against the $130 million dam 25 miles southwest of Knoxville continued their fight. THE INDIANS' lawyers appealed to Supreme Court Justice William Bren- nan for an injunction yesterday, but a court spokesman said Brennan would not rule on the plea until at least tomorrow. On Friday, the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart had rejected the Cherokees' appeal for an injunction to prevent TVA from closing the dam's gates. And on another legal front, Boone Dougherty, a lawyer who used the snail darter to stop TVA's completion of the dam three years ago,,met yesterday with former landowners who refused to leave their homes Friday as ordered by TVA. Dougherty said he might file some kind of a suit on their behalf this week. U' conference explores impact of law on women D . RvA n RD I R.N I I M V NT i-s rI~y E1j1 41A L' I.. 1 A l4 LA a The U.S. legal system's impact on women and women lawyers was con- sidered yesterday by some 400 par- ticipants in the 19 Midwest Regional' Conference on Wmen and the Law at the University. Sponsored by five Michigan law schools, the weekend conference featured 20 worksiops on various issues relating to womer. and the law. ONE WORKSHOP, entitled siinply "Title IX", dealt with the complexities surrounding the federal law which prohibits sex-based discrimination in athletics. Speakers tt the workshop in- cluded Margot Polivy, a former ad- ministrative assistant to Bella Abzug, and a specialist in administrative law, education and athleics in Washington, D.C. The Department of Health, Education, and WAlfare (HEW) was ordered last year ty a federal judge to complete investigations into its backlog of alleged Title IY violations by October 1979, said Polivy, adding that HEW of- ficials have failel to carry out the man- date. Polivy ako said among these ycases, those against the Universities of Michigan and Mnnesota are the oldest. OTHER WORKSHOPS, such as "Coping with Family and Career," focused on the woman's dual role as lawyer and parent, and the adjustmen- ts needed to pay both roles adequately. This *workshop was headed by Rosemary Wdock and Sally Lee Foley, two Detroit-ajea attorneys. Wolock, a new mother, explained the problems wmen, especially women lawyers, facewhen deciding whether to I continue working, or to stay home to raise children. "The choices a lawyer-parent must make are difficult or)es," Wolock said. She explained some of the problems facing women include lack of child care facilities, work satisfaction, and career development. Work satisfaction becomes an issue, Wolock said, when a woman continues to work if she likes her job, despite inadequate child care or salary. WOLOCK CALLED for the rights of "lawyer-parents to. make their own decisions (concerning whether to work or stay home to raise a family) without feeling guilty. . . and support from the legal and womens' community no mat- ter what the choice is." Her co-panelist, Foley, warned her' audience against feeling guilty when not at home. "The myth of the super- woman is in fact, a myth. The glamorous image of -a well-dressed woman, going to the office, (coming home, and cooking, etc.), is a myth." Second-year University law student James Barton, one of the few men at- tending the conference, said, "Men are being discriminated against," as well as women. He said the workshop "Coping with Family and Career" seemed to focus on women caring for children more than on men caring for children. Barton said laws pertaining to womens' rights, such as those discussed in Marital Property, must be examined closely. "Women have been discriminated against in their everyday lives, and passing legislation won't change that," he said. Daily Photo by JIM KRUZ WASHINGTON, D.C., attorney Margot Polivy said yesterday that a case charging the University with violating Title IX, is one of the two oldest cases before the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Polivy spoke at a work- shop on Title IX, as part of a conference on Women and the Law. NE PRE STRO (Roberto Rc Stalk, moving drama of MAN), in a displaced pi W Id War 11, who ma escpe her dreary, roo film of Italian neo-real genre. (81 riin) THE DEC MA II ENTS lo1, 1 S MBO~.LI !osellini, 1950) f a woman (INGRID BE ersons camp at the en rries an Italian soldie ,tless existence. A clo ism by the master of RG- d of r to Issic the 7:00 ONLY AMERON h-,fv.nlIi 10711