The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, August 5, 1980-Page 9 AP Photo Films ruined A fireman hoses down piles of precious original movie reels destroyed in a fire of unspecified origin at a warehouse in a Paris suburb Sunday. A spokesman for the World Union of Film Museum, considered one of the great film museums, said many originals of famous films were lost forever. Student Libertarians (ContinuedfromPage3)' no laws for or against prostitution, because what two consenting adults do with their bodies is their own business." "All existing laws regarding prostitution should be repealed," she added. THE FIRST plenary session of the group began Saturday morning and featured a keynote address by Roy Childs, one of the founders of Liber- tarian Party and an editor of the party magazine, Libertarian Review. Childs criticized the ideology of both the left- and right-wings of * the American political spectrum. "What was wrong with the Left-Right dichotomy that dominated the 60s?" he asked the crowd filling half of Auditorium C in Angell Hall. "The right. Drama, 1film looking good (Continuedfrompage 8) Martin Scorsese's The Last Waltz, a film document of The Band's final con- cert with all your favorite sixties rock icons (Clapton, Dylan, Ringo, et al) trotted out at various intervals. Some erstwhile critics have labelled this "the finest rock film ever made," but unless you can't remember these performers in their not-so-distant prime, The Last Waltz is a pale shadow of what these performers were once capable of. The Band does have its moments, though and Neil Young turns in a splendidly drunken bit of revelry. For those who prefer something a bit. more up-to-date in rock and roll, and have accessible transportation, Detroit is definitely the place to be on Tuesday. The infamous Bookies Club at 870 W. McNichols, is presenting the Members, an intriguing new wave band from England. The Members toss every available influence (reggae, R and B, rockabilly) in to a punky stew that is also flavored by a cheeky sense of humor. If they are half as vivacious live as they are on record, it should be an. exciting show. wing wanted to get rid of government controls in areas like taxation, and in- crease government control over foreign. policy. The left wing asked for peace, but their prescription for the country's economic woes called for something. that was not a free market economy." After Childs' speech, the members began trying to decide what the group's platform would be. Although the Liber- tarian Party has its own platform, the student organization does not. MEMBERS WERE given copies of two proposed platforms, one developed by the SLS National Office and another drafted by the SLS Radical Caucus. Af- ter discussing the merits of each document, the group voted to use the National Committee platform as a basis, adding amendments where necessary. "I'm pleased with the way it turned out," said SLS National Director Milton Mueller. "Lots of dynamic energy flowed during the session. We are the only student political group defining politics in a new way - not honoring the New Left or the New Right." On Sunday night, the conference sponsored a debate between Liber- tarian Party Presidential candidate Ed Clark and Citizens Party candidate Barry Commoner. A capacity crowd, including many Citizens' Party mem- bers as well as SLS members and the general public, filled the auditorium in the Modern Languages Building to wit- ness the event. THE DEBATE got off to a rather rocky start. Due to problems with the sound system, it began one-half hour late, and Naomi Gottlieb of the League of Women Voters mistakenly in- troduced Ed Clark as the candidate of the Citizens' Party. Clark expressed apprehension about the debate. "I debated Commoner once before, in Chicago, and it was a very unfortunate event," the California lawyer explained before the event began. "I got up and spoke out against the draft, and Commoner really at- tacked me for it - he said it was the class war I should be worried about." Commoner criticized the Libertarian platform. "They. are supporting cor- porate power under the 'guise of in- meet at 'U' dividual freedom, while the Citizens Party recognizes that freedom belongs only to the people who control the economy," said Commoner, a professor at Washington University in St. Louis. THE IDEOLOGICAL differences between the parties became more ap- parent as the debate progressed. "Those who say they can reform a nation's system of government are ridiculous," said Clark in his opening statement, lumping Nixon, Hitler, Stalin, and Kissinger into the "Mary Poppins School of Government." Commoner, in his opening statement, decried the power of the nation's large corporations to regulate individual citizens' lives, a theme that ran through his responses during the debate. "The power that governs our lives in this country rests in the hands of the large corporations," Commoner said. "For example, the reason we are threatened with war in the Mideast is the result of the operation of 'Liber- tarian principle' of individual freedom in the hands of the oil companies." BOTH CANDIDATES were heckled throughout the debate from members of the opposition party. One of the panelists asking questions during the debate, a correspondent from Business Week magazine, drew a smile from Commoner when he asked, "What makes you any different from a Ted Kennedy who can think?" "I'll tell you what makes me different from ,Jennedy and all the other can- didates," Commoner replied. "They are all in favor of the free enterprise system, and I'm against it." He added reducing the military budget and making more jobs available to minorities were other ideas he had that weren't shared by major party can- didates. Both candidates conceded they have little chance of winning the election. Iran threatens hostage trials From UPI and AP Iran's Parliament decided yesterday to postpone debate on the American hostages but the speaker of the house, protesting the jailing of Iranian demon- strators in the United States, said the hostages should be put on trial to show "we are not scared." Speaker Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsan- jani said Parliament had asked the Supreme Islamic Council to make preparations for trials of the 52 Americans since nearly 200 Iranians were jailed last week during a Washington demonstration. MEANWHILE, in Otisville, N.Y., 40 of the 172 Iranians being held at the federal prison are being force-fed because their prolonged hunger strike has left them in a "life-threatened situation," a prison spokeswoman said yesterday. Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghot- bzadeh asked for a U.N. commission to investigate the conditions of the Iranians who face possible deportation to Iran. The State Department said it would welcome such a probe, although a U.N. spokesman said no such request had been received from Tehran. In Cairo, Egypt, President' Anwar Sadat, who buried his old friend the Shah of Iran last week, has taken over the late monarch's role as chief defen- der of Western interests in the Middle East. UNLIKE IRAN, Egypt lacks vast reserves of oil to meet the growing demands of its vastly poor 42 million people who have a per capita income of only about $350a year. But like the late King of Kings, Sadat has most of the political power concen- trated in his hands, has launched a modernization program heavily depen- dent on Western imports and faces his main opposition from Islamic fun- damentalists. Perhaps the most significant similarity is that Egypt, like Iran under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, is helping Washington to develop the capability to project military power in- to the Persian Gulfawhere most of the industrialized world's oil comes from. SOME DIPLOMATIC observers worry privately about what one called the "Iranization of Egypt," fearing the United States will make the same mistakes that contributed to the ouster of the shah by Islamic revolutionaries in January, 1979. A major irritant in Iran was the per- vasive presence of Americans, who numbered more than 50,000 at the peak. Many lived with all the comforts of home in isolated "Little Americas" cut off from Iranian society. The seeds of such a community are found in the Cairo suburb of Maadi, where U.S. diplomats, oilmen, and educators have settled with their families. NOW DETROIT'S CASS CORRIDOR 1963-1977 Two floors, South Wing-Avant garde scene. Paintings, sculpture, and related poetry and music. T HE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS