GAY RIGHTS See Editorial page E LIEP augi BONNY High 61O Low 43 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 23 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 4, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Supplment High Court refuses to overturn anti-gay ruling WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court, in a busy first day of its fall term, let stand yesterday the ruling of a state court in Washington that homo- sexuals are immoral and may be fired from their jobs. The court refused to hear the appeal of James Gaylord, fired in 1972 because he admitted being a homosexual to-of- ficials at the Tacoma high school where he had taught for 13 years. GAYLORD, contended that his con- stitutional rights were violated when his status as a homosexual was used to dismiss him. The Washington Supreme Court ruled that homosexuality is im- moral and Gaylord could be fired even though he was accused of no homosexual act. - Supporters of homosexual rights ex- pressed dismay at the Supreme Court's refusal yesterday to hear the Gaylord case. But they emphasized that the court decision set no precedent and would not overturn existing state or local laws protecting gays against discrimination. Civil liberties attorneys, who had hoped to use the case to have the Supreme Court review the rights of homosexuals, predictably were outraged by the court's action. "THE CASE presented the Supreme Court with an opportunity to say that discrimination against people by government because of their status as homosexuals is impermissable," the American Civil Liberties Union said. "This Supreme Court maintains its record of gross insensitivity to in- dividual rights," the organization said in a statement from its New York headquarters. In the 40 pages of orders handed down, the justices also: " Agreed to decide the legality of pension plans requiring women to con- tribute a greater portion of their salaries than men based on studies showing that women on the average live longer to collect benefits. At the same time, the justices let stand a state court's decision outlawing pension plans which pay smaller monthly retirement benefits to women based on the same life-expectancy tables. * Let stand a lower court's order requiring the busing of students throughout 11 school districts in the Wilmington, Del., area. A plan to put the racial desegregation order into ef- fect is being worked out but school of- ficials had hoped to make such a plan unnecessary. " Agreed to decide whether one party may own a newspaper and broadcast station in the same community. A lower court said such cross ownership almost never can be allowed. That ruling would affect an estimated 170 such ownerships across the country. * Agreed to decide if a newspaper, the Stanford Daily on the California university's campus, enjoys greater protection than other non-criminal suspects against police searches. The case asks the court to review the cir- cumstances in which police may search the premises of anyone not suspected of a crime. " Left untouched a lower court's ruling that allows telephone sub- scribers to use equipment-extension telephones, answering devices and the like-of their own choosing without paying the telephone company for a protective device. The court's action could cost the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. and smaller telephone companies a lot of money. " Ruled, in essence, that the once-, secret 880 reels of White House tape recordings left behind by former President Richard Nixon may be released for use in civil suits. The court's 1974 decision that the tapes could be used in the criminal Watergate trials of Nixon's top aides probably hastened his departure from office. IN THE HOMOSEXUAL case, Justices Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan Jr. the court's only two consistently liberal members, voted to hear Gaylord's appeal. They also were the only two justices to vote in favor of hearing the appeal of a Paramus, N.J., schoolteacher, John Gish, who was disciplined and ordered to take a psychiatric examination after assuming the presidency of the New Jersey Gay Activist Alliance. The votes of four justices are needed to grant review. GAYLORD'S attorneys had argued that he was denied his constitutional rights to privacy, liberty, freedom of expression and equal protection under the law. Federal laws and past court inter- pretations of the constitution make illegal-most forms of discrimination based on race, religion, sex, age, color and nationality. But sexual preference has been given no special protection. Many states and communities have passed such anti-discrimination laws. The repeal of County, Fla., homosexual prominence. one such law, propelled the rights into : in Dade issue of national IN OTHER orders, the court " Let stand the conviction and death sentence given to Marcus Wayne Chenault, the condemned killer of Mar- tin Luther King Jr.'s mother. Chenault was found 'guilty of gunning down the civil rights leader's mother in 1974 as, she played the organ in an Atlanta' church. " Refused to hear an appeal aimed at forcing the Kiwanis International ser- vice club to accept female members. The court let stand rulings in lower courts in. New York 'that Kiwanis is a private club and therefore exempt from federal laws barring sexual discrimination. Campus gay leaders blast, court decision By BRIAN BLANL-HARD Calling the decision both "outrageous" and "a breakthrough" after years of governmental inaction, gay leaders on campus voiced their disapproval of yesterday's Supreme Court refusal to review the appeal of a high school teacher fired for his sexual preference. From the Gay Advocate's Office in the Union, Jim Toy reported that "years of indecision have led people to get optimistic." Now homosexuals "have something to work on," he said. TOY ALSO said the decision "points out more than ever the need for federal legislation" on sexual preference to clear up laws concerning gays. But Dan Tsang, Gay Academic Union Coordinator, said the ruling demon- strates that laws will not protect gays. The decision "just proves that you can't depend on the U.S. legal system to deal with the question," said Tsang. Tsang went on to say that the sexual preference ruling is part of an overall "reactionary trend" by the high court. "IT'S TERRIBLE, especially coming from Washington where there is so' much Mower." said Robin Wright of the Alice Lloyd Women's Center, See GAYS, Page 7 VA defense 'very interested' in weird events at Dearborn hospital .. r. . ".w." .r..-.:tr. rrti rr a,. +lkm+ lhth hatra 1 By KEITH RICHBURG Defense attorneys in the Ann Arbor Veteran's Administration (VA) case are anxiously awaiting laboratory results from Oakwood Hospital in Dearborn, where a patient suffered a breathing failure after being given an injection by a myryterious man in a green scrub suit.' The patient reported late Saturday to nospital autnorities tna tne uan experiencing breathing difficulties after an unidentified oriental man dressed in a green operating gown came into his room and administered an unauthorized injection. THE PATIENT'S roommate con- firmed that someone had indeed injected the patient, whose name is being withheld by the hospital admin- Gas deregulation foes end ong WASHINGTON (AP) - Militant Sen- ate opponents of deregulating natural gas ended a 13-day-long filibuster yes- terday, saying lack of support from the White House made it impossible to con- tinue their delaying tactics. Sens. James Abourezk (D-S.D.) and" Howard Metzenbaum (D-Ohio) said they would allow the Senate to vote on the natural gas pricing legislation. "IN VIEW of the White House posi- tion, we will call oft the filibuster ef- fective immediately," Metzenbaum ilib uster, told reporters. A vote on the bill could come today, Their surrender came after Vice President Walter Mondale joined in a dramatic effort by Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd designed to break the filibuster. MONDALE, presiding over the Sen- ate, began ruling amendments filed by the filibusterers out of order at Byrd's request, ignoring the shouts of Abourezk and other senators seeking recognition. The two liberal Democrats had been waging the filibuster by demanding roll call votes on hundreds of amendments they had filed to the bill. Even though the administration wan- ts to keep price controls on natural gas, it joined Senate leaders in trying to break the filibuster on grounds the im- passe was jeopardizing the rest of Pres- ident Carter's energy program. MEANWHILE, in a last-ditch effort to salvage part of President Carter's natural gas pricing proposals, Senate Energy Committee Chairman Henry istration. Oakwood ordered laboratory tests to determine the content of . the injection. The results of the tests should be announced today. "We really don't know at this point what it was," said Oakwood Hospital spokesman Robert Hillcoat. "We have an incident reported by a patient and an eyewitness, and we're following up on it." SIMILARITIES between the Oak- wood incident and the mysterious 1975 breathing failures at the VA, for which nurses Filipina Narciso and Leonora Perez were tried and con- victed this summer, sparked specu- lation that the two cases might be connected. "It wouldn't be surprising if they were at all related," said defense lawyer Michael Moran. "ONE OF the possibilities we've always held was that there was a man, and that he was dressed in green," Moran told The Daily. "We never said he was an employe of the VA,.just someone who know his way around the hospital." The "man in green" surfaced repeatedly during the ten weeks of testimony in the trial of Narciso and Perez. The unidentified man, dressed in a green hospital scrub suit, was seen lurking in the corridors of the VA hospital at the time of several of the mysterious breathing failures. there. NARCISO AND Perez, both natives of the ° Philippine Islands, were convicted of poisoning five of those patients by injecting Pavulon, a powerful muscle-relaxant used dur- ing surgery, into the patients' intra- venous feeding lines. Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN A simple celebration Rabbi Aaron Duchan (far left) and Rabbi Aaron Goldstein assist Jodi Marder in celebrating the Jewish feast of Succoth in front of a ceremonial "sukkah" on the Diag. Jodi is holding a lulav (palm branch) and an esrog demon), which are traditionally shaken every Succoth to ensure a good harvest. DISCOUNTS 'MYTHS' Mersereau: RC still viable By SHELLEY WOLSON The Residential College (RC) is still philosophically and financially viable, John Mersereau, Chairman of the LSA-RC Review Committee, and newly appointed RC director report- ed yesterday. Mersereau presented his commit- tee's evaluation to the LSA faculty during their second meeting of the year, and described the college and its requirements before dispelling many "myths" that surround RC. .smug ctvr~W t;.+;..., - +..+ L+t,.. ti n contact with their professors and allow for innovation in education while abiding by LSA requirements. Another "misconception" about the RC, Mersereau added, is that its professors separate themselves from. LSA faculty and use "cheap labor" in the form of many teaching fellows.. "We have only two teaching fel- lows on the current faculty, and our faculty is some of the finest in LSA," Mersereau continued. "Some of our lecturers are 'cheap labor', being TF's, but they are not inexperienced nr imnalifpl been higher in the past are now similar. "It's also been said that the RC doesn't carry its share of minority students. We know this and we are trying to use the knowledge of the RC to attract minority students." In addition to addressing the question of the RC, the LSA faculty yesterday heard from the Director of the University's Libraries, Fred Wagman. WAGMAN SPOKE of various prob- lems in the library system and future < mammmmmmmm