Page Six -THE MICHIGAN DAILY_ Wednesdav. March 20. 1968 Page Six ~THE MICHIGAN DAILY -%.-47---, IT4i1 --'If +/J a I I I Coffin Urges Active Souris Quits Vietnam War Protest Michigan's l H i. h ...C . ALTERNATIVE TO RESERVE CALLUP: Undergrads May be Drafted If New Viet Buildup Occurs (Continued from Page 1) I i I and mistreating prisoners, actions forbidden under the U.S. military code and the Geneva Convention. "It raises the question," Rev. Cof- fin said, "of whether our Com- mander in Chief may not be the War Criminal in Chief." Press Conference On the subject of the President, Rev. Coffin said in a press con- ference yesterday afternoon: "You can get to a scoundrel, but a fool can't be reached. I'm afraid he has strayed from a politician and become an ideologue who is no longer sensitive to public pres- sures. "Senator McCarthy is a moral challenge to President Johnson, but Bobby Kennedy is a moral threat." Referring to the upcoming pres- idential election. Rev. Coffin said "if we don't despair and put all our effort into it there is a very good chance we could elect a Kennedy or a McCarthy or a Rockefeller." (He later said that he threw the last name in to please "the one or two Republicans who might be in the audience," but he said his sources did indicate that d Rockefeller was becoming dovish.) Also at the press conference he spoke of his decision to plead "not guilty" to a charge of "aid- ing i and abetting draft resistors. If we didn't fight the indictment of conspiracy almost anyone could be charged. It's a matter of protecting the rights of dissent and conscience.'' He also said it was conceivable that if the war doesn't stop "many citizens will go to jail." He cautioned the audience to give special consideration to any of the many alternatives - jail, Canada, CO status, or ROTC - available, but that "if you join ROTC, you better give half of your salary to the peace move- ment or you'll be plagued by guilt feelings." He referred to , McCarthy's showing in New Hampshire as "a result of student power. It was moving to see those men shave off their beards. Greater love hath no man of 21 than for his beard." In his afternoon press confer- ence he confessed that students are the force that "may be able to save this country before it reaches the point of no return." nign ourt Resignation To Give Republicans Majority: Seat To Stay Vacant DETROIT (om') -Republican- nominated justices will gain a 4-3 majority on the Michigan Supreme Court because of the announced resignation yesterday of Justice Theodore Souris. Under the State Constitution, his resignation will reduce the court to seven; members. The eighth place will not be filled be- cause the Constitution provides that the first vacancy on the court by dealth, retirement or resigna- tion shall not be filled. Souris' resignation would be likely to frustrate the ambitions of any other persons toward the court's only open spot. Had Souris sought re-election this fall - which the Constitution would have allowed for a current member of the court - he likely would have been opposed by Pig- gins running as a Republican nominee by Judge John Gillis of the State Court of Appeals, anoth- er Republican who reportedly seemed interested in the Supreme Court. In a news conference. Souris blasted Piggin's one-man grand jury system and called for its re- placement with a 23-man grand jury plan, similar to that used by federal courts. "As a private citizen, I fear the one-man grand jury law," Souris said. Judge Piggins became known around the state asa one-man grand juror probing crime in Wayne County in 1966-67. I WASHINGTON (CPS) - Selec. tive Service Director Lewis B. Her- shey said recently that some un- dergraduate college students may, be drafted if President Johnson decides to send 200,000 more troops to Vietnam. Hershey said if a decision is made to enlarge the war, the Pres- ident will have to decide whether to call up the reserves or to en- large the draft calls. If the re- serves are not called up, Hershey said, "we would have to contrive some way" to draft undergraduates in order to meet the increased draft calls. Consider Major Escalation Recent press reports have in- dicated the Administration is con- sidering a major new escalation of the Vietnam war. The Wash- ington Post reported that one recommendation before the Pres- ident calls for 206,000 additional troops in Vietnam. The current authorized number of troops for the war is 525,000. The White House said this week that no decision to enlarge the war has been made. Hershey's remarks about draft- ing undergraduates were made during a question-and-answer ses- sion following a speech he deliver- ed to the National Press Club. He said the number .of students drafted "would depend upon whether they're going to send them this year, next year, or some other time. And the quicker they'd have to send them, the larger the calls would have to be." President Johnson is authorized by law to declare "that we've got to have some of those boys that are candidates for baccalaureates," Hershey said. He emphasized the Selective Service System presently has no plans to determine which undergraduates would be drafted. Abolish Idea of Intelligence "We've abolished this old-fash- ioned idea of thinking that people who pass high examinations know any more than people who can't' pass them at all," Hershey said, referring to the new draft law i -oil NATIONAL NEGRO HISTORY WEEK COMMITTEE CABARET !-Ann Arbor Armory-Friday Nite "HISTORY OF JAZZ" Black Bazaar BLACK Trueblood Aud. 7:30-11:00 Saturday Onl "BLACK STUDENT INVOLVEMENT AT A WHITE UNIVERSITY" BLACK Aud. A-Mason Hall 3:00 Sunday which defers all undergraduates ier' Hershey replied, "I'm not so doing satisfactory work. Previous- sure in the future we're going to ly, local draft boards could ex- declare any war. "We've been able amine students' college grades and to be flexible enough to kill people their scores on a special examin- very handily without war. We ation in deciding which ones to don't even have to have enemies; defer. we kill our friends when we run At one point in a discussion out of somebody to kill." about training young people for Hershey also said he does not the military, Hershey said, "I wish graduate students will have a dras- we could take everybody, but I ion to end deferments for some haven't much hope that we'll ever graduate studentsw ill have a dras- sell Congress that we'll train people tic effect on graduate schools. "I when we don't know what we're have heard these cries of 'wolf' training them for." many times," he said. "I have a Asked if a declaration of war by firm faith that the graduate Congress would make his job eas- schools are going to live." SWorld lN'ewsRoundup By The Associated Press GUATEMALA - The Guate- malan g o v e r n m e n t suspended constitutional guarantees for 30 days Monday night in the wake of the kidnaping of the Roman Catholic archbishop of Guatemala Saturday. The state of siege declared Mon- day night also puts the police under army control and allows the presidentsto militarize other public services. The government declared that the kidnaping of Archbishop Mario Casariego is "an offense to the people and a challenge to the government." It blamed the kidnaping on "subversive ele- ments" guilty of "persistent at- tacks against social institutions," meaning pro-Castro guerrillas. crease. This would create an in- itial $25 million war chest and strengthen its hand at the bar- gaining table, union officials say. WARSAW - Communist leader Wladyslaw Gomulka took some of the edge off a party propa- ganda campaign blaming Zionists for widespread unrest in Poland. Making his first public com- ment yesterday on the riots that began March 8, Gomulka said there were Jewish nationalists in the country and added: "It would be wrong to see in Zionism a dan- ger to socialism in Poland." In Jerusalem, the Israeli gov- ernment protested the anti-Zion- ist campaign and said it would "always intervene to protect and shelter" persecuted Jews. Gomulka announced in broad- cast speech that 1,208 persons have been arrested in the disturb- ance. They broke out at Warsaw University and spread to a num- ber of cities and campuses. He said those arrested included 367 students. Courts have fined or imposed other sentences, he said, on 67 students and 140 others. Forty three demonstrators and 103 police or auxiliaries have been injured, Gomulka said. 4 a b ' el f-~. 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