O'Neill favors coed draft sign-up WASHINGTON (AP) - House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said yesterday he favors draft registration, and suggested he thinks women should register as well as men. "Personally I would be for it," O'Neill told reporters. "I think we should have registration for use in an emergency ... It's one of the things we, ought to do to protect our nation." O'Neill made clear he would not favor renewing the draft itself. ASKED IF women should register also, O'Neill said, "Seeing that my last two appointments to the naval academy were women, I would have to say my thoughts would be to go down +he sna mrad-" The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 15, 1979-Page 13 The House Armed Services Commit- be included. tee approved a measure last week that The purpose of registration when would require 18-year-old men to there is no draft would be to speed up register starting Jan. 1,1981, in case the war mobilization by having young draft is reinstated in a war or emergen- people already registered if the draft is cy. reinstated. The provision is in a $42 billion PRESIDENT Carter has taken no weapons authorization bill that may get position on renewing registration. House action next week. Secretary of Defense Harold Brown PROTESTS HAVE been organized told the House committee he hopes the against renewing draft registration, standby Selective Service System can and there is no indication yet whether be improved to meet Pentagon war the full Congress will do so. mobilization requirements without The House committee measure renewing registration. specifies men, but it also would require The Penatgon requirement is that the the president to report back to Congress system be able to produce the first draf- recommendations on how to carry out tees in one month and the first 650,000 registration and whether women should draftees in six months. Coast Guard investigates collapsed oil drilling rig GALVESTON, Texas (AP) - A marine court of inquiry will be con- vened in Galveston to investigate the collapse of an oil-drilling rig last week in which eight crewmembers were believed killed, the Coast Guard said yesterday. The body of one of the crewmembers, Eddie Fredericks, 25, was recovered from the sunken rig Sunday afternoon, but the Coast Guard has given up its search for the seven other men, missing since Thursday night and presumed dead. "At this point, we've run out of clues," said Coast Guard Lt. Gabe Kin- ney. "We've nothing to base a search on. Anything could have happened to them, the seven missing men. "WE'VE HAD instances where people have drifted for weeks, but they are few and far between. We don't close a case until we have it completely rlsolved, so we will continue to carry this as 'pending,' "he said. Meanwhile, Lt. Bruce Pickard of the Marine Safety Inspection Office said several Coast Guard officials from out- side the Galveston area flew over the sunken rig yesterday, but they have not yet set a date for a formal board hearing. The inspection office, an arm of the Coast Guard, investigates all maritime accidents and has the power to sub- poena witnesses and records. THE SEVEN crewmembers have been missing since a support leg collap- sed, spilling the 1,300-ton platform into the water about 12 miles south of Galveston. Around, across, straight ahead Daily Photo by LISA Geometry is not confined to textbooks and exams. At Farrell's Ice Cream Parlour in Briarwood Mall, the ceiling is an example of lines, angles, circles, and squares in practical use. TO COUNTER 'MORAL AND SPIRITUAL DEGENERACY': Jackson pu CHICAGO (AP)-Rev. Jessie Jackson the 25 wants high school graduates to receive the em voter registration forms along with been w their diplomas in an effort to end what newsc he calls the nation's "trend of moral campa and spiritual degeneracy." BUT despai Such a registration program is essen- whole tial, Jackson said yesterday, if the degeni country is to curtail the pessimism and Jack cynicism that developed with the the v' assassinations of the Kennedys and 'signif Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1960s. progre Those assassinations were followed by Hes the Vietnam War and Watergate, which power deepened the despair, he said. goals JACKSON, ONCE an aide to King and now president of Operation PUSH, said the voter registrationdrive would he the best way to celebrate the 25th an- niversary Thursday of the Supreme Court's Brown vs. Board of Education ruling which outlawed "separate but equal" schools for whites and blacks. That ruling triggered the civil rights movement, Jackson said, and resulted in gains in voting, education, em- ployment and housing rights. "The mos significant development in shes youth voting years since the Brown ruling is achieving full employment, finding npowering of the people who have alternative energy sources, changing vell-educated," Jackson said at a the nation's urban policy, and adopting conference called to kick off the an African policy that is consistently ign. anti-apartheid. HE SAID many youths have red of voting because of "the trend of moral and spiritual eracy." kson said 18- to 24-year-olds are on erge of a great new socially icant movement "in the essive tradition of social change." .aid youths must use their voting and commit themselves to such as ending racial polarization. ILLINOIS AND Cook, County (Chicago) education and election of- ficials appeared with Jackson and promised to support his program. Mike LaVelle, chairman of the county board of elections, said his office has contacted 80 of the 120 public and private high schools in the county and all so far have agreed to participate. Women's Workshop In Sound and Movement Voice poetry, music making, contact improvization and autobiographical dance Saturday, May 19th 1S 5p.m. CINTERBURY LOFT 323I/z . State St., '< i foor $1) fee, to register call Artemis, 663-0)7