.fir L Ifpiga D Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, February 12, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Sportswomen shortchanged TIMES MAY BE changing for wom- en in American society, but the University, which always manages to be at least one step behind the times, isn't satisfied with ready - made myths about women and has opted to create one of their own - that women don't sweat. The "U" has chosen to demon- strate their support of this original thesis by merely "overlooking" a need for a women's locker room in the new Multi-Sports Building. Perhaps Robben Fleming and Don Canham don't really believe this the- ory. After all, lots of strange ideas pour out of Ann Arbor's ivory tower. Maybe they just like their women to smell natural. Or maybe having only one locker room is their way of sup- porting the sexual revolution. BUT IT'S JUST too bad that they don't realize some women might not agree with their philosophy. The problem can, no doubt, be eas- ily corrected, but the flagrantly sex- ist oversight of not providing wom- en with a locker room is just as much a moral problem as a physical one, and the mentality that is responsible cannot be changed by rectifying the immediate lack of facilities. It doesn't take a great mind to see the problem should never have arisen in the first place if women were not regarded as second class citizens when they leave their realm of the prim and proper and choose to work up a good sweat at a gym. The University's predictable but woeful decision is just another way of reinforcing the ideology that has kept women in their domestic seclu- sion since time in memorial - if women want to keep fit, let them raise kids. JT IS UP TO the women on this campus to change this attitude and see that such a "mistake" never happens again. -THE DAILY STAFF Ask By PATRICIA FLYNN INSTEAD OF depositing their money in U.S. banks, oil rich Arabs are now buying the banks - or at least trying to. In this Northern California town a lit- tle over a week ago, overwhelming op- position by stockholders thwarted the attempt by Saudi Arabian businessman Adnan Khashoggi to acquire control- ling interest in the First National Bank of San Jose. A few days earlier, a Le- banese oil broker withdrew his bid to purchase a half interest in the Com- munity National Bank of Pontiac, Mich- igan, after the bank's management filed suit to prevent the acquisition. In Detroit, however, a wealthy Saudi. will apparently acquire controlling in- terest in the Bank of the Commonwealth - the state's sixth largest, with assets of $1 billion. Announcement of the deal led some angry customers to withdraw their deposits, but this opposition is un- likely to affect the purchase since the bank management enthusiastically wel- comes his capital. THE PUBLIC outcry against the in- flux of Arab money and the influence that goes with it has certainly not gone unnoticed by other Arab investors, who are already wary of making long term investments. Both Khashoggi and Ghaith Pharaon (of the Detroit deal), who are nericanr independent credit card system. That"is, if Khashoggi had gotten his way. The bank's management and Board of Directors approved Khashogi's offer to purchase a one-third interest in the bank for $14 million last November. But mounting opposition from dissident direc- tors and stockholders forced him to withdraw his offer on the eve of the stockholders' meeting. As Khashoggi put it, the "emotion and public controversy" surrounding the pur- chase made it impossible for sharehold- ers "to exercise rational and business- like judgment." It was also clear that if the matter had gone to a vote, Khash- oggi's bid would have been defeated. While some directors had argued Khashoggi's investment would not be in the shareholder's best interest, the ;ques- tion of Arab control of the city's largest and oldest local bank was clearly on everyone's mind. In the midst of the heated controversy, one bank director said he wished Khashoggi would "pick up his tent and go home." FURTHER FUEL was added to the controversy when Congressman Fortney Stark - who once sold a bank to Khashoggi - charged that the Saudi was financing his activities with com- missions on the sale of U.S. arms to Us cot vstment comes from Europe and Japan, The oil producing countries - with a $60 billion surplus to invest - have been hesitant about coming into U.S. busi- ness. They fear their holdings could be targets for retaliation against oil pricing policies. And, although anxious to convert their dollars into real assets, the Arabs are still waiting for some clarification of the rules of the investment game - a process that is slowly but surely under- way in Washington. At present, there are few legal restric- tions on foreign investment in the Unit- ed States. Publicly-held firms must re- port when foreign ownership amounts to more than five - in some cases ten - per cent of their stock. An airline that is more than 25 per cent foreign-owned los- es its rights as a domestic carrier. The Defense Department may deny se- curity clearance to any company with' more than six per cent foreign owner- ship, which effectively makes it inelig- ible for defense procurement contracts. There are also restrictions on foreign control in the fields of atomic energy, hydroelectric power, radio and coastal shipping. NONE OF THE moves to pass more restrictive legislation last year were suc- cessful, and scores of new bills are al- ready being prepared in the new Con- gress. Those who support stricter limi- tations will probably be reinforced by the expression of public concern in the recent Michigan and California bank cases. But the Ford administration shows few signs of responsiveness to the p u b l i c mood. Ongthecontrary, several key gov- ernment agencies appear on the verge of giving their approval to a substantial Iranian bid to buy into Pan American World Airways. The argument for maintaining the pre- sent free flow of investment is that it will benefit the U.S. balance of pay- ments, stabilize the international econ- omy by allowing excess petrodollars to be easily absorbed, and guarantee re- ciprocal freedom for U.S. capital abroad. And as one administration official put it, a growing Arab investment stake in this country is likely to make them more "responsible" in their behavior. THE CURRENT domestic credit crunch is another reason to welcome Arab capitalists - both government and business would like to see some of the aproximately $9 billion the Arabs de- posited in U.S. banks and Treasury bonds last year channeled instead into direct 'SCOtS investments. Arab investments, says As- sistant Treasury Secretary Gerald Par- sky, should be seen "not as a threat but, to the contrary, an important oppor- tunity." This point has not been missed by U.S. businessmen, such as Henry Ford II, who is known to be seeking Arab financing for a huge apartment-hotel-of- fice complex planned for the center of Detroit. Ford, in fact, was rumored to be involved in the Pharaon acquisition of the Bank of the Commonwealth - a rumor denied by the Ford Motor Com- pany office, although Bank President James Barnes says he has talked to Ford about the deal. Pharaon has said that he would like to use the bank to channel Arab money into this country, Q ; > s U.S. investments in the Mid- dle East. "Khashoggi does a lucra- tive business in the Middle East representing arms and (tircraft manufacturers such as Northrup, Litton, Ray- theon, and Lockheed..." WHILE U.S. business and government officials see no threat so far in Arab investment, officials in West Germany fear a mass buying up of German in- dustry. Late last year they were faced with the Iranian purchase of 25 per cent of the Steel Division of the giant Krupp Industries and the attempted purchase of almost 30 per cent of the Daimler Benz Corporation, which makes Merced- es Benz cars. The Kuwaitis had already acquired 14 per cent of the Mercedes corporation. In order to thwart the Iran- ian bid for Daimler Benb, the Deutsche Bank put out almost a billion dollars for the auto stock - reportedly under the instructions of the German government. Concerned about the Arab inroads, but anxious to avoid governmental regula- tion, German industrial and financial leaders agreed just over a week ago to set up a voluntary information pool to keep each other informed of any future attempts to buy them up. The obvious question is: can it happen here? Patricia Flynn is a San Francisco Bay Area freelance writer and researcher in in/ernational affairs. ...:{.}; .'.,{::i *ie . {. a. }i : : :.... . . m . . . . . . . . . . . : . _ . ". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "In the midst of the heated controversy, one bank director said he wished Khashoggi would "pick up his tent and go home."' CDRS a political football EPUBLICAN COUNCIL members ramrodded an application to the federal government at council Mon-. day night full of pet GOP alloca- tions for a $2.5 million revenue shar- ing grant. Many of the proposed programs to be funded clearly violate the inten- tion of Congressional revenue sharing guidelines - perhaps to the point of illegality. The grant, dubbed Community De- velopment Revenue Sharing (CDRS) fund is aimed at aiding low and mod- erate income residents, according to the Congressional CDRS Act and the office of Housing and Urban bevel- opment which administers the grant. Republican Mayor James Stephen- son has played politics with CDRS' since the city began to put together an application for HUD. STEPHENSON LOADED A task force, set up to advise council how to spend the $2.5 million grant to the city, with Republicans experi- enced in parliamentary procedure who could easily intimidate liberal committee members with less experi- ence. The mayor was blatantly obnoxious- in his manipulation of the task force by appointing his favorite for-, mer GOP councilman, speech pro- fessor William Colburn, to chair the committee. Council did make an effort to have TODAY'S STAFF News: Mary Harris, Jay Levin, Cheryl Pilate, Stephen Selbst, Curt Smith, Jeff Sorensen, David Whiting Editorial Page: Barb Cornell, P a u I Haskins, Mara Letica, Steve Stojic Arts Page: David Blomquist Photo Technician: Steve Kagan citizen input on DRS, however sug- gestions not in alignment with GOP policy hardly appear in the Republi- can's proposal.. Republicans ignored the poor and made a mockery of CDRS by recom- mending only $133,650 for health and drug abuse, a mere $123,750 aimed at child care, and then a whopping $250,000 for road repair. Although city streets are decimated by dangerous potholes, road resur- facing does not directly benefit low and moderate income residents and should be funded by revenues other than CDRS. SOME $100,000 WILL go to purchas- ing fire equipment if HUD accepts the Republican's proposals. Fire pre- vention is a normal city responsibility and the desperately needed fire equipment should not be bought with monies intended for the poor. Until the unresponsive and irre- sponsible GOP realizes their one- vote majority on council does not give them a right to dictate city policy, oppression of non-merchant minor- ity groups will no doubt continue. Editorial Sff4 GORDON ATCHESON CHERYL PILATE Co-Editors-in-Chief LAURA BERMAN Sunday Magazine Editor DAVID BLOMQUIST....................... . .....Arts and Entertainment Editor DAN BORUS ...........Sunday Magazine Editor BARBARA CORNELL ... Special Projects Editor PAUL HASKINS .... ..........Editorial Director JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY ...... Features Editor SARA RIMER.................Executive Editor STEPHEN SELBST.......... City Editor JEFF SORENSEN ,.............Managing Editor STAFF WRITERS: Glen Allerhand, Peter Blais- dell, Dan Blugerman, Clifford Brown, David Burhenn, Mary Harris, Stephen Hersh, Debra Hurwitz, Ann Marie Lipinski, Andrea Lilly, Mary Long, Rob Meachum, Jeff Ristine, Steve Ross, Tim Schick, Kate Spelman, Jim Tobin, David Whiting, Susan Wilhelm, Mar- garet Yao. well connected in Saudi Arabian gov- ernmental and financial circles, have de- scribed their proposed banking deals as "test cases" for future Arab investments. Khashoggi, 39, is one of a new breed of Arab entrepreneurs. With two broth- ers, he owns Triad Holding Company, which controls investments estimated at $400 million. Triad's interests range from tankers in Indonesia to cattle raising in Brazil - and arms dealing in the Middle East. Khashoggi's investment plans include the acquisition of $1 billion worth of banking in California. Two years ago he quietly gained control of two banks in a San Francisco suburb with com- bined assets of about $150 million. THE FIRST NATIONAL Bank of San Jose would have added $300 million more in assets, including 24 branches and an Saudi Arabia. Khashoggi does a lucra- tive business in the Middle East repre- senting arms and aircraft manufacturers such as Northrup, Litton, Raytheon and Lockheed - which pays him a regular retainer. But Stark claims Khashoggi also makes undisclosed commissions on arm sales carried out through the U.S. State Department, Direct foreign investment in the U.S. rose nearly 25 per cent - from $14.4 to $17.7 billion - between 1972 and 1973. While this is still only a fraction of the $107 billion in investments made by U.S. interests abroad, there has been talk of an "invasion of foreign capital." The U.S. has traditionally had an "Open Door" policy towards outsiders' money, but never before has there been so much foreign capital available to invest. MOST OF THE increase in U.S. in- Letters: Hitting road to fight racism To The Daily: RETURN WITH us now to those chilling days of yester- year, about the year 1956. You remember those days, do't you?, when buses full of young, black schoolchildren had to have armed escorts because of the fear that mobs of angry, white racists might attack them. Those were the days when the police openly defied the law, and federal troops had to be mobilized to see to it that the Constitution was upheld. Those were the days when black men and women lived in fear for their lives because of the hatred of white men and women. But that was 20 years ago, you say, things like that don't happen anymore. But we say they do. All you have to do is look beyond your ivory tower and you will see that such things do continue to happen. Look to the east, to Boston, the cradle of liberty, and you will see that such things do continue to happen. ONLY THIS time the federal government is not as willing to uphold the Constitution and de- fend the lives of the black pop- ulation as they were in 1956. President Ford says that the federal government will not in- tervene in Boston and has left that city to its own devices, which are woefully inadequnate for the task at hand, i.e., guar- anteeing both the security of the black community and their right to an equal education. This can only be done f the racist attacks carried aut by certain segmentsrof the Boston community are first smashed. We say that if the federal gcv- ernment will not protect black schoolchildren, then the con- cerned citizens, the anti-racist citizens of this nation must. Towards this end a conference is being held in Boston from February 14-16. This conference will attempt to deal with many of the issues raised by the bus- ing of children in general, and in Boston in particular. It will also attempt to devise n e w strategies for dealing with the racist attacks in Boston and anywhere else they may occur in the future. mittee Against Racism, room holier than the GEO. The U has 4001 in the Union, or call 763- clearly not bargained in ood 4799. faith and has exploited its Pow- -Ann Arbor Student er to the hilt. The unilateral re- Committee Against classification of GSAs m August Racism 1973 was but a first of arbitrary February 11 actions arrived at without ;ne input of any of the involved CEO parties. As any campus vworker will tell you, the U (headed oy To The Daily: second rate labor negotiaTors AS TWO graduate employees Fleming and Rhodes) is a bitch dismayed by the turn of events to bargain with. in the dealings between the GEO and the University, we object to A TRULY progressive alterna- the GEO's strike on the grounds tive program is one that works that it is little more than a against the systematic class and power play by those who al- income bias of U admissions at ready have large amounts of all levels. Demands for more power in society today. black and female TF's does not The GEO's contention is t~hat'guarantee admissions for the its members are workers em- poor and undernrivilegel. The ployed by the University at un- mmediatepossibilities are end- fair wage levels. Much to the less; increased grants-in-ad and contrary, we view its members scholarships, abandonment of as students, most from families sscrter, random adis- of the most privileged s o c i a 1 ionscriteia, rargos thatinK- strata, who attend the Univer- crease tuition charges tha. in- siyto secure the credentials ne- res with parental incomne, cessary to attain the most priv- and a fight against reactionary ileged positions in society. In ideology the U exists to dissem- ar ut f ur urrnteconomic mrate. These would work to- or out of our current ecnmc wards the real social chaiwe. turmoil, these individuals a r e Thartenseao iltang . bound for the top, heading for The pretense omi tancyes- occupations with high incomes played by the GEO, complef. and non-oppressive working con- Fuies "adical usic les- ditions. What chance has t h e sos" amons todnolmose than child of a working class family sons"arounts to no morethn to achieve these positions? A an obstacreatingarev ltiontrye oninimal one, compared to those society in which the last shall who occupy them now. be first and the first will go out and work for a living. ONE OF OUR main objections to the strike, then, is that its -Everett Ehrlich success entails the reproduction Jerry Caprio of the society around it. The February 11. GEO, on the other hand, sub- scribes to the "fat" theory ofcaer budget allocation, which tellsCarerS us that the higher salaries will To The Daily: be financed by the fat (or slush) in the U's budget. Such reason- MY EXPERIENCE at the ing ignores the fact that there ISMRRD Career Day on Feb- are people living off the Fat of ruary 4 was enlightening. I the University who will rot thought the program, offered an meekly tolerate any cuts in their excellent scan of various occu- projects, and we have no guar- pations. The three presenta- antee from the GEO that they tions and discussions I attend- will attempt to wrest it from ed were all informa+ve. T h e them. Money is power, a n d discussion sections offe:ed am- neither is surrendered with- ple time to ask questions of the out a fight. As a result, higher speakers. I wish I had had time GSA salaries will be financed to attend more of the sessions. A in one of four ways: be real- feature of the programs I found locating money from worthwhile particularly useful was the fact academic programs (like t h e sheets prepared for earn of the Pilot Program, which is in jeo- occupations. The sheets inclad- qiiotables To The Daily: I DIDN'T get any bad vibes from Gary Thomas' essay "Making a Mega-government" (Daily 1-30-75). The tone of the times is black, while his words were enlightening. As a member of the Ann Ar- bor People's Bicentennial Com- mission I acknowledge Thomas' "cry of hope." The PBC is also concerned with the erosion of civil liberties that has taken place over the past 200 years, and in a consideration of solu- tions would point to the words of Thomas Paine: "It is at all times necessary . . . that we frequently refresh our patrio- tism by reference to first princi- ples. It is by tracing things to their origin that we learn to umderstand them, and it is by keeping that line and tat ori- gin always in view that we rev- er forget them. An inquiry into the origin of rights will demon- strate to us that rights are not gifts from one man to another, nor from one class of men to another." I'm writing primarily in re- snonse to these lines from Gary Thomas' essay, which were highlighted in boldface: "The Founding Fathers were an un- witting collective Frankenstein, not knowing how their creation would turn into a monster, prey- ing upon the very populace it was supposed to protect. It is now an empire, both domestic and foreign." I THINK WE have to under- stand that our Founding Fath- ers Mothers, particularly the Jef- fersonians and those rad:cal Whigs who wrote the Dealara- tion of Independence were, in fact, well aware of the d-ngers to the development of the coun- try they had set out to liberate. Thomas Jefferson proclaimed: "I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strongth and bid defiance to the laws of our country." In studying our revolutionary heritage with the PBC I've come to understand that the revolu- tionaries who wrote the Declara- tion of Independence in 1776 weren't able to dominate t h e later Constitutional Convention. And following that was the crea- tion of corporations which, by a decision of Justice John Mar- shall, became the only institu- tions with the same stature as the monarchy we had fougnt to overthrow - they can not be abolished, even if they serve in- terests which are adverse to the people's interest. Aad cor- porations never die, -at least not while they're making pro- fits. So today the royal Rocke- feller family alone controls 70 percent of the banking an iin- d-stry of the country. . AS FOR those "first piinci- pies" Thomas Paine men ioned, I think the following from Noah Webster in "An Examination in- to the Leading Principles of the Federal Constitution Proposed by the Late Convention held at Philadelphia, 1787," sums up the thought of many (though granted, not all) of our Faund- ers: "In what does real power consist? The answer is short and plain - in property. A general and tolerably equal distribuilon of landed property is the whole basis of national freedom . . As equality of property, wath a necessity of alienation constant- ly operating to destroy combin- ations of powerful families, is the very soul of a republic." I will just end here wvitn one last quote from Thomas Jeffer- son: "Laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new dis- coveries are made, new truths disclosed, and manners and oninion change with the circum- stances, instititions mast ad- vance also, and keep pace with the times." -Steven McClure February 4 Contact your reps- Sen. Phillin Hart (Dem'. Rm 253, Old Senate Bldg.. CaDitol "-i7 WSMAfMlMlMMMIkJEE i\,