CONGRESS FAILS CUTBACK TEST See Editorial Page it6 43.atl CAPRICIOUS High-71 Low-53 For details, see Today Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 24 Ann Arbor,Michigan-Wednesday, October 3, 1973 Teri Cents Six Pages & IFrOUSEE NWSHAPPCALL76NJLY Strike support The graduate student association of the history depart- ment last night voted to endorse the tuition strike. Adding their voice to those student groups that have come out in favor .of the strike, the organization also approved a measure calling for the formation of a teach- ing fellows union. They further voted for a resolution demanding that the University end all hiring practices that discriminate against minorities and women. Hayden remembers Although radical politics has taken Tom Hayden a long way from the Ann Arbor he knew as a student at the beginning of the sixties, he proved Monday night he is not one to forget an old adversary. Toward the end of the marathon Hayden-Fonda rally at Hill Ad., -Hay- den outlined a nationwide communications system which someday might bring profiles of campus radicals to lo- cal police forces. "That means that Staudenmeer will have'you'r file in his hands in no time," he said. The ubiquitous Eugene Staudenmeier, 26-year police veter- an, kept tabs on campus rads for the city police depart- ment, in case you've forgotten. He retired from the force last year. Yesterday we asked him how he remembers Hayden. "He was one of the moving forces in radical campus politics," said the mild-mannered Stoudenmeier, who is now an investigator for the Consumer Action Center. "I followed hii'm and his movement closely." Indeed, you did, Eugene. " Diag crime Salespersons for the campus yearbook "The Michigan- ensian" were the victims of a robbery yesterday after- noon while sellng orders for the books on the Diag. Four youth surrounded the sales booth, slapped away the cash box and made off with $55 of yearbook funds. " Happenings .. . ... include a visit from the Queen Mother of last year's Ozone Homecoming Parade on the Diag between 11 and 1 p.m. to promote the upcoming event . . . The Univer- sity Philharmonica presents a concert at Hill Aud. at 8 p.m. ... and on the movie scene, Antonioni's Blow-Up plays at Aud. A at 7 and 9 p.m. . . . Wellman's The Pres- ident Vanishes is at the. Arch. Aud. at 7 and 9:05 p.m., and Perry's Play It as It Lays is at Nat. Sci. Aud. at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. 0 Discrimination ended It looks like everyone will get a chance to don the ant- lers of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. At their national convention in Chicago, members voted by a 4-1 margin to permit, blacks and other minority groups to join the organization. Said Robert Yothers, grand exalted ruler of the nation's largest fraternal or- der, "The Order of Elks can get back to concentrating its efforts on the many benevolent and charitable works for which it has been famous for more than 105 years." That hasn't been the only thing the group's been famous for. Students protest Thousands of students at Beunos Aires University early yesterday occupied all buildings on campus in protest against the dismissal of their leftwing rector. According to Peronist sources, education minister Jorge Taiana told the rector, Professor Rodolfo Puiggros, a former leader of the Argentine Communist party, that President-elect Juan Peron wanted him to resign. Later, the students demonstrated in central Buenos Aires in support of the professor. No incidents were reported. The dismissal of Puiggros follows a decision by Peron-due to take office in 10 days-to carry out what sources in the Peronist movement described as "ideological purification" of his movement and crack down on leftwingers. Astronauts still weak The Skylab 2 astronauts said yesterday they were still experiencing feelings of weakness or "tired blood" from their record 59 days in weightless space, but that they were rapidly re-adapting to earth. "It's been a bigger strain coming back than I thought," said Astronaut Alan Bean, the mission commander. "I feel a little bit weaker than when I left. It feels like I've got tired blood." But Bean added that he and astronauts Jack Lousma and Owen Garriott were "physically getting back to where we started." KKK wedding As a 20-foot cross burned nearby, Martin Miller, 43, and Clarice Hill, 37-wearing traditional white Ku Klux Klan robes and.hoods-were joined in holy matrimony. Saying that they chose a KKK wedding "because it is'so mean- ingful and beautiful", the toolmaker and warehouse clerk exchanged vows in a field Saturday night near Lewis- burg, Ohio. On hand to officiate was Rev. Robert Miles of Cohoctah, Mich., national KKK, chaplain and all-round good guy. How touching. On the inside ... .. .Nixon-style tactics in the university are discussed by Chris Parks on the Editorial Page . . .Marc Feldman looks at "super safety" Dave Brown on the Sports Page . . . and on the Arts Page, Jim Schiop writes about Arthur Miller, our resident playwright this fall, and the mini course he will help teach. Abortion safeguar ds to By PENNY BLANK Almost nine months after Michi- gan's 127-year-old abortion law was struck down by the U. S. Su- preme Court, abortions are per- formed everyday in the state with- out legal limitations or safeguards for women seeking them. No new law' has replaced the old one voided Feb. 16. Health offic- ials and legal authorities, there- fore, fear that it may take a tragic death from an unregulated "legal" abortion to shock legislators into action. ON JAN. 22, the High Court ruled that states cannot prohibit women from having abortions during the first six months of pregnancy al- though they may regulate the abor- tion procedure to protect the wo- man's health, past the first tri- mester of pregnancy. Legislation along these guidelines set down by the court has been pending in both the state House. and Senate since Feb., but is be- ing held up in committee. Meanwhile, countless abortion clinics have opened and closed in rapid succession throughout the state, as women have become more selective in choosing where to ter- minate their pregnancies. THE CITY will not have a clinic until a chapter of the nationwide Planned Parenthood opens one Nov. 15. Abortions can be obtained with relative ease for under $200 in the state, but women must beware of so-called "rip-off artists" and "fly- by-night" clinics, according to re- ferral, service spokespersons. To a Michigan woman, getting an abortion no longer has to mean a clandestine and costly quick trip to New York. IT DOESN'T HAVE to hean she has to sign her "mental stability" away just to satisfy a hospital board to grant a therapeutic abor- tion. It also doesn't need to involve risking her physical well-being to a stranger in an upper room down a back alley. Non-profit social services groups such as Planned Parenthood, Michi- gan Clergy Counseling Service, or the recently - defunct Contracep- tion, Abortion, Pregnancy, Sex In- formation Service (CAPSIS) have been looked to for advice, referral ng and understanding by area women seeking termination of their preg- nancies. OF THE ESTIMATED 20 abor- tion clinics doing business in the Detroit area three outpatient clinics are recommended by these organiz- ations - Keemer Clinic, Summit Medical Center, and Women's Health Service. These clinics do not advertise, but rely on referral from respon- sible non-profit groups for patients. Their procedures, facilities, and personnel have been found to meet the standards outlined in Feb. by 'erdue State Health Director Maurice Rei- zen, according to Clergy Counsel- ing and groups such as the Na- tional Organization of Women. "Women in their first trimester are referred to Detroit clinics. "We've received excellent reports on them," Ellen Macdonald, a counselor at Ann Arbor Planned Parenthood, said. IF FINANCING for an abortion is a problem, she said, "Planned Parenthood handles the negotia- tions with the clinics, who are anx- ious to stay in our good graces." See ABORTION, Page 2 FUEL ALLOCATION PROGRAM Nixon or ers gas, oil controls r "???:ii4i'I:y??r.?ii?'-ii: v::::4-. :::: ?...: r::v: :...::.:: ..:.. .. ........ S - ,, r:-:r:rr:8";::: i:; ?: ?>;i:?r:r:..c:?:o?:x::::;:.??:?.io.?:o-r>?. : -::::.:i::i Cl i::.. j i:: .. ..... :n :.; Jv:3:;": i^'.:.:.?....::: :.:: ;: ;:",.tUx:Y.;:{;"yt.: i:;i ?y::::::i v?::.::. : ::.::: .L :::::::::::. .: ........ ?-:iii.... .... _. _. SGC ELECTIONS: n a me..:iv:: iiviii^i-: it-:;?:":-vii.:iiii?^it!i+";~ii:Y.-Y;'Yii": CLAMP changes on paraffin and diesel and jet weeks. The mandatory allocation pro- gram was announced by John Love, director of the energy policy office in the White House, following a a breakdown in a voluntary allo- cation system set up by the Ad- ministration earlier this year. Love said there would be fuel shortages in the coming winten and perhaps' over the next few years, although he did not believe the problem would , be unmanagable this year. ROGERS MORTON, secretary of the interior, said the comfort of Americans late this year and early next year would depend on how severe the weather was.. Love disclosed that the 4dminis- tration was considering plans for the direct rationing of heating oil used by consumers,but he said there was no intention at the pre- sent time to put them into effect. THE ADMINISTRATION set up a list of priorities for propane gas, including farm production, food processing, the transportation in- dustry, hospitals, and essential gov- ernment services. A similar priority system for home-}heating oil was drawn up. Distributors will sell heating oil on the basis of allocated supplies received from refineries. Love said the shortage of home heating oil would be most pro- nounced in the heavily industrial- ized Northeast and the upper Mid- west, while shortages of propane gas were likely to be felt in rural and food-producing areas. "THE PURPOSE of the manda- tory allocation system is to ensure a more equal -distribution of our fuels so that no one area of the country will suffer undue short- ages," Love said. Love warned that mandatory al-; locations could not increase the supply of heating fuel or propane gas, and said that Congress must approve proposals from President Nixon to increase supplies. These proposalssinclude con- struction of an Alaskan oil pipeline from the oil-rich north slopes of Alaska, the construction of deep- water ports to permit large tank- ers to unload, and price deregula- tion of natural gas. THE PIPELINE has long been a pet project of the Nixon admin- istration. Conservationists have fought long and hard against the proposal, however, arguing it will do serious damage to the Alaskan landscape and wildlife. fuel, are to begin in about two Austrian transit to stay shut VIENNA, Austria (P-) - Chan- cellor Bruno Kreisky yesterday re- fused ,a dramatic personal request by Israeli Premier Golda Meir that he reverse hisfdecision to close group transit facilities for Soviet Jewish emigrants. Kreisky told a news conference after a 1 hour meeting with Meir that he had proposed as an alterna- tive that the United Nations high commissioner for refugees be ask- ed to assume responsibilities for the nearby Schoenau Castle trans- it camp for Soviet Jews enroute to Israel. THE AUSTRIAN government agreed last Saturday to close the camp in return for the release of four hostages held by two Palestin- ian terrorists. The decision prompt- ed strong protests from Israel and the sudden visit by Meir. She has criticized the agreement to close the camp as "the greatest encouragement to terror through- out the world." Kreisky said there was "no spe- cial reaction" from Meir regard- ing his suggestion that the United Nations take'over the camp. "The question.is still on the agenda," he. said. QUE STIONED closely on the matter, Kreisky added that Meir was "not very impressed by my proposal. Perhaps she did not think it was very realistic." The atmosphere ofthesmeeting was "very serious," Kreisky said, and it was apparent that his en- counter with the Israeli Prime Min- ister had been strained. Meir left Austria to fly home without making any statement to newspersons. KREISKY SAID the decision, to close the camp would not bar the travel of individuals through Aus- tria. "Only special facilities We have been able to grant so far will no longer be available," he said. but not party plat form By STEPHEN SELBST Like Exxon, Campus Coalition (CC) has changed its name, but not its gas. Basically it's the same party that ran candidates last spring under the CLAMP label- Coalition of Liberals and Moder- ates Party. As the name suggests, the party is a fairly loose coalition and as such takes no singular position on issues. Despite the lack of party discipline, however, certain themes run through the comments of all party members-particularly with regards to current Student Govern- ment Council (SGC) policies. CC PEOPLE are concerned al- most to the point of obsession with the question of fiscal responsibil- ity. All feel the student govern- ment in the past has wasted large amounts of student money. They point specifically to expensive elec- tions and appropriations granted to various activist organizations. Instead they would like to see SGC get involved in what they see as "more tangible and less con- troversial projects." Candidate Jeff Schiller summed up a common feeling among party members when he said, "SGC can do things for the students, like the grocery co-op and the meat co-op. But monetary support of nebulous activist groups simply accomplishes little." Most members of the party are generally opposed to the new 10-10- 10 representation plan which will greatly expand the size of SGC. Schiller again captured the ma- jority sentiment when he com- mented, "I like the representation part, but I'm kind of leary about the members." HILL ADDED, "Town meetings went out in the 17th century." CC is running the largest and most complete slate of any of the parties onthe ballot. In the resi- dential constituency David Faye and Robert Gordon are running from the residence halls while Dick Needleman and Maureen Muldar represent independent housing. From the divisional constituency, CC is running three candidates for undergraduate positions: David Rosenthal, David Lambert and Robert van Nieuwkerk. In the school - college area CC is running four LSA candidates: Jean Neuchterlein, Greg Millman, Pete Shinevar and Bill Armstrong. The law school spot is being sought by Jim Hill, and Greg Higby is currently running unopposed for the pharmacy slot. POWER PLAY GOP jo By GORDON ATCHESON Daily News Analysis The Republican City C o u n d i 1 members have initiated a move to revise the city's ward boundaries ultimately aimed at guaranteeing a GOP victory in the pivotal Fnrth Ward in next Anril's mu- ickeys for power promise between the Democratic and Human Rights Parties (HRP) which dominated the prior council. Since then the Republicans have continually challenged the legality of the plan. Following extended litigation, the Circuit Court last August sent the turned-out to be the pivotal dis- trict. The Republicans eked out a razor-thin 360 vote victory over the Democratic challenger, thanks largely to a major split within the liberal voting bloc. The final tally gave Republican Richard Hadler 31290 votes. Demo-