Can Cowboy shotgun crack Steel curtain? Dallas-Pittsburgh matchups even. See p.8 Dallas' Staubach A WELCOME SURPRISE See Editorial Page r ir i an I tt1 LIGHT FLURRIES High-close to 30 Low-i2 See Today for Details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 93 Anti Arbor. Mich igan-Sundnv Jnnunrv 71 1979 ram r--4- T___ ]. _..__ ('__ P_.____ _ i n , ..*,* . "wuI unyIduv zI 7 I rien.celts en ages plus Suppement Jobs still tight for ;women, sa s stu NEW YORK (AP)--Women in the job market are no better off than they were at the turn of the century, according to anew survey by an anti-discrimination group. Furthermore, the report says, the federal government and businesses are "rapidly retreating" from an earlier commitment to redress racial in- lustices. , THE RESULTS of three-year studies 6f institutional sexism and racism were released this weekend by the non-profit Council on Interracial Books for Children. The work was sponsored by the Carnegie Corp. The council is a non-profit group based in New 'York that has studied racial and sexual stereotypes in children's textbooks and other aspects of discrimination. The Carnegie Corp. is a non-profit educational foundation that makes grants for demonstration projects, research and experimental programs. The studies conclude that while 60 per cent of Americans are female or mem- bers of a racial minority, white males still dominate business, government, the media, education and health in- stitutions. IR. ROBERT MOORE, director of the council's resource center; said the data showed "females and minorities remain relatively powerless and-or poor." "Total documentation highlights the grossly disproportionate white male control of our society's institutions," he said. Moore contended the reports provide "strong evidence of the need for See JOB, Page 7 t- Khomeini to en eil Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG The Earle, Ann Arbor's jazz restaurant and music club, will soon be changing its format to become "more of a restaurant and less of a club." Since its opening in December 1977, the Earle has been losing money, according to co-owner Dennis Webster (insert). P jazz losing mgoney TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Ayatullah Khomeini reportedly told his followers in Iran yesterday he will end his 14-year exile Friday and return to Iran to build an Islamic republic and directly challenge the government installed by the shah. Prime Minister Shashpour Bakhtiar "has only the military now, and that's not 100 per cent," said a Bakhtiar associate. TEHRAN RADIO reported new poli- tical violence yesterday in the southwest oil center of Ahwaz, where 30 died or were injured last week. In the capital, more than 1,000 persons shouting "Hail to Khomeini!" peacefully marched near Tehran University, one day after pro- IKhomeini marches by millions throughout the nation. There were new signs of a split in the military between pro- and anti-shah factions, and of growing divisions in the ranks of the political and religious op- position to the "vacationing" shah. Officials at Khomeini's headquarters in suburban Paris said the 78-year-old leader would return to Iran Friday and had so informed his followers there. A formal announcement was expected later today. Ibrahim Yazdi, an aide to the Moslem leader, said Khomeini may soon an- nounce a five-man Revolutionary Council for the transition to an Islamic republic. Yazdi said he foresaw pariticpation of members of the National Front, the political opposition to the shah, in a future government. Yazdi said Khomeini may soon an- nounce a five-man Revolutionary Council for the transition to an Islamic republic. Yazdi said he foresaw par- ticipation of members of the National Front, the political opposition to the shah, in a future government. The Tehran newspaper Kayhan quoted a "reliable source" as saying Karim Sanjaby agreed to step down temporarily as chief of the Front so he can join the Revolutionary Council. The report said Khomeini insisted members of the Council belong to no political organization. BUT A NATIONAL Front spokesman said he had "no information at all on- this report" and said he thought it was not true. In his statement, Khomeini repeated his call for resignation of the Regency Council appointed by the shah to rule in his absence and of the Iranian Parliament to pave the way for the "legitimate" government. The Bakhtiar associate, who asked not to be identified, conceded that Khomeini "does not have a high opinion of the Bakhtiar government." He said the Moslem leader's return "will be a serious problem." BAKHTIAR SAID in an interview on French television he did not doubt the loyalty of the military as long as a legal government-meaning his-was in place. But he suggested the army might feel differently if Khomeini takes over. See KHOMEINI, Page 7 By DAN OBERDORFER and KEITH RICHBURG One year ago today, promoters were saying that Ann Arbor had an insatiable appetite for jazz. They're not saying that anymore. The Earle, billed as "Ann Arbor's Music Club," recently announced it will be changing its format to become more of a restaurant and less of a club. The reason: The Earle is going broke. MEANWHILE, Eclipse Jazz, the student-run promotional group, has not turned a profit on a concert since last September. This season, Eclipse is opting for proven big-name draws and a slick media advertising cam- paign to attract a wider audience. Tickets for the only Hill Auditorium concert scheduled so far - pianist Bob James - are selling for $5.50, $6.50, and $7.50, two dollars more than tickets for most previous con- certs. Does this indicate the collapse of the jazz scene in Ann Arbor, a place which, just a few years ago, was a favorite tour stop for artists such as Chick Corea? Most observers say no. Their ex- planations, which are as numerous as the observers themselves, frequently focus on the idea that the local audience was already saturated with jazz even before the Earle's December,1977 opening. Some blame the financial dif- ficulties caused by over-ambitious projects like the September Ann Ar- bor Jazz Festival. Others cite poor. See FISCA L, Page 2 See FISCAL, Page 2 Project aids community, shows students real life By MARTHA RETALLICK Regardless of the degree of truth. in oft-heard comments about student apathy and University administration cut- backs in innovative programs, at least one service-oriented project just keeps on going. Project Community not only surives, but more and more students are finding their way to its offices on the second floor of the Michigan Union to sign up for the increasing number of opportunities the project offers. INITIATED IN THE early sixties, Project Community is an experiential learning and community service program coordinated by the Unviersity. Each year, it places about 700 student volunteers in public schools, correctional facilities, child care centers, and community agencies throughout southeastern Michigan. Through their work in the program, students can explore areer possibilities and gain professional contacts while ser- ing the community. Project Community also offers a "real life" learning experience often missing from class lectures nd textbook abstractions. Project Community students involved in the program's mate Project, for example, do things like serve as eachers' assistants at Maxey Boys Training School north of nn Arbor, and run arts and crafts workshops for the in- mates at the Huron Valley women's prison. Over the years, the Inmate Project has grown so large that it has become a program within a program, with its own coordinator and staff. STUDENTS IN OTHER programs may work helping local residents fill out their income tax forms or tutor academically needy students in area public schools. For their efforts, Project Community students get two or three hours of. University course credit. In fact, the course credit may account for much of the program's continued popularity. To Project Community coordinator Jeffrey Howard, those two or three credits offer a "major or strong incentive" for students to sign up for the program. "Most students are wanting practical experience," he said. "But, since most are busy, they need the reward of credits." HOWARD NOTICES MORE and more members of what journalist Tom Wolfe dubbed the "Me Generation" coming into the program. When Project Community began in 1961, its participants "had a very other-orientation," he said. Not now, however. Howard sees more and more studen- ts "getting personal kickbacks" from their work in the See STUDENTS, Page 7 -Sunday * A majority of this year's frosh class favors legalization of marijuana and the right to an abortion. The new students also claim to be political moderates, rather than liberals or conser- vatives. See story, Page 7. . Federal aviation officials have begun a probe of the Lear jet crash Friday night at Detroit's Metropolitan Airport in which six people were killed. See story, Page 2. " Fourth Ward Republican City Councilman Ron Trowbridge is calling it quits Jan. 30. After his defeat in the GOP primary for State Senate, Trowbridge an- nounced plans to leave the coun- cil post for a position with Hillsdale College. See story, Page 10. * Hong Kong has granted asylum to 372 Vietnamese "boat people." See story, Page 10. 4 46 r Read the today column, Page 3 BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Hanoi accused Chinese troops yesterday of killing 20 Vietnamese and wounding dozens of others in more than 50 in- trusions into Vietnam's territory over the past 10 days. The Vietnam News Agency, monitored in Bangkok, said Chinese troops entered at more than 30 points along the border areas. It said Chinese troops kidnapped many Vietnamese and directed loudspeakers at Vietnam around the clock "to incite the Viet- namese people to oppose their gover- nment." TENSION BETWEEN the countries has heightened the past year because of alleged persecution of Chinese in Viet- nam and because of China's support for Cambodia. Meanwhile, on the Cambodian front, troops of the fallen government of Premier Pol Pot were massing for an attack yesterday on Vietnamese-held Battambang, Cambodia's second- largest city, sources here reported. They said the Pol Pot forces con- Hanoi accuses China of raids on Vietnam tinued to battle the Vietnamese and their Cambodian rebel allies on several fronts. Western and Thai military analysts in Bangkok said the Vietnamese and the rebels were running into stiffer resistance. SINCE ITS multi-pronged invasion in late December, the estimated 100,000- man Vietnamese-Cambodian force has become thinly spread, is getting little local support and is experiencing sup- ply shortages, the sources said. Battles were reported on Kong Island off the coast of southwestern Cam- bodia, at Takeo in the southeast, Svay Rieng on the border with Vietnam and in the remote northeastern provinces. The sources said a force of Pol Pot troops was threatening Batambang, a western provincial capital. The Viet- namese were bringing up reinfor- cements, including artillery pieces, to Battambang, they said. THE CITY, about 155 miles northwest of Phnom Penh, was taken by the Viet- See VIFNM FC: acra7 * c =-v £ 11V H VAZ21K7R2 , I ast chance lips away; SU wins By GEOFF LARCOM With their backs to the wall and their Big Ten title hopes reduced to a glimmer, the Wolverines gave it all they had yesterday. It just wasn't enough, however, as the cagers .. w.d. tn si m? q u a :.te , . 9 ',w ^ird: hwe '#n+,./ .- w