'The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 10, 1982-Page 5 Times are a' changin' for candidate Hayden SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) - Tom Hayden, the anti-war student firebrand of the 1960s, is cultivating a new image in his costly battle for a seat in the state Assembly - as the button-down prodigal son the Democratic Party. Hayden, 42 and graying at the tem- ples, is running in an affluent, solidly Democratic district encompassing San- ta Monica and West Los Angeles again- st Republican insurance executive bill Hawkins, 34. GOP contributors, including a coalition of major California cor- porations, have spent heavily on Hawkins' campaign in an effort to deny a political base for Hayden. According to state officials, Hawkins has raised about half the $600,000 he says he needs to win. The National Conservative Political Action Committee has registered in Califonia to finance an anti-Hayden ef- fort that has yet to materialize. Hawkins has asked the NCPAC to stay out of the race. Just in the primary, Hayden spentĀ° about $750,000 more than any legislative candidate in California history. A big bundle has come from his activist wife, actress Jane Fonda, who joined Hayden in precinct walks to register Democratic voters and made a $125,000 loan to his campaign late in the primary. BEYOND mere dollars, Hayden en- joys a wealth of celebrity support in his bid for the $28,111-a-year Assembly seat held by Democrat Mel Levine, who is running for Congress. Hayden's biggest political liability is his past. Many district residents still perceive him as the long-haired street demonstrator and co-founder of the radical Students for a Democratic Society. The "new" Hayden dresses conser- vatively in suits and ties, speaks softly and drives to campaign rallies in a well- used Volvo. At a recent Democratic fund-raising dinner, the issue of Hayden's past was tackled by one of his most important allies, Assembly Speaker Willie Brown of San Francisco, who declared: "TOM HAYDEN is not radical at all. Tom Hayden is a sensitive, caring human being who's trying his dam- nedest to make sure that President Ronald Reagan doesn't continue to run amok." At the dinner where Brown defended him, Hayden spoke of his ties with the party. "I felt I had been away from my home for a long time," he said. "Id been in the wilderness. I'd been many places. I'd always wanted to come home, not as a prodigal son, but cer- tainly the native son of the 44th District." He expresses particular regret over the violence surrounding demon- strations he helped lead at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Hayden, one of the defendants in the tumultuous "Chicago Seven" trial, was convicted of conspiracy and incitement to riot, but the convictions were over- turned on appeal. In their campaign, Hayden and Hawkins have tried to portray each other as extremists. Daily Photo by JON SNOW Basket case A broken ankle gives MSU student Jeff Boettcher an excuse for a free ride after the football game yesterday. Fellow MSU student Bruce Linger is doing the honors. Bill to imit auto imports dies Hay-den ... trying to shed old image POETRY READING with Raymond Stock and Duncan Moran Reading from their works Monday, Oct. 11-i:00 P.M. GUILD HOUSE $02 Monroe WASHINGTON: (AP) - Despite con- Iued pressure from the United Auto Workers and the nominal support of more than half the members of the House, legislation to limit foreign auto imports apparently is dead for the year. Even supporters of the legislation concede that there is little chance it will be brought up in the lame-duck session that starts Nov. 29. Rep. Richard Ot- tinger, author of the legislation, said he would reintroduce the bill after the new Congress convenes in January. t HOWEVER, some observers say just he threat of the protectionist legislation may influence the upcoming negotiations on continued voluntary export restaints by the Japanese Ottinger, a New York Democrat, said his "domestic content" bill "sends a clear signal to the Japanese and Europeans that the United States will no longer play 'Uncle Sucker' when negotiating to rectify our present trade * balances." W"The Japanese program of voluntary restraint in automobile exports showed the world that the Japanese gover- '(The bill) sends a clear signal to the Japanese and Europeans that the United' States will no longer play 'Uncle Sucker' when negotiating to rectify our present trade imbalances.' -U.S. Congressman Richard Ottinger nment is aware of the problems caused by its position in the American market," Roger Smith, chairman of General Motors Corp., told a congressional hearing on the auto import bill last month. "IT ALSO showed an awareness of the growing protectionist sentiment in the United States and the need to act to avoid ill-considered protectionist legislation." Ottinger's bill would require foreign automakers selling more than 100,000 cars and trucks a year in this country to have a specific proportion of their production done in the United Public research groups gather to plan strategy States. A Congressional Budget Of- fice analysis said the proposed "domestic content" formula would have the effect of setting quotas on Japanese imports. Smith and Ford Motor Co. Chairman Philip Caldwell both spoke against the legislation but urged the government to negotiate continued voluntary restrain- ts. . The Japanese agreed in 1981 to limit their U.S. auto exports to 1.68 million units a year for two years. LARGE AMRWY? FREE BAND FREE ROOM REDUCED PRICES Groups of 50 or more can have their own area of our restaurant or nightclub with no charge for admission and low prices on beverages. SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY ONLY OCTOBER 19 3:30 Rm. 231 Angell Hall MASS MEETING for students interested in Anerican Institutions 1 N T E R N S H I P S LSA students and students interested in management careers inpubibeand private institutions are encouragedto apply. Must have Junior standing. Meeting will explain internship. Applications will be available. TUESDAY LUNCH-DISCUSSION OCTOBER 12th-12 NOON "REFLECTIONS ON A TRIP TO NICARAGUA" Slides & Comments by Donald Coleman, Co-Director of Guild House Campus Ministry. at the INTERNATIONAL CENTER For additional 603 E. Madison Street information, Lunch: $1.00 please call 662.5529 Co-sponsored by: The Ecumenical Campus Center, The International Center, Church Women United in Ann Arbor. ontinued from Page 1) "STUDENTS have the right as citizens to organize, but they (students) are trained to think that they don't have the right to," Levick said. "No students challenge a syllabus or a professor's choice of a textbook," he added. "PIRGs give students a chance to learn to be responsible and learn organization by doing it themselves." From its start Friday night, the *anizer's conference addressed such topics as member recruitment techniques, posters and flyers, bucket drives, student governments, and methods "for getting people to act." "We want to communicate PIRG's growth," Pearson said, adding that last spring new groups in Florida, Montana, Santa Cruz, and UCLA sprang up. IT TOOK UCLA seven tries before its PIRG group started because of ad- ministrative refusal to acknowledge the &up, Pearson said. The PIRGs chose to meet in Ann Ar- bor, because Pearson said he considers the Michigan group to have great potential and he wants to build organizational support for the group. Ann Arbor Campus Coordinator Wendy Rampson said that PIRGIM of- fers an alternative learning situation outside the University structure. "MSA (Michigan Student Assembly) is confined to what the University lets it do," Rampson said. "MSA makes decisions within its own little milieu, but PIRGIM can lobby to develop legislation helping to write laws." PIRGIM also offers internships and credit for its members, Rampson ad- ded. Call SECOND CHANCE 994-5360 2 'V Mama Zirilli's * Authentic Italian Cuisine The University Club Italian Buffet Sundays, 5-7pm $3.99 Includes Bottomless Soda 1' ,