nihe £Iian Daily Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Wormens' sports: Kicking stigmas Wednesday, November 12, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 By BEVERLY HARRIS WOMEN'S ATHLETICS IS no small issue at a place like the University of Michigan where ... 1) The women's gymnastics "team" does not exist. Instead, it is a "club" that has been uncoached, has had to provide it's own transportation to meets, etc.; but in spite of all that, has brought home several second place finishes. It is difficult to believe that the prestigious U of M is "unable" to provide an intercollegiate team for these clearly talented and devoted women; and where . . . 2) In 1974, at the same time that this "great U" was deciding that it could indeed field a women's tennis team (as well as five other intercollegiate sports - the first for women on this campus), the sparklingly bright Track and Tennis Building was completed - if you can call it complete with no locker facilities for women. Besides reflecting the attitudes in existence towards women's sports and athletes (after all, the initial planning stages for a women's tennis team were under way at about the same time as the architects' sketches), the lack of locker facilities also shows poor planning. Clearly, at the very least, women's team facilities will eventually have to be added to the building - and it can only cost more than it would have cost to build them originally; and where ... 3) Men like'Bo Schembechler, who have access to major media. either purposely or ignorant- ly misinterpret the guidelines issued about Title IX. Once again, Title IX does not require equal expendi- tures. BUT IN FAIRNESS, we must be aware that not all the problems are caused by the U. Women have not been socialized to sports participation in the same way that men have. Historically, most sports were considered "unfeminine". A few sports were okay for women -- golf, tennis, swimming. Women could participate in these sports and still be feminine -as long as we didn't play too well or compete too seriously. Oddly enough, field hockey has always been considered a woman's sport even though it is probably as rough a game as ice hockey (espe- cially for the goalie) with little of the associated pro- tective padding. But then men damage so easily. However, times are a-changing. Women's sports are achieving a prominence that has never been seen before, at least not since the Amazons! More high school girls are participating in active competitive varsity sports than was even imagined when I was in high school. Although these women are, not here yet, they are on their way. But the women who are currently at the U were socialized pre-BJK (pre Billie Jean King and the great women's sports boom). There are difficulties in actually getting women to use the available facilities. These women have not been socialized to get together and go play basketball as a social activity in the way that men have. It just does not occur to most women. PROGRAMS NEED TO be developed to inform and educate women on campus as to the possibilities available to them in athletics, and their rights to use the facilities. This could easily be added to the existing orientation programs. Women in dormi- tories and sororities should be made aware of how easy it is to field intramural teams - either re- creative or competitive - in a number of sports. The athletic department has done a fine job of creat- ing a very attractive and very informative series of booklets this year. However, these are mainly being distributed at the sports facilities. Those who are already using the facilities are the ones who receive the information. But many women still consider these places male domains (even if we don't realize that we do); so these informational packets are not reaching many potentially interested women. The problems are complex; the answers are not simple. But we can. all start somewhere. The Com- mission for Women has a newly formed committee on Women's Athletics. The committee is open to all interested participants. Call the Commission at 763-2203 to become a part of this committee. THE COLISEUM AT Hill & Fifth has "Women's Hours" from 5-7 pm Monday-Friday. Lockers are available on a daily or semester basis, and so is equipment. Get some friends together and go play basketball or volleyball - or go by yourself and practice. If you work at the 'U' or live in a dorm or soror- ity or know any other group of University connected women, then see about getting a team together for a fall or winter sport (volleyball, basketball, foot- ball, track, bowling, etc.). Call the Coliseum (763- 5195) for information about starting dates. If there is a sport you are interested in, but you are not able to get a team together, call the Coliseum where YOU LEFT HER BECAUSE OF THAT? -Photo by Beverly Harris they will compile a list of those wanting to partici- pae; and when there are enough people, you all become a team or you become members of already existing teams, Alternatively, if there is a sport you are interested in, you might want to join one of the many already-existing clubs (archery, karate, hiking, fencing, soccer, volleyball, etc.), or you can form your own club. TAKE CONTROL OF your tive! Remember, "women chance". body and become ac- deserve a sporting i/ Ir rw n i i r r rr r ru rw i TeMILWAUKFEE JOURNAL Field Newspaper pae Syndicate. 19767 1 1 Preserve consumer board T H I S MORNING the W a y s and Means Committee of the Washte- naw County Board of Commissioners will vote on whether to eliminate the office of the Consumer Action Cen- ter. As it now stands, the office serves four functions-mediation for non I-criminal complaints, consumer information, consumer education, and prosecution of criminal complaints. . The resolution appearing before the committee would cut . the effective- ness of the consumer office to per- haps an eighth of what it is now. The proposal would move the crim- inal investigator to the office of the Sealer of Weights and Measures, And do away with the remaining positions in the consumer office, essentially ending the other three functions of the consumer office. The investigator would become a part of the Sealer of Weights and Measures office, and w o'u ld spend half his time investigating violations in weights and measures, gasoline, meat weights, etc., and the other half, investigating violations in other con- TODAY'S STAFF: News: Gordon Atcheson, Stephen Hersh, Lois Josimovich, Pauline Lu- bens, Rob Meachum, Jim Nicoll, Sara Rimer, Curt Smith Editorial Page: Paul Haskins, Tom Kettler, Jon Pansius, Tom Stevens Arts Page: Doc Kralik, Jeff Sorensen Photo Technician: Ken Fink SAY! DID YOU READ WHERE THEY PREDICT THAT BY THE 21ST CENTURY, MOST HEATING WILL BE BY SOLAR ENERGY? REALLY? a Ii Izj o sumer areas, like automobiles and mobile homes. The investigator would be half as effective. BUT THAT IS not the most painful part of the proposal. The major- ity of complaints that pass through the Consumer action office are not criminal. Most of them deal with bad deals-a bum washing machine, a pair of shoes with cardboard soles. And the consumer office, with the aid of volunteers, looks into these complaints and tries to do what is fair for the consumer. But the new proposal. eliminates this function. The reasons behind the new reso- lution are complicated, but the offi- cial reason is budgeting; the county's budget must be cut. Over the l a s t two y e a r s, on a budget of $70,000, t h e y saved the county $130,000. Commissioner Cathy McClary said that she hoped the new office would continue to be as effec- tive, but considering the staff cuts, it doesn't seem very likely. FVERYONE WILL get the bad end of the deal if t h i s proposal goes through. Consumers will have no es- tablished institution to go to when they get worked over, by an unethical business firm. The criminal violations that do go on, will receive only half the attention that they deserve. But if they pass his new proposal, they are benefiting nobody but the office of the Sealer of Weights and Measures. YEAHI AND THEY SAY THAT MEALS WILL BE MADE OF . PLASTIC THAT CAN BE EATENI ~ \~t E~~ - E I Teach-In To The Daily: AS A PARTICIPANT in the recent Teach-in, and an observ- er of campus movements since the 1930's, I would like to make a brief comment. Both in the sheer numbers of students who participated hour after hour in the Teach-In, and the quality of attention given the many speakers, it was truly impres- sive and encouraging for the future. I attended a meeting at Hill Auditorium which focussed on the Chicago "conspiracy trial" in 1969, in which the at- tendanceawas larger, but the quality and atmosphere quite. With Jerry Rubin as the chief entertainer, the response was more boistrous, but also more superficial, in contrast with the Letters more thoughtful, critical and open-minded reaction to the cur- rent Teach-In. It is said today that the stu- dent concern with social prob- lems, which exploded in the 60's, is dead on today's cam- puses. The Ann Arbor Teach-In proves how wrong this estimate is. I believe that the Ann Arbor experience merits nation - wide attention as a truly historic event. ONE CRITICAL NOTE as a post-script. Michael Beckman, in his article on the Teamsters Union is guilty of some gr'oss inaccuracies. He refers to "the corruptCIO longshoremen un- der Harry Bridges," and reit- erates his point later in speak- ing of Harry Bridges' "racke- teers" The West Coast long- shoremen's union, now the in- to The The Lighter Side :moww Peacemakers bullish, IXI:} on arms agreements =- we.r ", .r..j ..v . Dick West By DICK WEST "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall supply both sides with arms."-The New New Testament. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Suppose two countries had been fight- ing each other and you were assigned the role of mediator. How would you go about restoring peace between them? Would you A) try to persuade them to beat their swords into plowshares? Or would you B) promise that if they signed a treaty you would see to it that each got more weapons? I'm not suggesting the Biblical approach A) is no longer valid, but it does appear that the era of peace through munitions purvey- ance B) is now close at hand. Fresh from negotiating the Israeli-Egyptian treaty, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger went before a congressional committee the other day seeking $1.5 billion in military air for Israel. He said the question of also supplying arms to Egypt still was hanging fire, so to speak, but "we listened with sympathy" to President Anwar Sadat's request for U. S. military assistance. WHICH PROMPTED REP. Donald W. Reigle, D-Mich., to ob- serve that "we may find ourselves arming all sides." To the untrained eye, it might appear that stacking more pow- derkegs atop a tinderbox does little to prevent explosions. But Kis- singer said the $3.3 billion in military and economic aid sought for the Middle East "is a prudent investment in peace." And he must know whereof he speaks. For since he began negotiating peace pacts in various parts of the world, the overseas sale of U.S. arms has jumped from $2 billion to $9.2 billion annual- ly. After the hearing, I asked a diplomatic observer how providing additional war material to potential belligerents reduces the threat of war. "Apparently you don't realize how badly some of these coun- tries want to get their hands on missiles, rockets and other mod- ern military hardware," he replied. "They literally will do anything to acquire such weapons, in- cluding signing agreements not to use them." I said, "I never dreamed they were that desperate." "What we are trying to do," he continued, "is take advantage of the demand for arms to forge a worldwide chain of nonaggres- sion treaties. "LET'S SAY COUNTRY A and Country B are on the verge of dependent ILWU, was born in the struggle against labor cor- ruption and racketeering, and established itself after one of the nation's most historic strikes in 1934, which became, ultimate- ly one of three general strikes in,the country's history. Bridges was attacked, not for corrup- tion or racketeering, but for his political radicalism which was expressed in his helping to create a model of democratic "rank-and-file" unionism which still stands today as an example of what most of us would hope to see emulated in the labor movement. As a former member of the ILWU in the late 30's and early 40's, I am a personal witness to the accuracy of my state- ments here. Dick Criley, Midwest Director, National Committee Against Repressive Legislation November 6 dog-gerel To The Daily: NOW THAT THE weather is getting colder, I am more and more dismayed by the numer- ous dogs I see left to wait out- side buildings on campus for their owners. This morning at ten to eleven, I entered the MLB, where there was a gold- en retriever with collar and tags sitting outside the door. When Ihcame out at five past noon, the dog was still there, checking each personswho came out the door to see if they were 'his.' And this isn't an isolated incident. I realize that people like to take their dogs with them when they go out, and I sympathize. If I had a dog (I don't only because I can't accommodate one in my apartment) I would too. If you're going to have to leave the dog outside while you run into the store for five min- utes, that's one thing. But it's really unfair to the dog to ex- pect it to wait for an hour or more outside in the cold while you attend class. Doesn't that defeat the purpose of having the dog along for companionship anyway? Besides the discomfort of lying on cold cement (and they do!), the dog is at the mercy of other loose dogs and even unscrupulous h u m a n s. Should its patience falter (and who's to blame if it did?), wan- dering around in the street un-. controlled increases its chances of being hit by a car. So please, people, if you care about your dog, don't take advantage of its good nature. If you can't keep the dog with you, which is where it prefers to be any- way, leave it at home where it can at least wait for you in comfort and relative safety! Julia Stielstra October 30 controlled by a tyrannical ma- jority of underdeveloped and Communist countries, and the resolutions passed by this as- sembly reveals their resentment and disdain for the civilized world. The United Nations' action of proclaiming Zionism as a form of racism is . undoubtedly the most perverted distortion of the truth ever to emenate from within her walls. Sponsored by the oil - rich Arab bloc, this treacherous resolution repre- sents a digression into the dark ages. Denying the Jewish Peo- ple the rightato their historic homeland is a manifestation of medieval anti-semitism cast in a modern mold. Free-thinking peoples of the world will not be fooled when such personages as Sadat claim to be anti-Zion- ist but not anti-semetic. No dis- tinction can be drawn between the two as the majority of Jews are pro-Israel and as such are deeply concerned with its sur- vival. THE RESOLUTION must be takenmost seriously and must not be passed off laughingly by the sane men of this world. Let us not forget that only forty years have passed since a short- sighted world took lightly the actions of a madman in Ger- many. Surely one lesson to be learned from the Nazi tragedy is that appeasement of an evil force does nothing to impede its progress, on the contrary, it en- courages it. Gil Grant Alice Lloyd Hall November 11 S. Africa To The Daily:- I ON FRIDAY, November 7, the University's African Student Association showed Last Grave at Dimbaza, a movie made se- cretly in South Africa and smug- gled out of the country in 1974. This was the Ann Arbor premier of the movie which shows the brutal, systematic oppression of the Black majority in South Af- rica - with American conni- vance and involvement. The film's editing is precise and its commentary sharp. Scenes include: a Black woman taking care of a white child, while her own children are sent off to a 'reserve" to be seen once a year by their mother; rows of listless Black children dying of malnutrition, while the commentary tells us that one out of every three Black chil- dren dies before reaching the age of one. This in the richest country in Africa. And 18,000 Black men have died in the white-owned gold mines in the last 30 years, an average of three deaths every shift. The film punches out the con- trast between white affluence and Black suffering, with the clarity of its scenes and born- Daily including the theft of copies of the film. When Last Grave at Dimbaza was shown on cable TV last week, a member of the African Student Association reported that the article in the New York Times advertising the event had been torn out of at least 7 newspapers in cam- pus locations at the University. On Friday the University se- curity harassed students at the movie, trying to censor a dis- play of Southern Africa litera- ture outside the hall. Unable to close down the display on his own, the MLB building su- pervisorncalled security who sent a nervous young "safety" officer, Robert J. Farrier, to the scene. When this failed to close down the display they es- calated their tactics, until two obese Ann Arbor police officers, the safety officer's supervisor, and the chief of campus se- curity had been called in to deal with the two students at the literature table. The students demanded to see the rules by which they were to be *evicted and the whole offensive fizzled. The security contingent were unable to pro- duce the rules, tried further in- timidation- and then left. WHY DID THE administra- tion, and others, respond so ag- gressively to Last Grave at Dimbaza? Dimbaza is one of the African reserves in South Africa and the graves are those of Black babies who die of hun- ger while their mothers take care of white children hundreds of miles away and their fathers work in white - owned corpora- tions. The movie speaks clearly about the treatment Black work- ers receive at the hands of the 475 U.S. corporations in South Africa. These workers receive less than $100 a month (often much less), strike actions are illegal and frequently end in death for many of the strikers. Profits for U.S. corporations are enormous. Following the movie, Tapson Mawere, representative to the U.S. of the Zimbabwe Arican National Union spoke to the au- dience. He emphasized that South Africa's Blacks do not want sympathy. Repeating the message that brought the au- dience at the Teach-In to its feet last Tuesday, Mawere said that Black South Africans "will win their own struggle: and you can help them by winning your struggle here." The Southern African Committee November 1i CRISP To The Daily: WE, THE STAFF of CRISP, resent the article in the Daily of November 7 which indicates that CRISP is responsible for the delays at Angell Hall. Neith- er we nor our office have any- thina to do with the handing out -w - rTM \\ \1\\ i IN THAT ABOUT - U CASE, OUR COMPANY CAFETERIA IS 30 YEARS AHEAD OF ITS TIME! 1 r.; , \1 1 L \\ °" V,