REGISTRATION See editorial page C I - be Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom ii aljj CLOUDY See Today for details Vol. XC, No. 1( 07 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, February 9, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Supplement _, Carter says women to register All 19-20 year-olds t 0 From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-President Carter proposed yesterday that men and women ages 19 to 20 register for military service, probably lBeginning this summer. Eighteen-year-olds would be included in the program beginning next Jan. 1. Declaring that "equal obligations deserve equal rights," Carter became the first president to suggest draft registration for women. WHITE HOUSE officials said Carter will sign an executive order next week requiring young men to register for the draft,- but he needs congressional approval of his plan to include women in the program. Because opposition is expected on Capitol Hill, the president said he would submit the plan to register women separately from his request for funding. That way, if Congress decides women should not be included, the funds need to register men could still be approved. AP Photo IN THE FUTURE, more women may find themselves in the position of Sgt. Antoinette Beck, above, a drill sergeant at Fort Dix, New Jersey. Or more likely, they may find themselves in the position of one of the above recruits. President, Carter announced yesterday that 19 and 20-year-old men and women will have to register for the draft. Under Carter's plan, however, women would not serve in combat positions. Engineering Dean Ragone named -president of Case estern Reserve House Speaker Thomas O'Neill has predicted Congress will reject registration of women. IN THE ANNOUNCEMENT of his draft registration program, Carter made it clear. women would be registered for non-combat service only, but did not specify whether he would include them in any actual military draft. Aides said it was unlikely. In explaining his decision to include women in the program, Carter said, "There is no distinction possible, on the basis of ability or performance, that would allow me to exclude women from an obligation to register." He described the decision as "a recognition of the reality that both women and men are working members of our society." THERE WAS MIXED reaction to the president's registration plan from women. Phyllis Schafly, leader of anti-ERA forces, said, "Carter has stabbed American womanhood in the back in a cowardly attempt to get back the election-year support of the radical feminists." But other women's leaders said that if women must assume responsibility for helping with national defense, they should also have equal rights. THE PRESIDENT of the League of Women Voters of the United States, Ruth Hinerfeld, said, "We support equal opportunity regardless of sex. We would not oppose including women in a draft." There were widespread predictions that Congress would tefuse to force women to sign up. " Indeed, most members of the -Senate and House Armed Services committees oppose inciding women in registration, altough they have been pressing for a program to register young men. "I'm sure he realizes it will not pass," Rep. Richard White (D-Texas), chairman of the House Armed Services manpower subcommittee, said of Carter's proposal to include women. REP. PATRICIA SCHROEDER (D- Colo.), an opponent of registration, said the plan to compel male registration o sign up. "will go sailing through." She said refusal to register women could doom registration of men. Pentagon lawyers drafted legal briefs last year saying that if women were not registered along with men, "the whole registration system will be thrown out" in a court challenge, said Ms. Schroeder. The program would affect 4.2 million women and 4 million men. See CARTER, Page 7 Students respond to draft proposal By KEVIN TOTTIS Although President Carter's proposal' that 19- and 20-year-old men and women register for the draft is expected to be overwhelmingly defeated by Congress, it met with mixed reactions on campus yesterday., Most of the 35 students contacted in an informal survey, however, ,felt that if there is going to be registration at all, it should apply to both men and women. "I feel it's a good idea to draft both men and women," Sara Curran, a freshwoman in the School of Natural Resources said. "The only way for the horror of war to be realized is to have women go, so that it no longer is heroic for men to fight," she added. "I think that women's registration is definitely fair," LSA freshman Mike Buhler said. "They have as much at stake in the country as men do." School of Education senior Peggy Bartlett said, "The whole idea of war shouldn't happen. If he's (Carter's) See STUDENT, Page 7 By ADRIENNE LYONS David Ragone, dean of the College of Engineering, yesterday, was elected president of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Ragone will assume his new position'July 1. Case Western Reserve trustees unanimously voted Ragone into office, following a ten-month search for a new president. University officialp here said they had no idea who Ragone's replacement in the College of Engineering would be, altough Acting Vice-President for Academic Affairs Alfred Sussman said the formal search process would begin fairly soon. RAGONE SAID yesterday his feelings about the appointment were mixed. "It's good and bad. I'm excited to be asked (to take the position), but sad to leave Ann Arbor," he said. University President Harold Shapiro said the University will miss Ragone's services. "His leaving will be a loss to the University and the College," Shapiro said, adding, "Case Western is to be congratulated on their wise choice." Shapiro, who has been president of the University since Jan. , said he would try to help Ragone adjust to his new position if possible. RAGONE SAID HE anticipated few major changes in the move from a large university to a smaller one. "They're different," Ragone admitted, "but I spent three years (teaching) at Carnegie-Mellon (Univesity of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), and two at Dartmouth (College in Hanover, New Hampshire, as dean of the Thayer School of Engineering), so I have a feeling how a private university is run. "Both have to fight for survival. It just seems smaller schools have to fight a little harder," Ragone added. Shapiro said he did not anticipate Ragone facing such problems. "Case is bigger than the College of Engineering. It has a fine program and he'll be able to enhance it," he said. SUSSMAN NOTED that according to an understanding between the nation's universities, the University cannot recrit new faculty from other colleges after May 1, since that would not leave the other institutions enough time to find a replacement. Sussman added that he doubted the University would have a replacement before Ragone leaves. Ragone will replace Louis Toepfer, who resigned to become head of the new Columbus, Ohio branch office of a Cleveland law firm. More than,200 candidates applied for the post which Toepfer accepted in 1971, said Paula Slimak, director of University Communications at Case. Slimak noted the 45 Case trustees had to approve Ragone's appointment by at least a two-thirds majority. The presidential search was conducted by a six-member committee chaired by Case Trustee Allen Ford, executive vice-president of the Diamond Shamrock Corporation in Cleveland. SLIMAK SAID THE Case search process was "very secretive. There were strong internal candidates, so harmony on campus had to be preserved." Secrecy was maintained also, Slimak said, to protect the jobs of out-of-town candidates. Ragone came to the University as the Engineering College dean in 1972. He began teaching here in 1953, upon receiving his doctorate from the, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Ragone left the University in 1962, when he held several government positions, before working at Carnegie-Mellon and Dartmouth. Sussman praised Ragone's achievements at the University. "Both from a University standpoint and a personal one, he'll be missed," Sussman said, adding Ragone is an "imaginative leader and a person with broad intereskts and understanding," who was helpful :in "generating funds for the Engineering College's move to North Campus. He'll do extremely well," Sussman said., Changes in Women 's Studies Pro.urged By LORENZO BENET An LSA Program Review Committee has recommended extensive internal changes in the University's Women's Studies Program. The committee report, obtained by the Daily ye'sterday, includes a recommendation that the program use faculty members instead of teaching assistants in courses at'the 300 level and above. The report advises reallocating $26,000 of the program's budget to fund University Information.Services Photo DAVID RAGONE, above, currently dean of the College of Engineering here, accepted an offer yesterday to become the president of Case Western, University in Cleveland, Ohio. Ragone was offered the position, effective July 1, following a 10-month search during which more than 200 candidates were considered. KHOMEINI'S SON, BISHOP SEE U.S. CAPTIVES: Visitors report hostages OK both the increased faculty teaching assignments as well as more extensive research in women's issues. A REDUCTION in the total number of Women's Studies courses is also being recommended. The four-member Review Commit- tee was appointed by Dean Frye. The Review Committee's recommendations were studied by the LSA Executive Committee and then delivered to the Women's Studies Executive Committee, which will send its response back to the LSA Executive Committee. The Women's Studies Executive Committee plans to respond to the recommendations by February 28, ac- cording to Program Director Margpt Norris. Norris declined to comment further and Associate Dean for Curriculum John Knott would not discuss the issue. LSA Dean Billy Frye was unavailable for comment. According to the report, the review committee focused on the program's academic justification, teaehing quality, research work,' and its relationship to other departments within the University. THE REPORT maintained that it was against LSA policy for TAs to teach 300-level courses and it would be dif- ficult to exempt the Women's Studies Program from this rule. See WOMEN'S, Page 7 From AP and UPI Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's son and a Greek bishop made separate visits to the U.S. Embassy hostages in Tehran yesterday, and said they found the Americans, held captive for 97 days, in "perfect health." They were the first known visitors to the embassy compound in more than a month. Khomeini's son, Ahmad, told some of the hostages that "the U.S. government has not yet come to its senses, otherwise it would have extradited the criminal Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and would hand over his plundered wealth so that the hostages could be set free," Tehran radio reported. THE MILITANTS ALSO received a vote of support fromfTranian soldiers who rallied in front of the embassy. The government radio said the visits by the younger Khomeini and Greek Catholic Archibishop Hilarion Capudji were made with an unknown number of hostages. . The Moslem militants occuping the embassy remained defiant in the face of a campaign of pressure mounted by Iran's newly-elected president, Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, to undermine their strength in apparent preparation for resolving the embassy crisis. THE IRANIAN PRESIDENT has denounced the militants as "rebels" and "dictators" who have established their own "government within the government." The Revolutionary Council, which Bani-Sadri now heads, restricted the militants' access to national television and radio. State Department spokesman Hodding Carter did not comment on Bani-Sadr's statements or his new position of authority, but said: "What is important is the emergence through constitutional processes of a government, and that is apparently what is occurring." Meanwhile, Iran's Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said yesterday the ruling Revolutionary Council was prepared to use force if necessary to make Moslem militants occupying the U.S. Embassy obey its orders. Ghotbzadeh's statements were the strongest yet used against the militants who seized the United States Embassy Nov. 4, altough one of their spokesman said Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini still backed their position that their 50 American hostages would not be released until the ousted shah was returned. I I some gains: College of Architecture and Urban Planning; School of Art; School of Business Administration; School of Dentistry; College of Engineering; Law School; School of Library Science; College of Literature, Science and Arts, and; the Medical School. Schools with a slightly lower enrollment this year are: School of Education; School of Music; College of Pharmacy; School of Public Health, and; the School of Social Work. [] Pet parade,.partI Police in Lafayette, Colorado were asking Michael to the rural outskirts of the city to visit his cats after he moved to a nursing home. Now he tries to see them twice a day in the $40,000 home he recently bought for them. McLeroy, 84, bought his six cats a house of their own when he couldn't get used to the separation. The cats, the only occupants of the house, play, eat and sleep in the kitchen- den area of the home near the Rosewood Nursing Center where McLeroy stays. "Those cats were tearing down everything," he said in a recent interview, "so I just bought them a home up here. The felines preferred not to comment on the condition of their new digs. O Herrington gave the scouts unofficial permission to sell their cookies for three days last week after getting complaints from local residents. Then the scouts had to sell outside the village limits. D On the inside The Palestinian autonomy question is not at the center of current world crises, on the edit page.. . and for more basketball insights see the sports page. c w g Se - y 119, i I