Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom E La1 ~~Iai1 Pushy Cloudy and windy, with a chance of snow flurries. High near 36. Vol. XCIV-No. 133 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, March 18, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Six arrested, two injured in neo-Nazi rally State leads Win sweep By ERIC MATTSON and CAROLINE MULLER Six people were arrested and two police officers suffered minor in- juries yesterday when protesters clashed with 11 neo-Nazis holding a rally on the steps of the Federal Building. The rally by members of the S.S. Action Group began around 3:00 yesterday afternoon, two hours later than scheduled and four hours after about 60 demonstrators gathered at City Hall to protest the neo-Nazis presence. NEO-NAZIS represent the modern version of Hitler's party of the 1930s and '40s. According to leader John Reich (whose name is a pseudonym), the neo-Nazis demonstrate every year in Ann Arbor "because Com- munists are trying to take over and destroy this city. It's just sickening and we're not going to tolerate this," he said. A scuffle broke out shortly after the neo-Nazis began their rally when a counter-demonstrator, shouting "you're a goddam killer,". began to hit one of the neo-Nazis. POLICE officers wrestled the at- 'tacker to the ground, and as other scuffles began to break out the of- ficers escorted the Nazis to a parking lot behind the building and put them on a police bus. Six coun- ter-demonstrators were arrested on charges ranging from disor- derly conduct to assault and bat- tery. THIS YEAR'S demonstration was much smaller than the rally two years ago when a crowd of 1,200 ran from City Hall to the Federal Building to confront a small group of neo-Nazis. The neo- Nazis avoided counter-demon- strators last year by rallying two hours before they were scheduled to appear. Yesterday, many of the anti- Nazi demonstrators - made up of the United Community Against the Nazis (UCAN), the Progressive Labor Party and International Communists against Racism - went home after waiting in the cold since 11:00 a.m. CARRYING signs saying "Death to the Nazis" and "Smash Racism," the counter-demon- strators paraded outside of City Hall for four long, cold hours yesterday afternoon. The 60 demonstrators, organized by UCAN and the Revolutionary Workers League, gathered in hopes of deterring the neo-Nazi party members from rallying. "We will not sit quietly by," said UCAN spokesperson Don Rogers. "We will oppose (the Nazis) in whatever form they appear, until they disappear." "WEre here to physically stop the Nazis," said PLP member Calvin Turner. At one point during the rally, See VIOLENCE, Page 2 for Mondaile From United Press International Walter Mondale, declaring he had scored "a national victory," put his Democratic presidential candidacy back on track Saturday, winning the Michigan and Arkansas caucuses and leading narrowly in Mississippi. Civil rights activist Jesse Jackson made his best showing of the year in South Carolina, where he was born, beating Mondale, but trailing a majority vote for uncommitted delegates. In Mississippi, Jackson was close behind Mondale. SEN. GARY Hart of Colorado was winless in the six caucuses that picked 251 national convention delegates. Mondale won with the aid of a big labor vote in Michigan and the help of traditional Democrats in Arkansas. Mondale was jubilant, declaring, "This is a national victory for us." Long lines were reported at various polling spots around Michigan, with candidate supporters - armed with literature and rhetoric - giving voters last-minute pitches as they waited in line. OFFICIALS estimated 200,000 voters turned out in the race that was expected ito draw only 100,000. Joel Ferguson, co-chairman of the Jackson campaign, said that in some 1 places "the lines were so long we star- ted feeding people.., so they wouldn't: get discouraged." Squabbling broke out among the political camps, with Ellen Globokar, Mondale's state director complaining that credit card recipts were accepted in the Ann Arbor area as identification. ERNIE KESSLER a memeber - of Hart's Michigan organization, charged that $3 dollar tickets to a beer party were given free to those voting for Mondale at a site in Jackson County. The practice was stopped when hart backers protested, he said. At stake in michigan were 136 of the 251 delegates to be chosen yesterday in Michigan, Arkansas, Mississippi, South Carolina and the Panama Canal Zone. In Kentucky the first three of 120 coun- ties held caucuses that finish March 31 A heavy uncommitted vote in Mississippi and South Carolina in- dicated that in the volatile 1984 election year some Democrats could not see a clear front-runner and were biding their time. MONDALE won 65 delegates yester- day, Hart 40 and Jackson 12 in returns see MONDALE, Page 2 Hart bea ts Mondale in county By NEIL CHASE Sen. Gary Hart did not win the Michigan caucus, but did capture4i percent of the votes cast in Washtenaw County yesterday. Former vice pr., esident Walter Mondale received 31. percent, and the Rev. Jesse Jackson received 16. Two hundred twenty votes, most of which were for . Hart, were excluded from the totals because they were challenged, according to Sheila CotfFr- berworth, county caucus director. MOST OF the challenged ballots belonged to voters whose qualification See HART, Page 2 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Ann Arbor Police Detective Richard Anderson wrestles with an unidentified protester who knocked down the Nazi lying on the ground during yesterday's Nazi rally at the Federal Building. Anderson was one of the two officers injured during the third annual Nazi rally. .4 __ Stereotypes are lies, actr By GEORGEA KOVANIS Special to the Daily DETROIT - Men and women must PUS abolish stereotypes and lying to them- selves and each other about who they hou! are, actress and television producer PhD Marlo Thomas said yesterday. Speaking before a crowd of about 1,500 gathered in Cobo Hall for a women's career conference, Thomas - most famous for her role in the television series "That Girl" - encouraged women to forget traditional ideas which dictate that girls can't be doctors and boys But the can't play with dolls, members SONGS popular 15 years ago, true emoti Thomas said, portrayed the perfect said. Men woman dressed in fancy lace and women sh, doused with perfume. Men, according she added to the same idea of the times, were sup- "I knom posed to be physically strong and what (the technically proficient, she added. powerless * Lebanese talks stall, fig hting continues. t-feminism means actresses are dumb, sewives don't work, nobody loves a -Mario Thomas actress and feminist 'ess says Thomas said. She warned, however, that a lot of women are getting tired, saying that the revolution is over - that it is an era of post-feminism. "Post-feminism means actresses are dumb, housewives don't work, nobody loves a PhD," Thomas said, adding that women have to keep pushing or they will lose ground in overcoming such stereotypes. THE NEXT goal that should be ac- complished by the women's movement, Thomas said, is to help men feel more comfortable by allowing them to have emotions and not take all the respon- sibility for supporting a family. The equal rights movement was the first step insdissolving stereotypes, but women must be inspired to keep the movement alive, Thomas said. *And that inspiration, she said, comes from See STEREOTYPES, Page 3 se stereotypes have forced of both sexes to hide their ions from each other, Thomas aren't supposed to cry and ouldn't participate in sports, . w all about stereotypes and y) can do . . . we've all felt . . . written off," Thomas said. She added that she had to contend with the brainless actress stereotype when she was a young woman trying to make it on her own and even later in her early days as the only woman in her production studio. THE EQUAL rights movement, which began 15 years ago, was the first step in dissolving these stereotypes, v.. ....... .... .....................v::::::::;::::::::::....,.............r..-...vr.......:...v.. {...: k:::::: -v:nr.v:::.: v......... v..- ......\tt'""}}:::.:i-}:":vv{}::>.>.>.:.: + " 1fi. " .4 .... v4'": i".O.::r ..i:..... v..-..-r......x.......L.. .'{"... r..v.. 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Jumblatt, speaking just before the full conference resumed after a seven-hour delay, said President Amin Gemayel ant his father Pierre Gemayel, head of the Christian Phalange Party, had not yet accepted the need for a new political system. "WE WANT radical reforms, we want a new historical compromise,' Jumblatt said. "If we don't get it, it means another 10 years of civil war." As the negotiators met, their followers in Beirut clashed in the heaviest fighting since a cease-fire was imposed on Tuesday. Police said at least 13 people were killed and 35 wounded in the battles. WITH AN APPARENT impasse in the negotiations for a consensus on reform, Syrian Vice President Ab- dul Halim Khaddam directly intervened by meeting privately with the key participants, Jumblatt, Amin Gemayel and Shiite Moslem leader Nabih Berri. Jumblatt said he was still demanding new elections 'to replace Gemayel, and said there had been no agreement on any of the major concerns he raised at the conference. The Druze leader, accusing Pierre Gemayel of "still trying to gain time," said it would not be easy to get the dominant Christians represented by the Phalange Party to share power. THE ROLE of Khaddam remained crucial but it was not clear who the Syrians were pressuring to get the agreement they have insisted on. Jumblatt said the Syrians were backing him "on certain basic and important demands," but gover- nment officials had earlier expressed the belief that Khaddam would lean on Jumblatt and Berri in order to reach an agreement. "We hope that they will announce a final agreement on national reconciliation and a plan for implementing peace in Lebanon tomorrow," Gemayel's political adviser, Michel Samaha, said when the session ended at 104p.m. The closed-door conference was scheduled to See LEBANON, Page 3 Day of the Irish AP Photo Teddy Gleason, head of the International Longshoreman's Union and Grand Marshal of New York's 223rd St. Patrick's Day parade, is interviewed by a television reporter yesterday as he marches up Fifth Avenue during the parade. ........................................................::.:::....... ... r.. .. .x ..... by .:. .. x ..... .. ... n... ,..r ..................v ........{...........F..v.... ...:..... :...... .... rv ................. ..........................................v.......... ,........:::::.:..:..::::.:"?._:: ??:. q:":?4i:":: "iv ....... ..".,..... ,...v ........... . ..n. .. .... .... .... .....:.v.......: .+. r........{..... . . ...... .....v.... ............................................................................. ... ...........:.r.:: i:b:Lii}::Yw:::::: i::J"} ::v\iti:Cirii:v }i:? v TODAY Michael mania with disciplinary action when she wore the singer's trademark single white glove to school in honor of Jackson's record eight Grammy awards last month. Don- nelly said school officials feared that studded belts might be used as weapons and the gloves could be caught in machinery in shop class. The dress code prompted 283 of the school's 625 students to sign a petition in protest. Last week, 60 students along with 70 parents and teachers showed up at a school board meeting to back the petition. wheel, swerving the car across the street into two parked vehicles. No one, including Bear, was hurt. "The insurance agent asked me if my dog was a licensed driver," Swatlowski said. "I wanted to teach her to waterski this summer, but if she can't handle the driving, I don't know." The Daily almanac N THIS DATE in 1968 the Faculty Assembly voted * 1958 - University math Prof. H. Chandler DAvis, who was suspended after being found guilty of contempt charges in June 1957, said he would appeal his conviction to the U.S. Circuit Court in Cincinatti. Davis refused to answer questions during a House -Un-American Subcommittee hearing on his alleged link to a Communist cell at Harvard University while he was a graduate student between 1946 and 1950. * 1974 - Residents on the fourth floor of East Quad's Hayden house set a new campus record for a marathon I 1