Join the Daily! Come to the mass meeting tonight I SAHKAROV vSee editorial page I hE Sir i~w 143Iaitg ANOTHER CHILLER See Today for details NineY Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. XC, No. 94 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, January 24, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages PRESIDENT WANTS TO REINSTATE DRAFT REGISTRATION Carter vows Khomeini .admitted t~o hospftal1 x ~ i for 'heart condio i From APand UPI French radio reported last night that Iran's 79-year-old revolutionary leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, had been admitted to the cardiology depar- tment of Reza hospital in Tehran with a heart problem. The report quoted a Khomeini. spokesperson in the holy city of Qom, x. where the ayatollah lives, and gave no ,.further details. KHOMEINI'S doctors said earlier IF SOME PEOPLE have their way, th yesterday that his "condition is good Fleming Building. Fleming (inset) was and there is no cause for concern." The statement, broadcast on Tehran radio,n V nmca e atr K o ii' of ce nQ m, 1G G New name f 100 miles south of Tehran, said he would continue foregoing appointments until Feb. 9 because of .fatigue and a mild By NANCY RUESTER illness. and MICHELE HARLANI The report that Khomeini was taken What's in a name? to the hospital capped a day of conflic- A lot, according to some teachin ting stories about the Iranian leader's professors who work in the Mode 'health. Earlier, the militants holding Building (MLB) and who don't want the U.S. Embassy announced Robben W. Fleming Building. Khomeini, who has gone into seclusion THEY SAY THEY'RE going to oppo several times because of fatigue, was from the University's administration seriously ill this time. Radio Tehran massive brick structure in back of Hill later announced Khomeini was "suf- ter the former University president, fering a brief indisposition which is not While administration officials are car sufficiently serious to merit concern." the idea of dedicating MLB to Fleming See KHOMEINI, Page 10 an idea at this stage, some who work in Mideast oil protection WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter, citing a "grave threat" to Mid- dle East oil supplies, vowed last night that any Soviet effort to seize control of the Persian Gulf region "will be repelled by use of any means necessary.. See related story, Page 3 In a nationally broadcast State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress. Carter also announced that he wants to "begin registration" of draft-age youths, but expressed hope that "it will not be necessary to reim- pose the draft." In an overture to Islamic nations in, the vital oil producing Persian Gulf region, the president said he hoped "to shape a cooperative security framework that respects differing values and political beliefs, yet enhan- ces the independence, security, and prosperity of all." CA RTER DID not spell out the nature of the security alliances he hopes to shapes An administration official, who asked that he not be identified, said the president did not seek a formal alliance such as the .North Atlantic Treaty Organization and would be "flexible" in his effort to promote cooperation. He also called for collective action by the major oil consuming nations to meet the Soviet threat to the Persian Gulf area, but was not specific. Declaring that "the state of our union depends on the state of the world," Car- ter said the seizure of American hostages in Iran and Soviet intervention in Afghanistan confronts the United States with a broad challenge that must be. met in cooperation with other nations. CARTER, DRESSED in a dark blue suit, spoke in a firm, clear voice, reciting part of his speech from meory and reading other parts from a text. He added several passages to his prepared See CARTER, Page2 Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY e Modern Languages Building (MLB) soon may be known as the Robben W. president of the Unitersity from 1968 to 1978. r MLB? Change possible D ng fellows and rn Languages to work in the ose a suggestion to rename the Auditorium af- reful to say that is no more than the building are more outspoken. Acting Vice-President for Academic Affairs Alfred Sussman confirmed that there is a proposal, but said, "Right now it's in the information gathering stage." Some feel they've heard enough already. "NAMING MLB after Fleming would be a complete joke," said one professor in the Germanic Languages Department. "Fleming was against humanities, and in act never set foot in the building. The obvious choice was the Administration Building." The professor went on to say that some faculty members have expressed bitterness over the proposal. Another professor in the same department said he objected to the idea for the same reason. He added See NAME, Page 7 House committee accepts Carter's Olympic proposal -WASHINGTON (AP) - A House Olympic Committee has refused Car- committee approved a resolution ter's request to move, postpone or can- yesterday backing President Carter's cel the Moscow Games. drive to have the Moscow Olympic The Carter administration has been Games moved, canceled, or boycotted advisedthat it has no legal authority to if the Soviet Union does not withdraw bar participation in the Games by U.S. its troops #from Afghanistan within a athletes, and resolutions proposed in month. Congress would not have the force of The actionby the House Foreign Af- law. fairs Committee cane by voice vote. The House resolution would urge the REP. CLEMENT Zablocki (D-Wis.), U.S. Olympic Committee to honor Car- the panel's chairman, said he expected ter's request. approval by the full House today or tomorrow. "THE SOVIVT invasion endangers The move came after Robert Kane, independent countries neighboring president of the U.S. Olympic Commit- Afghanistan and endangers access to a tee, testified that the Carter ad- major source of the world's oil sup- ministration's suggested boycott -is an plies," the resolution says. ill-advised, go-it-alone stance that is unpopular around the world. "So," it adds, "the security of the "We're out there alone, swaying in United States, .of the region encom- the wind," he said. passing Afghanistan and of the entire CARTER SAID Sunday he will ask world is threatened." U.S. athletes to boycott the Olympics if Kane testified he did not oppose Car- by Feb. 20 the Russian troops still are in ter's idea of exploring a transfer of the Afghanistan and the International Games from Moscow. . Humane Society to stop donating house pets BY JAY McCORMICK Angered by the recent cat-killing in- cident involving members of Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, the local chapter of the Humane Society has refused for, now to give house pets to University fraternities. Fraternity members say that isn't fair. No requests for pets from fraternities will be granted for the time being, ac- cording to Diane Allevato, director of the Humane Society of Huron Valley. She acknowledged that the brutal killing of a cat by fraternity brothers in early December was "a catalyst for checking our policy" on Greeks. MARK NEIIMER, a former president of Delta Chi fraternity, said a Humane Society worker recently made it clear to him that his fraternity could not get an animal from the organization. Delta Chi may be able to adopt a dog in about two months, he said he was told. Allevato said Delta Chi's request is being reviewed. "The majority of fraternity adoption requests have been turned down in the past," she said. "We don't want an animal adopted out to a setting where it's going to be burned or hit by a car." Fraternity life and pets don't mix, Allevato said. "Problems develop when an animal lives in a communal living situation," she said. Nehman objected to that claim. "IT IS unfair to hold others respon- sible for the actions of a few individuals who happen to belong to a fraternity," he said. "I feel that (the cat-killing) was an isolated incident, and that it doesn't represent the Greek system." Nehman said Delta Chi's previous pet, a beagle, ran away and never came back. But he added that the fraternity has taken good care of pets in the past. The request for a new mascot was ac- companied by a recommendation from an LSA assistant dean, he said. According to Allevato, the cat-killing was only an example of a larger problem. "Fraternities sometimes 'vote out' their mascot pets, and bring them back to us. There is a lot of irresponsible pet ownership. Frater- See FRATS, Page 2 Co-ops, dorms offer alternative housing By NICK KATSAV ELAS If the thought of living in a house next fall doesn't thrill, and if apartment living is unappealing, don't fret: Even in Ann Arbor's less-than-plenteous housing market, there are lots of options available. Nearly half of all students live in cooperative housing, fraternities and sororities, and University-operated housing. Each of these living alternatives has its own character,. which allows students a diversity of options. CORRECTION In yesterday's edition, the Daily in- correctly reported the phone number for Sang Nam, an area andlord. The correct number is 662-0351. UNIVERSITY HOUSING comprises about one-third of all student housing, providing homes for about 10,000 students. The traditional halls, those usually distinguished by cafeteria operations inside the building, are usually made up of first and second year students, with few juniors, and even fewer seniors. Dorms are noisy, expensive, (room and board for next year might jump 13 per cent higher than current rates), and usually don't provide as much privacy as some residents would desire. But ready-made meals, washers and dryers, recreational equipment, and a social atmosphere make dorms popular places to live. Many current dormies try to return each year, only to be shoved out of the residence halls because the Housing Office must vacate nearly 60 per cent of the living spaces to make room for incoming freshpersons. The University also runs non-traditional halls, which are generally less expensive than their traditional counterparts. See STUDENT, Page 10 'U' professor find's fault, in S. African reforms By ALEX McGEOCH Ben Yablonky, a University com- munications professor, reports after a month-long trip, to South Africa that, despite cosmetic reforms, the apar- theid system of racial segregation in that country remains intact. Though visible changes 'are small, however, Prime Minister P. W. Botha has indicated that broader concessions may be made in the future, Yablonky. said. The new South African Parliament will consider the reform of laws forbidding the registration of black labor unions and the so-called "immorality acts" which forbid in- See 'U', Page 7 Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY. UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS Prof. Ben Yablonky, recently re- turned from a trip to South Africa, said the changes that have taken place there have been mostly cosmetic and superficial. Y geographer explains that the principles that apply to tem-*. peratures of the air around lakes apply in the home. Rah rah University administrators tend to be seen as a pretty bureaucratic lot. But in the current "Memo to the Faculty ''-a periodic publication of the University's Center for Research on Lear- as dean to become a simple cheerleader," writes St. An- toine, "and to tell people how good I thought they were, in so many words." In extensive evaluation procedures, ad- ministrators tend to be "mother hens," he adds. In arranging class schedules and filling teaching slots, the administrator becomes an "indentured servant" of sorts, according to St. Antoine. "But even in this menial role, the administrator must often exercise delicate discretion. The proven, prolific scholar may have to be given more frequent leaves than others. More controversially, the teacher who is a towering figure in a small group will have to be given more seminars, while the extroverted colleague wants a place in the Guinness Book of World Recorlds. But despite his oral talents, there's no category in the Guinness book for whistlers. Is Giese discouraged? "I whistle for fun," he says. "Really, it's kind of exciting. I'll whistle for a beer or my dinner when people ask me to. Heck, I'll whistle when anybody asks me to. Q On the inside A call for reforming the Iowa caucus proces is on the editorial page.. . In sports, read A Neff Is Enough for a .._ .L.. .LI F A A l- 1 I I Jl * I I i