The Michigan Daily-Friday, August 4, 1978-Page 3 Milliken nixes budget, defends abortion aid LANSING (UPI) - Gov. William Milliken yesterday vetoed a section of the 1978-79 state welfare budget that would have cut off funds for Medicaid abortions. In order to do so, however, Milliken had to axe funding for all Medicaid ser- vices-totaling $520.8 million. That means the legislature will have to rewrite the Medicaid budget. THE LEGISLATURE, in writing the $1.2 billion welfare budget, ap- propriated $1 for non-therapeutic abor- tions on welfare women. The measure was constructed in such a way that Milliken could not use his line-item veto power to reject only the restrictive D "Iy Photo by HN KNOX abortion language, but had to veto the Hot item entire Medicaid budget. This Pinto-owner has made sure that other drivers are aware of the consequences In his veto message to the legislature, of a back-end fender bender. Ford Motor Company recalled the model when it the governor was critical of lawmakers found that the car had a tendency to explode during collisions. for using technical tricks to try to get Detroit strikers back to work the funding cutoff "slipped past the public." "We should deal with it openly, based on the courage of our convictions. We should not attempt to cloud the issue or attempt to pander to both sides of this issue," he said. "TO APPROPRIATE the grand sum of $1 for 'nontherapeutic' abortions is a cruel hoax on a segment of our population which has already seen too much of life's cruel side." Milliken said he vetoed the anti- abortion section of the budget because it discriminated against the poor. "We are not dealing with the substan- tive issue of abortion," he said. "Rather, we are determining whether or not this freedom of choice is to be given only to the most affluent in our society. I strongly believe this should not be the case." MILLIKEN HAS LONG supported individual choice on the question of abortion. "The U.S. Supreme Court has, in ef- fect, granted each woman in this coun- try the right to make her own individual decision, based on the dictates of her own conscience and circumstances in consultation with her physician," he said. "It could force poor women to seek a legal abortion under back alley, highly unsafe procedures. I cannot condone such a decision which ignorestthe plight of the underprivileged and tells them they are second class citizens." MILLIKEN SAID he supports efforts to provide birth control information to women and to improve adoption ser- vices. "But I cannot say to a woman who is pregnant, and who has after con- sidering all the alternatives with her physician reached the very difficult and personal decision she should seek an abortion, that she cannot have one solely because she is poor," the gover- nor said. "Consistent with this belief and con- sistent with my long-held belief on the very controversial issue of abortions, I must do today what I believe is right." DETROIT (UPI)-Union officials representing 3,500 striking sanitation department and bus system workers agreed to call their members back to work yesterday and to settle grievances through existing contract provisions. There was no guarantee, however, that leaders of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) union could convince frustrated workers to end their three-day wildcat strike. A MEETING between the union leadership and Mayor Coleman Young, who had threatened to fire all strikers, led to the agreement. "The unions agreed to put their people back to work and to sit down and use mechanisms in the contract to resolve grievances," said James Graham, Young's press secretary. "The mayor then said we won't fire anybody." "We anticipate by having full ser- vices back by Friday morning. Representatives of the unions and departments will meet to begin to resolve grievances." UNION OFFICIALS who had never approved the walkouts were not im- mediately available for comment. Agreement came as police assigned to the city's legal department were chasing union officials in an attempt to serve a court order barring the illegal strike. Young had delayed actual firings while awaiting confirmation that all union officials were served with the court papers. The strike evolved from long stan- ding complaints among sanitation department workers about mandatory overtime. Many employees complained that they were forced to work 12-hour days seven days a week. Their gripes were aimed at union leaders as well as the city. OTHER LOCALS with their own complaints about existing contracts joined the picketing. The Department of Transportation, serving 185,000 commuters daily, was hardest hit and was forced to stop service. Graham said the settlement was not a reopening of contract talks, "The mayor made it clear he was not going to bargain, and there were existing contractual mechanisms for settling differences," Graham said. The strike had halted all trash and garbage collection, forcing the city to open five dumps and keep them under police guard 24 hours a day. No serious vandalism or other trouble was repor- ted during the wildcat walkouts. today- Happenings... ... begin at 2 with a showing of the high seas ad- venture classic, "Mutiny on the Bounty" at the Ann Arbor Public Library, Fifth and William ... Carolyn Gregory gives a poetry reading in the Liberty/Division St. park from 6:30-9 ... "A Child's World" opens at the Ann Arbor Art Association gallery, from 7-9. The show runs until the end of the month"... at 7:30, the Astronomical Film Festival offers its 75th program in its nine- year history. Tonight's features are "The Mystery of Stonehenge" and "Cracking the Stone-Age Code". That's in MLB 3 ... the Moliere Players present the classic comedy, "The Learned Ladies" in the Pendleton Room of the Union at 8:30. Scent home Dick Storm is usually a dependable news voice for Hancock's WMPL radio station. But the other day Storm really stunk. It got so bad, that station manager Robert Olson has to ask Storm to leave. It seems Storm was trudging down the Upper Penin- sula city's main street before dawn Wednesday when a skunk strolled across his path and let loose with the aroma for which skunks are best known. Storm returned home, disposed of his clothing, and even took a bath in tomato juice-which is supposed to eliminate the odor-but he still couldn't shake the smell. He reported for work as usual, but before delay fetilization for up to six years, the attendants long, Olson asked him to take the day off-so learned. everyone else could take a breather. I Cheese on theirfaces Several deputies in Nez Perce County, Idaho ap- parently were moonstruck the other day when they turned in a call that a fire-like glow filled the sky about 13 miles east of Lewiston, near Lapwai. Deputies said the closer they got, the bigger the glow became. After a few minutes of silence, a radio dispatcher asked the deputies more about the fire. It was a false alarm, the deputies radioed back. What they had actually seen was the moon on the horizon. Such luna-cy. Egg-citement at the zoo It wasn't a test-tube affair, but the reptile staff at the Rio Grande Zoo in Albuquerque was puzzled when a coachwhip snake laidseven eggs- and no male had been around for over a year. But a little scholarly digging explained it all. Attendants found that snakes have the ability to store male sper- matozoa in little internal folds and use it as needed- to fertilize their current crop of eggs. And if there's another delivery that can't be attributed to a recent male visit, the staff won't be alarmed. Colubrid snakes, such as the coachwhip, have been known to. New playthings Forget Barbie and Ken. Gay Bob has come out of the closet. Bob is a 13-inch male doll who wears an earring and a plaid flannel shirt open at the waist. Now being sold in novelty stores for $15, Bob comes in his very own cardboard closet. He sports a blond crewcut and, according to inventor Harvey Rosen- berg, "looks like a cross between Paul Newman and Robert Redford." Rosenberg, of Manhattan, ad- mits he designed the doll "to make a lot of money," but says Gay Bob is really a symbol of male liberation. "Whether you're straight or gay, everyone needs to come out of the closet, to 1 ive more openly and freely," Rosenberg said. What's next for the inventor? "Starting next year, we'll be selling Gay Bob's parents, Fat Pat and Heavy Harry," Rosenbery said. "They come packed in a refrigerator, which is the symbol of obesity to fat people." On the outside... Looks as if Mother Nature is a bit confused by Ann Arbor's new double decker buses-she's ordered genuine London fog for us early this morning. It should clear up, however, leaving partly sunny skies with a comfortable high of 75.