/ I' r ATTENTION STUDENTS: We are offering a 10%DISCOUNT CARD Bring in a valid student ID and we will give you a card en- titling you to a 10% discount on all photographic chemicals, papers and other selected darkroom items.(Sheet film hold- ers, negative pages, thermometers, point tongs, static master, film clips, etc.). Valid thru 5/82. Page 2-Wednesday, September 16,1981-The Michigan Daily Goldwater battles with Moral Majority SUPERMARKET OF APPLIANCES - TV STEREO-CAMERAS Home Appliance Mart 2019 W. Stadium Blvd. Mon.-Sat., 10-9 Sunday, 12-5 665-8653 WASHINGTON (UPI)- Conser- vative patriarch Barry Goldwater declared war yesterday on "political preachers" who "claim the right to dic- tate their moral beliefs to me." The Republican senator from Arizona, who recently suggested a kick in the pants for the Rev. Jerry Falwell, Moral Majority leader, said he would fight "every step of the way" the religious groups that he said cloak themselves in conservative political garb. "A kick in the head?" someone asked. "loo, not that high," the senator said. "There are other goon places." GOLDWATER, the 1964 GOP presidential candidate, said he was up- set with opposition by such groups to Supreme Court nominee and fellow Arizonan Sandra O'Connor, who refused to state her judicial views on pbortion. She said she personally op- poses abortion. But the main thrust of his statement was an attack on Moral Majority-style "religious factions that . . . are not using their religious clout with wisdom" and claim credit for the coun- try's apparent swing to conservatism. "THERE IS no more powerful ally one can claim in a debate than Jesus Christ, or God, or Allah," Goldwater said. "But, like any powerful weapon, the use of God's name on one's behalf should be used sparingly." Taking note of news reports describing the Moral Majority and other religious groups as "the new right" and the "new .conservatism," Goldwater said: "I have spent quite a number of years carrying the flag of the 'old conservatism.' And I can say with conviction that the religious issues of these groups have little or nothing to do with conservative or liberal politics. HE SAID abortion, busing, the Equal Rights Amendment, school prayers, and pornography are of secondary im- portance to national security and the economy. "I'm frankly sick and tired of the political preachers across this country telling me as a citizen that if I want to be a moral person, I must believe in 'A,' 'B,' 'C,' and 'D.' Just who do they think they are? And from where do they presume to claim the right to dictate their moral beliefs to me?" Goldwater said. ,qq t i C r r 4 Parents protesting Chicago integration s CHICAGO (AP) - Black and white parents kept their children out of school for a second day yesterday to protest the integration of two South Side elementary schools located just nine blocks apart. Parents were writing "Return to Sender" on transfer notices sent by the school board and warning their children not to answer the door in case it was a truant officer, Alderman Patrick Huels said. YESTERDAY, jsut 133 of the 942 pupils enrolled reported at the predominantly black Hendricks Elementary School and at the predominantly white Granham' Elementary Scshool, The parents are protesting a Board of Education plan to move half the pupils in each school to the other. The board provided buses to ferry the children un- der railroad tracks that for years have been the border between white Canaryville and black Fuller Park. "You are talking about two old com- munities who admit there has been as imaginary boundary there and they just don't cross it," said Hdels, whose 11th ward encompasses both neigh- borhoods. PARENTS FROM both neigh- borhoods met Monday night and vowed to keep their children out of school until the board changes its plans. "One guy said, 'Don't worry about the truant officer. By the time he gets around to everyone, it will be Christ- man, Huels said.x Parents who picketed the two schools Monday and ..yesterday said they feared for their children's safety and felt their educations would not benefit from the transfers. "WE CAN'T walk over there. You're liable to get mugged. They don't want us over there," said Lizzie Robinson, a black mother of four. School spokeman Tom maloney said buses were provided as a safety measure, so the children would not have to walk through the viaduct under the tracks and other potentially hostile areas.. Another black mother, Gloria Young, noted that blacks are not welcome in Canaryville and asked: "Why should my daughter put up with thigtrouble if she's not going to get any better education?" DIANA MILLER, a white mother of an eighth-grade pupil at Graham, said parents wanted to be allowed a choice. "We are open-minded. Some of .us have children at Beasley," she added, noting that her fifth-grade child attends mostly black Beasley. But one white parent said he feared school integration would be the first step in integrating the neighborhoods. "We all know that blacks and whites can't live together," said John -An- drews, "You can see that all over town. If the transfers go on, it will be all black here." IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Interest rates drop NEW YORK- Interest rates edged lower yesterday for the fifth straight day, highlighted by a move throughout the banking industry to match a modest decline in the prime lending rate. Rallies in the bond and money markets prompted some economists to suggest rates may continue to drop slowly, with little chance for substantial relief from record-high borrowing costs. Economists believe the trend was fueled by signs that the Federal Reserve Board is relaxing credit reins.The Fed has sought to keep credit tight to con- trol inflation. Sun-Times attacked in Cody case CHICAGO- City officials yesterday accused the Chicago Sun-Times of "yellow journalism" for articles on Cardinal John Cody's financial dealings and a woman implicated in the stories threatened a libel suit. Alderman Edward Burke likened the newspaper to the Ku Klux Klan and Alderman Vito Marzullo, the salty dean of the City Council, said he just doesn't believe the cardinal is guilty of any wrongdoing. An attorney for Helen Dolan Wilson, 74, a step-cousin and lifelong friend of Cody's, said Monday his client is, considering a libel suit against the newspaper for "assassinating her character." Ultranationalists try to stop 'withdrawal from Sinai TALMEI YOSEF, Israeli-Occupied Sinai- Ultranationalists who bitterly oppose Israel's withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula are challenging the government by moving into Jewish settlements to be handed to Egypt in seven months. "We have two groups here now," said Yossi Maas, 35-year-old coordinator of the "Stop the Withdrawal" movement. "One came two months ago to Yamit and the second came last week to Talmei Yosef. We plan to bring more groups to the area." The new arrivals are taking over the homes of those who already have ac- cepted financial compensation or new homes inside Israel in return for leaving the settlements in the sand dnes along the Mediterranean coast. The effect is to bolster the numbers of veteran settlers who say they will refuse to leave and who demand that Prime Minister Menachem Begin renegotiate the peace treaty with Egypt. Bell wins rate increase LANSING- The state Public Service Commission yesterday granted Michigan Bell Telephone Co.'s $115 million rate increase request but refused to let the utility hike the price of pay calls from 20 cents to a quarter. Under a plan approved last year, Bell rates are adjusted annually accor- ding to the inflation rate, minus a productivity factor. The eight percent in- crease means the average Bell customer's bill will rise by around 80 cents per month in Detroit and about 59 cents per month in some outstate areas. Bell said the actual price of pay phone calls is 27 cents. The prie was last raised in 1976 from a dime to 20 cents. Bell Vice President Frank Zimmerman was pleased with the rate hike, but said he was "puzzled and disappointed" by the rejection of the 25 cent phone call plan. Senate committee approves O'Connor's nomination WASHINGTON- The Senate Judiciary Committee approved Sandra Day O'Connor's historic nomination to the Supreme Court yesterday. The 17-0 vote clears the way for her Senate confirmation, probably Friday. The 51-year-old Arizona appeals court judge, the first woman appointed to the high court, is to be sworn in late this month in time to take her seat with the other justices when the court starts its new term Oct. 5. Sen. Jeremiah Denton (R-Ala.) was the only committee member who did not vote to recommend her confirmation. He said he had-not learned enough about her constitutional views on abortion to support her nomination. Rather than oppose her, Denton voted "present." Vol. XCII, No.6 Wednesday, September 16, 1981 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scriptiop rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. 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