4 II 4 4 4 I Celebration of preset Jewish Arts its GEULAj GILL Page 2-Tuesday, January 18, 1983-The Michigan Daily Cold doesn't freeze spirit of King march I World renowned Israeli singer Saturday January 29 8 pm Michigan Theatre Tickets: $12.50, 10.00, 7.50 Students: $6.50, 5.00, 3.50 GROUP RATES AVAILABLE Advance tickets at the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St, 663-3336; and at Herb David's Guitar Studio, 302 E. Liberty; S 4 Z t By SHARON SILBAR More than 300 people braved bitter cold Sunday to march the streets of Ann Arbor to commemorate the fifty-fourth birthday of civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. The march, which followed a one- mile route from the Washtenaw County Building to the Second Baptist Church on Red Oak Street, was followed by a lengthy memorial service at the chur- ch. AS PART OF the ceremonies, Mayor Louis Belcher read a proclamation naming Sunday Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. Following the march, speakers focused on the theme "Toward Fulfilling The Dream" to . draw parallels between the procession and the marches King led on Selma, Ala. and Washington during the 1960s. "We are meeting the challenge King's legacy created," said Richard Garland, organizer and chairman of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Committee. "(He) left us with a way by which we can move forward." "The dream is that one day people will be judged by the content of their character and not the color of their skin," said Calvin Williams, vice president of Hunter and Walker Manufacturing in Detroit. Ronald Wood, director for Afro- American and African Studies at Eastern Michigan University, warned against delaying efforts for reform un- til a single leader appears. "No race can put its development on hold in anticipation of the emergence of leadership," he said. "The collective of the group must of its own initiative do those things." i II Union pickets trying to secure more local jobs You're Needed All Over the World. Ask Peace Corps volunteers why their ingenuity and flexibility ore as vital as their degrees. They'll tell you they are helping the world's poorest peoples attain self sufficiency in the areas of food production, energy conservation, education, economic development and health services. And they'll tell you about the rewords of hands on career experience overseas. They'll tell you it's the toughest job you'll ever love. January 18th, 19th and 20th. Interviews at Career Placerent & Planning. Sign up today. Detroit Office: '1226-7928 PEACE CORPS (Continued from Page 1) ACCORDING TO Business Manager Roy Greer, the union decided to picket after Troy Neil, the company's only employee from the area, was laid off last Wednesday. The two groups reached a settlement yesterday afternoon after many of the other workers on the site refused to cross the picket line following their lun- ch break. Ceco officials agreed to rehire Neil today and to secure a majority of future employees from the local union. GREER SAID tensions had been building between the union and the company since mid-fall, shortly after construction began on the site. Last November the union asked the company to sign a labor contract New Hairstyles for '83 DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State........668-9529 East U, at So. U..........662-0354 Arborland ..............971-9975 Maple Village ...........761-2733 similar to the one eventually signed today, Greer said. Ceco officials refused to sign the agreement, although they hired Neil. The union did not press the issue. Then last Wednesday Neil was laid off. Mike Martindale, sales manager for Ceco, said he thought Neil was let go because there was not enough work for the men, not because the company was averse to hiring local help. Dick Bepee, foreman at the site, also cited a shortage of work as a reason for Neil's dismissal. Donald Hall, the supervisor for Ceco who negotiated the settlement yester- day, could not be reached for comment. Neil said the union decided to picket to bring a speedy end to the negotiations. "Advertising is one of the fastest ways of solving the problem," he said. Police notes Young trespassers caught Campus security caught three boys wandering around in Hutchins Hall early Sunday morning after they allegedly broke into the building. Ac- cording to Walt Stevens, director of University security, the trio apparently entered through a door on the hall's south side and took some empty cans. Security guards kept them in custody until police arrived. The boys were later released to their parents. Knife-wielding woman arrested A 26-year-old woman was arrested after she allegedly pulled a knife on two Briarwood Shopping Mall security guards trying to stop her for shoplif- ting. Police said the guards had followed the woman out .of the com- plex's Hudson store about 8:30 Friday night. When they tried to take her into custody, the woman allegedly began threatening them with a knife. The guards managed to get the weapon away from her and held her until police arrived. -Dan Grantham IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Justices uphold ruling barring after hours school prayer WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court, steering clear of the hot political issue of prayer in public schools, refused yesterday to allow school children to hold religious meetings in classrooms after hours. The justices let stand a ruling declaring unconstitutional the Lubbock, Texas, school system's "equal access" policy, which gave elementary and high school student religious groups the same use of classrooms as non- religious groups. Their action, in a brief order, came three days after a federal judge in Alabama left intact state laws allowing teacher-led prayers in public schools. The district judge's decision, which eventually may end up at the high court, was'based on his belief the Supreme Court had misread history when it banned such prayer 21 years ago. In turning down the Lubbock prayer case, the justices ignored warnings by two dozen senators who said legislation proposed to strip federal courts of their power to decide school prayer cases is a result of a widespread belief courts are "hostile to religion." Five killed in bridge collapse ANTWERP, Ohio - Five people killed in the collapse of a small bridge over a rural culvert had no warning that danger lurked ahead on the blackened road, an investigator said yesterday. Sgt. Lewis Hohman of the Ohio Highway Patrol said the bridge crumbled shortly after 9 p.m. Sunday and carried away the two-lane blacktop road- way, but the drivers of four cars could not see the hole in time to stop. The stone and asphalt span was only 10 yards long with no overhead sup- port, he said. "The bridge collapsed shortly before the cars went in," Hohman said. Three cars heading in one direction and a fourth in the opposite lane plunged 10 feet into a dry creekbed in the space of a few minutes, one vehicle landing on top of two others. Chrysler fires wildcat strikers" DETROIT - Chrysler Corp. said yesterday it has fired five workers, suspended 85 more, and reprimanded 134 others who took part in a wildcat strike last week at the automaker's technical center. A spokesman for United Auto Workers Local 212 said a strike authorization vote has been called for Thursday in protest of the Chrysler ac- tion. If the vote is approved, the case will go before the union's international executive board which will decide what further action the union members will take. The workers walked off their jobs at the Outer Drive technical center last iWednesday after they were allegedly told they could not drink coffee at their work stations. The wildcat strike lasted only a few hours and the workers went home for the rest of the day at the direction of the union. U.S. perceives Soviet threat WASHINGTON - The Pentagon envisions a "major conflict" between the United States and the Soviet Union if Moscow attempts to seize Persian Gulf oil reserves with conventional forces. A secret 136-page Defense Department document considers the region so vital it directs preparations for introducing U.S. forces into the area even "should it appear that the security of access to Persian Gulf oil is threatened" and there is no outright invasion. The document, titled "Fiscal 1984-1988 Defense Guidance," a key com- ponent of the administration's strategy for countering the Soviets, spells out use of non-nuclear forces worldwide to combat perceived Soviet aggression and directs the buildup of U.S. forces over the next five years to make sure military muscle exists to enforce that policy. "If widening the war by conventional means and total mobilization are in- sufficient to ensure a satisfactory termination of war," the document said, "the United States will prepare options for the use of nuclear weapons. Klan campaigns for book ban THREE RIVERS - A Ku Klux Klan leader and a mother and son minister team have united in a campaign to force the Three Rivers Public Library to remove all books containing favorable references to homosexuality. The battle focuses on three books - two of which are missing from the library - and has embroiled the community of 7,350 people since last May. Also involved in the controversy is Republican U.S. Rep. Mark Siljander, a Three Rivers native who last fall sought to restrict minors from reading books on homosexuality at the public library in nearby Niles. Siljander joined the Three Rivers brouhaha Saturday when he sent an aide to tell members of the Freedom Council, a conservative Christian organization, he was not connected with the Klan's efforts. Leaders of the book-banning campaign are the Rev. Edward Varner, his mother, the Rev. Vivian Varner of the Trinity Full Gospel Mission, and Daniel Vincent Emery. 4 A 4 4' 4 k4 FREE UNIVERSITY COURSES NOW OPEN Four week free courses on social change The following Free University courses, sponsored by Canterbury Programs, are open to all students at the University ofMichigan as we las to other interested people in the community. They will each meet two hours a week for four weeks, beginning in late January and ending before Spring break in February. Each course will therefore meet for a total of eight hours. These Free University courses have been designed with people's other schedule commitments in mind, involving minimal outside reading, etc. These are "free" courses in three ways: The courses are about social change for human liberation, how we can free ourselves and help others to free themselves. The resource people have volunteered their time and the courses are offered free to whomever wants to come. The courses will have a free learning environment where all participants have the opportunity to shape what happens-free from grades, credits and other restrictions. How do you become involved in a free university course? You go to the first meeting, the times and locations for which are listed.below. There is no registration; just show up at the first meeting. If you have specific questions about a particular course, please call the resource person listed directly. if you have general questions about the Free University program, call Canterbury Loft, 665-0606. You are welcome to participate in one or more of the following Free University courses. 4 Conscientious Objection to the Payment of War Taxes Our government requires us to pay Federal taxes, even though some persons are conscientiously opposed to the use of their monies for building nuclear weapons and for other military purposes. This course will deal with the judicial, legislative and tax resistance (civil disobedience) efforts to resolve this dilemma of conscience. Resource Person: David Bassett, evenings at 662-1373. First Meeting: Wednesday, January 26th, 7:30 p.m., Michi- gan League., Room B, third floor. Critique of American Public Education: A Look at Jonathan Kozol We will assess Jonathan Kozol's book, "The Night Is Dark and. I Am Far From Home," and discuss the issues he raises there, for example, indoctrination, de-sensitization and alienation. We will not limit the critique of American public schools to Kozol's work. Resource Persons: Rich Layman and Jonathan Weber, 763- 3241, 668-1612. First meeting: Monday, January 24th, 7:30 p.m., MSA office, 3rd floor, Michigan Union. Drama of the Viet Nam Experience We will read David Rabe's trilogy of short plays about Viet Nam: The Basic Training of Pavla Hummel; Sticks and Bones;. and Streamers. We will be looking for the political and social issues considered in the plays and attempts to understand the experience of Americans in the Viet Nam war. Resource Person: Herbert Hall, 764-4926. First Meeting: Thursday, January 27th,, 7 p.m.. Alice Lloyd Dorm, Art Room. (Ask for directions at Alice Lloyd front desk.) Gay Value issues A discussion about values for those who have accepted their feelings of emotional and sexual preference for members of the some sex. What are possible sources of values among gay people? Must values among gays be radically different from traditional values? Topics which could be discussed in- clude monogamy, relations with family and friends, and social and community responsibilities. Resource Person: Forrest Hartman, 665-0606. First Meeting: Tuesday, January 25th, 7:30 p.m., Michigan League, Room B, Third Floor. Mahatma Gandhi's Meaning for Us in Our Times Truth firmness (satyagraha); inspiration for action; renun- ciation, discipline, suffering, joy; resistance and non- cooperation; equality vision. We will ponder these and fur- ther aspects of Gandhi's life and teachings. What do they imply for our orientation to our present situation: personally, socially, politically, spiritually? - - I - *t. - - - - - ...L~f fl The U.S. and Central America The course will consider the current situation in Central America regarding the liberation struggles, solidarity net- works, and the role of the U.S. government. One session will be spent on each of the four countries currently involved in the conflict: El Salvador, Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala. Resource Person: Ken Naffziger, evenings at 994-4423. First Meeting: Thursday, January 27th, 7:30 p.m., Conference Room 4, Michigan Union. (Ask for directions at desk in the Michigan Union lobby.) The War Powers Act: A Conference Review We will view a video tape of last November's conference on the U-M north campus attended by Gerald Ford, Alexander Haig and others. The conference focused mainly on the War Powers Act, which limits the U.S. President's power alone to commit military forces abroad, and which is currently under review. The course will examine the significance of the con- ference and unanswered questions. Resource Person: Rich Ahern, 2 p.m. to midnight at 665-9358. First Meeting: Tuesday, January 25th, 8 p.m. organizational meeting (call Rich Ahern at 665-9358 if you can not attend) at 336'/ S. State Street above Bacchus' Garden restaurant. (Video tape viewing Thursday, January 25th, 12 noon to 5 p.m. Subsequent meetings Thursdays at 8 p.m.) What Happened in Ann Arbor in the 1960's? How can we know where we are going if we don't know where we've come from? Ann Arbor was one of the most im- portant places for the development of the Movement during the 1960's. In this course we will use the personal experience of the resource person through the decade of the 60's in Ann Arbor. Resource Person: Dave DuBoff, 665-0606. First Meeting: Sunday, January 30th, 8 p.m. Guild House, 802 Monroe Street, corner of Oakland. What Makes a University Free? What does it mean to be free? This course will first consider the philosophical issue of freedom, and how we can be free in our own lives and create free settings. We will focus on how a university, such as U-M, could be free and also monitor this four week free university course experiment. Resource Person: Jonathan Ellis, afternoons and evenings, 665-0606. First Meeting: Tuesday, January 25th, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury Lof t, 332 S. State St., second floor, above Bivouac. Where We Are and Where We Should Go: The State of the Western Mind As We Approach the 21st Century Action without reflection is blind. Reflection without action is impotent. We need to fuse the two on a new level and in a new context as we face our momentous and monumental oroblems. We need to reflect on our situation with a new PIANO DROPOUTS HOW TO PLAY THE PIANO DESPITE YEARS OF LESSONS Two years of testing have pro- duced a new course in making music. This course is based on an amazing breakthrough in piano instruction, and it is intended for people who can at least read and play a simple mel- ody line of notes. This new technique teaches you to unlock your natural ability to make music. You will learn how to take any melody and play it a variety of ways: rock, folk, swing, jazz, semi-classical, bolero . .. you name it . . . just for the sheer joy of it! By the end of this 8 lesson course, you will know how to arrange and enrich a song so that you won't need sheet music or memorization. How well you play depends upon how much you practice, of course. Come and experience this revo- lutionary new way of bringing adults back to the piano. FREE DEMONSTRATION Monday, Jan. 24, 1983 from 7-8 p.m. in Room 2038 Vol. XCIII, No. 88 Tuesday, January 18, 1983 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan, Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription riates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI. 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 763-0375!; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. Mike BradleyJoe Chapelie, Laura Clark, Dan Coven. Editor-in-chief DAVID MEYER Richard Demok. Jim Davis. Jim Dworman, Tom Ehr, Monoging Editor PAMELA KRAMER Joe Ewing, Paul Heigren, Steve Hunter. chuck Joffe. News Editor ANDREW CHAPMAN Robin Kopilnick. Doug Levy. Tim Makinen. Mike Student Affairs Edtor ANN MARIE FAZIO McGraw, Lorry Mishkin, Lisa Noferi. Rob Poilard. Dan University Editor MARK GINDIN Price, Jeff Quicksiiver, Paul Resnick, Wendy Rocho, Opinion Page Editors JULIE HINDS Lenny Rosenbt urn, Scott Solowich. John Tayer. Jydy CHARLES THOMSON Waiton, Karl Wheotley, Chick Whitman. Rich Wiener. Arts Magazine Editor RICHARD CAMPBELL Associate Arts Magazine Editor BEN TICHO BUSINESS MANAGER ............JOSEPH G. BRODA Sports Editor BOB WOJNOWSKI SALES MANAGER...........KATHRYN HENDRICK Asso~at SprtsEdiorsBAR BAKER DISPLAY MANAGER ................. ANN SACHAR LARRY FREED OPERATIONS/NATIONAL JOHN KERR MANAGER......................LINDSAY BRAY RON POLLACK FINANCE MANAGER..............SAM SLAUGHTER Photooraphy Editor . . BRIAN MASCK CLASSIFIEDS MANAGER .............. PAM GILLERY ARTISTS Norm Christiansen Pete Sinclair Jon ASSISTANT DISPLAY MANAGER ..................... PAMELA GlD 14 L I i I.