Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom Lit Ia IEtIaII Swamp Breezy and warmer with a high near 54 and a chance of showers later this afternoon. w Vol: XCIV-No. 130 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily ^AnnArbor, Michigan - Thursday, March 15, 1984 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages Hart: Defleit Is 'economic Vietnam' Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Colorado Sen. Gary Hart describes his economic policy to the Women's Economic Club of Detroit yesterday at the Renaissance Center. By NEIL CHASE Special to the Daily DETROIT - Looking far more poised and confident than when he came to Ann Arbor five months ago, Sen. Gary Hart yesterday attacked the increasing Election '04 federal deficit under the Reagan ad- ministration as an "economic Viet- nam." Hart, fresh from his victories in Tuesday's Democratic primaries, outlined his plans for economic rebirth to a quiet group of 1,600 in a plush Renaissance Center ballroom, before returning to his block-long motorcade of police, Secret Service agents, and three busloads of press. THE COLORADO senator told the Women's Economic Club that deficits of $200 billion "represent a mortgage against our children's future." "In the long term, these deficits represent nothing less than an economic Vietnam for this nation.. . They represent one generation, for the first time in this nation's history, literally stealing the future from future generations." Hart won occasional bursts of ap- plause from the women's group when he said he would seriously consider having a female vice president, and in- tends to "incorporate women into my cabinet and administration at all levels." HE ALSO called for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment, equal pay for comparable work, fair tax, pension, and insurance laws, and equal educational and training opportunities for women. But most of his 40-minute speech Hart continued to stress his image as a candidate of the future who has new See HART, Page 3 Mc Govern quits after, Massvote From staff and wire reports Former Sen. George McGovern an- nounced early yesterday that he will withdraw from the field of Democratic presidential hopefuls after learning that he had come in third in the Massachusetts primary. McGovern had said he would drop out if he didn't take at least second place in Massachusetts, the only Super Tuesday state where he campaigned and the only state to support him in his 1972 presidential bid. AS THE remainder of the returns see McGOVERN, Page 3 'PSN reports vandalism, threats By PETE WILLIAMS Progressive Student Network members say they, have been subject to threatening phone calls and vandalism in the last week, following their March 6 laboratory sit-in against defense research. John Hartigan, a Residential College freshman, said two or three persons have called him repeatedly and threatened his life since the protest at the lboratory of George Haddad, an engineering pr- ofessor. HARTIGAN said the callers identify themselves as "friends of the graduate student" that he said kicked him in the back during the sit-in. "They call up my house at night, and they say, "We're gonna come over and break your back, and then we'll break your head, and then we'll kill you," Hartigan said. Ann Arbor police put a tracer on his phone after the last call, two days ago Hartigan said. HE SAID HE thinks the calls were made by engineering students who "felt their work is threatened by the sit-ins." "Some students felt threatened by the idea of protests and disruption and have responded with violence and death threats," he said. Hartigan, who left the protest for "personal reasons" before police arrested 11 demonstrators, said other PSN members have had rocks thrown at their houses in the past week. ONE PSN member, who confirmed that his house had been vandalized, called the action "an incon- venience. It is an attempt to scare us." The student, who asked to remain anonymous, said the group will continue to fight against Pentagon- sponsored research at the University. Hartigan said he thinks the threats have had "a unifying" effect on members of the group. "People are outraged that some people could be so ignorant, See PSN, Page 2 Shapiro By RACHEL GOTTLIEB Gay activists said yesterday they are isturbed by University President Harold Shapiro's comments this week after he issued a statement guaran- teeing that the University would not discriminate on the basis of sexual preference. Although the policy statment was a step forward for the gay rights movement on campus, Shapiro's com- ment that he had not seen any solid evidence" of gays facing discrimination on campus soured the kictory, said lesbian LSA Senior Cathy Godre. WITH that comment Shapiro "totally discounted us," Godre told a 25- member audience yesterday at Cam- pus Meet the Press. Gay men and lesbians on campus are discriminated against in subtle ways such as being afraid to disclose their aggravates gays 'It's not cool to refer to blacks as niggers, but it's still cool to refer to homosexuals as fags and dikes. - Bruce Aaron LaGROC spokesman sexual orientation to an employer or professors for fear it might jeopardize their jobs or standing in class, said Godre, at yesterday's forum in the Pendleton room of the Michigan Union. As a result, many gays and lesbians have been afraid to come out without protection by the University, Godre said. That is clear evidence of discrimination and there is no need to provide a "laundry list" of incidents, she said. BRUCE Aaron, spokesperson for Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus (La GROC), the group that led the movement for a policy statement, pointed to discrimination such as when people feel it's "cool" to refer to gays and lesbians as "faggots" or dykes." "It's not cool to refer to Black people as niggers. (But) it's still cool to refer to homosexuals as fags and dykes," Aaron said. To avoid such ridicule, See UNIVERSITY, Page 2 ..:. :: -::: -:. ::. :::: r. Ni::;:: >:; iiryji"i "y.::r :'-:'4'"i:::"i:"iii:;itii:{{:{S:":":::" ' + v...:. "} {: biiiii:{U.<" Legal question stalls. petit ion dr'ive By THOMAS MILLER Legal snags have forced a group of non-unionized teaching assistants to give up their petition drive protesting the Graduate Employees Organization's (GEO) mandatory fee. The group decided to discontinue the drive last night after they learned they could not legally force GEO to hold a vote to change the union's contract, said graduate student David Vander- veen, a petition organizer. UNDER Michigan's Labor Relations Act the individuals a union represents cannot ask union leaders to revise the contract until the agreement expires, said Joseph Bixler, an administrative law judge at the Michigan Employment Relations Commission in Detroit. Teaching assistants organized the petition drive based on the National Labor Relations Act and didn't realize that as a state institution, the Univer- sity falls under Michigan labor laws, said Vanderveen. The national labor statutes would permit teaching assistants to ask for Union to vote on a contract change, Bixler said. GEO'S current contract with the University requires all teaching assistants to pay union dues, even if they are not GEO members. Teaching assistants who refuse to pay the fee could lose their jobs, according to the terms of.the contract. The petitioners want GEO to make See PETITION, Page 2 Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Jonathan Rose, of Student Legal Services, calls the proposed code for non-academic conduct "repressive." Rose was one of nine speakers last night at a teach-in on the code in the Michigan Union Ballroom. Students attack code at teach- By CLAUDIA GREEN William Colburn was the odd man out at a teach-in on the proposed code of non-academic conduct in the Michigan Union Ballroom last night. Colburn, a communications professor who chaired the committee that originally drafted the code last spring, drew fire from the eight other panel members and audience who attacked the code as repressive and unnecessary. AT ONE point, Colburn condemned student opposition to the code, saying, "Essentially what all of you in the audience are doing is defending the status quo." To Colburn, the status quo means weak University rules which he says allows students to commit thousands of crimes each year while the University's hands are tied. BUT STUDENTS opposed to the code say the proposal may violate student's rights by placing the University in the position of judge and jury. "We're going to fight this code until it's no more," said Matthew Harris, ex-president of the Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil. The code "will lead to random prosecution of students whether or not they are guilty," said Harris, an LSA senior. See CODE, Page 2 . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..::.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TODAY- Sex on TV NN ARBOR Cablevision is presenting a special two-hour show tonight on cable channel 5 entitled "The Intimate Epidemic." The program is an in- Ga. says. Dough Bachtel of the Rural Development Center studied data from the 1980 census and found that 3,434 Georgia residents were over 95 years old - 72 percent of them women. Although women have a longer life expectan- cy than men, Bachtel said the nature of their work in the late 1800s actually amounted to aerobic exercise. Churning butter, he said, "is an aerobic-type exercise that didn't require much strength, but it did require an expenditure of a lot of energy over a long period of time." Washing clothes on a scrub board or ironing for an hour may have sixteenth century costumes, had a "subpoena" delivered to Johnson Monday. The stepfather had refused to wear the short pants because of his "bony knees," but said, "If they can go to all this trouble, I suppose I can wear tights." The 45 other family members and attendants aren't worrying about looking silly, however, all will wear Renaissance costumes to the March 31 wedding of Johnson's step- daughter, Valancy Vant Leven and Allen Johnson, who is not related to his father-in-law to be. After all, dear Valancy thinks her stepdaughter has "cute legs." The couple met in the sumnmerr of 1989 Arron hnkerpinfhe.na~r~t of "A because "it will probably be cheaper to buy beer than root-, beer. Beer is not as sweet as soda, and therefore not as fat- tening." Also on this date in history: " 1915 - In one of the fastest basketball games of the season, the fresh lits nosed out the architects, 28-26. " 1968 - Don Canham, former Michigan track coach, was appointed as Director of Athletics and Physical Education. " 1976 - The Graduate Employees' Organization announ- ced they' would demand a full tuition waiver for all f"_ ..a.,. nC'4...J..... A 4....4.+o.r- i I k