==I . x a- * see * *° . t t* * * 4 *t* **..- - t ma a . a- W -e. ' °... a. t .#. :s # +#: '- 8--i"°.tnE "#-4E 1Wd'A- 3G'CC rya. -F' #-'4 P.- .,. ..# R 4..W'... . R^ Y.,': 1" m 3 #Y T m.. M w co aen"".."s *s t ~ t a w r.*.- s .,e **a r.f,. , m .. $-W . S,,: x a ..A-". -4 r .*.. a 1A C 0V E R ira11*1*C4 gender and Gerry By Jackie Young D ISILLUSIONED with the1 primary season that elimi Democratic presidential candi John Glenn and Fritz Hollings, Lussier wasn't going to vote at Lussier was tired of candidate W Mondale and angry that Michi primary fell so late - after her favi candidates had dropped out of the r But on July 12, 1984, Rep. Gera Ferraro (D-New York) made histo becoming the first woman t nominated for and then run on a party ticket. Lussier, a 1984 University grad decided to return to Ann Arbor graduate student in library science also decided to vote the Mon Ferraro ticket. "When they put Gerry on the sl really woke me up again. I b debating again and arguing wit husband," Lussier said. The nomination of a woman ma have affected everyone's life as as Lussier's. But Ferraro is, n theless, in the political spotlight an is causing people to look at \% - r t t G' ~ 'MNK KNW tiAM -WVE Cool Down Wit] Hot New Album EDITIONS And VIRG S, BUDD/EN() tI--;a ::o .~ long nated dates Pat t all. alter gan's 'orite race. ldine ry by o be major uate, as a e. She dale- ate it began h my y not much ever- d she the Just one of many great Mexican and American selections. Something deliciously different is a Chimichanga - large flour tortilla * stuffed with Beef and Spices. Topped with Jack Cheese, Diced Tomatoes, Sour Cream, Guacamole, Fresh Fruit and Salsa. FOOD AND DRINK 3150 S. Boardwalk (near Briarwood) Ann Arbor 9 668-1545 The newest collaborati garde keyboard stylist I go creates, as Eno says, a go musically "Shimmeit modern isticchamberr QUINE/MAL + + + + 4 Ferraro: A symbol of hope to many }...++++++++++ ..+.+.+ ..+ . } t++ + + + + +} + + + + + + + T * ++ + + + .... + ++ ice! RUBIRT Ql ,VE: and1 members of andergroi the Voidoids, Material acclaimed touring line S .Q ground BAWSS is thei impressive, ambitious imagination and guts presidential race and women in politics in a different light. "It has certainly spurred more people to take an interest in politics," Lussier says. "A lot of women have told me that they are so glad to see a woman is no longer just the candidate's wife, looking at her husband all misty-eyed." Judy Goldsmith, president of the National Organization for Women, praised the choice of Ferraro last summer as a victory for all women and for all Americans, but several Univer- sity students don't see it as such'a big step. "I don't think it's a really big deal. I won't vote for her just because she's a woman," says Denise Burke, a senior communications major. "I never felt there was any difference between women's and men's career goals.And I don't personally feel there has been any sex discrimination against me." Art school junior Jill Kominsky agrees. "It's complete bullshit. A person's a person. Just because she's a woman she shouldn't have any more impact than anyone else," Kominsky says. "She's just a human being. So what." Barry Shulak, a senior English major, says he thinks it is really great that a woman is on the ticket but feels Mondale is being less than honest when he says it wasn't a political move. "(Ferraro) was chosen as a woman who happened to be qualified, rather than a person qualified who happened to be a woman," Shulak says. In fact, being a woman is becoming more of an asset in politics these days. The "gender gap" which emerged from the 1980 elections and then in New York, Texas, and Michigan in 1982 proved that there is a difference between the way men and womenevaluate a political candidate at the polls. This year the gender gap is becoming one of the hottest political topics. Polls show that although both sexes support President Reagan over Mon- dale, women support Reagan to a lesser degree than men. The reasons for this difference are generally thought to lie in two key issues: World peace and human rights. Marjorie Lansing, a national authority on the gender gap who first coined the term in one of her many books on women in politics, concludes in her latest book that women now "constitute a force in America that is comparable to the organized labor movement of the twentieth century." "There's a Ferraro factor involved with all the races," says Lansing, an Eastern Michigan University political science professor who the Democrats have nominated for Univer- sity regent. ' "It provides a new dimension for selecting women as candidates. There is now a notion that women can win," she says. Michigan . Student Assembly President Scott Page recognizes the significance of the gender gap on cam- pus, especially with such issues as security. "A woman's perspective at the University is different from a man's perspective," Page says. Page says he thinks students at the University overall "are not only in- terested in electing white males," noting that the past two MSA presidents were women. On campus, Page says "special in- terest or bloc voting" has propelled a number of women and minority can- didates into MSA seats, a fact which illustrates on a smaller scale the power of special interest voting. Women are becoming more visible in all levels of the political process, from running for high offices to working as volunteers. George. Sallade, past chair of the Washtenaw County Democratic Party and longtime Ann Arbor political organizer, says the telephone in his of- fice rang constantly after Ferraro's nomination. He says he acquired 75 campaign volunteers over the phone - all of them women. "Qualifications are still the number one requirement for office," Sallade says. "But there is obviously an in- terest in women as women. The women's vote is very important." Because of their number - 52 percent of the population is female - and their voting patterns, Sallade contends that women candidates now have a better chance than male candidates, even in the South. Some political experts predict that the Democrats' increasing focus on the women's vote along with the candidacy of Ferraro and the Rev. Jesse Jackson may cause fewer white males to vote the Democratic ticket. Sallade doesn't believe this will hap- pen. "There will be no white-male backlash. That's a fiction of political C KDE ' I. 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