Thursday, September 9, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, September 9, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three The University's political climate . . . Filtering left or right? The occasional march By TAMMY JACOBS Supplement Co-Editor Two years ago the University was considered one of the more activist campuses among the doz- ens of "new left" activist cam- puses in the nation. During the 1969-70 school year, the University had experienced two invasions of the ROTC build- ing, an LSA bldg. take-over with 107 subsequent arrests, two gen- eral class strikes (one highly suc- cessful, one less so), and several rallies and marches of several thousand people each, all led by radical or left-liberal forces. Last spring, a year later, con- servatives won four out of the seven open Student Government Council seats, giving them four out of 11 total seats on SGC, which until then, had been con- sidered liberal to radical. Last year, one 4,000 persons march was held to protest the Vietnamese and American incur- sion into Laos. But other than that, radical /confrontations of the previous years' type were limited to one feeble and easily routed sit-in, and various poorly- attended Diag rallies. To many, this means a dying left, and perhaps a rising right on campus. But the left is not really dead at the University; and the right, although perhaps more verbal than in past years, has not ac- complished much more or gained many more supporters than in the past. The left, rather, has switched tactics, choosing to organize and discuss, rather than take over buildings, and call strikes. The radical on-going organizations, too, have died out, and the trend is towardsdissue orientedad hoc groups, concentrating on what radical call the University's "complicity" with United States "imperialism." And the right, although it has several organizations listed, from College Republicans to the local branch of the conservative Young Americans for Freedom, has a smaller active following than one would think, as many of the members of one right-wing organization overlap into others. Appearances again prove de- ceptive when SGC elections are analyzed. Although members of the right - wing Student Caucus T.V. RENTALS $10.50/mo. NEJAC T.V. 662-5671 won the council seats, the left's vote was split between members of the radical Student Coalition, the two members of Young So- cialist Alliance who ran, and Re- becca Schenk, who also ran suc- cessfully for SGC president. Had supporters of the left voted only for Schenk as a presidential candidate, and used the vote they gave her council seat can- didacy for one of the Student Coalition candidates instead, all five Coalition candidates prob- ably would have gained seats. In- stead, the right - wingers got the undivided moderate-conservative vote. The right-wing groups them- selves are experiencing several damaging inner splits, although from outside indications such as the SGC elections they appear more cohesive than the left. Much dissension occurs be- tween proponents of traditional conservatism and those who ad- vocate a "laissez - faire" liber- tarian doctrine. Membership in avowedly right- wing groups, according to one ob- server, totals 200-250 people-ra- dical "membership" as such can- not be counted because of the nature of the left on campus this past year. For, unlike the conservative groups, the radical organized groups on campus have virtual- ly died as a campus political force during the year, underlining one of the major changes in the direc- tion of the left. Students for a Democratic So- ciety (SDS) , which originated at the University in 1961, has changed from a 140 person group in September, 1970 to a mere memory. A series of convictions forsil- legal demonstrations by the stu- See THE LEFT, Page 11 F7otullnever goWong by vUint SGC : The right gets a foothold Another tactic: The teach-in The left regroups at a mass meeting Area women's movement stays segmented, but very much alive The women's movement in Ann Arbor has experienced so many changes' in the past few years that the question "what do women want?" is no longer mentioned in jokes by anti- women's liberationists. For ever anti-women's lib- erationists are beginning to get an inkling of what the women are seeking. In Ann Arbor, as in the. rest of the country, the women- want, basically, to be treated as equals rather than as members of a "weaker" sex. This goal includes such things as obtaining #a job equal to the ones a male can get - and with equal salaries. It also in- cludes changing the structure of society so that -women a r e freed from their traditional ob- ligation to the home, hearth, and children. And it includes, as some women say, "not be- ing treated like a piece of meat -- a sex object." Taking these points into ac- count, nearly every woman at one point or another "agrees" with women's liberation. While they may not agree with all the shapes and forms it takes, t h e basic goal - to end what wo- men refer to as "sexism" - seems widely accepted in An n Arbor. For over a hundred years, women have pressed for equal .rights, in job opportunities as well as sufferage. And for the most part, they've earned both kinds of rights, at least on pap- er. But, during the last decade, as Civil Rights legislation made headlines, women, too, h a v e become militant about turning their paper rights into realities. Women's liberation has b e e n growing and its views becoming more widespread.' With this new popularity, however, has also come a divi- sion among women. Women have formed small groups ac- cording to their political and social beliefs, and in s o in e cases, around very specific wom- So You H Beer Jann aloS , 421 E. You can Vi SERVING YOU GREEK and * ,...CUI and the -C C f1YFY T - en's liberation oriented issues. Ann Arbor's women have ex- perienced this tendency tow- ards division, and it hit its peak this year. During the 1970-71 school year, Ann Arbor wom- en's groups reached their low point in terms of unity and co- hesiveness, but at the s a m e "rigid" structure of the teach- in, which they called "anti- women." But the opposite reaction, however, came from other women at a Regents' meeting the same month, when a group that had banded together in a continuing effort to form a last fall when the Department of Health, Education and Wel- fare (HEW) completed an in- vestigation of University j o b opportunities prompted by a charge filed by FOCUS, an Ann Arbor women's group of pro- fessional women. HEW upheld FOCUS' charges that the University was dis- criminating against women in its job opportunities and cut off all government contracts to the University for a two-month negotiation period. Ultimately,sthe University committed itself to an "Affirm- ative Action Program" to es- tablish equal opportunities - one result of the program was the formation of a new group. The University's official "Wom- en's Commission" was created to formulate plans and safeguard- ing results of the action pro- gram. Another group specifically in- volved with the University's of- ficial treatment of tis women employes is PROBE into the Status of Women at the Uni- versity, a group which sees it- self as a "watchdog" over t h e University. A large part of PROBE's membership consists of University office workers; and the group concentrates on doing investigative work into University policies. Although women will p r o- bably unite on a few specific issues in the coming year, it is most likely that the movement will continue to grow. TC rc! apitol' LIQUOR WINES BEER COMPLETE GROCIERS featuring one of the FINEST SELECTIONS OF WINESIN THE AREA Visit Case, Our Deli Cs with s Bulk Cheeses * Mediterranean foods e Olives ALSO: Fresh Lox and Bagels for your-convenience Open 7 Days, 10 a.m. to 1 a.m. SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS TILL MIDNITE 211 S 4th Ave. 663-0101 I art supplies I AT FOLLETTS ^ A Women dramatize their views on sexism time, the number of small groups multiplied rapidly. Towards the end of the year, these small groups spend most of their time in small discus- sions and "consciousness-rais- ing" sessions,,- talking things out among themelves. There- fore, they disappeared, to a large degree, from the public eye. However, earlier in the °1970- 71 school year, during the fall term, the women's movement had erupted with a burst of activity. In October, a "Woman's Teach-in" was held, which fea- tured workshops, small semin- ars, and a few keynote speak- ers. An unscheduled feature of the teach-in offered a glimpse at how divided the women's movement was in Ann Arbor. The proceedings of one key- note panel were disrupted by over 120 of the, 600 persons pre- sent, led by a radical women's caucus that had formed at the teach-in. The demonstrators said they were protesting t h e University-financed free child- care center for the community called for support presenting their ideas to the Regents. The vast majority of the 300 persons present came up to the Regents' podium to de- monstrate their support, a n d although the Regents rejected the child care plans, it was a rare show of male-female soli- darity for what is usually c o n- sidered a "women's issue." Women's groups also made their mark in a meaningful way I, II WELCOME TO MI CIA lave Ne n To . 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