ERA supporte By JOYCE FRIEDEN Yesterday's ERA rally was sponsored by the Michigan Student Assembly, A Student Government and one other Noup-Students for the Equal Rights Amendment (S.E.R.A.). S.E.R.A. was founded in September, 1979 by a small group of students who were. interested in getting the Equal Rights Amendment passed. It is affiliated with no other organization. S.E.R.A.'s membership includes about 50 students, male and female, from LSA, Engineering, the Law School, and ' rom other colleges. BECAUSE OF THE diverse group of students involved, S.E.R.A. does not take stands on any other political issues. "There are a lot of different opinions around here on issues outside of the ERA," explained office co- ordinator Lori Nelson. "That's why this remains a single-issue group." According to publicity chairman Fritz Ruehr, the group has two purposes. "First of all, we are trying to persuade legislators in other states to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment (ETA)," Ruehr, an LSA junior said. Although the amendment has been ratified in 35 states, including Michigan, it still needs to be ratified by three more states before it is incorporated into the Constitution. To make their views known, S.E.R.A. members are writing letters and sending petitions to legislators in other states. "By showing our mood to decision-makers in other states, we can help give them a clearer picture of what the mood of college students is in their home states," Ruehr explained. THESE ATTEMPTS to influence out- of-state legislators are necessary for the good of the whole' country, rs have own explained group member Jilian interpersonal relati Mincer. "If three more states don't the group's co-ord ratify, we'll all be living in an unratified Kim Brady. Some country," she added. will break up the h The other major purpose of the ,is give wome group, according to Ruehr, is to opportunities." educate people about what the ERA is Equal pay for eq and what its effects will be if and when goal that the ERA it is passed. "We need moral support now, many women from everyone," he said. "If everyone college, entering t understands what the amendment is, being paid less tha they can help it work better, after it is the same amountc passed." Mincer. "Women1 Many group members think that a surprising- number of University 0 students were ignorant about the D amendment. "Not only are many .A ck people unaware of what the ERA is, many people think that it's already been passed," Mincer explained. a ss a "That's why education is so important." (Continuedf "THE ERA WILL affect your relationship with the law, not your plates. "The car b" The Michigan Daily- organization ionships," explained graduated from Michigan and that ar inator for speakers, won't happen to me.' Wait until they m people say the ERA graduate!" M ome, but all it will do Ruehr agreed that people need to be o n more career made aware of the discrimination that P is being practiced "before they can use th qual work is another the ERA to help change things. Once a will effect. "Right the amendment is passed, the law itself are graduating from will be changed, but it might not be g the work force, but enforced unless legal precedents are " an men (who've had set," he said. o of education)," said Group members also thought that o0 here think, 'Well, I most of the nation favors the ig Thursday, April 10, 1980-Page 5 at 'U' mendment. In poll after poll, "the ajority of citizens are for the ERA," incer said. "However, a well- rganized minority is preventing its assage." Mincer cited groups such as he John Birch Society and STOP ERA! leaders of that minority. Ruehr stressed education as a way to et the amendment ratified. 'Nationwide, there is organized pposition to the amendment ... Here, ur enemies are apathy and norance," he said. ey, Konovsky charged with alt and battery in fistfight from Page 1) elonged to Dickey," ERA leaders rally at Diag; appeal to *A2 residents in their fight for ratification (Continued from Page 1) Organization for Women (NOW), to over 100 enthusiastic listeners. "We're going to Chicago (to) say_ to the legislators in Springfield, 'It's time. We will not wait any longer.' I want to see iverybody there!" King appeared at the rally along with Laura Callow, who represented ERAmerica, a consolidation of groups striving for passage of the amendment. 'We need the ERA . . to shift the burden of proof (of discrimination) from the individual to the state.' -Laura Callow, ERAmeriea In addition, Nic Tamborriello spoke for en Allied Nationally (MAN), for RA, and Edie VanHorn represented the United Auto Workers in supporting the amendment. While the speakers and onlookers at the rally on the Diag were emotional in support of their gause, the rally ended after just over 30 minutes of cold weather, wind, and drizzle. The speakers kept their messages short, at first citing statistics revealing inequality between the sexes, such as woman's average wage of 59 cents for each dollar a man earns. The speakers also stressed the need for support in the upcoming duel in Illinois and asked the crowd to par- ticipate in a May 10 march from Springfield to Chicago. Between speeches, plans were announced by the University's Students for ERA to send busloads of local ERA supporters to the, event, a trip to be partially funded by yesterday's sale of green balloons on the Diag. "We need the ERA to protect the gains we have already made," said Callow, who spoke first, "both for you and for future generations." She discussed the legal need for the amen- dment, "to shift the burden of proof (of discrimination) from the individual to the state." Tamborriello, a local resident, spoke next for the MAN for ERA group. "The concept of equality is not a sometimes thing," he told the crowd,"it is a part of our every day lives. It is part of what this country is about." said Captain Charles Wibert of the East Lansing police. "I told him to get off the road so his car wouldn't get hit," said Miquelon. "They (the University athletes) left the car in the middle of the street with the doors wide open and the next thing I knew I was on the ground," being at- tacked. MIQUELON NEEDED stitches in his face as a result of being struck by a fist. According to McLellan, Dickey was Miquelon's assailant. Burkhart suffered bruises and abrasions in a struggle with Konovsky, who had a beer bottle in his hand. "He hit the guy with his fist and the bottle broke," noted Police Captain Wibert. "That wasn't too sharp on his part. The incident broke out, said Wibert, because "Dickey thought these guys threw something at his car." Miquelon revealed that he had heard one alleged assailant say something about throwing bottles at the car, but he said neither he nor Burkhart had done so. McLellan said there had been no report of throwing bottles. After the fight, Wibert said Burkhart flagged down a paramedic vehicle and Dickey, Konovsky and Kligis all fled. East Lansing police were notified and thre three Michigan, athletes volun- tarily returned to the scene while police were still there, Wibert reported. The Michigan athletic department will probably take no action against the athletes until the issue has been resolved legally, according to a source in the athletic department. Dickey and Kligis were reached at their Ann Arbor home but refused to comment on the incident. "They are not talking and they may not talk about it at all, said a roommate of Dickey and Kligis. "They feel it was a minor scuffle that is getting blown out of proportion because of the names involved." ?ducks & Trailers for Rent We feature Dodge & other fine gas & desel trucks Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daily The Ann Arbor film Cooperative Presents at Nat. Sci.: $1.50 Thursday, April 10 NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (George Romero, 1968) 7 & 10:20-NAT SCI A group of people trapped in a farmhouse are surrounded by radioactive ghouls who have come out of their graves, murdering, mutilating and eating raw human flesh. More frightening than THE BIRDS, more grotesque than FREAKS more menacing than INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS, AS HORRIFYING A NIGHTMARE VISION AS YOU COULD HOPE TO SEE ON FILM. "Kill the brain people and you kill the ghoul." (Edgar G. Ulmer, 1946) D TOUR 8:40-NAT SCI "The ultimate B-Movie," DETOUR is an exercise in sustained perversity, a consistent demonstration of the absence of free will. Tom Neal worms his way from nightclub to beanery to barren motel room, writhing to free him- self, only to be ensnarled still further. Ann Savage gives a performance that defies conventional credibility: ugly, unpleasant, a shirll, unmodulated embodiment of Yeats' dictum that only the unexplainable is irresistible. "I adore DETOUR!"-E. Ulmer. 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