THE M1CNI AN dA,1LY Tuesday, January 20, ... u :: ;, . .. '$+. f .; } , y v .. k , ' . ''./.:: .v .. l : +. ? :.... ...::. ' 5 ..fir.. . .. . is '. :_ . s .: .. .. ., . .., -.. C} :: ,,;,. .: '-' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, January 20, Deriiocrats back lower voting age ACADEMICS LEADS THE aAY: Americans migrate to Caniada protesters (Continued fron Page 1) gress has not authorized the ac- celerated draft of so-called delin- quents.J Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices John M. Harian and Potter Stewart voted to overturn the conviction pending before the court but for other reasons. _ In a separate thrust at draft boards the court agreed to hear the appeal of a Kentucky man who questions the process of de- termining conscientious objector status. This case, of Joseph Thomas Mulloy, 25, of Preston- burg, will be heard this spring. Still on the court's docket is a draft case in which the power of boards to reclassify protesters to IA is under serious attack. Doug- las, Black, Brennan and Marshall took the position in the G u t - knecht case that boards do not have congressional authority to reclassify, for punitive purposes, young men who were exempt or de- ferred. ' This view may not command a majority. White, who agreed with the liberal foursome that the ac- celerated induction of a man al- ready IA is not authorized, did not join in their view of reclassi- fication. , The court's second major rul- ing yesterday was a warning that blacks may not be kept off juries' for racial reasons. But this was, coupled with a refusal to dismantle Alabama and Georgia laws which civil rights lawyers claim work as instruments of discrimination.' Justice Stewart said even over-j wlvelming proof of black under- I representation on someSouthern juries and school boards is not grounds for invalidating laws that ' limit service to "intelligent" or "well-informed" citizens. "Whether jury service be deem-. ed a right, a privilege, or a duty," said Justice Stewart, "the state may no more extent it to some of its citizens and deny it to others on racial grounds than it may in- vidiously discriminate in the of-. fering and withholding of the elec- tive franchise." OTTAWA tIP-Paul Rosen, 30. a former U.S. citizen, tells why he moved to Canada: (Continued forn Page 1) "The doctors are less arrogant, It will be up to the student- the policemen more polite, the youth caucus to help make sure customs men more civil. You can these reforms go through," a d d s stil find a parking lot downtown. De Grieck, one of the initiators of "It's simply a more civilized the caucus. place to live." However, F'rank Shoichet, anzo- He is one of many thousands of theri YD member and an initiator U.S. academics who have moved of the caucus, believes that "whe- across the border in the last dec- Lher the 18-Year-old vote will pass ade-so many, in fact, that they is highly dubiouse" filled 84 per cent of Canadian university appointments in a The caucus, which held its first uige yea, m. meeingat he onvntin, assingle year. , Yeeting at the convention, was They are part of a major trend developed chiefly by campus YD in migration in the 1960s. members in order to "give youth Rosen says Canada puts much more voice in the party," says importance on the plights of Bia- Shoichet. frans and little on ownership of During the two days of the con- an aircraft carrier. vention, some 80 students gather- Rosen, who learned about Ot- ed to discuss their goals for the tawa from a colleague at New York party. University, now teaches political The youth-student caucus' will theory at Ottawa's Carleton Uni- -liffer from YDs in that it will not versity. be bound to the party; and will At the beginning of the decade, work outside the party to achieve perhaps 11,000 Americans a year its goals, if necessary. were moving north. Last year's "We're not going to do every- figure probably will match the thing the party wants us to," days 20,422 arrivals of 1968. D, G k;'There is no sign of a slowdown One was from a U.S. naval of- ficer getting his discharge in San Francisco. He wanted to know wvhether Atomic Energy could use his experience, gained on a nuclear submarine, in retaliation protec- tion methods. Lipin forwarded the application to the Clark River, Ont., plant, The applicant, who comes from New Jersey, already has sent his wife and children to live in Arm-, prior, an Ottawa ;Valley town be- tween Ottawa and Chalk River. The youths who evade the draft or desert military service by com- ing to Canada get more publicity, but other landed immigrants are . more significant for Canada. Among the 8,266 U.S. citizens going into the labor force in 1968. almost half were professionals- university professors, teachers, engineers, scientists. Alnmost 1,000 to Canada with $1,000 but the average U.S. citizen comes in with $4,Q00. The 1968 group brought t $90 million in cash or assets to Canada. The San Francisco naval officer is coming after completing his military service, George Schu- mann, 42, who came to British Columbia two years ago from Wells, Nev., last spring sent his son back to serve when the boy received a U.S. draft call. Schmuaan has invested $110,000 in a cattle-feeding and slaughter business on the Nechako River in British Columbia. Carol Buck, a striking brunette, came from New York City in 1966 to study at McGill University in a Montreal. ' The safe streets of Ottawa and Montreal charmed her. Like Rosen, she is impressed by the absence of drunks and panhandlers. "It's --Associated Press ~Nioreriaj .i tropas Iecd rel[uorees ' Nigerian Federal soldiers feed Ibo refugees at Awoomama, between Owerri and Uli= in the former secessionist state of Biafra. Relief workers say the federal troops have be'en helping with relief in a number of places before the relief teams arrive. SUPR EME CO UR T: NiXOn nominates Judge Carswell of these were "owners, managers, when you go back that you get officials." . cultural shock," she says of New The average immigrant comes York. Use Tail Ci *sfied (Continued from Page 1) that freedom-of-choice plans are acceptable only when they actual- ly bring desegregation. As a judge in Tallahassee, Cars- well ruled against attempts to force theaters to sell tickets to blacks and to force the reopening; of municipal swimming pools that had closed after a black "wade-s in." He also ruled against segre- gation at the local airport. Marvin Capland, director of the. Washington. office of the Leader- ship Conference on Civil Rights,I yesterday said he assumes his of- fice will be opposed to Carswell's nomination for the Supreme Court. Sen. Richard S. Schweiker (R-I Pa.), who voted , against the Haynsworth nomination, said he would vote to confirm CarswelW The senator said in a statement property I inherited from my issued by his office he is satisfied father and my grandfather." with the thoroughness of the Jus- He identified the firm in which tice Department's investigation of his wife held an interest as El- the nomimee, berta Box and Crate Co. Some den. Robert P. Griffin of Mich- students joined the strikers in the igan, the GOP whip, whose op- wage dispute, and a state judge; position to Haynsworth was a enjoined the strikers from cross- major blow to the administration ing a property line at the plant in the earlier controversy, issued ,site. a guarded statement of approval. The strike ended after several Griffin did not say how he will . w ka L36 rs C: .a .... U .. .a . v ec,.. a .a v s The group's goals include gain- "I've hid a great many appli- ing veto powers over the selec- cationsfrom U.S. citizens in the Lionof nmines to theState last seven or eight months,'' said - tion of nominees to. the I vaten Board of Education and state uni- Sam Lipin, personnel coordinator versity boards, implementing the for Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd,. reforms passed last weekend,. and in I probably have seven or eight;r developing a better understanding m nry. box today." of minority group problems. "We're going to have to find H ' ace liberals and radicals who know H ospital face ' FREE Service and Delivery how to act-people who are fed up with the existing situation in the la c of blOOd --NO DEPOSI T R EQUIR EE-- party," he adds. Members of the caucus are cau- University hospital needs a CALL: tiously optimistic about the con- minimum of 200 pints of blood vention's reforms. to ease a critical shortage. At "We got just what we expected present blood is only available Nl ---a commitment in words. It all for emergency patients. All6 7 depends on whether the commit- potential donors are urged to . 'r662-5671 ment is carried out,' says Shoi- call the local Red Cross chapter SERVING BIG 10 SCHOOLS SINCE 1961 chet. at 971-5300 to schedule ap- "The farces of change are grow- pointments. ing." De Grieck agrees, "but if the_._. _® __.-..-..- ._._..- ... _ Democratic Party doesn't open up __; even more in the next few years, -there will probably be a signifi- :cant third party movement."E .n / ttN61" 4 vote. "The reports thus far have been ver"y favorable, and I hope the Senate will be able to confirm the nomination without delay," he said. Causwel ssaid yesterday he had no business holdings. . But he said his wife had "some interest' in a Tallahassee firm Istruck by black millworkers last year in a wage dispute. Asked about his personal hold- I gs, Carswell rej1jed, "Ihave my home and a few parcels of real Contract Ratified W li,g g a ge ,tS 'tttti Wt, increase smaller than they sought. Asked if he thought the dispute might center into his confirmation by the Senate for the Supreme Court, Carswell replied, "I find that would be incredible to' fathom, really." V V! tYl .:i! VU 1! Forner Prof. Johnson CREDIT' U 0 dies at age Clarence T. Johnstan, 97, pro- fessor emeritus of geodesy and sur- veying at the University, died Saturday evening at his home. Survivors include two sons, Clarence N. Johnston of Streat- or, Ill., and Dr. Franklin D. John- ston of Ann Arbor, who retired last year as professor emeritus of internal medicine and land chief of the University Hospital Heart Station. The late Prof. Johnston, a Uni- versity alumnus, retired in 1941 after 30 years of service. He had been chairman of the former de- partment of geodesy and surveying and director of the Davis Engin-; eering Camp, now called the Camp Davis, in Wyoming. of 97 r E' w The Washtenaw County Build- ing and Construction Trades A memorial service will be held Council, bar-gaining agent for 281 at 3 :30 p.m Friday, Jap. 23, at the Muehilig Funeral Chapel with dozen unions, last night ratified the Rev. Terry N. Smith, of the a 27-month contract with the Uni- First Congregational Church, of- versity. ficiating. The ' contract, involving no He was widely known, in the fringe benefits or grievance is- field of hydraulics, including ir- sues, provides for an across-the- rigation, drainage, and the admin- board hourly wage hike of 44 istration of water resources. He E cents, retroactive to Jan. 4 of this was the first secretary of the Wyo- iyear. An additional 37 cents in- ming board of registration for crease will become effective March engineers, the first such board in 14, 1971 continuing until the con- the United States. tract expires March 31, 1972. ' invites all students to ashare in'he oppor- tunity of putting student money to work for students' benefits, -open a share .aCCount tOday -join 1400 fellow students who are nqw earning interest on savings HOURS:M-F 9 30-12:00 °1st floor 1 :00-4.30 MICHIGAN UNION BLDG. S3ats. 1.:00-12:00s rPHONE '665-5394 530 So. State St. 'm I j i TH E MEN OF WEN LEY HOUSE Are Proud to The Renewal Announce of Their U ESCORT SERVICE for the Coeds of Michigan PLEASE CALL THESE NUMBERS BEFORE MIDNIGHT *1 764-2753 ~764-3776 764-6728 764-2796 Il C 'IliS lIlffi1 IlII1 C c 1ff T11 C ;p II 1L Il IlC Il lEf11 5 j pC C ff 4IlII1 Cq Cg]4IlIljb fI711C ft11 I 5;Manyrhave moved.. but the cf ailit eStay'On... The Pdu lists arri ed on the West Side of Newx York City in 1858. 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