The Michigan Daily--Wednesday, July 14, 1982--Page 3 WOULD OPEN CRITERIA TO PUBLIC Council tables art fair By KRISTIN STAPLETON Legislation which would, according to its sponsor, require the three groups involved in the art fair to submit to Ann Arbor City Council their criteria for selecting participants, was tabled Monday night by the council. The reason for the decision to table the resolution was a disagreement over the wording and intent of the measure, council members said. LARRY HUNTER, the resolution's sponsor, claims that it is meant only to make the criteria for the selec- tion of art fair participants available to the public. "The public has a right to know," Hunter, a Democrat, said. Edward Hood said he and the other Republicans on the council tabled the motion because they believe the resolution is an attempt to involve City Council in- the selection process. "It (the resolution) said that the City Council should require criteria and review that criteria," Hood said. "Anytime you are establishing or reviewing criteria in any way, you are acting as a judge," he added. HUNTER SAID his resolution only calls for the groups to make their criteria accessible to the public. He said that if other council members interpreted the 'review' in his resolution to mean that City Council should become part of the evaluation process, then "they don't know how to understand English." Asked if he would object to a resolution which only required the art fair groups to submit their criteria to the council, Hood said, "I don't see anything wrong with that." He insisted, however, that Hunter's resolution involved more than that. Hunter said he introduced the resolution in respon- se to charges by a group representing Jon Lockard, an Ann Arbor artist whose application to participate in this year's art fair was rejected. THE GROUP, calling itself the Committee for the Salvation of the Human Experience in the Visual Arts resolution (SHEVA), claims that the Acceptance Committee of the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, Inc. is not accountable to the public, although it uses public funds in the form of city services. According to Leslie Kamil-Miller, co-chairperson of SHEVA, the group became concerned about the public accountability of the art fair groups after representatives of the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, Inc. refused to reveal the reason why Lockard was rejec- ted from the fair. Lockhard accused the Acceptance Committee of rbeing racially biased, but Richard Brunvand of the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, Inc. denied the charge. Brunvand claimed Lockard's work was judged by the same criteria the committee used to judge the work of all other applicants. Kamil-Miller said SHEVA would like to see that the criteria, as well as the composition of the Acceptance Committee, are open to public scrutiny. Air conditioning In a desperate attempt to stave off this summer's unbearably high temperatures, Joe Lower moves some of his fur- niture outside yesterday to enjoy the breeze for free. Search contunues for illegal cable TV hookups By GREG BRUSSTAR Ann Arbor Cablevision has met with little success thus far in its efforts at nabbing cablevision pirates, a company official said yesterday. Two weeks have passed since the cable company decided to search out and prosecute illegal hookups, but nobody has been prosecuted for violations as a result of the search, ac- cording to Ann Arbor Cablevision General Manager Robbie Blair. "WE ARE involved in looking into illegal hookups in two apartments. Two (cable) boxes have been vandalized there in the past two weeks," Blair said. The search for illegal hookups is a tedious process, Blair said. "We have an auditing staff of 14 who go house-to- house" to detect illegal cable connec- tions, he said. "It's something you have to do to stay in business," Blair said. "We have reworked many of the boxes and put new locks on many of them," Blair said. HOOKING into either a cable pole or a wire installed for paidsubscribers are among the ways people illegally use cable. Others break into convenience boxes located on th e sides of houses legally wired for the service. The cable company offered amnesty to all illegal subscribers who turned themselves in to the company. It ended June 30. Blair said that about a dozen people'used the grace period to sub- scribe after admitting that they had been illegally hooked into the system. Blair said that they are not concen- trating the search for cable pirates in any certain area, but that servicemen check adjacent boxes during servi& operations. The servicemen do not have to enter the bouse in which the cable service is being used illegally, Blair said. 'U' study explores teen values By BARB MISLE Alternative lifestyles may have become increasingly popular in the last decade, but many teenagers still hold traditional views on marriage and the family, according to two researchers at the University's Institute for Social. Research. The study, conducted by A. Regula Herzog and Jerald Bachman, revealed. that 80 percent of high school seniors surveyed planned on getting married,, but at a later stage in life. The students also tended to view sex roles more* equally. HERZOG AND Bachman collected their data at high schools nationwide from 1976 to 1980. The females were not as liberal as the males, however, when it came to non- traditional values onsex. According to the study, many more males had fewer objections to the idea of extra-marital relationships or sex with more than one partner. "This came up fairly consistently," Herzog said, "that women were more liberal in equal sex roles and equal pay, but males were more liberal in regards; to sexual morals." Herzog and Bachman also found that many of the seniors were in favor of traditional sex roles once married. the majority said they would want the husband to work full-time and two- thirds of the seniors objected to a mother with pre-school aged children having a job. THE MAJORITY of the females sur- veyed indicated they wanted careers in addition to raising a family, and those who, were career-oriented said they would postpone their marriage until career goals were attained. In addition, 25 percent said they wan- ted to wait at least five years after graduating from high school to get married. Religion and education played a part in survey results, according to Herzog and Bachman. The two researchers found that those seniors with stronger religious backgrounds were more likely to view marriage more traditionally, while those who came from higher income -families or who had mothers who worked were more likely to be in favor of sexual equality. Herzog said she expected the studen- ts' answers to be more clearly defined, either liberally or conservatively. "Perhaps it's a reflection of the times," she said, "These different issues aren't clear to any of us." Survey results cannot, however, be used to predict actual behavior, accor- ding to Herzog. "The data was taken from people who have had no real ex- perience with these kinds of relation- ships," she said. "What these kids will actually do is quite different."