3tfr41!Jan I4uti I Anniversary: Abortion struggle goes on :k4f Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1974 A women's rights victory THE SUPREME COURT ruled Monday that it is unconstitutional for school boards to set an arbitrary time when women teachers must give up their jobs, during pregnancy, on the grounds that such time requirements violate an indi- viduals right to due process. This ruling is gratifying to women's rights advocates who have long contend- ed that a woman's reproductive func- tion should not be arbitrarily used against her in the . economic market- place. The Court held that school boards could only require that pregnant teach- ers notify the school boards of their con- dition. Because the particular cases under ap- peal to the Court dealt with school board rules in Cleveland and Chesterfield County, Virginia, the decision does not directly affect similar rules that burden women in other occupations. IT IS POSSIBLE however that such rules in other occupations will begin to die out as employers note the prece- dent indirectly set by Monday's ruling. As a result less tortuous time and money will have to be spent fighting such rules in the courts. Meanwhile, the Court's decision is hopefully only a prelude to other legisla- tive and judicial findings that will make possible even more economic par- ticipation and self-sufficiency for women. By KATHLEEN FOJTIK HERE WE ARE at the first anniversary (Jan. 22) of the Supreme Court Decision on Abortion, and unfortunately a backlash has swept this country like you would not believe. Thanks to the activities of the Right-to- Life groups, any type of legislation dealing with family planning or health services to women has been dubbed "permissive legis- lation." Therefore, no matter how rational or necessary, this legislation is being defeat- ed, ignored, or generally put in jeopardy by male dominated legislative bodies, and this is especialy true here in Michigan. During 1973 in Michigan, Senate Bill 558 which would have allowed licensed physic- ians to render contraceptive services to minors upon their request was quickly de- feated, with little discussion and very little publicity. Senate Bill 221 which would allow for the teaching of birth control information in sex education classes in public schools is currently still, caught in the H o u s e Health and Education Committee, and it looks destined to die there if more support does not quickly emerge. THESE TWO BILLS are examples of pre- ventive legislation, not permissive. Many of those that worked for the defeat of these bills also gathered in Detroit's Kennedy Square on Sunday to hear our Republican Lieutenant Governor speak in favor of an amendment to the U.S. Constitution which would reverse the Supreme Court Abortion Decision. News reports have ittthat 1,000 persons showed up in the rain at Kennedy Square, "Much is being done to persuade legislators to oppose "pre- ventive" legislation which pertains to women and their free- dom of choice. Those of us that support freedom of choice must stand up and be counted, no matter how controversial or unpleasant the issue." .... .. . .... .. ": .:rA.. .. ... . .:".{vRv4::r.::}::: r::."}. . { r~v"v".."?t""A:{}:":r:%%r":v d and others paraded around Washington with guilt-inducing red roses for the legislators. These self-proclaimed "righters" are, in- terestingly enough, according to a recent poll, 75 per cent in favor of capital punish- ment, yet their believe in one absolute - "the right to life" as long as they are defining who has the right and why does not. Unfortunately, preventive education by trained professionals, both physicians and teachers, is somehow construed to be "per- missive" and harmful to our children and society, and the State Legislature has chosen to withhold this factual, scientific data and information from our high school aged citizens. Is it democracy when legislative, body non-medical reasons, to pick and choose which services they wish to provide, des- pite the fact that the Supreme Court De- cision said that abortion services could not be refused for reason of conscience. The distinction is that individuals have the right and freedom to pick and choose their actions and beliefs according to their own conscience; however, institutions do not have consciences, and institutions should not be encouraged to impose ,their moral inter- pretation on others. THIS ARTICLE is meant to remind in- dividuals that much is being done to per- suade legislators to oppose "preventive" (not "permissive") legislation which per- tains to women and their freedom of choice. Those of us that, support freedom of choice must stand up and be counted, no matter how controversial or unpleasant the issue. Information and services need to be avail- able to people, so that they may have the freedom of choice to absorb the information and seek the service, or decline the infor- mation and rfuse the service. If you agree with any of the above, please stand up and be counted. Write or call members of the House Health and Educa- tion Committee. Write or call the Gover- nor's office. Write or call me. Kathleen Fojtic is Washtenaw County Conmissioner for the Fourteenth District, and Vice President of the Ann Arbor Chap- ter of the National Organization for Wo- men. She, can be contacted at the Washte- naw County Building in Ann Arbor. Obviously, emotional hysteria is rampant, and logic is sparse when these issues are debated in open forum. BUT, MOST WILL adhere to -the old adage that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure and, hopefully, most will agree that contraception is the preferred means of birth control. With contraception preferred over abor- tion, it seems logical that it should not be against the law in Michigan for a teach- er in public schools to answer questions, or give out factual information concerning contraceptive devices. It also seems logical that physicians should be allowed to render contraceptive services to minors without breaking another law. withholds access to information from a given segment of the population? THIS POLICY is much more harmful to our children and our society than the preventive information which would be rendered or taught if the current laws were reversed to allow for the teaching of this informa- tion. Not only are many persons working for the defeat of preventive legislation, they are also supporting highly unconstitutional legis- lation such as. Senate Bill 156 which Gov- ernor Milliken recently signed into law, though he was aware of the unconstitutional nature of the bill. This law allows hospitals and other in- stitutions to refuse to provide abortion ser- vices. It allows medical institutions, for Sterilization non-guidelInes LAST SUMMER two young girls in Ala- bama were sterilized in a federally- funded clinic after their illiterate mother signed ai "X" on a consent form. An in- vestigation soon made it clear that nei- ther the parents nor the girls had under- stood that sterilization was to be per- formed. Investigations also showed that nearly 100 poor teen-agers, many illiterate or re- tarded, were sterilized by federally-fund- ed family planning clinics throughout the country in the last year and a half. Such operations were to be voluntary, but as was shown, it is easy for officials to gain consent from those who really do not understand what is going on. In light of all this, new guidelines for such operations on minors and those judged incompetent have been drawn up, but they are dangerously inadequate. All such proposed operations on minors and incompetents would have to be ap- proved by a local panel appointed by the clinic director. Thus the review commit- tee would probably be inclined to ap- prove the director's recommendations. FEW SAFEGUARDS exist against abuse by people who might arbitrarily de- cide to bar some citizens from the. right to reproduce-especially the poor, the non-white and the retarded. It is just such people who often use federally funded clinics, of course. With publicity of such cases as those last sum- mer and the lack of stiff regulation, there is little wonder that some raise the cryof genocide. U.S. Intlience: Joke with no humor Refreshing attitude ALTHOUGH IT MAY not have much ef- fect on their political and economie policies, Japanese Premier Kakuei Tana- ka's statement that Japanese should learn from criticism that has been raised in several South East Asian countries is refreshing. Compared to the officials in the Nixon administration, Tanaka comes off as a pillar of candor. Perhaps what Japan is learning is that economic imperialism has the same ill ef- fects and produces the same resentments as colonial imperialism. Japan has spent much of this century attempting to promote Japanese econom- ic hegemony in East Asia, a policy that has resulted in the riots and burned Japanese products that greeted Tanaka TODAY'S STAFF: News: Dan Biddle, Barbara Cornell, Ted. Evanoff, Chris Parks, Charles St e i n , Ted Stein Editorial Page: Marnie Heyn, Eric Schoch, Eric Williams Arts Page: Diane Levick Photo Technician: David Morgolick throughout his recent tour of Southeast Asia. The United States has pursued a simi- lar policy throughout the world and has reaped simialr results - anti-American riots and kidnapped corporation offic- ials. WHAT IS INTERESTING is the reac- tion of .Tanaka during his trip. For example, when That students demon- strated in Bangkok, Tanaka met with them and listened to their complaints. He displayed little of the arrogance that one often finds in Americans leaders traveling abroad. Of course, Tanaka made no specific promises and Japanese policy may be little affected, at least not very soon. But what is important is that Japa- nese officials appear ready to admit that they may be wrong and may have some- thing to learn. It would be nice to see the same atti- tude in upper echelon officials of the United States government, who seem to spend most of their time trying to con- vince foreign countries to learn from the U.S. By GARY THOMAS WATERGATE has had one very beneficial effect on the Amer- ican public: it has educated them about that mysterious combine of organizations known collectively as the intelligence community. Anybody watching the Senator Sam Show this past summer got a quickie course in the clandestine operations of the FBI, CIA, Mili- tary Intelligence and a variety of other "spook" organizations. I found this particularly gratify- ing. Since my discharge from the ranks of Army Intelligence in 1971, I had been consistently amazed at the ignorance of the American peo- ple as to their domestic and fore- ign spy apparatus. This past fall, I spent a d a y talking with Victor Marchetti and Jon Marks, two men who have been under a court order not to publish their book about the CIA and the intelligence community. Marchetti is a former special as- sistant to Richard Helms, the former CIA director, and had pre- viously written a fascinating novz1 on the agency entitled "The Dope Dancer". Marks is a former State Department intelligence analyt. For the record, I am a former in- telligence coordinator from t h e Army. DURING THE course of our con- versation, I questioned Marchetti as to the real competence of t h e agency, since my own experience with them had been somewhat lUm- ited. Marchetti smiled, and replied, "Let me put it this way: the real reason the agency doesn't want us to publish our book is that it world be very embarrassing. There's nothing in there that would dam- age national security. Their real fear is being laughed at, at losing that powerful myth of the super spook that has existed in people's minds for all' too long." Marchetti is right. Watergate has shown the CIA and its c o h o r t s in the intelligence professian to be full of incurable romantics like E. Howard Hunt who really believe their own myths about themselves. The agency knows that half their power lies in the secrets and myths surrounding them. THERE ARE a great many bli- thering incompetents in the intelli- gence community, not the least cf whom is the CIA director himself, William Colby. Colby was the architect of the CIA/Army "Phoneix Program," whose stated purpose was "neutral- members in the harmless Marxist study group, and spent months es- tablishing his bona fides as a committed Communist. But people started droppang out, until, after a few mon-hs, there were only six remaining. These, the agent thought, must be the h irdcore, and he regularly report- ed on their activities for a number of months. Then some sharp mind did a little checking and found the entire cell consisted of the FBI, CIA, local police Red Squad, Army Intelligence, Air Force hnttli- gence, and a Treasury Agent. THE SECOND reason the Labor Committee's charge is full of holes is the very nature of the people who work for it in the intelligence community. The truth is, they ire just plain incompetent. Can one honestly believe a system which authored such a brilliant fiasco as the Bay of Pigs really be capable of a massive brainwashing scheme with, of all people, the KGB? Those spooks at Langley live for "outwitting the opposition," a n d are frigid lovers to the C 1 Id War. There's just no way theyd work with the KGB -- it would go against the grain of every E. Ilow- ard Hunt that the system's school for spies has ever produced. The intelligence community eats up the type of paranoid rhetoric propagated by such groups as the Labor Committee. It feeds the clandestine ego and reinforces the myth of the all powerful secret cabal of government spies. There are plenty of government' spies, to be sure, but their re- sourcefulness is offset by their sheer incompetence and bungling. Watergate was typical of claud..s- tine operations, and all one can do is chuckle that they were so in- competent at such a totally use- less, not to say, idioic, scheme. IF WE CONTINUE to reinforce the myth, then we are respoisible for the ensuing madness. If, on the other hand, we are armed with facts and a sense of humor, then the clandestine mentality cannot exist. Hunt and Liddy are really Laurel and Hardy and I, for one, refuse to keep feeding their egos. They are dangerous, to be sure, - but not so dangerous that they cannot be ridiculed and laughed out of existence. The M a x w e 1 Smarts outnumber the James Bonds and what would hurt the spooks most to to turn red - a bright, shiny red blush. Gary Thomas s a Detroit cor- respondent for United Press Inter- national. 'An acute case of inferiority complex. Thinks he's the only person in town who hasn't been bugged or wiretapped.' ization of the Viet Cong Infrastrc- ture." This was supposed to be av- complished through the use of a counterterror operation. In fact, the program did nothing to cut down the political or military strength of the National Liberat;-n Front, but it did kill quite a few. people in an indiscriminate fash- ion. This program came unde- fire from many members of Congress here at home through teitimoiny from former participants in the program. Colby took the rap for this particular piece of agency hin acy, and was rewarded with the directorship of the CIA. He re- placed Richard Helms, wno is pre- sently playing footsie with the Shah of Iran as the U.S. ambassa- dor to that country. There is no doubt the apparatus is large, and conducts a massive amount of spying, wiretapping and other clandestine grames. It should not be discounted lightly. Water- gate has already shown that the spook community is capable of some pretty outrageous things. Burglary and wiretapping in the name of the god National Security is not funny. PEOPLE SHOULD not live in complete fear and paranoia about them, however. Despite what some people think about paran)ia being the highest state of conseousness, it is like a plague - very unheal- thy to carry around. I recently read charges by the National Caucus of Labor Commit- tees concerning a massive brain- washing plot by the CIA in c(1l- lusion with the Soviet inrelligence apparatus, the KGB. Anybody hav- ing any reputable information about the state of our intellige-ice sys- tem knows this is a ludicrous charge. First of all, the community is beset by bickering and petty riv- alries. The various agencies do not trust each other to the point of extreme. I remember a story re- lated to us at Army Intel'igence -School at Fort Holabird, Maryland, about how ridiculous the rivalries can be carried. It seems the Military Intelli- gence (a contradiction ri terms, I assure you) had penetrated a cell of the American Co'munist Party with an agent - a pretty easy exercise. He met all the Letters: Selling en ightmen L 1 ,: . !' . 1t .. " To The Daily: HOW GRIEVED I was to witness the slick selling of the path to pure consciousness and inner peace. Yet even more grieved was I to see people buying it. Thursday, January 18, SIMS (Stu- dents International Meditation So- ciety) of Ann Arbor held an itro- ductory lecture before a crowd of 200 plus to promote what amounts to a 6 hour (4 sessions, 1 hours each) course. Transcendental Meditatian (TM) teaches a natural technique that "can easily be learned by every- one . . . improves clarity of per- ception, develops creative intelli- gence, expands awareness, insures full development of the individual in a natural way . . . TM is prac- promote enthusiasm (and drum up customers) which last over an hour each, the grand secret of just how to contact pure consciousness for twenty minutes twice a day is not revealed until the four sessions (even though the lecturer-teacher admits most students only need one) which cost $45 for the college students and $35 for the more im- poverished high school student. SIMPLE arithmetic shows that if 100 people sign up for the ses- sions around $4,000 will be received for what will likely be only 10-20 hours of time for the instructor. Nor will there be a bad profit mar- gin if only 50, or even 30, sign up. Of course, the lecturer argued that there is an organization to They are not primarily interested in making available the path, but only in selling their how-to-relax-in- 4-easy-lessons package in places like Ann Arbor where there is a market - impressionable students with money. A PRETTY CRAFTY scheme in- deed. These capitalists do not ever have to produce anything, no labor problems to worry about. All they need is a fancy brochure with a picture of the calm and beautiful Maharishi, a ban on non-prescrip- tive drugs, i.e. marajuana ia 1- though no ban of alcohol) to win over the right people, and a slick- talking, coat-and-tied salesman. I only wish that people would find a path to buy that is not with a quotation from John Allen which is fair neither to Allen nor to people in the English Department who teach film. The quotation, with the fifteen words preceeding it, has Allen say that because the English Depart- ment has an area interest in film, that interest will be addressed in a manner that is "exclusively liter- ary," which is to suggest that peo- )le teaching in English (or His- tory, or Psychology, or History of Art) are narrow creatures cap- able of 'mastering only one disci- pline and able to apply to other dis- ciplines only their own terms. Thus people in fields o t h e r than music cannot intelligently re- 3pond to and analyze the use of music in film .and the sam i tn it Film Resources Committee, I be- lieve a film and video program should be strongly interdisciplin- ary, drawing upon the talents of people across the entire range of the university, and that it should in- clude instruction in the making of film and video tape. I am presently giving a great deal of my time to the creation of such a program. What we are try- ing to do in English is simply to bring together students and facul- ty i English who have a strong interest in film. We are attempting to do the same with the other spec- ial areas (fiction, etc.).that a r e taught by members of our depart- ment. -William Alexander / / I rI rf 'N' W& MEU / IR~i5, I inuuIwIUMIrl 11" \ 5 t$ IMMM