Page 2 - The Michigan Daily- Monday, January 12, 1987 Feminists wary of ERA battle IN BRIEF WASHINGTON (AP) - The National Organization for Women is determined to prod the Equal Rights Amendment through Con - gress again, but other feminists aren't so sure they're ready for an emotional repeat of the 1970s ERA battle. The ERA was one of the first pieces of legislation introduced to the new Congress last week, and its host of sponsors drew encour - agement from the new Democratic majorities in the Senate and the House. NOW, the nation's most visible women's rights group, has made the amendment its top pri - ority. But the last ERA attempt sputtered to an ignominious end less than five years ago after a decade's struggle, and some wo - men's activists wonder if it is too soon to begin a new, draining fight. "I don't agree that it will happen now," said Irene Natividad, chair - woman of the National Women's Political Caucus. "Everybody gets tired," she said. Columnist Ellen Goodman asked whether the ERA, through its perennial introduction, would be - come the "Harold Stassen" of amendments," referring to the Minnesota politician whose re - peated bids for the presidency never got him close to the White House. Goodman wrote, "Is it a year to mount another full-fledged battle for its passage? Not by my reckoning." The ERA would prohibit dis - crimination based on sex. "This has been a 63-year strug - gle already so we don't shy away from it," said Judy Goldsmith, who chaired NOW in 1983 when sup - porters could not muster the ne - cessary two-thirds majority and the ERA was defeated on the House floor. "But it also seems foolhardy to beat our heads against a situation that is not likely to meet with success this time around." ELEANOR Smeal, who de - feated Goldsmith for the NOW presidency with a vow to take the fight for women's rights "back to the streets," had ready answers for those who would prefer to wait a few years for a more hospitable political climate for the ERA. "Obviously I would prefer a pro- president, a far bigger margin in both houses (of Congress), and a better atmosphere politically," she said. "circumstances are not ideal on any issue dealing with women's rights. But have they ever been?" she said. Goldsmith, Natividad and others talk of smaller battlegrounds that they believe can be more easily fought and won for women - pay equality, better child care, national maternity leave rules, and re - storation of the Civil Rights Act. Smeal, however, is impatient with the argument that other fights should be fought first. "We're never going to see equal- ity for women in the basic eco - nomic thing if we have to go law by law, program by program,. statute by statute. As soon as we fix one up, another one's undone," she said. Like any constitutional amend - ment, the ERA faces formidable obstacles: it needs approval by two- thirds of Congress, then must be ratified by three-quarters of the states. Compiled from Associated Press reports Rucimagel to leave for Atlanta position (Continued from Page 1) criticized a discussion draft of the emergency procedures that the council released last spring. "We still don't see a need for the University to use academic sanc- tions to control our behavior out of the classroom," said Ken Weine, member of the Student Rights Committee and past member of the council. Sociology Prof. Howard Brab- son, a member of the council, said, "All the proposals and drafts that the students are presenting now are just delaying tactics." The council was designed as a democratic body to gather equal input from the students, faculty, and administration, but partici- pation has not been equal on all sides. Frequent absences and vacancies of the faculty and admini- strative representatives have hin- dered the council's progress. "Out of the three administrators that we are supposed to have, we have only had one since September," said Diller. David Newblatt, another student member, agrees. "It's kind of strange that on one hand we are feeling pressure for not producing fast enough, but on the other the administration is not holding up their end of the deal." NEED MONEY? WORK FOR HOUSING! Jobs with Housing Division's Food Service offer $4.20 /hr. starting wages FLEXIBLE HOURS NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Phone or stop by the Food Service Office of any Hall. Alice Lloyd ......764-1183 Bursley ........763-1121 East Quad..... .764-0136 Iran arms sales continued at Reagan's behest, says senator WASHINGTON - A Senate Intelligence Committee member said yesterday the panel's investigation shows that President Reagan was the driving force behind the decision to continue selling arms to Iran after the first such shipments failed to free all the American hostages held in Lebanon. "It was kept going primarily because the president wanted to continue the program," said Sen. William Cohen (R-Maine). Cohen praised Reagan for trying to win the release of Americans held by Pro-Iranian forces in Lebanon and to find a diplomatic opening to Iran. But he criticized the president for overriding misgivings among senior Cabinet members and the intelligence community about selling arms to Tehran. Despite those warnings, Cohen said, "the president turned to amateurs for his advice on a major foreign policy initiative, rather than listening to the sound and seasoned voices of the experts, and that is where I think the president has made his mistake." Arms deal slows attempts to repay U.S.-held Iranian funds WASHINGTON - Administration officials seeking to return $500 million the United States owes Iran say they face minor technical roadblocks and one major political task - convincing the public the money isn't an attempt to ransom hostages. The Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal in the Hague, Netherlands, ruled last year that the U.S. must return roughly $500 million left over from a $3.7 billion fund that Iran deposited in the New York Federal Reserve Bank to pay off syndicated loans made during the rule of U.S.-backed Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. "There is a realization that some people in the United States will misinterpret.. . that this was a payment for the release of hostages, which clearly it is not," said one official who demanded anonymity. "It is not a valid jump, but some might make it and it has to be considered." Negotiators are trying to settle conflicting claims to one month's bank interest and decide on the precise wording of a final overall pact. Aquino constitution opposed MANILA, Philippines - Supporters of Ferdinand Marcos burned copies of the draft constitution yesterday. At another rally, thousands of leftists denounced the charter after police blocked their march on the presidential palace. President Corazon Aquino urged enthusiastic crowds in three cities of central and southern Luzon to approve the draft constitution in a Feb. 2 plebiscite. Back in the capital city of Manila, about 700 riot police and troops backed by water cannon and firetrucks kept about 5,000 torch-bearing leftists from marching on Aquino's offices at Malacanag Palace to protest the charter. The march was organized by a federation of leftist groups including the militant May 1st Movement, the country's largest labor organization with a claimed membrship of more than 500,000. Earlier, marchers distributed a resolution condemning the charter as "anti- people" and "pro-imperialist." EXTRAS Familial ties baffle player Basketball player Leon Wood not only stole a leaf from the collected sayings of Yogi Berra, he may have topped them all. Wood was traded to the New Jersey Nets by the Washington Bullets, and after joining his new club he was introduced to sportscaster Steve Albert. Innocently or otherwise he said to Steve: "Are you any relation to your brother Marv?" Parishoners fast from media Fresno, California parishoners of a con servative Protestant church took a week off from watching television and reading new spapers for a week in order to spend more time on their spiritual and family lives. "The purpose... is to change my focus from all that's going on in the world to God," said parishoner Larry Ecklund. Ecklund, a professor at Pacific College, said concentration on current events doesn't allow the individual to give God "his proper place. We're putting information, ball scores, before him." Ecklund said his "fast" allowed him to sleep better and read the Bible more. The fast ends Sunday. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. Couzens Hall Law Quad . . . ... 764-2142 ... 764-1115 Mosher Jordan . 763-9946 Markley Hall ... 764-1151 South Quad .... 764-0169 Stockwell . West Quad . E.U. E . .. 764-1194 764-1111 A non-discriminatory, affirmative action employer. t * * 0 . What's Happening Recreational Sports BASKETBALL OFFICIALS NEEDED $4.40 per hour ithe Michigan aifl Vol. XCVII --No. 72 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-S18 in Ann Arbor; S35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. 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