Wednesday, August 16, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine GOP aims APPEAL PLANNED for more Judge lifts oil pipeline injunction Swomen MIAMI BEACH (P) - Repub- lican rule makers yesterday ten- tatively sought equal representa- tion for women at future GOP national conventions, but shut out- any such actions for young people and minorities; At the same time, another pre- convention subcommittee of the GOP Rules Committee was em- broiled in controversy over the 11th - hour proposal by Sen. John Tower of Texas for reap- portioning 1976 GOP convention delegates. Tower's plan would allow smaller states to keep a cer- tain delegate level while award- ing larger states bonus conven- tion votes at a faster rate. The change in representation for women was approved by the Rules Committee's subcommit- tee on election of delegates. It would require each state to "en- deavor to have equal represen- tation of men and women in its delegation" at. future conven- tions. Sponsors said +this' would not require specific quotas for wo- men, only a good faith effort on the part of state parties to balance their delegations. State parties in which women chose not to participate would not be penalized. But the rule change would make it difficult for state parties to -shut out women who want in. The subcommittee amended another rule to ban discrimina- tion on the basis of sex and age. It already is banned on the basis of race,. religion, color or na- tional origin. But another section of the same rule which did require state parties to assure partici- pation of minority groups was watered down to require only that they have the opportunity to take part in party affairs. Ann Arbor Civic Theatre announce auditions for FORTY CARATS to be directed by Ted Heusel 4 men and 7 women will be cast Aug. 14, 15, & 17 7:30 p.m. 201 W. Mulhollnd (off W. Washington) WASHINGTON (P) - A federal judge yesterday dissolved the in- junction which has blocked con- struction of an oil pipeline across Alaska for more than two years. But environment groups whose opposition to the project had won the original stay saidthey would appeal immediately to a higher court. District Judge George Hart Jr., who issued the injunction in April 1970 dissolved it yesterday after rejecting every legal argument by the environment groups w h o had sought to have it continued. Hart made it clear he was framing his decision to expedite the anticipated appeal and that he believes the pipeline question eventually will have to be set- tied in the U.S. Supreme Court. The proposed trans-Alaska pipeline was one of the earliest tests of the National Environ- mental Policy Act passed in 1969 and signed into law on Jan. 1, 1970. Then-Secretary of the Interior Walter Hickel, was on the verge of issuing permits for construc- tion of the pipeline from Arctic oil fields to a port in Southern Alaska when three environment groups sued the department to block the permits, alleging that the Interior had not complied with the new law's requirement of a detailed study of environ- mental impacts. These groups have argued also that the pipeline, its construction road, and related facilities would occupy far more land than the secretary was entitled to author- ize under the 1920 Mineral Leas- ing Act. For the past 28 months Hart's injunction has held up action on the pipeline while the Inter- ior Department prepared and is- sued a first draft environmental impact statement, then held pub- lic hearings, and then, last March, issued a final impact statement. After providing 45 days for ad- ditional public comment, Inter- ior Secretary Rogers Morton an- nounced last May that he has decided to issue the permits and allow construction of the pipeline once the legal hurdles are clear- ed. Yesterday the environmental groups and their opponents res turned to Hart's courtroom but this time Hart ruled against them on every point. Dennis Flannery - represent- ing the Wilderness Society, En- vironmental Defense Fund, and Friends of the Earth - at first requested a stay of his decision. But Justice Department lawyer Herbert Pittle, representing the Interior Department, said the de- partment has not yet drafted the pipeline permits and could not, therefore, issue them immediate- ly. Whlfgve~r You Mwednyi' Tllnt \ / Business Onnortunities 4 Aft* I Merchandise for Sal ---- CLIP AND SAVE ---- * U f I . f f f f a Phone Numbers: N I f f Circulation 764-0558 f f * f Classified Adv. 764-0557 Display Adv. 764-0554 News 764-0552 f Sports a f 764-0562 C A w-wCLIP AND SAVE-. .R- .Win!tkRig 1k IkhY For DIRECT CLASSIFIED SERVICE CALL 764-0557, 10 A.M.-4 P.M., Monday thru Friday