The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 04, 1980, Image 4

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    OOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Mormon church,
Battalion Classifieds feminist were on
‘collision course’
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
JOB 'OPPORTUNITIES ^
HELP WANTED
MEN! —WOMEN!
JOBS ON SHIPS! American. Fore
ign. No experience required. Excel
lent pay. Worldwide travel. Summer
job or career. Send $3.00 for infor
mation. SEAFAX, Dept. J-9 Box
2049, Port Angeles, Washington
98362. 9014
MEN! WOMEN! JOBS!
CRUISESHIPSI/SAILING EXPEDJ-
TIONSI/SAILING CAMPS. No ex
perience. Good pay. Summer.
Career. NATIONWIDE, WORL
DWIDE! Send $4.95 for APPLICA-
TION/INFO/REFERRALS to
CRUISEWORLD 127 Box 60129,
Sacramento, CA 95860. 77t7
Now Taking Applications
For Cashiers and Hostesses
APPLY IN PERSON ONLY
At Ken Martin’s
1803 S. Texas next to Sears
79ttn
FIELD REPRESENTATIVE
General Motors Acceptance Corp.
Challenging & diversified. Opportunity
to advance. Excellent benefits. Apply
4103 Texas Ave., Bryan. Equal
Opportunity Employer.
92t5
Modem Dance Teacher
for
Dance Arts Society
Please call Dove after 7. 846-0987.
If you don’t know what Modern
Dance is, please don’t call.
77tfn
COCKTAIL WAITRESSES
NEEDED
Apply 313 College Ave.
Skaggs Shopping Center
At the Spectrum 11 -3 Daily
846-2277
90t4
WANTED
HELP!! Will pay for old quizzes. PHIS (BIO
220)-Sherry, MICRO BIO (206)-Opheim, PSY
(307)-Jones, EPSY (439)-Barker. Call Martha.
693-5955 or 696-4043. 91t3
Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds
822-0544... Itfii
Typing. Full time.
823-7723... 76tfn
Symbols. Notary Public.
^^OFFICIAL NOTICE
""“SPRiNcTAWARDS
SCHOLARSHIPS”
Deadline-March 1,
1980
Application forms for Spring Awards
Program may be obtained from the
Student Financial Aid Office, Room
310, YMCA Building. All applications
must be filed with the Student
Financial Aid Office not later than
5:00 PM, March 1,1980. Late
applications will not be accepted.
80133
SPECIAL NOTICE
FULL OR PART TIME
*Day sh.'ft
*Night shift (til 10:00 p.m.)
^Weekends
Cashier experience helpful
Flexible hours to fit your schedule
Rapid advancement
Bryan
1101 Texas
Starting Salary $3.10/hr.
Apply in person only:
9:30-11:00 a.m. (if possible)
Whataburger
College Station
105 Dominik
United Press International
SALT LAKE CITY — The excom
munication of feminist Sonia John
son by the Mormon Church has
touched off a debate in Mormon soci
ety that threatens to be more painful
than the church’s long struggle with
the question of equality for blacks.
There were few blacks in the Mor
mon Church in 1978 when its presi
dent, Spencer W. Kimball,
announced a revelation from God
ending a century-old color ban that
prevented men of Negro descent
from participating in the all-male
Mormon lay priesthood. Not many
blacks have joined the church since
the revelation.
It’s different with feminism and
the issue of women’s rights in the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, as the Mormons are formally
known.
At least half of the members of the
church are women. As one Latter-
day Saint feminist put it, “There is
one of us in nearly every bedroom. ”
Johnson, a fifth-generation Mor
mon from Sterling, Va., was excom
municated for making anti-church
I * statements during her campaign in
CASH FOR OLD GOLD
Class rings, wedding rings, worn out
gold jewelry, coins, etc.
The Diamond Room
Town & Country Shopping Center
3731 E. 29th St., Bryan
846-4708
J
FOUND
EXPECTANT PARENTS NEEDED
FOR INTERESTING RESEARCH
STUDY
CALL JACKIE WALTERS
693-8927
OR DR. CANDIDA LUTES
845-7146 egts
PREGNANCY TESTING
Counselling on all alternatives
and birth control methods.
Women’s Referral Center,
3910 Old College Road.
846-8437
CO-OP
EDUCATION
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS
HAS THE FOLLOWING CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE SUMMER & FALL OF 1980
BROWN & ROOT: Houston. Texas
Job Description: Personnel Work
CORPS OF ENGINEERS: Galveston. Texas
Job Description Economic Punning
CONTINENTAL TELEPHONE COMPANY: Dalus. Texas
Job Description: Personnel Work
GULF STATES UTILITIES: Beaumont. Texas
Job Description:
Punning ^'Scheduling,
Accounting
FOLEY’S: Houston, Texas
Job Description: Management Trainee
NATIONAL OCEANIC AND
ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION: Ft. Worth, Texas
Job Description Personnel Work
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS &
SPACE ADMINISTRATION; Houston, Texas
Job Description Management Trainee
CONTACT. HENRY D. POPE OR SUSANNAH CLARY
107 HARRINGTON
PHONE: 845-7814
m
WANTED
L J
FAST FOOD PERSONNEL
3.15/hr.
•FREE FOOD
•PAID VACATIONS
FULLOR PARTTIME
•ROOM FOR
11 a.m.-2 p.m.
ADVANCEMENT
7 p.m.-2a.m.
•GOOD WORKING
5 p.m.-2 a.m.
ENVIRONMENT
APPLY IN PERSON
*NO EXPERIENCE
BETWEEN 9:30 a.m.-11:00 a.m.
NECESSARY
501 S. TEXAS AVE.
FOR RENT
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT FOR RENT.
$125 per month. Bills paid. 822-3078 after 5:00.
92t5
NEW EFFICIENCIES
$159 month. One bedroom from
$180 month. All bills paid except
electricity. No pets. Villa West
Apartments, south of Villa Maria.
Lorraine Peterson, manager. 822-
7772. 177tfn
WAITERS
AND
WAITRESSES
NEEDED
Please apply
in person
2-5 afternoons.
3 C BARBECUE
81 OS. Main
Bryan
UNIVERSITY
ACRES
Now taking applications for 1-
and 2-bedroom apartments - fur
nished and unfurnished.
$50 deposit required.
9 month lease.
Call
Joe Courtney Inc.
846-5796
If you are looking for temporary
full time or part time employment
the Eagle has a job for you. We
are now forming sales teams for
door to door subscription solita-
tions. Set your own hours.
Call Eagle
Circulation
779-2345 7mfn
ENGINEERING &
TECHNOLOGY
STUDENTS
On Campus Interviews!
Foster Wheeler Energy Corporation is a lead
ing engineering and construction firm serving
the petrochemical and related industries na
tion wide.
Our Houston Engineering Center will have rep
resentatives on campus, Monday, February
11, to conduct interviews for engineering and
design positions. If you will be graduating in
May in Chemical, Electrical, Mechanical or
Civil Engineering, or in Electrical, Civil or
Mechanical Technology, sign up at the Place
ment Office to arrange for an interview.
We would like to discuss the opportu
nities Foster Wheeler and Houston can
offer you.
DOMESTIC
SERVICES
Part Time/Mon.-Wed.-Fri. A.M.
TEAM CLEANING HOMES
With Other Students
Starting Salary
$3.30/hr. Plus Mileage
693-1954
Judy Smeins -Libby Vastano 8815
FOR SALE
1976 Suzuki TS400 priced to sell. Good condi
tion. 779-6554. 89t5
1973 Audi-100LS - Gets good mileage, new
tires. Right door damage. $800. 693-1458.9315
$ave Ga$ Money With MIX-I-GO Gas Addi
tive!! Money Back Guaranteed. 693-7520.
8GLU
STEREO EQUIPMENT: Klipsch speakers,
Yamaha CA-1010 Bang, Olufsen turntable and
cassette recorder. Perfect condition. $2950.00.
Call 693-3352. 93t5
FOR SALE: Pioneer PL-112D Manual turnt
able with Shure M95-ED cartridge. Excellent
condition. $60.00 cash. Call Scott 845-4515 or
696-0670. 93tl
LOST
REWARD: Lost light brown suede jacket in
Alamo Friday night. Call 779-0158. 9H5
LARGE REWARD: White Eskimo Spitz lost in
Northgate area. Answers to Fred. 845-8356.
9115
1976 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO
FULLY LOADED-SUN ROOF
MICHELIN TIRES-32,000 MILES
IMMACULATE-$4000
845-5947 gots
REWARD
For brass keyring and keys lost Mon
day between Reed McDonald and
Plant Sciences Bldg.
846-9672
after 5:00 p.m.
92t3
LOST: AGGIE RING
CLASS ’49 13 years old. Original lost
in Korea; second has sentimental
value also. Lost in Northgate or Post
Office area.
846-8491
HILLEL CLUB
is taking prepaid orders for
BAGELS
thru Feb. 15
696-7313 846-1492
MWF11-2 WKNDS PM
9214
support of the Equal Rights Amend
ment.
Kimball declared the ERA a moral
issue four years ago and urged
church members to work for its de
feat. He said it posed a threat to
traditional family life. Since then,
Mormon groups — with encourage
ment and direction from church
headquarters in Salt Lake City —
have campaigned against its ratifica
tion in several state legislatures.
But Johnson, a former college En
glish teacher and mother of four chil
dren, could not accept Kimball’s
teaching — a difficult thing for her to
do since Mormons consider the
church leader to be a prophet and
God’s spokesman on earth.
Also, she could not accept in si
lence the church’s lobbying efforts
against the ERA.
Johnson helped organize Mor
mons for ERA, a group of Mormon
feminists which set out to counter
the church’s politicking. Mormons
for ERA lobbied for the amendment,
sponsored rallies and tweaked Mor
mon leaders by hiring airplanes to
tow pro-ERA banners over church
conferences in Utah and Virginia.
That, in itself, probably wouldn’t
have gotten her into trouble. Other
Mormons have publicly supported
the amendment, including Utah’s
Gov. Scott Matheson, Salt Lake City
Mayor Ted Wilson and women who
unsuccessfully sought its ratification
in the Utah Legislature.
But Johnson went further. She de
nounced the Mormon patriarchy,
telling a meeting of the American
Psychological Association in New
York that the men of the church tre
ated women as “bootlickers and
toadies.” She told the psychologist,
“The Mormons, a tiny minority, are
dedicated to imposing the prophet’s
moral directives upon all Americans
and they may succeed if Americans
do not become aware of their
methods and goals.
“Because the organization of the
church is marvelously tight and the
obedience of the members marve
lously thorough-going, potentially
thousands of people can be mobil
ized in a very short time to do consci
entiously whatever they are told
without more explanation than, ‘the
Prophet has spoken. ”
In another appearance in Monta
na, she suggested that people tell
Mormon missionaries they are not
interested in being preached to by a
church that does not support equal
rights for women.
Her tough talk did not go over well
with Mormon leaders, either male or
female.
Barbara Smith, the highest rank
ing woman in the church and presi
dent of the 1.5 million-member Re
lief Society, strongly disagrees with
Johnson’s characterizations of Mor
mon women.
“We hame a basic doctrine that
puts men and women together in
partnerships rather than power
struggles,” she said.
“I think she (Johnson) is trying to
promote a cause by making the
church look like it has an attitude of
uncaring or indifference to women.
That just isn’t true. ”
“I don’t know of any other society
where women have a greater voice
or more voting power or more prom
ise or more ideals surrounding the
relationship of men and women,”
said Elaine Cannon, president of the
275,000-member Young Women’s
Organization.
“The difference between Johnson
and some of my friends who support
the ERA and are still members of the
church is that they aren’t tearing
down the prophet, the church and its
policies.
“It seems very clear to me that the
Rotary Club wouldn’t put up with a
member who went around and said
the Rotary is crazy. I think the critic
ism that was leveled at the institu
tions and people we hold sacred are
in very poor taste. I don’t think it’s a
nice way to fight even a political
battle.”
Even some of Johnson’s relatives
and supporters thought she had gone
a bit overboard in her criticism if she
expected to remain a Mormon.
“It had to go that way,” said Paul
Harris, Johnson’s brother, after the
excommunication. “She’s been on a
collision course with the church ever
since she started openly supporting
the ERA.”
“Some people say she was too hon
est for her own good, ” said Teddie
Wood, a co-founder of Mormons for
ERA.
Marilyn Warenski, an ex-Mormon
who analyzed “the plight of Mormon
women” in her book “Patriarchs and
Politics,” said it was logical for John
son to be excommunicated.
“She gave them plenty of grounds
by the standards of a male-
dominated, authoritarian church
which provides no avenue for dis
sent,” said Warenski.
“It’s not surprising to me that she
was excommunicated. It is surpris
ing that she ever rose up in the first
place.”
In many ways, Warenski’s book
served as a catalyst for Mormons for
ERA. Many of its themes have been
echoed by Johnson.
The book has caused a stir in Mj
mon society because it challenf;
what Warenski calls “myths” aliotl
the roles of women in the churchli
is not a popular book with Moran
leaders because Warenski’s into,
pretation of Mormon history isdls
rent from that of official church hist
rians. 1
Warenski notes that Mom®
women have long taken pride iiu
heritage of women’s ri^its. Hie
were the first in the nation to esei
cise the vote a privilege given k
them in 1870 by the UtahTerritoriil
Legislature — a body dominated!}
Mormon men.
Leaders of the Relief Society weit
also leaders in the women’s sul
movement, campaigning hand-in
hand with Susan B. Anthony, E!
zabeth Cady Stanton and others
When Utah was admitted to th
Union, the state’s new constituta
included an equal rights clause
guaranteeing that “both male anl
female citizens of this state shall en
joy equally all civil, political and reli
gious rights and privileges."
Mormon women in the last cen
tury were encouraged to h
doctors, lawyers, teachers and bun
nesswomen.
Nearly every young Mormongd
has heard the story of Martin
Hughes Cannon, the fifth wifenl
polygamist Mormon apostle Geo®
Q. Cannon. Mrs. Cannon was
physician who became the liis!
woman elected to a state senate in
the United States. She beat herb
band for the seat in 1896.
But Warenski maintains that tk
women were encouraged to partid-
pate in political and economic
in early Utah because the male pal
riarehs of the church decided thalii
'would be to the advantage of Mor
mon society.
Women were given the vote it
increase Mormon power at thi
during a time when many non-
Mormons were moving into
Territory and the church was do
fending its practice of polygamy,
says.
They were encouraged to join tk
national suffrage movement because
it gave them a platform to defendth
institution of polygamy. ,
Women were allowed to b
professionals because the new tern
tory neded professionals and
men were busy converting n«
church members.
In nearly all cases, contend!
Warenski, it Was men using women
to serve the interests of the church
“There was little concern
women’s rights per se,” she says
“They were concerned about build
ing up the Mormon kingdom.”
But now, she says, the creative
spirit of the early church” whichled
to some amount of equality for
women is being replaced byacoa
servative trend which stresses ik
women’s place in the home raisinj
children. And Mormon women are
doing what the patriarchs have
ordered just as they did in the las!
century, says the writer in an exp
nation for the massive Mormon
opposition to the ERA.
Cadavers aid advance of science
ROOMMATE WANTED
FOSTER WHEELER
ENERGYCORP
Box 22395
Female
Roommate Needed
to share one bedroom
apartment located two
blocks north of campus.
$175/month.
Call Cindy at 846-6382.
93t5
By SCOT K. MEYER
Campus Reporter
There is one way to get into medical
school without great intellectual
ability or a high grade point ratio.
Although it may not be as glamor
ous as being a med student, you can
play a part in advancing science by
willing your body to a medical
school.
Dr. Jack Wagner, the head of the
anatomy Department at Texas A&M
University’s medical school, is in
PERSONALS
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Free abortion
counseling and referrals. Call (713) 779-
2258...62tfh
INTERESTED IN
WORLD
CITIZENSHIP?
Call 696-1626.
SERVICES
BOHANAN STABLES. 3 miles to Campus.
Full or partial care - lighted arena - roping -
barrels - poles - etc. 693-5217. 87t9
We tutor FRENCH. Call after 5:00. 846-2038.
93t5
'Jupfnamba
Eddie Dominguez '66
Joe Arciniega '74
ALLEN
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
Honda
SALES - SERVICE
“Where satisfaction is
standard equipment"
2401 Texas Ave.
Service For All
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
HALSELL MOTOR
COMPANY INC.
podge Sales and Service Since 192:
1411 Texas Ave. . 823-8111
JUST MAKE OUT Your List...
“White’s has it at Northgate
Bike Parts & Service, All Makes —
Plumbing .& Hardware
WHITE AUTO STORE
846-5626
charge of its willed-body program.
He said the need for willed bodies
is critical, because doctors must
learn by doing. Medical students
must have bodies to dissect, because
“that’s how they learn how the body
is put together,” he said.
“You wouldn’t want a mechanic
working on your car if he had never
taken a car apart and learned first
hand how everything worked,”
Wagner said. “It’s the same way with
doctors.”
One of the most common miscon
ceptions people have is that they will
be paid for willing their bodies to
science.
“It is illegal, not only in the state of
Texas but anywhere in the United
States, to buy bodies,” Wagner said.
In the early days of medical scien
ce, med schools would pay for
bodies. By creating a market for
bodies, medical schools inadvertent
ly gave rise to professions like grave
robbing, Wagner said. More aggres
sive individuals often took more di
rect methods like murder, which is
FREE
PREGNANCY TESTS
Immediate Appointments
Confidential Counseling
• Birth Control Information
• Termination of Pregnancy
WEST LOOP CLINIC
622-2170
2909 WEST LOOP SOUTH
HOUSTON, TEXAS 77027
why the practice of buying b
was made illegal, he said.
In spite of this, there is one finan
cial incentive for people to will their
bodies to medical schools. Texas
A&M will pay for the preparation
and transportation of the l
which can relieve the family c
financial burden of a funeral, '
ner said.
“The primary reason people
ate their bodies is to advance medic--
al science,” Wagner said. “In aver):
real sense, it is the ultimate gift."
The decision to will one’s body is
not a legally binding commitment,,
Wagner said, and the donor canal
ways change his mind. And although
the wishes of the donor take legal
precedence over the wishes of the
next-of-kin, the school is not inclined
to accept bodies against the wishesolj
the donors’ families, Wagner said
“It would be bad for medical sci
ence to rob someone of their loved
ones,” he said. For this reason,
donors are advised to notify their re
latives of their intentions when they
fill out the donation forms.
Wagner said that the Texas A&M I
medical school is scattered all over]
the campus and doesn’t have the;
facilities to prepare or store willed
bodies. The willed-body program is
currently operating on an interim |
basis in cooperation with Baylor Col
lege of Medicine, Wagner said
Baylor prepares and stores the
bodies, and transfers them here as
they are needed. Texas A&M only;
has facilities to store the few bodies
which are being used.
Construction will begin this
spring on a medical building, Wag
ner said, and the medical school is
scheduled to occupy the new build
ing in January 1983. Then the Texas
A&M medical school will be able to
handle willed bodies itself, he said,
and will probably start publicizing
the program.