Attend Mass Meeting at the DAILY tonight r~ir i1u :434hr1 STUDENT UNION See editorial page BRIGHTER High-25 Low-to See Today for details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 90 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday,, January 18, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Lesbian mother wins custody By KEVIN ROSEBOROUGH Margareth Miller's two and one-half year battle for custody of her daughter Jillian ended yesterday when the Michigan Supreme Court, in a lan- dmark decision, awarded her per- manent custody, reversing lower court rulings. "Two and one-half years of trauma and pain has ended," said an ecstatic Miller of yesterday's ruling. "Jillian has been living with me since the court fight started, but we never knew when someone might come and take her away." THE SUPREME Court, ruling on the issue of child custody by a homosexual. parent for the first time, stated in their decision that " the record does not present clear and convincing evidence that the change of custody is in the best interest of the child." Although the Supreme Cour ruling overruled an earlier decision that many charges were made because of Ms. Miller's sexual preference, there is some question as to the broadness of the ruling. Homosexual parental rights weren't mentioned specifically in the Court's decision, so the scope of the ruling in relation to these rights is still open to interpretation. Miller's ex-husband, Paul Miller, gained custody of Jillian, 12, and their son Rick, 16, after petitioning Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Frederick Ziem in September, 1976 for a change of custody. Ms. Miller had had custody of the two children for four years after the couple was divorced. Ms. Miller, who is a research assistant at the University's Institute of Social Research, was also living with her female lover. "SAY THE word 'lesbian' (in court) and everyone jumps out the window," said Miller, 38, of the proceedings. Rick moved in with his father, but Jillian was allowed to stay with her mother, and the lengthy legal battle was on. The case was heard in Oakland County Cir- case cuit Court twice and the Michigan Court of Appeals twice before being heard by the Supreme Court. "Judge Ziem relied not on the facts of the quality of the parenthood that the children were receiving to make his decision, but on his presumptions about what lesbianism is and means," said Miller's attorney, Michael Moran. "You can't adjudicate on the basis of a person's status - you must take the in- dividual facts of a case. The judge (Ziem) was considering the case on the basis of (Miller's) homosexuality, even though there was no proof that went against the existence of good paren- thood." See LESBIAN, Page 2 Carter gives vote of confidence to Iran Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Margareth and Jillian Miller smile after winning a two-and-a-half year court battle in which the lesbian mother was awarded custody of her daughter. 1,000 FEARED DEAD IN TREMOR: Fighting, earthquake r By AP and Reuter northeast province of Khorrasan, formed to supply food for survivors left TEHERAN, Jan. 17 - Less than 24 killing up to 1,000 people. homeless by the quake. hours after the shah left the country, The earthquake - the second major A major earthquake in the same area Iran's delicate political situation slid one in the province of Khorrasan in four last September destroyed the town of into confusion yesterday amid reports months - destroyed three villages and Tabas and left 15,000 people dead. of dozens of deaths in heavy army local press reports said the death toll Yesterday's tremor was reported cen- shooting in a major provincial city. may reach 1,000. tered on Birjano, 155 miles east of Informants said anti-shah militants So far, the official death toll is only Tabas. had bombarded an army garrison in 199 with 650 others injured, but rescue IN THE United States statements of Ahwaz with messages from loud- teams were still digging for bodies. support for Bakhtiar appear to have speakers Tuesday night. Troops TWO HELICOPTERS and three giant become more reserved in recent days angered by the anti-shah comments C-130 Hercules transport planes were as opposition to his 11-day-old gover- rushed into the streets yesterday mor- used yesterday to fly relief supplies nment continues unabated.. This sen- ning to confront the demonstrators. from Teheran to the disaster zone. In timent has been echoed more forcefully Local press reports said hundreds of addition, two tankers carrying in the private comments of ad- soldiers shouting "Javid Shah" (Long kerosene and water have also been sent ministration officials. live the Shah) ran through the city to the area. Undersecretary of State David mowing down dozens of people and Iran Radio said that a committee Newsom told interviewers Tuesday spraying buildings with bullets. working on behalf of the exiled religious night that while the administration con- ADDING TO Iran's problems yester- leader Ayotallah Ruhollah Khomeiny, tinues to support the Bakhtiar gover- day, a major earthquake struck the the Shahs chief opponent, had been nment, it recognizes that Iran is in the )ck Iran process of "political change." One aspect of the rapid turn of events in Iran that has struck officials here is that the once-pervasive U.S. influence has virtually disappeared with the shah's departure for a still-undisclosed destination in the United States. THE SHAH arrived in Egypt on Tuesday andI diplomatic sources said he will visit Morocco later in the week. The precipitous decline in U.S. in- fluence in Iran was a theme Newsom, stressed repeatedly in his comments on the Public Broadcast Service's "Mac- Neil-Lehrer Report." Other officials point out that if the United States was unable to save the shah, it would have even less chance of ensuring the survival of the Bakhtiar government. Despitethe limited U.S. influence, State Department spokesman Hodding Carter said yesterday that the United States still hopes to play a role in easing tensions. As for the shah's future, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance as recently as last Thursday was describing the shah's then-impending departure from Iran as a "vacation.,, But Newsom, under questioning Tuesday night, passed up the oppor- tunity to characterize it as such. Asked whether the shah plans to settle per- manently in the United States, Newsom said, "We do not know as yet what his plans are." WASHINGTON (AP)-President Carter expressed confidence yesterday that the Iranian people would be able to restore a stable government and economy to their strife-torn nation after the departure of the shah. Carter also called on the exiled Iranian religious leader, Ayatollah Khomaini, to support the new civilian government headed by Prime Minister Shapour Bakhtiar. He said the prime minister has won the support of the Iranian military "and many of the religious opponents" of the Shah of Iran, who left the Persian Gulf nation Tuesday, ending his 37-year rule. AT HIS FIRST news conference in five weeks, Carter said that despite the overthrow of the Cambodian gover- nmentrby Vietnamese-backed Cam- bodian insurgents, "We do not detect any immediate threat to the border of Thailand from the Vietnamese." But in an apparent warning to Hanoi and Moscow, Vietnam's chief ally in the communist world, he said. "We have warned both the Vietnamese and the Soviets, who supply them and support them against any danger, that they might exhibit toward Thailand." Turning to economic matters, the president said the fiscal 1980 budget, to be made public Monday, will more than meet his goal of a deficit of less than $3 billion.F HE SAID THAT any fair analysis of the new budget, which goes into effect Oct. 1, would show that it adequately meets the needs of defense as well as "meeting the legitimate needs of those who are most depending on gover- nment." Carter said that "the total alloction of funds for the poor will be increased" by $4.5 billion. But he offered no specific figures for individual programs to illustrate how the increased funding would be distributed. And the president said California Gov. Edmund Brown's call for a con- stitutional convention with the aim of amending the Constitution to prohibit budget deficits was "extremely dangerous." CARTER DEFENDED his decision to invite former president Richard Nixon to a White House state dinner Jan. 29 for Deputy Prime Minister Teng Hsiao-ping of China as "entirely proper." He said Nixon had opened up "an avenue of communications and con- sultation" with Peking, adding that Teng and other Chinese officials ex- See CARTER, Page'2 LSA-tSG _hitsr Stechuk protest endorsement-, By ADRIENNE LYONS The Literary College Student Gover- nment (LSA-SG) last night passed a resolution condemning President Bob Stechuk's endorsement against the Yigal Allon lecture last month and tabled a second resolution which would have protected the organization from future endorsement abuses. "It (the first resolution) establishes LSA-SG's position with regard to the in- cident," council member Bruce Kozar- sky said. "It condemns the incident, clarifies the original intent (of the en- dorsement of the Palestine Human Rights Committee-PHRCleaflet) and disavows council from the endor- sement." THE TROUBLE began at former Israeli foreign minister Allon's lecture December 17, when Stechuk, using the council's name, endorsed a leaflet sponsored by the PHRC, which opposed j Thursday * The government's economic report is optimistic for the coming year. See story, Page 2. " The past is reborn at the Ben- tley Historical Library. See story, Page 3. eProposal D, which officially raised Michigan's drinking age to 21 in December, is causing problems for bar owners. See story, Page 10. * Michigan's cagers hope to recover from their three-game slide. See story, Page 9. e Reed the Today column, Page 3 shapes up for '79 By JOHN SINKEVICS University officials and professors have griped about the deteriorating writing skills of incoming freshpersons as well as graduating University students for many years. As a result, the University's English department devised a special writing program last summer which will be in full swing by fall term of 1979. Under the direction of the English Composition Board (ECB), the program involves a series of pre-tests for incoming freshpersons which in- dicate to instructors the level of com- petence at which the students are per- forming. On the basis of these tests - which are taken during orientation - a student is placed in a special tutorial program, an introductory English composition course, or is allowed to forego basic composition requirements. BECAUSE THE new writing requirements are not fully effective un- til the fall of 1979, the ECB set up special introductory composition sec- tions for the current school year in English 125 for students whose assessment essays indicated need for tutorial help. Those students who suc- cessfully complete this course then get credit for English 125. Next year, students placed in the tutorial program will have to complete the requirements for that course before they can take the English composition course. Until this year, the University relied primarily on Scholastic Aptitude Test scores (SAT) and results from the Ad- vanced Placement (AP) test in English to determine exemptions for advanced students from the composition requirements. The new program in- cludes the University's own writing test and subsequent composition requirements beyond a student's frosh year. Entitled "The Upperclass Writing Requirement," the program operates in conjunction with the curriculum of a student's concentration,, and is over- seen by the ECB. Most departments at See NEW, Page 2 Ease on down the snowy road By DIANE SILVER According to one University student, the South University entrance to the Engineering Arch is the most enter- taining place on campus these days. "The ice is so bad that everybody either slips or does a little dance on their way by," she mused. For many people, the dance ends (literally) on an embarrassing note, and the slick conditions are not con- finndl to the Tnivtrcrty rnnrt Union dorm supporters to rally By MITCH CANTOR At least 50 students are expected to attend today's Regents meeting in the Administration Building as a last measure in a week-long student lob- THE RECOMMENDATIONS, tabled last month by the Regents, originated out of the Sturgis Report, a study com- pleted last year which evaluated the Union's facilities. Though the four per- students to make long-distance calls to the Regents from the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) office for no charge. MSA allocated $500 to the drive earlier this month. I , ; p , .k .. .,. .h <:: . : .s. ._..:,. IIB'iliU l 'J.:+}... .. .'t. ,._a...: .. x N 52.tie';i '*_ 'ci,%h '_k ^S..Lti.... ... .C'u u'.X .£.kt