Saturday, September21 , 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY M . "JV* " - Court inay ovrrledraft reas~if uicati..o ..................................................................................................'..r "~ Page Five ate \ By SUSIE SCHMIDT WASHINGTON (CPS) - Next month the Supreme Court will hear a draft case that may affect hundreds of young men around the country whose verdict will al- most surely deal a blow to the Selective Service System and the procedures it has followed during recent months in reclassifying protesters. In an unusual development for such a case, the defendant, a 24- year-old divinity student, and the prosecution, attorneys r for the Justice Department, have both re- commended the same holding - that the decision of a lower court to uphold his reclassification to I-A and his subsequent induction because of his protest activity- be reversed. REFUTES HERSHEY The Justice Department, in re- commending reversal, has collid- ed with the Selective Service and its director, Lewis B. Hershey, who maintain that local boards have a right to reclassify "those who engage in illegal activity" as de- linquents-an action that puts them at the head of the list of priority for induction. The American Civil Liberties Union, which represents Oeste- reich, is fighting the reclassifica- tion on several grounds. and on several levels. It argues that: The declaration of delinquency and reclassification is invalid be- cause it is punitive and therefore cannot be undertaken without the due process safeguards to the re- gistrant required by the Consti- tution (counsel, confrontation and cross-examination, and impartial tribunal and so on); w That the act of returning a draft card is speech protected by the First Amendment. Evidence here, among other things, is the fact that in the original Selective Service Act after World War I "failure to possess (have on one's person, as it is now interpreted) a Registration Certificate (draft card)" was not on its face illegal,' but was merely evidence (to be investigated) of failure to regis- ter, which was illegal. The Justice, Department brief, filed last week, admits that incon- sistencies existed between the pro- vision for exemption (which, ac- cording to Solicitor General Er- win Griswold; is guaranteed by Congress and not subject to local board interference) and the pro- vision for reclassification. The Justice brief also puts much of the blame for the tricky - legal situation on General Her- shey. The Department has prev- iously argued that his October 24 letter to local boards, recommend- ing that they reclassify and induct protesters posthaste, was a "state- ment of personal opinion only" and not mandatory or binding. In cases brought against Her- shey last spring by the National Student Association, the c o u r t ruled that local boards were not legally affected by that directive. Now, however, the Justice De- partment, in a deviation from its spring position, agrees with the opposition that Hershey's memor- andum, for all its "informal" status, was indeed in effect "in- viting local boards to use their re- classification powers in a puni- tive way"-- using them to "get the bad guys." It urges the court to take into account when it considers the case the fact that (as the ACLU counts) at least 76 of the 650 men who turned in draft cards in October are now involved in legal proceedings because they have been "Teclassified. CASE SIGNIFICANT The Oestereich case is the first of all these, perhaps the only one, to reach the "court of last re- sort," the Supreme Court. Its de- cision will affect hundreds of other cases now in court. If it decides on the narrow point of law recommended by the Jus- tice Department, that will still af- fect perhaps 1000 cases, accord- ing to officials. If it should decide to tackle the whole problem of in- consistencies and illegalities in the Selective Service law in general terms, as advocated by the ACLU, its ruling will affect every re- classification instance now in pro- cess. HERSHEY LOSES Either way, General Hershey has lost his battle this time.Al- though the Justice Department gave him eight pages in its brief, explaining his side of the story and stating the Selective Service case for upholding the reclassifi- cation, it would not let him enter his own brief to the Court. Both sides seem to concur that his memo last October was a blunder, both technically and leg- ally. And both concur that local boards have acted illegally in many cases. The differences come in basic support for the draft as it now exists. Most telling, perhaps, is the ACLU's continual references to reclassification as "punitive", and the Justice lawyers' contention that "induction isn't punishment" -inferring that young people should be happy to serve in the armed forces, not try to avoid it by any means possible. DRAFT ISSUE The really broad issues -- whe- ther delinquency reclassification should be considered illegal not even as punishment for past deeds be because it forces compliance with the procedures of the draft system, whether it denies the right of free speech to registrants who must be afraid to dissent for fear of being reclassified -- are only touched on in this case. But they, too, are still hovering beneath the surface, ready to come up next time. 'COOL AND ARTICULATE, Julian Bond gains recognition in wake of Chicago convention ATLANTA, Ga. (P) - "Every- where I go I can see people whispering, 'That's him, That's him.' I don't like it. I don't like for people to talk about me." Julian Bond seems to find na- tional prominence a little hard to live with. But people. were talk- ing even before his role inkthe limelight at the Democratic Na- tional Convention. And they are not likely to stop. Bond - ' Georgia state repre- sentative, war critic, articulate civil rights spokesman and - for a few minutes -- a candidate for the vice presidential nomination - has been praised and damned in many quarters. Through it all, he remains self- possessed, supremely calm, sen- sitive to public opinion. ' CONVENTION FIGHT Bond, who led a challenge dele- gation that won half of Georgia's votes from Gov. Lester Maddox's state regulars in the convexntion's bitterest credentials fight, with- drew his name from contention about midway in the vice presi- dential balloting. He said he was too young to serve, the minimum age requirement being 35. Although he supported Sen. Eu- gene J. McCarthy in Chicago, Bond said he is working actively now for Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey.' "The limited gains Blacks have made over the past eight years are in danger of being lost under Nixon. There would be social and political regression. There would be police state tactics - Chicago- style."' Georgia first heard of Julian Bond in 1959 when he and several other Negroes sought to observe the workings of the Georgia House of Representatives from the white-only gallery of that cham- ber. "A legislator got to his feet and yelled, "Mr. Speaker, get those niggers out of here,' Bond re- lated. "And Speaker George L. Smith had us thrown out." In 1966 Bond returned to the House, this time as an elected re- presentative. His colleagues refused to s e a t him because he had publicly en- dorsed a statement by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Commit- tee -- SNCC - accusing the Unit- ed States of aggression in Viet- nam. DENIED SEAT He ran again, won again and was denied his seat again. Early in 1967, the U. S. Supreme Court ordered the General Assem- bly to seat him. Reluctantly, it complied. Some of those who led the fight to deny him his seat were among the Georgia regulars who left the Democratic convention after the Bond group was seated. "I don't think, as some people do, that you're going to have ra- cial warfare," he said. "There will be a series of racial clash- es. Not as big, not as destructive as Detroit, but more violent -- quicker." RELATIONS WITH WHITES Bond, said he does not hate whites, "but I am not as comfort- able around them." Bond indicated that greater po- litical power might infringe on his personal freedom. "I'm my own creature. Nobody owns me. "I'd rather be obscure and free." A white waitress has recognized him from television coverage of the Chicago convention. "You tell him we thank him for being a gentleman up there in all that mess," she said. LINEBACKER CECIL PRYOR (55) scurries after sophomore ball carrier, Jim Betts (23) at scrimmage. Some Michigan fans might see these two in action this fall, against such foes as the Minnesota Gophers, the Ohio State Buckeyes, the Michigan State Spar- tans, and a host of other potent Big Ten teams. Both football'erupt agin By FRED LaBOUR The scholars look at football f' as the season begins. ' 'r v "As snow descends upon th e autumn plain, as gold descends upon the Spanish Main, as a port- ly man is right as rain, so doth pigskin talk incite the peasants to riot." -- Paul Thunder "I recall the first time. my pa- ternal grandfather took my pink hand in his and introduced me to American football." -Saul Arthur "A tedious chore I fain would do, upon the grass so sweet, and that chore would be to find my mouth surrounded by a cleat." -Tim Fudge "A football to the common man is like a fine turke'y to the aristo- crat. That is to say, a common man finds solace in the football, while the fellow of higher breed- ing just gets fat." --P. Staryle "As the dawn of a new football year comes upon us, and we see again the very humanity that marks our separation from the an- imal kingdom mirrored upon the field, I can only say 'Good luck' to most of those contending, and a hearty 'Bleh' to the rest." -C. Norton "I'm quite aware that both the Asians and Africans are conpcious of the "football consciousness" my colleagues constantly refer to, but what I want to know is this: how does this relate to me as a stu- dent?" -Turner Pole "The sweetest music to my ear is a flock of halfbacks, leaping deers, assaulting the other's line so bare, that scarcely the AP pol fellow who will start this afternoon at split end, gives his all and his did care." -Pierce Arroi scrimmage time. Imsland's helmet was snatched up by a passing We want the Big Ten title and ircling Moosejaw. we want it now. JULIAN BOND IIf( JERRY IMSLAND (86), a helmet to snare a pass at pigeon and was last seen c TO sict a E~~ait