Page 10-Saturday, February 14, 1981-The Michigan Daily NEW POLICY MEANS LARGE MILITAR Y, CARD LEADER SAYS Draft opponent fears Reaga Ppgn Extension Service cuts-may isolate 'U' By ANN MARIE FAZIO Ronald Reagan's opposition to draft registration in his campaign is inconsistent with his present military policies, the leader of a national anti-draft group said Thursday night. Speaking to more than 35 people at the Ann Arbor Unitarian Church, the Rev. Barry Lynn, chairman of the National Committee against Registration and the Draft said, "The government can't have 'Reaganese' policies without a draft." LYNN'S REMARKS kicked-off a three-day national anti-draft conference which began at Wayne State University in Detroit last night. To carry out Reagan's foreign policy directives, the government would need five more armed divisions and three more aircraft carriers, Lynn said.This would mean enlisting 200,000 more active recruits and another 200,000 on reserve, he explained. "And there aren't that many who'll be willing to go," he added. THE MYTH OF the United States as a gentle giant-big but with no power-must be debunked, Lynn said. Every military branch is currently meeting or exceeding its quotas, according to Lynn. "We have more than enough people to do more than just defend the shores of the United States," Lynn said. The reverend urged anti-draft activists to fight those government officials who are trying to make 'We have M ore enough people to do more than just defend the shores of the United States.' Rev. Barry Lynn National CARD chairman the draft appeal to the American public. AN EXAMPLE OF this attempt at public appeal, Lynn said, is the ready reserves-a program which trains recruits for three months before putting them in the reserves. The problem with the ready reserves, Lynn said, is that it doesn't seem like "the army" to the public because the training is for such a short period of time and then the new recruits go back to civilian life. CARD's overall aims could be aided by a favorable decision on a sex discrimination case which will be heard before the Supreme Court in March or April. The plaintiffs in the case claim that draft registration is unconstitutional because it excludes women, Lynn said. Lynn, however, is not optimistic aboutmthe out- come. "The government expects to win. I'm not too sanguine about the prospects of the Supreme Court case," he said. Lynn also pointed out mistakes the Selective Ser- vice has made in the registration forms. The forms require that the registrant notify the local draft board whenever he changes his address. There are no draft boards in existence, Lynn said, and therefore many registrants may have moved without notifying the government. In addition to fighting draft registration Lynn said, people must also work to eliminate "overall ex- cessive militarization" in the United States. non-registrant from Detroit. "They (the Reagan ad- ministration) have been trying to whip people into the mood for war, trying to win public support." Arnaldo Ramos, representing the Revolutionary Deomcratic Front of El Salvador, asked the audience to "help Salvadorians provide Salvadorian solutions to Salvadorian problems (without U.S. interven- tion)." Listeners responded with a standing ovation and chants of "No Draft, no war, get us out of Salvador." Duane Shank, director ,of CARD and a non- registrant 11 years ago, said he compares the strength of today's movement to the strength of the anti-draft movement in 1965. "The major difference between now and then is not that it's too soon, but that it's on time," he said. (Continuedfrom Page 1) around the state at other levels as well. McNamara, who has taught in the Extension Service for more than 20 years, said many public school teachers he has dealt with bring their experiences back into their classrooms, thus enhancing the University's image to prospective undergraduates. "It's a matter of public relations for the University," McNamara said. "To withdraw (out-state classes) indicates a kind of parochialism that will hurt the University in the long-run." PSYCHOLOGY Prof. Raphael Ezekiel said he has found a certain "stimulation" through teaching in the Extension Service that is not available by working solely in Ann Arbor. Working with the black population in Detroit is especially important to Ezekiel. A first generation of black students in city schools are being taught by black teachers,Ezekiel said. It is important to work with these teachers and help them with their educating function, he added. EDUCATORS, especially psychologists and sociologists, could have helped prevent rioting in Detroit in 1967 by studying the social structure in the city "before it burned," Ezekiel said. "Extension is an opening for (the faculty), a window into the world, an opportunity for a transformation of ourselves by participating in a less protected, less glass-house, less exotic atmosphere," he said. Director of State and Community Relations Malcolm Baroway told the subcommittee that a goal of his depar- tment is to keep the University visible to the electorate. The Extension Sor- vice helps accomplish that goal, he .said. The regional director for the Ann Ar- bor Center, Judith Kerman, said the University must continue to serve the citizens in a direct way because of "their important voi e in the allocation of tax dollars." "Extension Service serves the tax- payers of the state in a much more im- mediate sense ,(than the rest of the University)," said Paul Smirko,, the non-credit program coordinator at the Ann Arbor Center. 800 attend D etroit draft rall y By PAMELA KRAMER Special to the Daily DETROIT - The anti-draft message from the citizens to the government is as strong as it was in the 1960s, speakers told a crowd of more than 800 last night in a rally at Wayne State University. The rally, with speakers from across the country, marked the beginning of a four-day national anti- draft conference sponsored by the National Commit- tee Against Registration and the Draft. PARTICIPANTS SAID they don't think anti-draft organization is premature, stressing the importance of immediate action in response to President Reagan's foreign policy. "The administration's moves toward Third World intervention have been massive," said John Wood, a Dating rules evolve' (Continued from Page 1) Friends sometimes question * 0 your taste mn movies.' But they lisee them with you anyway. they were penalized with an earlier cur- few the next time. "ALL THESE couples hugging and kissing" would stand by the doors of the dormitories and sororities, waiting un- til the last possible moment before cur- few, Rosen said. She said this phenomenon was popularly referred to as "feeding time at the zoo." While Rosen said she was "one of the law abiding citizens," she said the "wicked ones" sometimes didn't sign out and they might stay out all night. The Greek system continued to dominate the campus social life in the early '60s, said Jim and Sue Posther, alumni from Fort Wayne, Indiana who met while they were students here. "EVERY FRAT house, had a party just about every Saturday night," said Jim Posther, a Phi Gamma Delta alumnus. And there was pressure and competition to get "dates." Starting on Tuesday nights, the fraternity brothers would line up for a turn on one of the four house phones to arrange their weekend dates. "If you didn't have a date by Thursday night, you could just forget about it," he said, "or get the leftovers." A TYPICAL FRAT party went something like this: Since no alcohol was allowed in the fraternity house, the brothers and their dates would go to a pre-party at a senior member's apartmnent. . "You would get a senior to buy you a pint of rum," said Prosther who still has a souvenir pint from his college days. Then it was back to the fraternity house for a dance party. "It was the era of the Beatles and the Twist," Posther said. After the party, a young man would return his date to her sorority house where they would usually encounter a "mob scene. . . all these hot breathing bodies" saying good-bye in the vestibule. "IT SEEMED reasonable at the time," he said. The Posthers met on a coffee date, Sue Posther remembered. A "coffee date"? That's an afternoon rendezvous arranged by friends, so two people could size each other up before agreeing to a weekend date. Sue Posther, who lived in Markley before becoming -a Kappa Kappa Gamma, said she didn't feel much pressure to date. She often studied on weekends in her room or socialized with the women in her sorority when they didn't have dates . IN THOSE DAYS the men payed for dates, she said, but informal group oc- casions were dutch events. As for sex, Posther said, it was "not widely talked about." If a sorority sister did stay out all night, that was a minor scandal. Courtship involved some romantic rituals which are still informally prac- ticed. One romantic story spans two generations of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority members. When Janet Wood was "pinned" by her husband-to-be in 1960, the Zetas held a traditional "candlelight" ceremony and his fraternity, Alpha Sigma Phi, serenaded the sorority. "IT WAS very romantic," Wood said. He gave her a dozen roses, and soloed "Who Says Sweetheart To You?" For those not up on the lingo: "Pin- ning" is when a fraternity man gives his steady friend his fraternity pin. Thi* is sometimes preceded by "lavaliering" or pre-pinning, when the fraternity man gives a woman a necklace with the Greek letters of his frat. THE ZETA HOUSE is one sorority that still practices these rituals, and Janet Wood's daughter, Michelle, was "pinned" last term to a fraternity man. Today, the number of men and women students has evened up, but the men still do the majority of the askin and the majority of the paying. At- titudes toward dating and sex, however, are relatively relaxed. After all, curfews and mandatory live-in rules were dropped in 1969. Sororities and fraternities attract about 14 per- cent of the students and many freshper- sons and sophomores live in co-ed dor- ms, and most students live in off- campus housing and apartments. Some socially conscious alumn* might turn over in their graves to know women go stag to dances, occasionally ask men out and even pay for the date. While students still participate in such practices as handholding, etc., and go places in couples, they tend to avoid terms such as "dating" in favor of "going out" or "seeing" someone. "It's more informal, there isn't a strict protocol you have to follow," ex- plained Mary Riffe, president of the Kappa Kappa Gamma house where 24- hour visitation now is allowed on th* first floor, and curfews have long been abolished. She echoed other members of frater- nities and sororites who said there was little pressure to date, and no emphasis on dating Greeks exclusively. Dave O'Brien said things have changed at the Phi Gamma Delta house since Jim Posther's day. The house only rarely has social functions where members are required to invite date4 such as tonight's Valentine's Day par- ty. He expressed common opinions that having a steady friend is more the ex- ception than the rule, and labels like "girlfriend" and "boyfriend" are sometimes considered demeaning. Informal socializing with one or more friends is more common than dates in the dorms, where "meeting people" is a popular activity. THERE IS "a lot of emphasis on havin something to do on a weekend night, said Stockwell RA Clare Tully. But she added, "I don't see people dating a lot." The women residents on the floor she supervises often go as a group to fraternity parties. The men who live in dorms also "tend to go out in groups," Mike Burton, a Couzens RA said. WHILE ADJUSTING to the academic load at the University in thei first year, many students don't feel they have the time for a lot of social ac- tivities, he added. "Most people go out (in a couple) once in a while." At Couzens, a semi-formal Valentines Day dance is planned for tonight, and many women residents on her floor will probably go stag, predicted RA Jeanne Barr. Most freshpersons she said, are "con- tent just meeting people. BOOK SALE 20% OFF The list price of all cloth and paperback titles in the store - '"~ ~N~aouwni. r-ui, KnowUV ig y our II liius, r