Sunday, January 23, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Hayden comes home) fn~i~ nn'firal rnnfS Carter throws a people's party LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, JAN. 25, 12 NOON LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUE DAY, JAN. 25, 12 NOON "EGYPT AFTER NASSER" Wontinuedfrom Pag e3) .'by i'te thnimnds ot, f Standingy I I IVUI Ila, HflIJ (Continued from Page 3 political office; until strong lo- cal organizations are built up. As for the, pronises of the in- coming Carter regime, Hayden comments, "I voted for Carter and am optimistic, but I doubt if any real changes are going to take place. The difference between Carter and Ford are like that between orange and yellow - certainly not the same but hardly radically different." Hayden believes that Carter is honest and very Democratic, and sees that the combination of the two as doomed to failure. "What very few people realize is that Carter will be the first Democratic President to serve in office in peace time since Roosevelts first ter." "The New Deal Democratic ideas of the thirties have never really been tested out complete- ly, in peacetime conditions. "Carter will have that oppor- tinity," Hayden believes, "and when the people realize that it takes more than just honesty and the Democratic Party to straighten out this country's problems, our grassroots move- ment will be able to gain strength." Hayden feels that Carter's economic policies are doomed to failure because they don't seek to alter the basic ideas that are currently in practice. "Every person in the United States has the right to work - and to find jobs for all those presently unemployed we have to utilize new strategies. We could change the definition of work to mean shorter work weeks, job sharing, and human- izing more jobs. Or shift our priorities to civilian over mili- tarv." "Too many people are hung- up on America being number one," says Hayden. "It's time we realized that there is no number one, the world is one, and we have to get it through our heads that it makes no dif- ference whether we can destroy the Soviet Union 50 or 100 times." Before running for the Sen- ate, Hayden admitted that for the most part he was against politicians, and at the time or his defeat he said that he was sick of them. "Mosttpoliticians are so swept up in their own little games that they have trouble carrying on a normal conversation. In Hayden's lecture Wednes- day night he talked about put- ting consumer advocates on the boards of most large and espe- cially multinational corpora- tions. "It's about time that this coun- try set terms for all corpora- tions to'follow. A new system" of corporate chartering has to be instituted." "Just about every major U.S. corporation is charted in Dela- ware, "for the simple reason that Delaware has the most lax chartering laws of any state. This has got to change, with laws that do not give corpora- tions unfair tax breaks." Part of Hayden's grassroots movement involves training workers to be able to organize movements in their own com- munities. They literally have in- stituted training camps that use encounter techniques, to teach trainees, in order to "put con- fident people to work where be- fore there were only concerned citizens." Hayden has also organized several community action groups into what he calls "The California Campaign for Eco- nomic Democracy." "This is a growing coalition," said Hayden. "People are find- ing out that by getting out and voting innumbers"they can change the political system." H AYDEN STRONGLY believes that there is little differ- ence between hisgrassroots movement and the student movement of the 6's. "The situation has merely grown. The students were di- rectly affected by the war and they voiced their opinions in the only way they could-they were denied the right to vote. The grassroots movement concerns everyone; no one can live out- side the economy." Hayden has found that college audiences today are just as re- ceptive as those during the anti- war movement. An equal re- sponse has been received off- campus, possibly showing a trend to the left among the "older generation," Today Hayden earns his liv- ing from lectures and free-lance writing. When not on the road he lives in California with his wife, Jane Fonda. Home life for Hayden is inter- woven and integrated with his occupation. "I don't have a nine to five job where I can come home and leave the office"be- hind me. I work in my house --A. d...: ia,,eisnr nnr- e- ' t 1 r I r ) I [ %J I*~ ~4 5 5 ~j ~ 1 t1.flJ ILIU. O'U"U'3- t --- -iIMS It was there on The Hill that Room ticket - holders below. in ibout old times with the new the spirit of the People's Inaug- The Naive were slightly un-, staff. ural took its truest form. It was familiar with the mechanics of "When I was editor," recallsj 150,000 men and women and delivering a speech. A college- "Haen "it was almt, a boys and girls and infants, peo- aged male eyed the Plexiglas Hayden, "it was almost expect- ple rich and poor, powerful and panel in front of the speaker's ed of you to become a member weak, idealistic and apolitical. platform on the portico and in- of Michigauma, (the elite stu- It was countless faces eager to sisted it was the latest fruit dent honorary), whose hazing hear the voice of the man they of electronic wizardry. was as bad as any fraternity had elected to office. It was "e at the time. I turned them heavy coats and thick scarves, there," he announced. "I'm down." ear muffs and woolen hats. It sure there is one. It's a Tele- "The entire idea of being was hundreds of pairs of binoc- Prompter, that's what it is. I beaten up and thrown in the ulars trained on the east steps don't know how a TelePrompt- mud so you could sit up in their of the Capitol, Polaroids, Insta- er works, all I know is you can little room on top of the Union matics, Nikons and notebooks. see through it. It's pure glass." and jack-off with all the other It was a thrilling, palpable an- The Southerners saturated little boys who thought they ticipation. The Hill and comprised one of were the campus elite was just The Complainers had come athmotipratatsfte barbaric to me," he said. long way and were disappointedPeostInuratio r t "Maybe things haven't chang. to discover they could not see one was talking with a South- ed so much - they're still up the special portico the Pres-rn accent, whether they were there." dent would speak from. from the South or not. These "Well, we can stay here or were some of the people who It was at that time that The go and watch it on television. Daily was the hotbed of cam- You want to do that? opened their mailboxes one day pus activists," said Hayden. "Yeah, let's go watch it on ad found large white envelopes "You've got to remember that f TV." with real invitations to the for the most part students were And: "Isn't it awful that swearing-in ceremonies. They not allowed to vote. The Daily they don't have bleachers?" were Carter supporters from was one of our few outlets. But The Neck Craners were try- wayhotalked about the te- nothing compared to the student ing anything to get a glimpseg ii activism that came five to ten of the ceremony. A middle-aged be and Jimmy were almost ar- years after I left." woman dropped a stuffed pap- rested. If certain asoectQ of campus er shopping bag on the ground l and stood on it, lifting her atr life, like Michigauma, don't most a meaningless extra inch seem to have changed much, and a half off the ground. AA stivalOf and if students today now seem younger woman, perhaps in her A bent on seeming "normal," Tomn early twenties, was 'trying toin},t r bayen seesthe curent trends climb up on her taller escorts Women t Haydn ses te crren trndsback, laughing even as she fellI as seeds which will sprout into off onto the powdery snow. A A HISTORICAL a renewed wave of change. man who already stood above PERSPECTIVE "People are worried about grad- the shoulders of most of his es and jobs a lot more than eighbors was piling up snow Mon., Jan. 24, 7:30 in to a small mountain he could when I went to school. Back stand on for an even better Rc then some one planning on do- look. Mianes, lecture ing graduate work could have The Tree People scampered Traditional Arts some C's and D's on his tran- high up the limbs of their excel- script and still get by. But lent vantage points, and were Tues., Jan. 25, 7:30 shooed off about once every those days seem to be over." half hour. As soon as it was Pendleton Arts Info. Center "Eveiryone is fighting every- safe, someone else would MICHIGAN UNION, 2nd Floor body for a piece of the pie," climb up. They had some ofC, he adds. "And this is why our the best seats on the grounds, INFORMATION CALL: and the lucky ones who had 763-1107 668-7884 grass roots movement is Iound eluded the special police by 764-3234 763-0087 to keep growing." noon were jealously resented While Others Are Conforming to Tradition, We're Establishing Our Own. OPEN RUSH-JAN. 23-27 i ryu Pill OterAMCnomAngtDELaiAn (Coner of H ill and Oxford ) 707 OXFORD 761-5950 K p "Y** "'."""''.:".r.:,.;;~ N~ It was Thanksgiving Day, 1968, he said, and Jimmy was one of four persons canvassing door-to-door in Springfield, Mass. on behalf of the Baptist Church. As it turned out, how- ever, Massachusetts had a law against such activity, so the cops hauled the future Presi- dent of the United States and his friends down to the station, where theytalkedbthemselves' out of further trouble. And so The Complainers, The Neck Cr"aners, The Tree People, The Southerners and all the rest listened to their new chief executive, listened as he asked them to become part of his presidency. "Your strength can compensate for my weakness," he said in his short, simple speech. "Your wisdom can help to minimize my mistakes." A People's Presidency? The people on The Hill probably, didn't give it much thought as they marched off to get a good spot 'on the curb for the pa- rade. It was a nice idea, of Speaker: PROF. course, but how could such, a UNIVERSITY OF dream become reality? You can't change tradition over- night, they figured. Ecumenical1 The Tree People jumped 921C from their perches and ran to Pennsylvania Avenue to wait Lunch (75c) is prepared or for the President. Church Women United at the Campus Ce CHURCH nter I' ROUSHDY HENEIN ALEXANDRIA, EGYPT nd served by - -. Urder Your' Subscription 7Today 764-0558 A career in law without law school. Whdt can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, respon- sible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work traditionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can give you the skills-the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered-choose the city in which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 1600 graduates in law firms, banks, and corporations in over 75 cities. 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