IFYOU SEE NPS AKOPEN CALL ZDNL More jazz The University's Jazz Band, under the guiding hand of band member and economics major Jon Diamond, managedto raise $18,000 since spring break to send the band to the annual Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland this July. Bands participate in the festival by invitation only, and last year only two U.S. college bands -- Ohio State University and the University of Kansas - received invitations. The hitch to the.prestigious festival is that the college bands must pay for the trips themselves. Diamond started to knock on doors in January, asking for money, but by March 2, he had collected only $3,000. But thanks to donations from funds of the University's executive officers including Interim President Allan Smith, a loan from the Michigan Student Assembly, proceeds collected from the Jazz Band's concerts, and the efforts of an executive at General Motors and the president of the Ann Arbor Musicians Union, the Jazz Band gathered $22,000, and, according to Diamond, expects more greenbacks from alumni and other sources. "It's possible they'll select a college group to go to Japan," said the enterprising Diamond. Ah, so. Correction A headline in Sunday's Daily, "Men call women's lib close- minded," misrepresented the tone of the story and the event to which it referred. The headline lent an antagonistic edge to the story, in- dicating that the mood of the men's awareness group referred to was hostile. Although the specific statements and conclusions drawn were correct, overall, the meeting was more supportive of the women's liberation movement than the specific incidents reported in the article would indicate. The Daily apologizes for the error. Take ten About 1,2000 Harvard students voted a three-day strike on April 10, 1969 in response to a police raid that recaptured University Hall in Cambridge from students protesting the Reserve Officers Training Corps program. More than 400 policemen wearing helmets and plastic face masks and carrying nightsticks rushed University Hall at 5 a.m. that day and arrested students in the building who had ignored a University order to leave the night before. Also that day, nearly 400 students at Stanford University across the country continued to oc- cupy a campus electronics laboratory in protest against classified research there. 0 The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, April 10, 1979-Page3.. GREAT LAKES FISH THREATENED Indian fishing rights disputed Happenings FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op - One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, 8:30, 10:45 p.m., Angell, Aud. A. Cinema Guild - David Copperfield, 7,9:30 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Students Concerned About Suicide - College Can Be Killing, 7:30 p.m, Bursley. PERFORMANCES Music School - Concert Band and Chamber Winds, 8 p.m, Hill Aud. . Canterbury Loft - Ten Faces of the Campus Rapists, in French and English, 8 p.m., Canterbury Loft. SPEAKERS Museum of Zoology - University of Texas' Prof. Guy Bush, "Sympatrick Speciation and Other Hopeful Monsters," 4 p.m., MLB Lecture Room 1. International Center - Tuesday Luncheon, Prof. Joseph Veroff, "Feelings of Well-Being, 1957-1976," noon, Inteinational Center Recreation Center. Center for Chinese Studies - Three China experts, Li "Chi, Harriet Mills, and Albert Feuerwerker, "The May Fourth Movement: Its Meaning, Past and Present," noon, Lane Hall, Commons Room. MISCELLANEOUS Meeting - National Organization for Women, 7:45 p.m., coffee, 8 p.m., meeting, Unitarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw Ave. Journeys - Presentation at the Ann Arbor Public Library, discussion of "The Snow Leopard, the Yeti, and Other Himalayan Myths," noon. Meeting - Peace Education Study Group, to discuss "Conflict, Violence, and Non-Violence," 8:30 p.m., Michigan Union, Conference Room 4. Black Law Student's Assoc. - Second Annual Alden J "Butch" Carpenter Dinner-Dance, Campus Inn Regency Ballroom, 7 p.m., April 14. Tickets available between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., Hutchins Hall, Room 100. Fighting City Hall There's the Coalition for Better Housing, the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid, and many other coalitions in Ann Arbor for various issues that are too numerous to list. But at Michigan State University (MSU), students have formed a new coalition to fight for something near and dear to their pocketbooks - the Anti-Towing Coalition, primarily composed of students living in Case Hall. The students said they're complaining about a local service station which tows illegally parked cars for MSU. The students claim the station's employees are removing vehicles from reserved parking spaces when the spaces aren't being used by authorized vehicles. "We understand it's against university regulations to park in certain spaces," said the group's leader, Paul Schwartz, a first-year student from West Bloom- field, Michigan. "But we also understand if there's a car there and it's not bothering anyone, there's no reason the space can't be used." Students often have to fork over $35 to retrieve their cars. Demon- strations by the Anti-Towing Coalition within the past few weeks have been spur of the moment, but the group plans another demonstration this week, which will begin with a wailing siren. The coalition is plan- ning to prevent tow trucks from removing cars from the parking lot outside Case Hall by ,peacefully sitting cross-legged around the wreckers, although campus police last month warned demonstrators that damaging a wrecker or interfering with authorities would result in arrest. The students also plan to flood the local district court with parking violation cases by claiming innocence and requesting jury trials. Activism isn't dead, it's just being channeled into different areas. By RICHARD BLANCHARD "The Indian situation is the skeleton in the closet of democracy that keeps reminding the American people of the deceit of the federal government. " John Bailey, a mem- ber of Michigan's Odawa tribe, and director of the Michigan Committee on Indian Affairs. In the heart of Lake Michigan's soothing and refreshing waters swims the object of an embittered and violent fishing rights controversy between the Native Americans and the State of Michigan. This controversy involves the lake's possible depletion of its most prized fish, the lake trout. In a symposium entitled "Fisheries and Native American Rights" held last weekend at Rackham and S. Quad, representatives of the Michigan Depar- tment of Natural Resources (DNR), the Bay Mills Indian community, and the Michigan Steelheaders Association debated the issues of Indian fishing rights and resource depletion. ON APRIL 17, 1973, the Bay Mills and Sault Ste. Marie tribes, both Chippewa, filed a suit in Federal District Court against the State of Michigan, that claimed that the state, in an effort to regulate fishing in some areas of the Great Lakes, have violated the 1836 established treaty rights of Michigan's Native Americans.' There are two phases to the case, ac- cording to University Resource Management grad. student John Mc- Dermott. The first phase determines the right of Native Americans to fish the waters of Great Lakes uncontrolled by state DNR fishing regulations, and, if this right is accepted by the court, the second phase will determine hov to regulate Indian fisheries to prevent depletion of fish stocks. John Scott, who represented the state DNR in the symposium, claimed that the Native Americans are seriously depleting such fish as lake trout, and must be regulated like all other Michigan residents by state laws. "The Natives are claiming exclusive and superior fishing rights, not subject to state laws and not subject to federal codes," said Scott. THE STATE DNR is the Indians' primary adversary. The Department claims that the natives' right to fish in regulated waters has been ac- cumulated through subsequent State- Indian treaties and should be subject to state control, McDermott said. Elizabeth Valentine, also represen- ting the stateDNR, said according to the original Treaty of 1836, there was no explicit mention of fishing rights. "The State of Michigan," said Valentine, "holds the opinion that fishing was of little consequence to the tribe, and, sin- ce it was not specifically mentioned, it was not important." According to McDermott, the Bay Mills Indian community understands the treaty of 1836 to have guaranteed its fishing rights to the waters adjoining lands they ceded to the American government. NATIVE AMERICAN tribes are sovereign political units and are free from state control and regulations; therefore, the Native Americans are represented by the federal government in this case, said McDermott. BIll LeBlanc, spokesman for the Bay Mills Indian community, began the native American's position on the con- troversy by quoting a DNR official who said, "The meek shall inherit the earth, but not the mineral rights." This is the DNR's view of the treaties which are designed to "take away from the In- dians rather than give to them," said LeBlanc. LeBlanc said the current court case before Federal District Court Judge Noel Fox in Grand Rapids is not to determine whether the Indians have the unabridged right to fish the Great Lakes, but to prove to and prevent harrassment by sport and commercial fishermen that the fishing right is guaranteed to them. "Michigan state courts through the years have always upheld that fishing right," said LeBlanc. MANN THEATRES FOX V[LL( MAM VILAG INCENTE~ ADMISSION Adult $4.00 No Passes on Weekends Child $2.50 YOU'LL BELIEVE A MAN CAN FL Y SUPERMAN MARLON BRANDO GENE HACKMAN SHOWTIMES Mon-FRI 7:00 9:45 SAT. & SUN. 1:30 7:00' 4:15 9:45 "ALL WE are asking for," LeBlanc continued, "is the recognition that we can make a living. We would never have ceded our lands to the government without a guarantee of fishing rights. Fishing is central to our way of life." Depletion of lake trout is the key point in the controversy. Although the DNR claims there has been 90 per cent reduction of lake trout in Whitefish Bay as a result of Indian fishing, there has not been enough data to prove the case, said McDermott. Regulation of the fishing is the main concern of the DNR, said McDermott, not which group manages it. Unregulated fishing by Native Americans, sportsmen, or commercial fisheries all pose a serious threat to the Great Lakes fishery, he added. IN 1966, the DNR, reflecting the needs of recreational fishing and the amount of money that it brings to fisheries' management programs, designated lake trout as a sport fish only, said Scott. "We began our conser- vation methods by banning gill nets (a non-selective fishing device), and at that time enough nets were brought up to stretch around the globe," said Scott. In response to these claims, LeBlanc said that the Native Americans' use of gill nets is not responsible for the reductions of lake trout. The DNR has relaxed regulations enforcement over the Great Lakes which has allowed poachers of lake trout and made native Americans appear responsible for the depletion of fish, LeBlanc said. The Native Americans have self- imposed fish and game management regulations. They are responsible for this resource and are using conser- vation methods to prolong the lake trout and other fish populations, said LeBlanc. BOTH SIDES of the case have been delivered to Judge Fox, but because of the six years that have elapsed since 1973, the DNR and conservation groups have become increasingly concerned over the present situation of the fish populations, McDermott said. Although there is bitter dispute and raging controversy, both sides agree that the solutions will be found in All Media Company present multi-media-musical theatre YOU NEVER KNOW WHAT THEY'LL DO NEXT . starring the NON RETURN ABLES Residential College Auditorium E.Q. April 13 &14 S:OOpm $.50 TICKETS-Michigan Union Box Office Sponsored by MI Student Assembly, LSAS.G.. R.C..U.A.C. THE RIVER NIGER By Joseph AWalker Featuring MEL WNLER. Guest Actorim-Residence Wed. April II " Sat. April 14 8PM. Sun.April 152PM Power Center cooperative regulation and increased communications, according to LeBlanc. The DNR "accepts the challenge to coordinate the harvest" and although it does not accept that the fishing right for the native Americans is established, it is ready with management options and fishing opportunities for Native Americans, either way Judge Fox may detcide the case, according to Scott. The Native Americans uphold their right to fish, and are willing, said LeBlanc, to enact regulations on them- selves congruous with DNR guidelines as long as the rules are based on fact. "The only way to solve the problem," said LeBlanc, "is to sit down and negotiate the terms and the methods of regulating those terms." The Ann Arbor Film Cooperstive presents at Aud A Tuesday, April 10 ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST (Milos Forman, 1975) 8:30 & 10:45-AUD A JACK NICHOLSON is electrifying as a free-spirited rogue named Randle P. McMurphy who wages psychological warfare against a mental hospital nurse (LOUISE FELTCHER) who fights to keep sadistic control over the inmates. Based on Ken Kesey's celebrated novel, this film won five Academy Awards, including Best Picture. "A powerful, smashingly effective movie.'"-Pauline Kael. "Nicholson shows an acting range matched by few other actors in the world."-Steven Scheuer. Tomorrow: Antonioni's LA NATTLE and Zanussi's ILLUMINATION The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society ~Presents Or 'The Lass That Loved A Sailor' April 5-8 and 12-14.1979 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Ann Arbor Tickets ovailbie at the Mendelssohn Box office 10 am.- 8pm.Call1763-1085. SPECIAL STUDENT RATE Students wih U of M I.U. may purchase tickets at a discount for performances on April 5, 8, and 12. These tickets will be on sale only from 2-4 p.m. at the Mendelssohn Box Office the Wednes- day preceding the performance. Price: $2.50 LIMIT: I ticket/U of M I. D. s, w . 11 1 Lie,, rm. Professional Theatre Program The University of Michigan.- Guest Artist Series Tickets at PT.P Box Office in the Michigan League 313/764-0450 & through all Hudson's Ticket Outlets Parental Guidance Suggested 12 & Under Not Admitted HOUSING DIVISION COUZENS HALL RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATIONS FOR SPRING/SUMMER 1979 AVAILABLE STARTING APRIL 3, 1979 IN 1500 SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: RESIDENT DIRECTOR AND RESIDENT ADVISOR Resident Advisor positions require a minimum of 55 credit hours., Graduate status preferred for the Resident Directors positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U. of M. student on the Ann Arbor campus in good academic standing during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence halls at Uni- versity level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduates must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average at the time of application. (5) Proof of these qualifications may be required. Current staff and other applicants who have an application on file must come to this office to update their application form. Staff selection and placement shall be determined in the following order: .' . r t i' w , y r 1 5 r R w M i k 6 " 1y i i ,r ; e , u '4 A ! 1 1 IF II 1. Current staff in Couzens Hall who have been reappointed fr a 1070-.Rf1 7 anademic vear. . i *l I LE~EA.U~ IA 'UCI I i