Wednesday, December 6, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven I Wednsda, Deembr 6 197 TH MICIGA DALY Pge eve OMXIC AN DINNER followed by Latin American Foik Songs +by Marco Antonio Vasquez and V slides about Peru sh own by 0DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Women 'is liberation hits jJ WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6 r DeemerBaldcmero Cacere , Deceber7, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. fEcumenical Campus Center, 921 Church For reservations call: 662-5529, days; 665-7146, nights UNIVERSITY LECTURE IN, JOURNALISM SERIES BENwBAGDI KIAN Outstanding Critic of the Press Speaking tOn: Freedom of the Press in.Jeopardy WEDNESDAY, DEC. 6--4 P.M. AUD. C-ANGELL HALL Join The Daily Ad Staff DAY CALENDAR Commission for W o mn e nI: Homer Ftlea h Lounge, Mich. Union, 11 am. Anatomy: H. W. Davenport, "Studies on Gastric Physiology." 4804 Med. Sci. II, 1:10 pmn. Psych. 171 Film Series: "Behavior Therapy with an Autistic Child," UG- LI Multipurpose Rm., 4 pm. Industrial & Operations Engineer- ing Seminar : P. Cherry, Victor Res. Inc., "Some Problems in Superposi- tions", 244 W. Engin. Bldg., 4 pm. Statistics Seminer: W. H. Dumou- chael, "On the Asymptotic Normality of the Maximum-Likelihood Estimators When Sampling from a Stable Distri- bution," 3227 Angell Hail, 4 pmn. Stuident Lab Theatre: Original One Acts, Frieze Arena, 4:10 pm. Journalism: B. Bagdikian. free lance nmedia critic, "Freedom of the Press in Jeopardy," Aud. C, Angell Hall, 4:10 pm., Physics Colloquium : J. A. Wheeler, Princeton Univ., "Beyond the End of Time," P&A Colloquium Rm., 4:15 pmn. Highway Safety Research Inst.: M. Becker, Haifa, Israel, "Pedestrian Night Accidents in Israel -Detection of the Problem & Countermeasures," HSRI Seminar Rm., 4:30 pmn. School of Music : Percussion Student Ensemble, SM Recital Hall, 5 pm. Housing Office In-Residence Staff Positions Informational. Meetings: Ox- ford, Seeley Study Rm., 7 pm.; Pilot Program, Klein Lounge, 8 pm.; Mark- ley, Dining Rm. No. 3, 9 pmn. Enact: 2051 Nat. Sci, 7:30 pmn. Grad Coffee Hour: E. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 8 pmn. School of Music: Holiday Concert, U. Arts Chorale, Maynard Klein, con- ductor, Hill, 8 pmn. School of Music:W. David. piano doctoral. SM Recital Hall, 8 pm. University Players: Jellicoe's "The Knack," Mendelssohn, 8 pm. GENERAL NOTICES Center for Western European Studies Grad Student/Faculty Colloquium: F. Bourricaud, Visiting Professor of So- ciology at Harvard Univ., "French Equalit arianism Reconsidered," E. Conf. Rm., Rackham Bldg., Thurs., Dec. 7. 3:15 pm. SUMMER PLACEMENT 212 SAB H & S Pogue. Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. College Summer Board Openings. Un- dergrad students interested in fashion and merchandising. Personal inter- views held Dec. 18 through Dec. 23. Further details available at this office. National Aeronautics and Space Ad- milnistration. Houston, Texas. Summer Prog. for grad students with bache- lor's degree in following fields-engi- neering, physical sciences, public ad- min., bus, ad., related fields. Further details and applies. available. Henry Ford Museum / Greenfield Vil- lage. Openings as guides. History, dra- matics, speech, and language back- ground desirable. Details available. In- terview deadline Jan. 19. U. S. Civil Service Commission, Wash- ington, D.C. Undergrad Trainee Work- Study Program available in the Wash- ington D.C. area. Openings cover the fields of engineering, physical sciences, meterorology and math. Further de- tails available. U. S. Info Agency. Washington D. C. Summer Intern Program, Seniors and Grad Students. Openings covers the fields of sociology, communication sci- ence, law, engineering, journalism cinematography, many others. Further details and applics available. Applica. tion deadline Feb. 5. By The Associated P'~ess Hd\IFA (A3-"Up against the wall,, Jewish mothers! " It so'inds like an anti-Semitic harangue, hult it's a fistelenched battl-_-pry of Israeli women's lib- eration. Women's lib in Israel-where a 74-year-old grandmother heads the state and girls get drafted into the army? "That's right," says Marcia Freedman, the 33-year-old Ameri- can-born leader of Israel's "Women for a Free Society," a gro'ip of 100 Jewish feminists. "The popular image of the Israeli woman as a sexy, gtun- toting desert fighter is a big myth. In reality, she's seldom more than a houtsewife or a sec- retary," says Freedman, a philos- ophy professor at Haifa Univer- sity. Even in the army, she argues, women only p'all clerical work, parachute Hacking, nursing and teaching jobs. And as for Israel's woman premier Golda Meir, Freedman says "she is no example of women's equality in Israel to- day. The pinnacle she reached is a leftover from an earlier Is- raeli society when men and women participatel together." Freedman complains about "sexist religious laws," and points to discriminatory statutes governing women's wages, taxes ,and pensions. The Rabbinate, which has the last word in all matters concern- ing a woman's marital status, and the Labor Ministry confirm that: -Women and men have differ- ent pay scales ; -Housewives are ineligible for social security; -A married woman's posses- sions, and the woman herself, are the property of her hus- band; -Only husbands can ask for a divorce; and -A dead man's 'brother muist give the widow official permis- sion to remarry. If the brother is not old enough to permit re- marriage, she must wait until he attains his majority. If and when the widow receives permission, she must perform a ritual of pulling off the brother's shoe and spitting in his face. "That's small recompense for the dishes and diapers thrown in our faces," says Freedman. Asked what Israeli feminists are doing about their gripes, she said the movement's leaders have split up to raise women's consciousness and to fight for equal rights. Freedman's eight - month - old group meets weekly to discuss the issues of inequality in work, abirth control, abortions, and child care centers, which the govern- ment provides only in welfare cases. Because of tiny Israel's "ba- bies-for-'the-state" ethic, social workers and the state health ser- vice don't offer advice on birth co-trot or issue pis, Freedman charges.: The health service con- firms it. She adds that abortions are illegal, and those that are per- formed, are poorly done and ex- pensive. Clandestine abortions in Israel cost about $200. While Freedman educates her "sisters," former Member of Parliament Shulamit Aloni is at the barricades fighting for equal wages and working -conditions, and a say in women's personal status under law. The 48-year-old attorney re- cently organized women laborers at Tel Aviv candy factory and closed the plant in a strike that achieved near-parity with male workers. Aloni also has campaigned to install a woman on the commit- tee that chooses Israel's chief rabbi. "It is high time employers ceased to consider women work- ers as an inferior community," Aloni says. "The whole issue is an insult to every woman in the country from the prime minister down to the last mother." The Bureau of Statistics says 30 per cent of the nation's total work force is female. Women fill 78 per cent of the clerical jobs, only 22 per cent of the manageri- al slots and 25 per cent of the professional jobs. Israe The Labor. Ministry reports that in 19"1, the average woman worker earned 57 per cent of the a-erage man's salary. Women's rights have never been a large issue in Israel; froni-~ally, the problems ..facing Israeli women's lib comefrom the women. themselves. Secure and happy in their traditional roles, many reject any drastic change in their status.k Another problem is that more than half of Israeli womanhood come from Oriental communities where, as one Morrocan-born Israeli quips,' "a .woman's place is in the oven. a, Social workers claim they must. plead with proud oriental hus- bands to allow their wives to work. Even, Meir * has come out agairpst *women 's liberation, call- ing it "foolish.:" The chain-smoking premier, once referred: to by elder states- man David Ben-Gurion as "the only man in the government," recently said: < "Women, beware-or you just might' end up the prime minis- ter, and that's- no joke." Harp, a flair far artistic writing? If yo u, are interest- ed in reviewitng poetry arnd music. or writing feature st ies a b o ut the arts: Onntact Arty .9dlitdr. c/o Tt dramla,.;dance, film. .. .f3 t/ ry _ ..~~ rRA BENEFIT CONCERT for the School of Music Scholarship Fund Beethoven's Ninth Symphony Friday, Dec. 8 Hill Auditorium 8 P.M. HOLIDAY SPECIAL UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA - UNIVERSITY SYMPHONIC CHOIR Conductors: THEO ALCANTARA, MAYNARD KLEIN SOLOISTS: ELIZABETH MOSHIER, soprano ROSEMARY RUSSELL, mezzo soprano JOHN McCOLLUM, tenor LESLIE GUINN, baritone $2.00 GENERAL ADMISSION Tickets available at School of Music Information Office. and Hill Auditorium Box Office. INFORMATION 764-6118 UJNION f OPEN I PMvl 4 I NON-ORDINARY STATES OF REALITY IN, BUDDHIST TRANCE LECTURE BY DR. LEWIS LANCASTER, from U.C., Berkeley ihors.-4 p.m. Modern Lanpauges Bldg, Aud. IV As part of a series: Dimensions of Religious Experience SPONSORED BY THE OFFICE OF RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS ________ I ENTIRESHOP SP C ALS LE CLASSIC *-" PRICS. BST PS CA STEENS 2_____ ELES&JECOKR&MN f3,)/ Y lI N Wf #". RELASE .\ii ______ SUPR -~- ~.c~dy/ng sm - I T AT~ LEON RUSSELL: / IMPOR IC~r 4. GRAND FN.: fl A LL: OF TH4EIR LS: SAE1N 10c,{ will really ' tanned cow a ". [[{' 'W1 Rv':'.Triple pero rw -'vd'iV .. 7. # 1,/" dth,c ' buckle. Brow - -FANASTC ~ ' ' ..~:.white.306 SAIN- N.OW:"H THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. J gift a young man appreciate. :.oasoft hide belt by Paris. rated atl around, double prong ovn, black, navy, red, Swaist sizes. $7.