The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 17, 1978-Page 11 ECONOMIC SANCTIONS PLANNED: County backs ERA in boycott By MARTHA RETALLICK Washtenaw County officials and employees attending conventions or conferences in the 15 states that have not ratified the Equal Rights Amen- dment (ERA) can no longer expect the county to pick up the tab. County commissioners passed com- missioner Kathleen Fojtik's resolution Wednesday night which endorses the ERA and prohibits the use of county funds to pay for travel expenses to states that have not yet ratified the amendment. FLOYD TAYLOR and Bent Nielsen, the only commissioners among the 15 percent to vote against the resolution, both said they support the ERA. In explaining his "no" vote, Taylor said, "I don't believe in establishing a financial whip over another' state; I don't believe in making another state do something it doesn't want to do." Nielsen, who voted against the resolution for similar reasons, said, "I don't feel the equal rights issue has to do with the boycotting of other states." "I'M IN FAVOR of it (the ERA) but I'm not in favor of mixing it up with another issue," Nielsen added. But Fojtik, a former president of the Ann Arbor chapter of the National Organization For Women (NOW), said it is "time he (Nielsen) put his money where his mouth is." To become law, the ERA needs the approval of 38 states before March 22, 1979. So far, 35 states have ratified the amendment. THE STATES THAT have not yet ratified the ERA are Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Utah and Virginia. In passing Fojtik's resolution, Washtenaw County joins other gover- nment bodies such as the Ypsilanti city council and the city governments of Washington, D.C. and Cincinnati in the economic boycott against states that have not ratified the ERA. Besides various local governments, at least 200 national organizations such as the United Auto Workers (UAW), Common Cause, the American Psychiatric Association and the YWCA have joined NOW in its economic boycott against those states. Ir. - MARCH SALE 15% OFF ALL GALLERY PRINTS AND CUSTOM FRAMING MARCH 1st-MARCH 31st Borders Book Shop Gallery 303 S. STATE 668-7652 Ky. House rescinds rati ficatio FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - The Ken- tucky-House of Representatives voted 61-28 yesterday to rescind ratification the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the U.S. Constitution -- making Ken- tucky the fourth state to first approve the measure and then change its mind. It is unclear, however, whether such a vote-to rescind earlier approval has standing under federal law. The matter is not expected to be resolved until after deadline for ratification next year. THE MEASURE, which would prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex, was adopted in Kentucky in 1972 and legislative efforts had been under way ever since to reverse the vote. The House vote came on a resolution which originally dealt with a totally unrelated matter - state pensions - but which had been amended in the Senate to revoke ERA approval. The Senate used that parliamentary maneuver because motions to rescind the ERA had gotten tied up in commit- tee. "It is a sad day when the Common- wealth of Kentucky sends forth the word that the Commonwealth of Ken- tucky no longer considers its women equal," said Rep. Dolly McNutt, an ERA supporter. MANY ERA opponents argued they are not against equal rights for women, but instead oppose the constitutional amendment method of ensuring equal rights. "This is not a vote on equal rights," said Rep. Louis De Falaise, "it is a vote on this particular method of accom- plishing that. On several occasions legislative leaders threatened to clear the packed Senate OK's first canal treaty (Continued from Page 1) fect of the DeConcini amendment on the treaties as a whole. The ambassador said Carter told Torrijos "to be patient and wait" for the final version to emerge from the Senate. Illeuca said Torrijos replied: "You've got to take a parachute of dignity and make certain you land in a field of peace" - an apparent reminder that Panama wants to maintain its dignity and that there is a possibility of violence in Panama. GAYLORD NELSON (D-Wisc.), the senator who cast the deciding vote on the first treaty, didn't even know history had called his name. ",I didn't hear my name," said Nelson. "I- didn't even know I was the 67th vote." As for his footnote in history, Nelson said, "it's all right with me. I've been for the treaties all along. It's the first definitive vote I've cast in my life." The Senate galleries were filled when the clerk began calling the roll for the vote on the treaty which would guaran- tee the neutrality of the canal once it is turned over to Panama. Ellsworth Bunker and Sol Linowitz, the U.S. negotiators, looked down on the cham- ber from different sections of the gallery. IN THE USUAL manner, the clerk called the 100 names in alphabetical or- der. But in a manner most unusual, every senator was in the chamber when his name was called. Only three failed to respond. THE NEXT SENATOR who failed to respond was Nelson. Sen. Jennings Randolph, Byrd's senior Democratic colleague from West Virginia, sat uncomfortably as the tally moved down the alphabet toward his n ofERA gallery as pro- and anti-ERA observers applauded and cheered their suppor- ters on the floor. SUPPORTERS OF the ERA vowed to contest yesterday's action in federal court. The ERA has been approved by 35 states - including the four that have rescinded - and must be ratified by three more by March 22, 1979, to become part of the Constitution. The other states to have rescinded are Idaho, Nebraska and Tennessee. THE CHRISATIA AND THE ARTS SPEAKER: DR. CALVYIN SEERVELD Senior Member in Aesthetics, Institute for Christian Studies, Toronto MARCH 17-19 Friday, March 17-"Tell-tale Statues in Watteau's Paintings: Disguised Critique of Fashionable Society"-8 p.m. Modern Language Build- ing, Lecture Room 2 Saturday, March 18- "Modern Art and the Birth of a Christian Culture"- 10 a.m., Campus Chapel, 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Sunday, March 19-"The Greatest Song: In Critique of Solomon"-10 a.m., University Reformed Church, 1001 E. Huron Sponsored by Campus Chspe/ tnd the University Reformed Church