Ninety- Editoris One Years of ti Freedom I E LIE igan l43lalig CLEARING SKIES Partly sunny today with highs in the low to mid 4Qs. __ ___ _. . f__.._:_L. "nnn r.LueL:___r __ ._ . . ... . . .. _ __ Vol. XCI, No. 63 Copyrighlt 1980, IThe Michigan Dily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 15, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages r 'U' prof becomes W rE By LORENZO BENET - It may seem unusual that a professor at this University would seek a position on the Wayne State University Board of Governors. But Murray Jackson, an associate professor of the University's Center of Higher Education, views his Nov. 4 election to the board as the logical culmination of his long association with Wayne State. Jackson; who has resided in Detroit for 50 years, was a member of- the Wayne State faculty for 14 years, and in 1969-1970, served as its assistant dean of students. His new position is similar to being a regent at the University. "My area of expertise is urban education," ex- plained Jackson, who received his Bachelor's and Master's degrees from WSU. "I feel I can make an important contribution by serving on the board. They need my voice. "MY PROFESSORS at Wayne inspired me a great deal," he continued, from his School of Education of- fice yesterday. "Their faith in me enabled me to achieve a lot of my goals. I have some dues to pay." "A year ago in July my wife died in a car ac- cident," he said somberly as he studied her portrait on a table behind his desk. "She used to serve on the board, which was a large part of why I ran for the of- fice." The 53-year-old father of two was invited to the Center in 1970. In addition to teaching a variety of ur- ban education courses, Jackson serves as the direc- tor of the University's School of Education's Office of Minority Affairs and as the chairman of the Student Relations Committee, an advisory board that makes recommendations about student issues to Vice President of Student Services Henry Johnson. HIS FIRST love, however, is teaching. "Nothing can match it," he said with a broad smile. "It's a great feeling to know that you helped inspire someone, and affected his life style in some special' way. "Jackson said he has encountered some obstacles as a black faculty member at the University. "Many U regent of us feel alienated from the mainstream , of the academic community," he observed. "It's like a reincarnation of the real world. Even though this is considered an enlightened community, the tension still exists. Many of us survive simply because we never let ourselves forget where we came from." Jackson also pointed out some of the special problems minority students face at the University. He stressed that the University has not adequately explained what minorities can expect to encounter here and how it can be of help. "IT'S NOT enough just to say you're admitted here. We need to provide these students with the necessary ingredients to help them succeed here," he said. Another area of concern to the new WSU governor is student course evaluations. His Student Relations Committee will be addressing the Michigan Student Assembly evaluations at its Nov. 20 meeting. "Some of my colleagues have negative feelings about the course evaluations," said Jackson.- "Some See FORMER, Page 5 Doily Photo by DAVID HARRIS UNIVERSITY PROF. Murray Jackson, of the Center for Higher Education, discusses his recent election of the Wayne State University Board of Gover- nors. - - ------- - ----- Anti-rape rally draws 0150' on Diag By CLAUpIA CENTOMINI The red paint proclaiming "A woman was raped here" at dozens of area locations was barely dry as more than 150 persons gathered on the Diag yesterday to demonstrate their concern for the safety of Ann Arbor women. PIRGIM; an organizer of the rally, denied it was involved in the stenciling, but spokeswoman Juli Silverstein said she supported the efforts of the vigilan- tes who painted the signs at more than 100 locations where they claimed a woman had been sexually assaulted. The spectators at the rally appeared supportive of most of the featured speakers who delivered rhetoric that has become the standard script at such rallies. BUT ONE speaker raised the ire of at least part of the audience when he claimed that "We (men) are all benefit- ting from rape." Shouts of protest erupted from the audience as Lou Okin, a worker with the Domestic Violence Project, tried to explain his philosophy of society and rape. "As long as' men want to rape, they will," Okin told the crowd. All men "perpetrate" rape by "glorifying movies, . patronizing See SPEAKER, Page 3 Meese., Baker first Reagan appointees From AP and UPI LOS ANGELES - President-elect Ronald Reagan announced yesterday the first two appointees of his ad- ministration. Named as counselor to the president with Cabinet rank is Edwin Meese III, a lawyer from San Diego who was Reagan's campaign chief of staff and is heading the president-elect's transition team. APPOINTED AS White House chief of staff is James Baker-III of Houston, Texas, a top aide in President Gerald Ford's campaign in 1976 and adviser to George Bush during the presidential primary season. Ending several days of rumors, President-elect Reagan said yesterday he has chosen Edwin Meese III, his longtime aide, and James A. Baker III, who managed presidential campaigns for two of his opponents, to be his top White House advisers. Meese, appointed as White House counselor with Cabinet rank, will be responsible for Cabinet administration, the domestic policy staff of the president and staff operations of the National Security Council. BAKER WILL have overall direction of the White House staff, including congressional relations, ad- ministration, press relations and the White House personnel office. Both men will be presidentially designated members of the NSC, a small group of advisers on national security matters. Reagan aides in California made the announcement in his name only a few hours after the president-elect told reporters in Los Angeles that he had made no decisions on major appoin- tments. MEESE, WHO is directing the Reagan staff efforts in the transition from a Carter to a Reagan ad- ministration, was the president-elect's chief of staff while Reagan was gover- nor of California and has been one of his closest aides.° On the other hand, Baker, a Houston lawyer, managed the 1976 campaign of President Gerald R. Ford and the 1980 presidential campaign of George Bush, who subsequently joined Reagan on the GOP ticket and is the vice president- elect. Reagan himself is due to visit Washington 'beginning Moday, scheduling several meetings with congressmen and senators before paying a first visit to his future home at the White House. REAGAN ALSO will receive national security briefings and meet with sup- porters and transition aides before he meets President Carter for the first time since defeating him in the last week's election, aides said yesterday. They also released a list of 14 economic advisors who will meet in Los Angeles this weekend to thrash out details of Reagan's overall economic plans. Those advisers, who include a num- ber of prominent economists and for- mer Cabinet members in the ad- ministrations of Richard M. Nixon and Gerald R. Ford, will discuss "how to implement, not what to implement," said transition press officer James Brady, emphasizing that the group is not. pushing for changes in Reagan's stated policies. ONE SUBJECT sure to be discussed, he said, will involve possible ways to meet Reagan's pledge to cut the federal budget by two per cent. Reagan said in Los Angeles yester- day that he has made no decisions about appointments to his new ad- ministration and has not yet talked with members of his transition staff. "They did announce it?" he asked, sounding surprised, when reporters tried to question him as he entered a Beverly Hills barber shop. "I just came down from the ranch. I didn't know they made the announ- cement," said Reagan. But he added, "I was expecting it.-" Asked if he had been conferring by telephone with members of his tran- sition staff during his vacation, Reagan replied, "No, no, we've just been ran- ching." Discrimination charge dropped as MSA plan pays childbirth costs Gays, feminists get OK from understanding Anita BY DAVID MEYER Three days before she gave birth in a local hospital, a University student wanted to make sure there would be no problem with her student insurance covering the medical costs. She was told, however, that the policy she had purchased months earlier through the Michigan Student Assem- bly would not cover the medical costs of her pregnancy. , Because of her unanticipated finan- cial burden, doctors arranged for her to spend only two days in the hospital, in- stead of the three days most women spend in the hospital when they have a child. INSURANCE company represen- tatives told the student that the policy did not cover expenses relating to a pregnancy ,f it was conceived before the policy was purchased. Other pre- existing medical conditions are covered, however. Claiming that such a provision discriminates against women, the student filed complaints with the state Department of Civil Rights. The legality of such a provision was never addressed, however. THE STUDENT dropped her com- plaints against MSA and the under- writer when a doctor's statements con- vinced the insurance company that the pregnancy may have been conceived after the policy was purchased. The insurance company decided to pay- the woman more than $1,500 for medical expenses because a pregnancy conceived after the policy is purchased is covered. Dan Newman, president of G-M Un- derwriters, the company that ad- ministers the student insurance, said the woman's difficulty was the result of NEW YORK (UPI)-Anita Bryant, whose crusade against homosexuals stirred bitter protests in gay communities across the nation, now says she has changed her mind and believes in "live and let live." In an interview in the December issue of the Ladies' Home Journal, she said, "If I had to do it over, I'd do it again, but not in the same way." "I COULD SEE that a lot of people got involved in the crusade who had a personal vendetta about gays," she said. "They harbored hatreds. They were as wrong as the gay extremists were and they're going to hate Anita Bryant for saying that." The singer and former Florida orange juice publicist said the traumatic events leading up to her divorce hooked her on pills and wine and pushed her to the edge of suicide. "I'M MORE inclined to say "live and let live, just don't flaunt it or try to legalize it," she told the Journal. "I guess I can better understand the gays' and the feminists' anger and frustration." Bryant said she married Bob Green "for the wrong reasons. Physical attraction was Bob's overwhelming strong point. I was lonely and needy, very naive and unhappy which affects your ability to look at what you should look at in a man." THE MAGAZINE asked Bryant about her husband's allegations that she was unfaithful. "I can't say that I'm totally innocent. I guess when there's a real void in your life and your marriage has become rotten, you fantasize a lot of things," she said. "I can't pretend to be lily-white. That was part of it, too." She said in 1976 she kicked a Valium habit. Two years later she became dependent on sleeping pills and wine, and contemplated suicide. Bryant said her divorced status had affected her feeling about feminism. "There are some valid reasons why militant feminists are doing what they're doing," she said. "Having experienced a form of male chauvinism among Christians that was devastating, I can see how women are controlled in a very ungodly, un- Christ-like way ... the problem is that most men are insensitive to women's needs. She said, however, she still couldn't support ERA. Bryant ... changes her tune ODAY Queen or a day GABRIELLA BRUM of West Germany, winner of the 1980 Miss World competition, quit her title yesterday less than 24 hours after winning it. The resignation came shortly after the 18- year-old Brum said that her 52-year-old boyfriend was "not too pleased" with her victory. Britain's domestic news agency, the Press Association quoted Brum as saying that Benno Bellenbaum, a film cameraman, was the man she Those nosey Jews Do rabbis smell funny? The question wasn't addressed, but Bailey Smith, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Del City, Okla., and president of the Southern Baptist Conven- tion, recently told his congregation that Jews "have funny looking noses." In a sermon on "God's Special People and Special Places," Smith said, "There are some people with whom God works more intimately with than others. Why, you say? I don't know. Why did he choose the Jews? I don't Eating the evidence A judge and jury in Rochester, New York found it a little tough to swallow a contention by police that Louis Davis, Jr. ate the evidence. Davis, 26, was arrested on April 14, when he allegedly tried to palm off a $1 bill for a $20 bill. At Davis' trial, the two detectives who arrested him testified they left the bill on a table and turned away for a few secon- ds. When they turned back, they said, the bill was gone and Davis was standing nearby chewing something. Though the detectives tried to pry open Davis' mouth, they were too around in.a search for solutions to some of the world's more weighty problems yesterday. For example, how do you get an egg, a box, four tin cans, string, and a skateboard across the Diag without breaking the egg or letting your body touch the ground? Or, how fast can you walk in a circle while your forehead is attached to a baseball bat servitig as a pivot on the sidewalk? Groups of students competed in these and six other events-entitled EAT-to see who could complete the tasks in the least time and gain the most poin- ts. The results won't be tabulated until Monday, but the winners will receive dinner at Mountain Jack's, lunch at i I I