Page 2-Wednesday, November 2, 1977-The Michigan Daily Accused murderer tells LANSING, Mich. (AP) - A sobbing Francine Hughes testified in her first- degree murder trial yesterday that her ex-husband repeatedly beat and other- wise abused her for years and that an ''urgent voice" told her to kill him last March. "There was like an urgent voice whispering, 'Do it! Do it!'," she said from the witness stand. Hughes, 30, is accused of killing James Hughes while he slept by set- ting fire to the home the couple shared. The prosecution maintains the motive was her involvement with another man. PROSECUTOR Martin Palus wound up his presentation Monday with testimony from a handwriting expert that Hughes' writing matched that on letters found in a former security guard's locker.' In opening statements, Palus said the letters would prove that the motive for the slaying was Hughes' "relationship" with an unidentified man. But Palus did not introduce the letters as evidence and did not disclose their contents during his presentation. He has refused any comment on the letters, and the defense has not ad- dressed the issue in its presentation thus far. Hughes has said she was driven to killing Hughes because of the beatings and abuse she had suffered at his hands since they were married when she was 16 years old. Feminist supporters hope Hughes' case will set a precedent to strengthen the rights of abused women. IN TESTIMONY on the sixth day of her trial in Ingham County Circuit Court, Hughes said she met Hughes at a high school dance, they became lovers "and she married him because of her moral values. ; "It used to be that a girl was taught to -save herself for somebody," she said. "We had intercourse before we were married. I felt like I should marry him The professionals, are at U-M Stylists HAROLD, DAVE, CHET and R-K hair care products. At the UNION because of that. He wanted to marry me so bad. I never felt I had anyone who loved me that much. What attrac- ted me to him was that he was attracted to me." But she later found Hughes to be "in- sanely jealous" and he began to abuse her within a year of the wedding, she said. "I felt terribly alone and afraid. It dominated my life. I never knew what to expect." THE COUPLE divorced in 1971 but soon Afterwards James Hughes was seriously injured in an auto accident. Ms. Hughes has said she moved into a home next door to Hughes' home in Dansville to help care for him. Gradually, --ughes moved into her home, sand the beatings and abuse resumed, she has said. Her face twisted with emotion, Hughes read parts of the divorce decree which was granted her on grounds of "extreme cruelty." In the first fight she could remember, Hughes blackened her eyes after she bought nail polish at a drug store while he was working, she said. "I guess it was because I left the apartment." SHE SAID her ex-husband once came to a factory where she worked and or- dered her to quit, despite the fact that the couple needed her income. "He came there and he made me quit because I had bought a new bra and it had stretchy straps," she said. "He didn't like it because it made me jiggle." After he moved into the home where she lived with the couple's four children, "I wouldn't move without him saying that it was all right," Ms. Hughes testified. "I know it's hard to believe, but it's true ... He didn't want me to go places, or see anybody-not even my own family. I think maybe he was afraid I'd leave." SHE SAID he used obscenities to describe her sisters and often taunted his 12-year-old daughter until she fled in tears. "It just kept getting worse and worse and worse and worse," she said. "Usually, he would beat me in the head-with his fists. When he hit me I would sometimes hit the wall or the o floor or whate "He would dows, put h things in the h SHE SAID him to his fan eventually th want to be1 didn't know w Police advi the judge who said. She trie was unavaila her that "mo beatings ever. leave everything they have behind and put his fist through win- go to other states," she testified. oles in the walls, break She magle trips to probate court and iouse." the prosecuting attorney's office to ob- she sometimes ran from tain a warrant for her ex-husband's mily's home next door, but arrest, but "they wouldn't do ey told," he ey "didn't anything," she said. "I just felt like I bothered," she said. "I was alone and no matter what I did it vhere else to go." wasn't any help. I don't like to take my sed her to seek help from problems to other people .. . o granted her divorce, she "I don't think that I could made ed to see the judge but he anyone understand how much I've been ble, and his secretary told through or how much I've been hurt." st women like me have to Carterpulls U.S. out of ILO mWomm Congress can vote to extend ERA deadline WASHINGTON (AP)-Congress has the authority to extend the deadline for states to ratify the Equal RightstAmen- dment (ERA), Assistant U.S. Attorney Genral John Harmon said yesterday. Thirty-five states have ratified the ERA since Congress passed it in 1972. Three more states are needed. Unless Congress extends the deadline or three more states ratify the amen- dment by March 22, 1979, it will die. The assistant attorney general testified at a hearing on whether Congress shouldhextend the deadline another seven years. He said Congress could change the time deadline for the ERA by a simple majority vote because the limit was not contained in the proposed amendment, only in the resolution sending the amendement to the states. 10 Regarding attempts by Tennessee, Idaho and Nebraska to withdraw ratification by their state legislatures, Harmon says that states can only ratity amendments and cannot change their mind once the action is taken. The first hearing on extending the deadlinewas before thedHouse Judiciary subcommittee on civil and constitutional rights. The hearing room was crowded, with women and men wearing "Stop ERA" buttons or hat- bands. Some passed out bright pink flyers criticizing the upcoming National Women's Conference in Houston, saying it would be a gathering of "women's libbers, homosexuals and abortionists." Rep. Robert McClory (R-Ill.) said he favors the ERA but he thinks an attem- pt to extend the deadline "is the worst strategy I ever heard of." Harmon said Congress could tell states such as Illinois that the next time it votes on the ERA that a majority vote will be considered sufficient for ratification, despite a state requirement of a two-thirds vote. (Continued from Page 1) ism. In 1975, the Palestine Liberation Organization got ILO observer sta- tus. The AFL-CIO walked out and said it would boycott the ILO even if the U.S. government remained. The Chamber of Commerce also was committed to U.S. withdrawal. It warned Carter in a letter Oct. 3 against any attempt to try to go it- alone in the ILO. In Geneva, ILO Leaders said they expect "voluntary contributions" to forestall budget cutbacks it faces when the United States quits. Carter's decision will weaken the ILO. The U.S. contribution to the ILO has been $20 million a year, about one-fourth of its budget. - SOME diplomats, including some of Carter's own top foreign policy advisers, say it might weaken the United Nations as a whole. "It reminds me of the 1930s when the German pullout marked the begin- ning of the end of the League of ,Nations," said a European diplomat in Geneva, where the ILO has its headquarters. "It's a stupid decision," declared a West European diplomat at the United Nations in New York. Carter countered: "This decision, I think, is the right decision." He made the statement during a photo session in the Oval Office. THE PRESIDENT'S decision rep- resents a victory for business and labor over diplomats in administra- tion councils. The AFL-CIO and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which are the labor and industry represen- tatives in the U.S. delegation to the ILO, favor pulling out. The State Department, on the other hand, wanted to stay in. AFL-CIO President G e o r g e Meniy,~who told reporters about Car'- ter's decision before it was an- nounced, said he was not particularly pleased that it had to be made. But he said it will have no practical effect on the United States. "I hope that somewhere down the road things will change so that we can get back in," Meany said. THE PRESIDENT reaffirmed his support for the United Nations in his annual report to Congress on this country's participation in U.N. activ- ities. "I have pledged my adminis- tration to full support for the work of the United Nations," Carter said. But he added: "The U.N.'s record with respect to human rights was disappointing in 1976. "The unwarranted linking of Zion- ism with racism was an impediment to serious consideration of human rights matters and the United States continued to resist it by all possible means," Carter said. "In a number of cases, failure to take effective action belied the commitment to human rights that all U.N. Members have accepted."- Carter praised the United Nations for serving "as a valuable forum for the discussion of political disputs even where progress on the underly- ing issues was not always possible." IN LEAVING the ILO, Carter decided not to lift a notice of withdrawal filed two years ago by the Gerald Ford administration. Henry. Kissinger, then secretary of state, said there was "disregard of due pro- cess" in ILO proceedings, a "selec- tive concern for human rights" and an "erosion of tripartite representa- tion. Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter's na- tional security adviser, and Secre- tarty of State Cyrus Vance had urged extension of the United States' 43 years of ILO membership for another year to give West European allies time to try to make changes in the ILO. Both advisers were concerned that withdrawing might weaken the U.N. structure and leave the Kremlin in charge, with the West Europeans on the defensive. But the AFL-CIO, the Labor De- partment and the Chamber of Com merce told Carter the ILO no longer serves its original purpose. When the U.S. pullout was an- nounced, the Chamber of Commerce called it "the only logical decision.' i Carter approves 35c minimum wage hike (Continued from Page1) Congress approved the new mini- mun wage law Oct. 20, despite heavy opposition from conservatives and business. Opponents argued that tiie increase would contribute to inflation and put thousands of people out of work. But the administration, aided by labor, civil rights and other groups, successfully argued that the higher wage was needed to lift millions of workers out of poverty. Sen. Jacob Javist (R-N.Y.), called the legislation a "triumph of biparti- sanship and cooperation between the executive branch and Congress." Sen. Harrison P. Williams Jr. (D- N.J.), said, "It is a great day for the GET MOVING, AMERICA! people on the lowest rung of our econ- omic ladder." While the new law represents a victory for labor and the administra- tion, it wasn't a total triumph. Congress knocked out a provision sought by labor and the administra- tion that would have made future increases automatic. The new law increases the number of small businesses exempted from the minimum wage law. Now, busi- nesses with less than $250,000 in annual gross sales are exempt. This will rise to $362,000 by Dec. 31, 1982, removing some 850,000 workers from minimum wage coverage. W0,1* :i 1& AW41 &V 44W A40 Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan r--- ---- ---WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----- ---- IM-j . i --- --- --- CIPAND MAIL TODAY!------------ I USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COSTI K ~ WORDS 1 day 2 days 3 days 4 days 5 days 6 days addi. 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The Good Neighbor. } ptp IN THE POWER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS ATheI Company in Nov. 11 & 12 Chapeau by Alfred Uhry & Robert Waldmar A Musical Based Upon Eugene Labiche' Italian Straw Hat Nov. 13 mat. & eve MO'I/R I 3:00 p.m. FRIDAY, nov. 4 PENDLETON ROOM 2nd floor UNION HUMAN RIGHTS& REPRESSION IN CHILE Impact of Student and Union Organizations 6 Chilean refugees, among the few admitted to the United States, Union