Ninety-Three Years of Editorial Freedom C I bt Sfir ga ~Ia41Q Bleak Will spring ever come back? Today will be partly cloudy and cool with a high in the upper 30s. Keep on hoping. 9 Vol. XCIII, No. 133 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, March 20, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages Anti-nuke protesters ,obstruct train;11 arrested SEATTLE (UPI) - Anti-nuclear war demonstrators protested yesterday against a mysterious white train moving at 35 mph through western states and believed to be carrying 100 nuclear warheads to the Navy's Trident Submarine Base at Bangor,Waslj. . Ben McCarty, Spokesman for the Department of Energy office in Albuquerque, N.M., said, "The cargo is classified and I cannot comment on it. I can say generally that these shipments carry nuclear weapons, nuclear weapons components or special nuclear materials." HE WOULD NOT say how often the trips are made or comment on their routing-but he did say "that's our train." ELEVEN PEOPLE were arrested yesterday as the train passed through Colorado. Three persons, including a Catholic priest, were arrested in Den- ver for walking on the tracks in the train's path. In Fort Collins, eight were arrested as they knelt hand-in-hand along the tracks while a crowd of perhaps 100 sympathizers chanted, "We shall not be moved." The train was painted white and in- cluded two locomotives, 12 "ATMX" cars carrying nuclear material and two security cars with turrets. Jim Douglass of the anti-nuclear Ground Zero organization in Washington state said, "It's probably the most destructive train in the world. We estimate that it has about 100 hydrogen bombs on it." Navy officials in Bangor and at the Pentagon, in line with their policy, declined to comment on the train. Douglass said the train left the Pan- tex Corp. in Amarillo, Texas, where nearly all of the nation's nuclear warheads are assembled, at 2:03 p.m. Friday. A. Frye Bryant ... protect quality ...conserve energy Horn back :.. preserve the University New 'redirection strategies explored By THOMAS MILLER "Protecting what we most want to protect . the quality of this institution," is the primary concern of the University's redireciton, Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye said yesterday. Speaking to a crowd of about forty people gathered for the conference "Crossing the Impasse: A Look at the 'U' in Crisis" at the Michigan Union yesterday, Frye defended the University's strategy of selective cuts to relieve the current budget squeeze. "WE HAVE TO have a strategy sufficient to deal with the problem," Frye said. "We can't temporize if it's not a temporary' problem. And ultimately we will have reviewed everything." The conference brought together students, faculty, and administrators to discuss the problems involved with the University's redirection. English Prof. Bert Hornback warned the gathering of the risks involved in the review process. "WHEN YOU decide that you're just going to save money, you're making a mistake. I want us to preserve the excellence not by that which makes money, but by that which makes us a University," 'Hornback said. Prof. Bunyan Bryant of the School of Natural Resources also warned against the problems involved with selecting the programs that are to be cut. "We can't afford to think what's mine is mine and what's yours is negotiable," said Bryant. FRYE CONCEDED there always are risks when you adopt a strategy of selective reduc- tions, especially at the University. "If we had to make selective cuts, it would be one thing if we had bad programs, but there aren't any bad programs at the University: This creates anxiety," Frye said. He emphasized the need to reduce the size of the University because of decreasing state aid. "Academia is no longer a favored group," Frye said. CONFERENCE participants also discussed ways to lessen the cuts facing the schools of See OPTIONS, Page 2 EPA tests altered, officials say WASHINGTON (AP) - John Todhunter, the En- vironmental Protection Agency official in charge of con- trolling toxic substances, ordered staff studies altered to make two suspected chemicals - dioxin and for- maldehyde - appear less dangerous, two EPA officials claim. In congressional testimony, one current and one for- mer EPA oficial said they received orders - attributed to Todhunter - demanding changes that favored the chemical industry's position in both cases. Todhunter, assistant EPA administrator for pesticides and toxic substances, denies that he ordered the changes, saying he had almost no involvement in the dioxin report and only made suggestions on for- maldehyde. THE ALLEGATIONS came up intestimony as part of the continuing congressional investigations of the EPA over claims of political favoritism and conflict of in- terest at the agency. Karl Bremer, chief of the toxic substance office in- EPA's Chicago office, told a House subcommittee that Todhunter ordered him to delete part of a report dealing with dioxin's possible link to miscariages in pregnant women. Dioxin, an unwatned byproduct in themanufacture of some herbicides, is considered on of the most toxic chemicals known to man. In Missouri, EPA officials said one part per million found in the soil was sufficient to justify the decision to buy out the town of Times Beach. FORMER EPA official ;Richard Dailey testified that last year Todhunter had penciled in changes to be made in a technical document on the alleged cancer risk from formaldehyde, a widely used chemical that is found in products ranging from plywood to diapers. Dailey said that when he objected to one of the proposed changes as scientifically unsound, he was taken off the formaldehyde project for three months, and later resigned after Todhunter demanded even more changes. Todhunter acknowledged suggesting changes but claimed that when the staff rejected them, he said, "fine, I am not going to make any more comments." ON FEB. 10, 1902, Todhunter decided against regulating formaldehyde as a suspected cancer-causing agent, des- See EPA, Page 2 Conference explores morality in medicine By JAN RUBENSTEIN Lisa Taylor (not her real name)needs surgery to remove a tumor. But her in-. come is slightly above the level which would make her eligible for Medicaid or other assistance programs, and her employer does not offer health insuran-. ce. She could apply for Medicaid if she quits her job as a waitress, but then her two children would suffer. Lisa's predicament is not uncommon. In fact, there are 10-20 million people in this country like Lisa, who cannot af- ford adequate health care, a University of Wisconsin medical professor said yesterday at the Eleventh Conference on Ethics, Humanism, and Medicine. GROWING unemployment and cuts in Medicaid and Medicare programs are the main reasons for this lack of health care, Prof. Daniel Wikler told a crowd of about 60 people gathered at the School of Public Health. "In deciding how to distribute health care,we should distribute the same good equally, unless there is some morally by H relevant difference," he said at the rallocatescar- session titled "Rights to Health Care." allocatesc- onference on Health care cannot be treated as a See ETHICS, Page 3 _ .Pollack urges women to seek equal treatment By JAYNE HENDEL The greatest internal battle women face is their unwillingness to deal with conflict, State Sen. Lana Pollack (D- Ann Arbor) told a crowd of more than 300 at yesterday's Seventh Annual Women's Career Fair. "The conflict is an essential part of acting in roles of authority. Women shouldn't sell themselves short," the keynote speaker told a mostly female audience gathered at the Modern Language Building for the all-day event. POLLACK warned women not to un- derestimate the barriers that exist for them in the world, pointing to the disparity in income for males and females in identical positions. Women must assert themselves and seek equal treatment, she said. The ability to assert oneself begins in childhood, according to Pollack, who stressed the importance of equal athletic opportunities for children. "We need to help girls become com- fortable with competition. Women are too slow to stand up for themselves" she said. POLLACK, who received a Master's degree in education from the Univer- 'sity in 1970, also spoke on her experience as a politician. "I've been referred to as 'the young lady who went to Lansing'," See WOMEN, Page 3 Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Music teacher Cathy Harris speaks to a group gathered in the Modern Languages Building yesterday for the annual Women's Career Conference. University Medical School Professor John Santinga speaks on s for arterial bypass surgery in a workshop yesterday on how to; ce medical resources. The workshop was part of the 11th C Ethics, Humanism and Medicine at the School of Public Health. TODAY Bedtime story STORE OFFICIALS in Portsmouth, Va., were left up in the air on Friday after a king-size waterbed being used in a promotional display floated away. "It was an eyecatcher," Mike McRae of Sleepyhead Waterbeds said about the bed which was last seen heading north over Portsmouth. McRae, whose firm was celebrating its grand opening, said the king-size waterbed heA hpan inflatel with helium and attached to a 50-foot rone chapel on a Houston street may cost the. Church of the Nazarine minister his job. Neal, who has been the unpaid pastor of the Irvington Church of the Nazarene for six years, has been ordered to resign his position today because he said, "The Nazanere Church officials just don't like marrying people who've been married before." The chuch's doctrine "forbids ministers to marry divorced people, unless they have scriptural grounds." A church of- ficial said Neal didn't ask the couples he married if they had a marri.a afnra"Wn a n 2 1 a .e -- ... and speaking of matrimony A N ELDERLY couple from Madison, Wisc., convicted of adultery in the 1940s, has won a pardon from Gov. An- thony Earl. On Monday, the couple appeared before the Governor's Pardon Advisory Board to present their case. The board unanimously recommended clemency. The pair, who married after their conviction and raised a large family, said their children were never told of the incident, and they requested their identities be withheld so their families would not find out. The couple had been sentenced should receive a $20 reduction in their rent. Arbor Management Co. sued the tenants after they withheld their rent, but the tenants lawyer countered that the company had ignored his clients repeated complaints. Also on this date in history: * 1947 - A state fire inspector denied a report in The Detroit News that he had called the University's 43-year-old maternity hospital a "fire trap" and that he had threatened to condemn the building. " 1975 - The Association of Black Sociology Students I ' t i