The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 23. 1980 Page 3 Mormons join in Crisler to hear church leaders -Doily Photo by DAVID HARRIS CATHY FOJTIK, LAST year's president of the local chapter of the National Organization of Women, leads pro-ERA chants at a rally held Sunday at Crisler Arena. Approximately 70 men and women marched in protest of the anti-ERA stand of the Mormon Church, which held a conference in the auditorium over the weekend. ERA groups rally at Crisler By JOYCE FRIEDEN Crying children, smiling parents, and tales of the Bible filled Crisler Arena last weekend as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints from Michigan and surrounding states came to Ann Arbor for an area con- ference. The two-day Mormon conference began with separate sessions on Satur- day for men and women members. The 6,000 women what filled the bottom half of the arena Saturday afternoon heard speeches from several church officials, including Barbara Smith, president of the Relief Society-a charity organization all Mormon women over age 18 are expected to join. SMITH SPOKE OF the problems Mormon women face. "More and more Latter-Day Saint women are having fewerrcheerful and joyful times," she said. Citing the nation's economic slump and looking for a husband as examples of the women's concerns, Smith urged the group to get involved in the Relief Society. "It helps us to become more task- and family- oriented," she added. The importance of the family unit was stressed by every speaker at the conference. "What we are attempting to do is create for ourselves eternal family units which are patterned after the family of God, our father," ex- plained Elder Bruce McConkie, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. "This is what sets us apart from the rest of the world." The "family of God" mentioned by McConkie consists of God, the Heavenly Father, his wife, the Heavenly Queen, and their son, Jesus Christ. The "family of God" is a central tenet of the Mormon faith along with the Christian concept of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. THE MORMON CHURCH, a sect of Christianity that boasts more than four million members world-wide, earned its nickname because of its belief in the Book of Mormon, a religious tract first discovered in the early 1830s by Joseph Smith, founder of the church. Other speakers at the Saturday af- ternoon session included Elaine Can- non, President of the Young Women; Marion Romney, distant cousin of for- mer Michigan governor George Rom- ney and the church's Second Counselor; and Spencer Kimball, president- prophet of the church. Although the church is headquar- tered in Utah, where most of the Mor- mon population of the United States resides, the conference attendees said they did not feel out of place in their communities. "I'VE GROWN UP in Michigan my whole like and I haven't found it at all difficult," said Jan Leavitt of Ann Ar- bor. Leavitt admitted, however, that "there are quite a few pressures from outside the Church to be different." Donna Ladle of Monroeville, Pa.. agreed. "We find we're very well respected," she said. On the subject of children, Ladle ad,. mitted it was sometimes difficult to' keep her children from drinking cola,,, and tea like other children. "Of course; these things do tempt them," she said: "That's why we have such a high in- volvement of youth in church. programs-to help them learn from. each other." Lansing high school students Becky, Flannery and Tracy Waite said being a, Mormon sometimes offered a unique- advantage. "Sometimes the other kids- enjoy being with us just because they. think we're different," smiled Flan- iery, On Sunday, crowds of more than 14,000 people filled Crisler during the- morning and afternoon sessions.- According to Jack Combs, Coor- dinator of the Church's Detroit Area; Communications Council, this weekend's conference will probably be- the last such area conference to be: held in the U.S. Combs said im- provements in telecommunications. technology will enable the Church to;, broadcast future conventions via, closed-circuit television to every Mor- mon church in the country. By LISA OLIVER NOW president, said the rally was held While 14,000 Mormons met at Crisler to clear up misconceptions often Arena Sunday, some 70 men and associated with the meaning of the women marched outside the arena amendment. chanting pio-Equal Rights Amendment "THERE'S SO MUCH misinfor- slogans and carried signs protesting the mation about ERA," she explained. "It traditional Mormon anti-ERA position. (the amendment) says equal rights un- The Mormon Church, based in Salt der the law. It has nothing to do with Lake City, Utah, has been a strong lob- whether or not a guy opens a door." bying force against ERA in states Fojtik admitted, however, that the which have not ratified the amen- rally would actually do little to change dment. the Mormon philosophy. MARCIA PUPKIEWICZ, president of Shortly after the rally began, Crisler the Ann Arbor/Washtenaw Chapter of Arena ushers encouraged Mormons the National Organization for Women, who were watching the demonstrators said in Utah and Nevada, where ERA to return to the conference. One usher has not been ratified, "there was a said the crowd was asked to move in- rumor that the Mormon pressure made side to "not give them (the protestors) two pro-ERA legislators vote against the benefit of an audience." the amendment." THE USHER SAID he was concerned One Mormon woman who attended over a possible confrontation between the conference explained that the Chur- the two groups. "There are two things ch was against the ERA because they people get upset over-politics and felt it would weaken the family. religion, and both are in play here." "Anything that weakens the family is Ann Arbor police at Sunday's rally evil," said Sarah Martinson, who came tbld the protesters they had to remain to the gathering from Cleveland. She on city property and not on the Univer- said women already have equal rights, sity-owned sidewalk outside the main but greaters efforts are necessary in entrance at Crisler. the court system to promote equality. Marcia Federbus, a NOW member, Pro-ERA protesters carried signs called University attorney William reading: "Feminists are Pro-Family Lemer on Sunday about the police ac- Too"' and "Feminists are not moral tion. He said the state, not the city, has perverts." Cathy; Fojtik,, last year's control Qver. Univ rsity property. She FILMS AAFC-Coming Home, 7, 9:15 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Cinema Guild-High Noon, 7, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Audio-Visual Service-Free Fire Zone, 12:30 p.m., School of Art Lecture Hall. MEETINGS Biological Research Review Comm-Open Meeting, 4 p.m., 3087 SPH I. Tenants Union-7 p.m., 4109 Michigan Union. Undergraduate Political Science Association-Anderson Room, Michigan Union,7:30 p.m. PIRGIM-Energy Task Force Meeting, 7 p.m., Michigan Union. Organization Meeting of Democratic Socialist Organization-7:30 p.m., Kunzel Room, Michigan Union. SPEAKERS International Center-Luncheon lecture by Alan Whiting, $1, "U.S.-China Relations," noon, Int. Ctr. Rec. Room. Undergraduate Political Science Association-Dr. Ralf Dahrandorf, 2-3 p.m., Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union. Great Lakes and Marine Waters Center-Structure, Function and Chemistry of Organic Colloids in Lake Water," 3:30 p.m., 165 Chrysler. Bio Engineering-John Melvin, "Protection of Automobile Occupants in Crashes," 4 p.m., 1042 E. Engineering. Chemistry Department Colloquium-Lionel Goodman, "Vibronic and Other Perturbations on the Two-Photon Spectrum of Benzene," 4 p.m., 1300 Chemistry. Geology Department-William Cambray, "Plate Tectonics as a Model for the Environment of Deposition and Deformation of the Early Proterozie of N. Michigan," 4 p.m., 4001 C. C. Little. Ann Arbor Public Library-"An Introductory Talk on the Transcendental Meditation Program,"! Mueling Room, 8 p.m. PERFORMANCES Jazz Festival-Peter "Madcat" Ruth, noon, Diag. Union University Club and WCBN-Concert, David Allen, 8:30 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS International Center-Returned Travellers' 'Round-up, 3 p.m., Int. Ctr. Lounge. Women's Volleyball-vs MSU, 6 p.m., CCRB. IM Track Meet-4 p.m., IMSB track. To submit items for the Happenings column, send them in care of: Hap- penings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynai-d St., Ann Arbor, MI, 48109. LEARN A NEW NON-WESTERN AND NON-INDO-EURO- PEAN LANGUAGE, TAMIL, WITH ITS RICH LITERALY TRADITION AND CULTURE. Spoken by approximately 60 million people, Tamil is the ONLY modern Ion- said Lemer said he did not know why the University was making an issue out of the rally area. The local chapter of NOW is in- vestigating possible police violation of the demonstrators' first amendment rights, and may file a formal com- plaint, according to Pupkiewicz. "First the government indirectly subsidizes the political activities of the Mormon Church by granting a'special tax exempt status then we're forced off of public property which is paid for by tax dollars," Pupkiewicz said. Mormon missionary: Hard work and faith By JOYCE FRIEDEN Nine hundred of the 14,000 people at- tending last weekend's Mormon con- ference at Crisler Arena have something special in common-they are all Mormon missionaries. Nineteen-year-old Mormon men and 21-year-old Mormon women are expec- ted to do two years of missionary work. After filling out applications and going through several interviews, the missionaries are sent to a city where they will remain for the next two years. During that time, the men and women are not permitted to engage in such ac- tivities as dating or watching TV, ac- cording to missionary Richard Jameson. JAMESON ADDED that missionaries must raise their own fun- ds before they leave. home. He estimated the venture costs $5,000- $6,000. "We start saving real young," he said. "My brother's only four-years- old and he's got his fund started already." Twenty-year-old Jameson, who hails from Las Vegas, is working at the In- dianapolis mission. "We go out there to meet the people and not necessarily to convert them all," Jameson said. "Some of my best friends aren't mem- bers of the church, and I certainly don't condemn them." Jameson described two methods of converting people: letting them come to the mission, and knocking on doors (also called "tracting"). He said few people actually slammed the door in his face. "People pretty much face us with the attitude that they're not interested," he said. "I usually leave a pamphlet with them and hopefully that will spark some interest." THE MISSIONARY was philosophical about the restrictions im- posed on his lifestyle by his work. "You don't have to do all the things other people do, and you can still be happy," he said with a smile. They will never experience the happiness I have ex- perienced when I convert people." But Jameson admitted missionary work is not always happy. "Sometimes it's hard, like when it's 200 below out- side and you are knocking on doors and no one will let yo talk to them. But in the long run, it's worth it." Recently, the Church admitted black Mormons into the priesthood-a move which Jameson lauded. He said it was difficult to explain the church's previous reluctance. MCHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY MSA & CSJ Are Now Interviewing Interested Students For: Election Court Student Organizations Court Court Of Common Pleas Apply To: MSA 3909 Michigan Union Phone: 763-3241 I nuuress: