Page 4-Saturday July 7, 1979-The Michigan Daily HMichigan Daily Eighty-nine Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, Mi. 48109 Vol. LXXXIX, No. 39-S News Phone: 7640552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Abortion funds remain in danger ANTI-ABORTION state senators, unable to alter the constitutionality of legislative procedure, have been doggedly attempting the deplorable task of eliminating Medicaid funds for abortions. The impact of the action they are suing Gov. William Milliken to effect would permit abortions for only those women who can afford them, while denying abortions to the less fortunate. Milliken's heroic efforts to maintain Medicaid funding for this purpose are laudable. He has twice vetoed bills that would have discontinued the program. Furthermore, any legal actions un- dertaken to retain this service with equity are justified. Much political maneuvering has surrounded this emotional conflict, pushing parties on both sides to the brink of legality. The Senate ap- propriated $1 for the program, knowing that cut- ting it entirely would be greeted with yet another veto from the governor's office. Milliken struck down the $1 limit anyway, and this freed the previous level of funding for welfare abortions, because the Senate failed to muster the necessary two-thirds vote to override the veto. A majority of the Senate voted to join the lawsuit against the governor initiated by Rep. Thaddeus Stopczynski (D-Detroit). The suit charges Milliken with exceeding his constitutional authority by vetoing the $1 appropriation, claiming that the chief executive of the state cannot ap- propriate funds-his action's net effect. Several senators who voted to join the suit said they do not oppose abortion, but are concerned with the con- stitutional question raised by the governor's ac- tions. The entire Senate is represented in the lawsuit, and their reasons for joining are muffled by the collectivity of that action. It would have been more appropriate for individual senators to have added their names to the suit, instead of lumping those who do not support the elimination of the program with those who do. Both houses have agreed to welfare budget bills prohibiting the use of Medicaid funds for abor- tions. It is expected Gov. Milliken will veto the bill limiting the total amount of Medicaid money, as he did last year, if upheld by the courts. The efforts of Milliken are praiseworthy, and seem fair enough in the political framework. Now the Michigan Appeals Court must decide if they were proper enough to maintain equal access to abortions. SUMMER EDITORIAL STAFF ELIZABETH SLOWIK dior-inChif I Letters to the j U.S. Economy To the Daily: Is the U.S. economy in another recession? Some capitalist economists may still be trying to make up their minds, but a majority of workers already believe that the long-awaited economic downturn is here. Ac- cording to a recent ABC News- Harris Survey, 58 per cent of the American people believe the country is now in a recession. An even larger majority, 62 per cent, believe that a year from now the country will still be in the throes of a recession. For many workers, the question of whether capitalism has entered a new recession is, of course, academic, For them, the last one never ended. At the onset of a new recession, the official unemployment rate is already near six per cent. At the same time the official jobless rate for black workers is more than double that. In the meantime, in- flation has soared to an annual rate of nearly 14 per cent exacer- bating the lives of workers everywhere trying to cope with ever-rising prices.'The economic contradictions of capitalism, ac- cording to the Socialist Labor Party, preclude any permanent solution to the grave problems confronting society today. Only Socialism (not the phoney setup they have in Russia) with its production for use instead of for profit and social ownership of in- dustries managed and controlled by the worker-producers them- selves holds any promise for a solution to unemployment, crime, inflation, and the threat of war. -Archie Sim Nuclear Legislation To the Daily: The time has come to take a long hard look at the nuclear power industry and the legislation protecting it from unlimited liability in the event of a nuclear disaster. Presently, the Weiss Bill is before Congress, which would repeal the Price-Anderson Act which places a ceiling on the liability of a utility, no matter how disastrous an accident should occur. If nuclear power is the safe form of energy that Detroit Edison would have us believe it is, why shouldn't they No Comment accept the full financial respon- sibility in the event of an -ac- cident, just as the airlines and chemical companies are required to do? It's also about time to study nuclear power and its long term environmental effect rather than continue the building of plants, apparently without heed to the general public good and without considering viable alternatives such as solar power. There is also a bill before Congress which calls for a five-year moratorium on the building of new nuclear power plants across the country, called the Fish Bill. This bill would give us a chance to give nuclear power the scrutinizing that it should have had long before now. In a sample survey conducted in Washtenaw County by the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM), it was found that the residents are very much in favor of both the repeal Daily of the Price-Anderson Act and the passage of the Fish Bill. (The actual results were: For the repeal of the Price-Anderson Act-78 per cent yes, 12 per cent no, and nine per cent undecided; and for the Fish Bill-68 per cent yes, 20 per cent no, and 11 per cent undecided) . It is now up to our Congressman, Carl Pursell, to listen to the voice of his con- stituency and co-sponsor the repeal of the Price-Anderson Act and the passage of the Fish Bill. The residents of Washtenaw County have called for a reassessment of nuclear power and it's up to Rep. Pursell to let our feelings be known in Washington. Write Congressman Pursell in Washington, or call his Ann Arbor office (971-5760) to let him know that we want action now. -Grant Sutton Editorials which appear without a byline represent a concensus opinion of the Daily's editorial board. All other editorials, as well as cartoons, are the opinions of the individual who submit them. ADMINISTRATION GAS Editor's note: This item appeared in the New York Times, January 10, 1939. It appears courtesy of Associate Prof. Rudolf Schmerl in the School of Education. ANN ARBOR, Mich., Jan. 9 (AP)-The University of Mich- igan board in control of physical education proposed today that colleges which subsidize athletes or award "athletic scholarships" be barred from membership in the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The proposal, contained .in a RATION CUPON twenty-page report signed by Chairman Ralph W. Aigler,said college teams of "scholarship holders and the like" should be "grouped with the New York Giants and the Washington Red- skins" and asserted that "professional and semi- professional teams" should "play among themselves." "Sooner or later," the report said, "there must be a separation of those institutions which look upon intercollegiate athletics as mere adjuncts of educational programs from those whose teams are made up of hired per- formers.' JUDY RAKQWSKY .....,. ... ........ JOSHUA PECK..................... MARK PARRENT Supplement EditorialDirector ........ Arts Editor MITCH CANTOR } R k-:f i 0::[ C 'F f( 3 5 i f'.C 3 1 T. :1 F