X S firMrn I aily Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 I Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in ol reprints. SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: LARRY LEMPERT Abortion law reform: Time tomake another try AS THE NEW SESSION of the State Leg- islature opened Wednesday, Ann Ar- bor's Sen. Gilbert Bursley renewed his admirable struggle for reform of state abortion laws by introducing a bill which would allow abortions to be performed whenever a woman requested the opera- tion. The abortion issue is an emotion-laden one, and there is a great tendency f o r proponents of one philosophy or another to generate a great deal of heat trying to convince others of one correct moral per- spective on the issue. The central point of the movement for abortion reform should be this: Each wo- man must decide the moral, religious and personal questions involved in abortion, and society must respect her decision. A woman must have ultimate control over the functions of her body. Bursley's bill is not perfect. It requires 90 days residence in the state to qualify for abortion-on-demand. It also requires single women under 18 to obtain consent for the operation from a parent or legal guardian. The residency requirement was ob- viously included by Bursley with good in- tentions - to prevent overcrowding of state medical facilities with women from other states seeking legal abortions. Yet for one dedicated to reforming the law in order to make abortion available to as many women as possible, Bursley's action is inconsistent. Hopefully, the provision can be removed and efforts turned to a positive movement for abortion law re- form in other states. The provision requiring parental con- sent for young women is naively optimis- tic. Single young women under 18 often need abortions for the very reason that they are unable to face their families with news of their pregnancy. J u s t as treatment of venereal disease and distri- bution of contraceptives are done on a private basis with young persons, so should abortion and abortion counseling. LAST YEAR, abortion law reform was defeated by one vote when a group of Catholics from suburban Detroit cornered their state senator and pressured him to change his vote at the last minute. This year, that political pressuring must be matched by those concerned with realis- tic r e f o r m. Gov. Milliken has backed abortion reform, and concerned citizens must remind him that he is morally com- mitted to using all of his influence to ac- complish that objective. The vote will again be close. The lead- ing advocate of abortion reform - and the only female state senator - Lorraine Beebe (R-Dearborn) ,was defeated last November in a bid for re-election. For this reason, support for abortion reform must be made known now, at the grass roots level. Only a strong outpour- ing of public opinion can counteract the established .and powerful anti-abortion lobbies already operating in Lansing. -JIM NEUBACHER Editorial Page Editor The Dinosaurs and By DAVE CHUDWIN VEVEN SOCIETIES that worship their ancestors don't make them chairmen of congressional committees," quiped former Congress- man Allard Lowenstein last year as he was arguing for reform in the seniority system. If Lowenstein was being flippant., his mood was appropriate for the tragicomedy of the last session of Congress. At one point, no less than six filibusters were going on at once in the Senate. Committees in both houses kept important legislation from reaching the floor. These types of blunders demonstrate that reform of the seniority system and rules of procedure are necessary if Congress is to retain any public confidence at all. Under the seniority system, rigidly in effect since 1911, representa- tives or senators with the most years of service are automatically nam- ed chairmen of committees- where most of the work of Con- gress actually takes place. The result is that, at an age when most people a r e retiring. tired old men take charge of com- mittees and continue through se- nility and illness until they die. The average age of House chair- men is 69-years old and the aver- age age in the Senate is 67. Some of the most powerful chairmen - veterans such as William Colmer of the House Rules Committee and Emanuel Celler of the House Ju- diciary Committee - are over 80. Although a few of the old men who run Congress are alert and healthy, the infirmities of old age generally produce a hardening of ideas as well as of arteries. McCormack Younger members, w h o enter Jh eom c Congress full of energy and ideas, must wait as long as 30 years for a chairmanship as they stand in line hoping to outlive their colleagues. ANOTHER RESULT of the seniority system is that one-party states and House districts, usually Southern and conservative, which re-elect the same person decade after decade have an inordinate amount of congressional influence. In the Senate for example, 55 per cent of the committee chairmen are from the South compared with 37 per cent of the total membership. This conservative tinge often prevents Congress from facing up to the nation's needs until a crisis situation intervenes. Since committees must generally approve legislation before it can be brought to the floor, all-powerful chairmen can personally block committee consideration of bills or use their influence to kill them. For example, former Rep. Howard Smith of Virginia, chairman of the House Rules Committee from 1955 to 1967, postponed or killed numerous civil rights, housing, education, health and welfare bills for years during his tenure. 4 Alo4 From Here to Eternity Letters to The Daily *" 4,. Free abortion counseling available in Ann, Arbor HILE DEBATE over reform of the state's antiquated abortion 1 a w s drags on in the Legislature, women in Michigan will find themselves in need of abortion counseling, and perhaps abor- tions. Currently, the most obvious method of obtaining a legal abortion is in New York State. The legalization of abortion in that state has prompted the birth and growth of a maze of abortion counseling and "re- ferral" services, all operating with pri- marily commercial interests at heart. Some of these "service agencies" adver- tise from time to time in The Daily. It- should be pointed out that there are a number of places r i g h t on campus where women can obtain free, profession- al, and sincere counseling concerning problem pregnancies: --Clergy consultation service of the Of- fice of Religious Affairs, 764-7442; -Women's Abortion Counseling Ser- vice, 663-2363. WOMEN WHO ASK to speak with a counselor at each of these numbers will receive knowledgeable information from professionals and persons who know what they are doing. There is no charge for the counseling. Care is taken in counseling to consider all the alternatives for action, and to help the woman respond to the pressures she is feeling and to help her make her own decision. In the event that a woman decides to h a v e an abortion, care is taken to prepare her for that ex- perience and directly aid her in locating a legal, medically safe facility which will treat her. The University Health Service assists with medical service and advice. Pollution To the Daily: THE CONCLUSION of the De- partment of the Interior that an oil pipeline across Alaska is es- sential to the "growth and se- curity" of the nation, even at the cost of almost certain environ- mental damage, is hardly surpris- ing or inconsistent. With few ex- ceptions it has been traditional al- ways to place obvious economic benefits above the less tanglible qualities of an unspoiled natural environment. The Alaska pipeline decision grows logically out of such a tradition. Yet in a sense, the Alaska case embodies the whole philosophy of man in relation to the environ- ment. The issue arises at a time when some recognition is being given to the value of natural en- vironment per se. More import- antly, Alaska contains the 1 a s t large natural environment in the United States and one of the few remaining in the world. The con- clusion that disruption of the last natural area is necessary is tanta- mount torthe conclusion that man and nature cannot coexist and that man must inevitably con- quer nature. IT IS TO BE hoped that as wilderness dwindles, its value - as a spiritual and recereational re- source for man and as an essen- tial part of the biophysical sys- tem of a healthy Earth - should increase, to the point where man opts in favor of what little wilder- ness remains even though he takes an immediate economic loss. Yet if the Alaskahdecision is sustained, even that hope must be dashed. For if the last great wilderness is sacrificed to continuing economic growth, there can be little doubt that this philosophy of growth will dominate human activity even to the point where all the earth is exploited for man's material gain. WILDERNESS and nature have been deeply intertwined with the spiritual and historical develop- ment of man. For many, the exist- ence of wilderness gives meaning and refreshment to an otherwise mechanized life. The Alaska pipeline decision is symbolic of man's negating all ties with nature. In so doing he denies his own past and v e r y likely his future as well. -Richard L. T. Wolfson School of Natural Resources r a a t 5 THE expertise SENIORITY SYSTEM is not all bad - it provides stability, and prevents deals in selection - but the country seriously needs the benefit of young ideas and vigorous leadership. A number of proposals h a v e been offered to make committee chairmen accountable f o r their actions and to limit their tenure and each of them has merit. Perhaps the best is being pro- moted by a group of Democrats and Republicans in the House, which has the best possibility for reform since t h e retirement of Speaker John McCormack, 79, last month. The plan pushed by the Demo- crats would retire all chairmen at age 70 and limit committee chair- manship to eight years. The Re- publican version would have GOP members confirm top Republican* posts. If the country is to be rescued as well as the House, should give top Wright Patman from senile dinosaurs, the Senate, priority to these reform proposals. AFSCME To the Daily: WE. THE UNDERSIGNED stu- My Lai massacre trials: And the farce continues -J. N. dents of Engineering Council, wish to express our concern for t h e conditions under which employes of the University are forced to work. The pay scale of the Uni- versity workers it far below any reasonable standard for subsist- ence. The discriminatory prac- tices against blacks, women, a n d union workers are intolerable. WE THEREFORE support the demands of AFSCME Local 1583 for wage increases and an end to discrimination. Since our dollars help to maintain the University, we have a right to the necessary services for the operation of t h e University. Until the union de- mands are met, we will be depriv- ed of that right. -Jay M. Babich and 14 others Jan. 14 Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to M a r y Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters sub- mitted. THE SECOND area where there is tremendous room for reform is the rules of the House and especially the Senate. The unlimited debate allowed by the Senate might have been a good idea in a less complex age, but Congress has too much work now for such a luxury. Under present Senate rules debate can be cut off only if two-thirds of the Senate approves. The result has been a series of filibusters on civil rights, reform of the electoral college, President Nixon's family assistance plan, the Cooper-Church amendment, the supersonic trans- port and numerous other bills. A number of Senators are proposing to reduce the cloture require- ment from two-thirds to three-fifths of the Senators present. If the upper chamber wants to fulfill its responsibilities to the people by voting up or down proposed legislation rather than talking bills to death, it will hopefully approve the change. BESIDES FILIBUSTERS, the Senate also wastes its time in hours* of windy speeches which have nothing to do with legislation. These tri- butes to deceased constituents and avowals of concern about unim- portant matters, known as "morning business" or more accurately as the "alibi hour," are generally delivered to an empty chamber. The Sen- ate must wait until this period is finished before it can get to work. A group of Senators has proposed switching the "alibi hour" to late afternoon. That way, if Senators wish to orate, they can do so in the # twilight hours after their colleagues have gone home. THE FARCE CALLED the My Lai massa- cre trials took another lurch in its course Thursday when a six-officer court martial in Ft. McPherson, Ga. acquitted Army Sgt. Charles E. Hutto of assault and intent to commit murder. It really seems that the only difference the verdict makes is in Hutto's personal freedom. He is now going to be able to leave the Army within a week, and rejoin society as a free man. Hutto admitted opening fire on unarm- ed civilians in My Lai, but claimed he was "following orders." His attorney argued that his conviction would open the way for "every GI" to question orders. And thus, on that logic, Hutto was ac- quitted. The entire point of the lesson which diorial Slafg MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN, Editor should be drawn from the My Lai massa- cre has apparently been lost: One cannot expect that young recruits, dropped into a "free fire zone" with orders to destroy everything in the village will do long and serious thinking about their personal re- sponsibilities and obligations. It is far too late, at that point, to expect anything other than a massacre. When every ac- tion, every premise of the U.S. presence in Indochina had pointed toward a My Lai for 10 years, there was hardly any- thing else to expect. Sgt. Hutto was not the one who should have been on trial for what happened at My Lai. Perhaps there is a strange sort of justice in his acquittal after all. -J. N. Chaney, Steve Koppman, Pat Mahoney, Rick Perloff. COPY EDITORS: Tammy Jacobs, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Juanita Anderson, Anita Crone, Linda Dreeben. Alan Lenhoff, Mike McCarthy, Zack Schiller, John Shamraj. Geri Sprung, Kristin Ringstrom, Gene Robinson, Chuck Wilbur. Edw\ard Zimmerman.' (h IC, ..C i'l i KIPS CAME LOMG. OK)TILl TI CU16 LAO~. 1 /4 l4 4 T IW0O6AT rlt&AS GEM N z T r d1:LOA F1r L)MTh.. $6E ELh6K)TARY UUD KIPS CAME II& L2FT- I STUART GANNES Editorial Director JUDY SARASOHN Managing Editor ,. I