Fr= YCU SEE NE L MA)PEN C Z-g MSA cleans up Because Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) members apparently have been neglecting their housekeeping duties, the fire department nearly closed the doors on their Michigan Union offices. A fire inspector visiting the premises last December was reportedly miffed about the somewhat disheveled conditions of the place. The inspector gave Assembly. members until this week to clean up, or the offices would be shut- down. They cleaned up. The December visit was prompted by a break-in into the offices. Vandals, apparently with keys, entered the offices and set the mimeograph machine on fire, according to the MSA vice-president Kate Rubin. Rubin said the vandals were putting -ages of the Bible through the mimeograph machine, then lighting the pages on fire. Yesterday, Assembly member Jeff Supowit remarked, "It's been a lot cleaner around here lately." Supowit also said that Rubin is the biggest offender when it comes to messy desks. Shakey 's tape The Daily's citywide search for Shakey Jake and his cassett recording, "The Greatest Hits of'Shakey Jake" ended yesterday when the tape was delivered to the Daily office by none other than Shakey Jake himself. "There's more on this tape than songs and jokes and stories," he claimed: "It will teach you young people how to deal with life." The recording, which Jake personally autographed, will soon be reviewed by the Daily Arts staff. 'U geography chairman named Rackham associate dean Professor Donald Deskins Jr., chairman of the university geography department, has been named associate dean of the Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Alfred Sussman, Univerity Graduate School dean, said, "Professor Deskins' administrative ex- perience, as well as other aspects of his academic career, equip him admirably for the position of associate dean." Sussman added that Deskins' respponsibility will be for financial aid, counseling and any questions relating to the welfare of all graduate students. Deskins has served as geography department chairman since 1975. In addition to that post, he has served as head of the Afro-American Geography Project, a national group designed to upgrade the quality of geography instruction at predominantly black colleges. f ~ " Prof. cited for hydrocarbon phase leadership Donald Katz, university professor emeritus of chemical engineering, will receive the 1979 Anthony Lucas Gold Medal Award from the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers at the AIME annual banquet on February 21 in New Orleans. Katz is being recognized for "his distinguished contributions to hydrocarbon phase behavior leadership as an engineering educator," according to the award citation. He joined the university faculty in chemical engineering in 1936 and served as chairman from 1951-62. Katz received three degrees from the university including a Ph. D and retired from the A. H. White University Professorship in 1977. 0 . Taey en On January 21, 1969, Ann Arbor police confirmed rumors that of- ficers had warned the University Activities Center (UAC) president that police action could result from the performance of the play "Dionysus in '69." The UAC president was warned that officers in his organization could be held legally responsible if prosecution on ob- scenity or indecent exposure resulted from the performance. Happenings FILMS Cinema II - The Virgin and the Gypsy; Aud. A, Angell, 7, 9 p.m. Cinema Guild - Little Big Man Aud. 7, Old Arch., 7,9:45 p.m. PERFORMANCES Dance - Israeli Dancing Group performance: Hillel, 1429 Hill St., 12-1 p.m. Faculty Chamber Music Recital - Museum of Art, 2 p.m. Women's Gymnastics - Michigan v. Michigan State: Crisler Arena, 2 p.m. ,Men's Gymnastics - Michigan v. Michigan State: Crisler Arena, 2 p.m. Musical Society - Philidor Trio: Rackham Aud., 2:30 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS Dance - Israeli dancing: Hillel, 1-3 p.m. Wesley Foundation - Worship, includes Afro-American music by Gail Barnes, readings from Paul Lawrence Dunbar, community singing: Wesleyan Lounge, 602 E. Huron, 5 p.m. Meeting - Gay discussions: Feminist Federal Credit Union, 500 E. William, 6 p.m. Meeting - Community Switchboard mass meeting; 608 N. Main St., 7 p.m. MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1979 FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op (Lubitsch night) Die Puppe, 9:30 p.m., Anna Boleyn, 10:20 p.m., Aud., A, Angell. MISCELLANEOUS Alpha Phi Omega - Red Cross student blood drive: Bursley, 3-9 p.m. Coffee House - "Israel Now," Ruth Navon, Israeli singer and recording star, Middle eastern food and photo exhibit: Pendleton Room, Union, 8-10 p.m. Pardon me, Ray The biggest hit in Nashville country music these days is a satirical commentary on former Tennessee governor Ray Blanton's propensity for pardoning criminals. Brian Christie, a Nashville television weather reporter, recorded "Pardon Me, Ray" because he was disturbed that Blanton had pardoned three convicts and commuted the sentences of 49 others, including a double murderer. Christie wrote some of the lyrics and compiled the rest from suggestions by at least 100 others including newsroom workers at his television station and by the musicians who had written the song's music. The most requested record in Tennessee begins, "Pardon me, Ray, are you the cat that signs the pardons? Cause you're an old friend of mine, just put your name on the line. Double murder and rape,that's all the jury put me in for. And I'm sure you'll agree, they took advantage of me." F The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 21, 1979-Page 3 U.S. STATE DEPAR TMENT: Women officials denied power WASHINGTON (AP) - Women appointed by President Carter to high- ranking posts at the State Department are finding it take more than a desk and a title to crack the "old boy's club" and influence foreign policy. Carter, whose relations with women's groups seemed to be getting worse recently, appointed more women to top foreign policy jobs than any other president when he took office in 1977. BUT ONE APPOINTEE, Patsy Mink, has quit in frustration, partly because she was given too little respon- sibility. Another, Lucy Wilson Benson, stays on even though she has been bypassed frequently in the policy- making process. The same bypassing has been ex- perienced by.Patricia Derian, assistant secretary of state for human rights-one of the Carter ad- ministration's early priority policies. On the other hand, Mathea Falco, one of the few female Carter appointees with an expert's credentials before she came to the State Department, says she has been accepted by her male colleagues. SOME CASE HISTORIES illustrate the way women have fared. Ms. Mink became assistant secretary of state for oceans, environmental and scientific affairs after 12 years in Congress and a losing campaign for the Senate in 1976. But the State Department assigned responsibility for the ."law of the sea" negotiations on a treaty governing in- ternational exploitation of ocean mineral resources to Elliot Richardson, who was given the title of special am- bassador. RESPONSIBILITY FOR the ad- ministration's nuclear non- proliferation policy went to Joseph Nye, who as deputy undersecretary was nominally Ms. Benson's subordinate. Six months ago, Ms. Mink quit to become president of Americans for Democratic Action. "I felt I could do more outside the State Department," she said last week. Foreign policy, she found, "was considsered the private domain of those who came up from the ranks and those with expert's creden- tials from other areas, like academia." Almost all of them are men. Unitil recently, there were few women in the elite career service. But in the past few years, about one-fourth of the department's new foreign service officers have been women. MS. BENSON IS undersecretary of. state for security assistance, science and techology. She came to her job withoutformal experience in those highly technical areas after she served as national president of the League of Women Voters. Knowledgeable department sources, who asked not to be named, say Ms. Benson has never overcome her initial lack of experience. Reponsibility for negotiating arms limitation agreemen- ts has been given to others, all males. Nye was given control of nucear non- proliferation policy until he left in December to resume his teaching post at Harvard University rather than risk losing his tenure. BUT INSTEAD OF responsibility for non-proliferation policy being left in Ms. Benson's office, it was transferred to the aegis of Thomas Pickering. Ironically, he is Ms. Mink's replacement. "I find that startling," Ms. Fink said. Ms. Benson refused comment. Ms. Falco is assistant secretary in charge of coordinatiang anti-narcotics efforts. Previously, she was special assistant to the president of the U.S. Drug Abuse Council and recognized as an expert in narcotics control. "This is truly a male institution, but my experience has been that once you demonstrate, competence, acceptance follows," Ms. Falco said. "I think women who come into jobs without ex- perience just because they are women are done a disservice. They're playing against a stacked deck." I -* THE YOGA CENTER OF ANN ARBOR 201 East Ann Ann Arbor, fi 48104 Battle continues over U.S. abortion policy 8 Week Session Staris Jan. 29-$30 YOGA CLASSES: Monday-Wednesday-6-8 p.m. Saturday-10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Call 769-4321 Io Arthur Penn's 1971 WASHINGTON (AP)-Six years after the Supreme Court legalized abor- tion, opponents of the procedure are preparing for what has become an an- nual ritual: the commemoration of the court decision by thousands of demon- strators. But the target of tomorrow's demon- stration, sponsored by a group known as March for Life, extends beyond the court. Demonstrators are aiming at in- fluencing the votes on abortion that will be taken in Congress during the next year. AND THOSE VOTES in turn will be used as ammunition in the 1980 elec- tions, when abortion opponents hope to elect senators and congressmen more agreeable to their cause. Supporters of the court's 1973 lan- dmark decision have no plans for a counterdemonstration tomorrow, but say they will make some announcemen- ts of their own. The National Abortion Rights Action League, for example, plans to release information on a fund formed to pay for' abortions for poor women who cannot afford them. The league estimates that the num- ber of federally funded abortions has dropped 98 per cent since Congress placed strict. curbs on the use of Medicaid money for abortions. The public funding issue will be revived. again this year as Congress prepares the fiscal 1980 budget. Sean Downey, legislative director of the National Right to Life Committee, said his group and its allies will be lobbying for even stricter prohibitions onbuseof government money for abortions. But the group's primary objective is passage of a constitutional amendment banning abortion. Groups that defend abortion rights have been able in the past to kill such amendments by keeping them bottled up in subcommittees. But Downey said abortion opponents will mount a lobbyng effort aimed at moving the amendment to the House Judiciary Committee by February 1980, with a vote by the full committee before the 1980 congressional elections. Downey acknowledged that proposals for comparable action in the Senate Judiciary Committee are almost non- existent now that Sen. Edward Ken- nedy (D-Mass.) has become its chair- man. Right-to-life forces already have an- nounced a "hit list" of senators who will be targeted for defeat in the 1980 elec- tions, including Senators Frank Churck (D-Idaho); Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.); George McGovern, (D-S.D.); Birch Bayh (D-Ind.); and Bob Packwood (R- Ore.). Daily Official Bulletin SUNDAY,.JANUARY 21. 1979 SUMMER PLACEMENT :3200 SA13-763-4117 Camp Becket/Chimney Corners. YWCA/Coed, Mass. Will interview here Mon. Jan. 29 from 9 to 3:30. All positions open at this time -waterfront rWSJ ) ridiog. arts/crafts, many others. Register in person or b phone. Camp Hickory Ridge, Coed/Handicapped, Mich. Will interview here 'rues. Jan . :30) from 9 to 5. Openings include waterfront WSJ arts/crafts: nurse, unit counselors. Register in person of by phone. Camp Tamarack, Mi. Coed. Will interview here Wed. Jan .:1tfrom 9 to 5. All position open -waterfront ( WSJ1,arts/crafts, sports, nature. gen. counselor's and many others. Register by phone or in person. OtNAtV. JANUARY 22. t979 Daily Calendar: Physics/Astronomy: C. Quigg, Fermilab, "About the Fifth Quark,"2038 Randall Lab., 4p.m. LITTLE BIG MAN The rope of the American Indian (or the real "human beings") told in flash- back form by Jack Crabbe (DUSTIN HOFFMAN). A 121 year-old man who was there at Little Big Horn. Custer is played as the psychotic politico he really was, Hoffman is convincingly aged one hundred years during the course of the film. Gave the western a new look and a modern conscience. With CHIEF DAN GEORGE, MARTIN BALSAM & FAYE DUNAWAY (as a minister's wife turned wanton Madam). Mon: MR. HULUT'S HOLIDAY (free at 7:00 & 9:05) not on schedule 0 Cinema Guild TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:45 OLD ARCH AUD $1.50 Christopher Miles 1970 The Virgin & The Gypsy An intensely romantic filii'that faithfully captures the tone of [ H.~lawrerice's seminal navel. A rector's indeoendent-minded dauahter fantasizes of sexual union with a gypsy she met and thereby nurtures a spirit of rebellion. The gypsy exists simply for her, as a presence, emanicapting her trom sup- pressed passion and inarticulate lonqinqs. Franca Nero embodies male sensuality. Though a somewhat "cuieter" film, director Miles' VIRGIN is as lush and involving as Ken Russell s WOMEN IN LOVE-Lawrence adaptation. With JOANNA SHIMKUS and HONOR BLACKMAN (96m) .,l Wed-Part 2 of the APU TRILOGY APARAJITO TONITE at7&9 Angell Hall Aud "A" $1.50 ANGELCA JKCQUELINE POZO ELLENS two woman show january 9 -26 reception: Tues.-Fri. 10-0 Jan 1 7-pmSat, un. 12-5 FIRST FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION T6;KE T HE LEfiD Help New Students Discover the Diversity of Michigan BE3E A FELL ORI ENTEITION LE#lDER Pick up applications at the Orientation Office (2530 SAB) from Mon. Jan. 22, to,-Friday Feb. 16, 1979 * an affirmative action non-discriminatory employer * IT'S COMING! A SUPER SPECTACULAR EVENT MICHIGRAS 179 Sat., Feb. 10-8 pm-The Union To find out more call UAC: 763-1107 MANN THEATRES ADMISSION F°GETwINo ' ULAGTI Adult $4.00 MAPLE VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTERA 769-1300 Child $2.00 WEDNESDAY IS MONDAY IS "BARGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGHT" $1.50 until 5:30 TWO ADULTS ADMITTED FOR PRICEOFONE! ommmomomm" ADLTS FRI.,SAT., EVE. A HOLIDAYS MON.-THURS. EVt. ALL MATINEES CHILD TO 14 SUN. $3.50 $2.50 S 1.50j I WAYSIDE THEATRE WALT DISNEY'S 3020 Washtenaw "PIN0CCHIO" Phone 434-1782 I V 1 I