#,, r -Tuesday, November 29, 1977-The Michigan Daily CLASHES WITH CARTER STAND: Panel urges abortion as option . T,. REG. DENIM BELLS BIG DENIM BELLS WASHINGTON (AP) - A special task force on teen-age pregnancy, says the federal government should spend more money caring for preg- nant adolescents and their babies thanain trying to prevent the pregnan- cies. The panel set up by the secretary of health, education and welfare also said pregnant teen-agers should be free to choose abortions as an alter- native to childbirth. Both President Carter and HEW Secretary Joseph Califano are personally opposed to abortion. A COPY OF the task force report was obtained by the Associated Press from sources who asked not to be identified. The recommendation that more emphasis be put on cure than on pre- vention comes despite the fact that the best available statistics, pub- lished by the Alan Guttmacher Institute in New York, show that two-thirds of the one million teen-age girls who become pregnant each year don't intend to become pregnant. Those figures also indicate that 300,000 of these girls terminate their pregnancies by abortion. The HEW task force, which was headed by Deputy Assistant Secre- tary Peter Schuck, recommended that the Carter administration spend an additional $147 million to $251 $1.9 million next year to deal with the problems of the nation's 11 million sexually active teen-agers. A TOTAL OF $62 million would be spent to expand family and contra- ceptive services for adolescents un- der the proposals the task force included in its $147 million option, and an additional $15 million would be spent if a more expensive option were adopted. The rest of the money would go to expand Medicaid eligibility to low- income pregnant women, to extend welfare benefits to unborn children in states that don't already offer them, and for educational programs to keep pregnant adolescents and teen-age parents in school and a variety of research projects., If Califano should decide to spend up to the quarter-billion dollar figure, the task force said, he should add ex- panded day care services or a new youth and family services program that would have the flexibility to deal with a wide range of human needs. "While the options do not address the provision,- of abortion per se," Schuck's report continued, "the task force considers abortion information, counseling, services and research essential to reduce the number of high-risk adolescent births, particu- larly for younger adolescents." At present, HEW is prohibited by law from financing Medicaid abor- tions for poor women unless their lives are threatened by continued pregnancy. The House and Senate have been deadlocked for months in a disput over whether to extend the restrictions another year or to ease them. "Even if federal funding is not available for pregnancy termina- tion," the task force said, "we recommend that health and service providers make available abortion information and counseling and, where appropriate, referrals to and from abortion services, to permit the adolescent a full range of choice and to assist those who do choose to terminate their pregnancy to receive adequate and safe abortion serv- ices." ft EVERYTHING FOR THE MAN CENTRAL CAFE FEATURING: MEXICAN DINNERS AMERICAN-MEXICAN BREAKFASTS SANDWICHES, SOUPS, SALADS OPEN 7 AM-Midnight Mon.-Wed., 24 Hours Thurs-Sat., Sundays til 9 PM 322 S. MAIN 665-9999 U .S. trade ANNARBOR E. LANSING 310 S. State See and hear the latest hi-fi equipment. Bring your favorite records and tapes. Ask the experts about the right system for you. Win one of many free door prizes. JVC Portable Cassette Deck Pickering Cartridges ABC Records T-Shirts Koss Stereophones Discwasher Record Care Kits A&M Records Pixoff Record Care Kits Special JVC Biphonic Sound Demonstration many new and exciting innovations I A I r r I I A I~ deficit worst in history WASHINGTON (AP) - A dock strike made October the nation's wdrst trade month on record, as the nation bought $3.1 billion more in goods than it sold abroad, the Commerce Department said yester- day. The trade deficit surpassed the old record of $2.8 billion set last June. At the current rate, the deficit for the year would be $27 billion, nearly three times the $9.2 billion defieitlast year. A TRADE DEFICIT can interfere with production and employment at home, but the administration says most of this year's imbalance is caused by imports of Middle East oil. Government economists said the October deficit and the September deficit of $1.7 billion were distorted" by the East Coast and Gulf Coast dock strike, which began Oct. 1. "Exports rose sharply in Septem- ber as shipments were moved for- ward in anticipation of the strike," said Courtenay Slater, Commerce Department economist. LONGSHOREMEN are scheduled to vote today on a contract to end the two-month containerized shipping strike. Slater said this year's deficit reflects heavy U.S. dependence on imported oil and relatively weak foreign demand for U.S. exports. The administration says other countries are unable to buy U.S. products because they are recover- ing more slowly from the worldwide recession. "THE IMBALANCES in the world economy continue to be a cause of concern," Slater said, "but the unusually, large trade deficit in October stems from temporary fac- tors rather than a worsening of the underlying situation." Exports for the month were $9.2 billion, a 15.8 per cent decline from September, and the smallest amount since the $9 billion in March 1976. Imports were down 2.7 per cent, to $12.3 billion. Every category of exports declined except soybeans and aircraft and spacecraft. Wheat, beverages and tobacco showed the biggest declines. The largest declines in imports were in iron and steel and beverages and tobacco. Oil imports declined from $3.7 billion in September, to $3.6 billion. rI I r , i V k Wednesday and Thursday, Nov. 30 and Dec. 1,10 AM-5 PM Michiaan Union Ballroom '0 University of Michigan CLIP AND BRING IN THIS ADVANCE DOOR PRIZE STUB. r-- -- -- -- -- -- -------m--mm------- I I Please enter my name in the FREE DOOR PRIZE DRAWING I Name AdU i Address __________ INSTANT CASH! WE'RE PAYING $1-$2 PER DISC FOR YOUR ALBUMS IN GOOD SHAPE. I