Page Six ERA CONTROVERSY: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 9 4 9, 1918 .4 Amendment By The Associated Press The (ERA) inching but has states. Equal Rights Amendment to the U. S. Constitution is its way toward ratification, run into trouble in several Two states that previous-'" ly adopted the amendment are con- sidering measures to rescind ap- proval. Minnesota and Oregon yesterdayI passed the amendment bringing the total to 26 states granting ap- Tanks shield Caribbean capital SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic, (Reuters) - Tanks and armored cars moved into the cap- ital of the Dominican Republic yes- terday in the strongest show of force since the government report- ed that a small group of guerril- las landed on thesoutherncoast Sunday. President Joaquin Balaguer al-I leged that the landing was a diver-j sionary movement to draw troops away from the capital, where he said an uprising had been planned. According to military reports, three soldiers and one guerrilla were killed in clashes near the landing area Monday. Tanks were positioned in key areas around the city yesterday while strong forces of police and troops in trucks and armored car- riers patrolled downtown streets. Balaguer said in a televised speech that the guerrilla party to- taled 10 men. Two in civilian clothes were believed to have slip- ped into Santo Domingo. The eightf others, in olive green uniforms, moved into a mountain area, where they were, being hunted by troops, he said. He said the guerrillas were "sin- gularly experienced men, trained in Cuba and other communist countries." Balaguer repeatedsthat former President Juan Bosch, who was ousted by the armed forces in Sep- tember 1963, was involved in the guerrilla plot. Bosch, hunted bypolice since the reported landing, has denied this in statements smuggled to newspapers.. proval. ERA needs passage by 38 states to become law. About a half dozen states have rejected the pro- posal, it is pending in the rest. The language of the proposed amendment is simple: "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the Unit- ed States or by any state on ac- count of sex." The issues it has raised, how- ever, have been complex and of- ten controversial. Opponents claim the amendment would create chaos in the nation's legal system and would result in women being draft- ed - an argument rendered moot by the recent end of the draft. Montana State Sen. John Mc- Donald, an opponent of the meas- ure, argued during debate: "If Jesus wanted people to be equal, he would have had six men and six women apostles." , The amendment was passed by the Montana House of Representa- tives, killed by the Senate, revived on a technicality and tabled. Pas- sage this session is considered un- likely. A house committee in Georgia held hearings on the amendment on Wednesday. Martha Gaines of Atlanta, representing the Georgia branch of the National Organiza- tion of Women, claimed that op- ponents of the amendment were "playing on fears." "They're saying that it would render impossible sexual privacy and that it would do away with separate public toilets," she tes- tified. "This is simply not so. This is a smokescreen." stalled: Idaho and Nebraska are con- sidering rescinding ratification. The Idaho House Judiciary and Rules Committee held its firstj hearing on the resolution' Monday and will decide today whether to hold another one. Nebraska legis- lators have not yet fixed a date for a public hearing. The Connecticut House of Rep- resentatives rejected the amend- ment by an 83-77 vote last April, but House Speaker Francis Collins predicts it will pass this year. Rep. Audrey Beck, a Democrat who is leading the drive for approval, said the measure failed last year because of a "lack of information"x about its seriousness. Opponents contended the bill would deprive women of certain existing rights - exemption from the draft and support from a hus- band. Proponents argued the amendment would simply recog- nize women "as people." Oklahoma legislators defeated the measure twice - last year and again last week. Rep Jan Turner was one of its strongest oppon- ents. "'Idon't needtan amendment to tell me I'm a human being," Turner said. The 24 states that had ratified the amendment in addition to Min- nesota and Oregon are: Hawaii, New Hampshire, Nebraska, Iowa, Idaho, Delaware, Kansas, Texas, Maryland, Tennessee, Alaska, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Wiscon- sin, Colorado, West Virginia, New York, Mighigan, Kentucky, Massa- chusetts, Pennsylvania, California, South Dakota and Wyoming. Hungry for the real thing? Try it.. you'll like DELONG'S BAR-B-Q CARRY-OUT, PICK-UP, and DELIVERY SERVICE DINNERS: 41 SMALL END RIBS .. MEDIUM END RIBS . SLAB OF RIBS ...... BEEF ............. PORK ............. 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