Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 14, 1968 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 14, 1968 Spock 1 By RICK PERLOFF Advocating a strategy of "pas- sive" legal defense, in political cases, Victor Rabinowitz, Dr. Ben- jamin Spock's defense attorney in the draft conspiracy trial, spoke last night at the Law Club. "When the person himself says that he thinks the war is politi- cally, socially, and religiously im- moral and says he will do every- thiig he can to' stop it including burning his draft card, I wonder if this doesn't present a stronger case than the lawyer arguing that 'Raskin defends Times awyer a 'my client says such and such.' He suggested that perhaps the lawyer should sit next to his client in the courtroom while the client presents his own case. The 6t- torney would merely serve in an advisory capacity. Rabinowitz argued that the law- yer does not necessarily have to rely on the standard defense of pointing out technical loopholes in the opposition's case. These loopholes would concern such matters as whether the in- dictmnent was properly drawn up or if the defendant was actually involved in the alleged crime. The latter charge could pertain to the Ann Arbor welfare sit-in trials where the defense argued that "bystanders" were charged with trespass. Rabinowitz noted that some- times in a trial based on, a "technical defense," the client will deny the charge, pointing out "if I had been involved it would. have been justified." sks self-defense posing a set of special findings "During the Spock trial no and questions to the jury. He also client could talk to newspapermen, felt the judge was wrong in choos- but I'm not sure if this is the way ing a jury without any women. to run a case. There is nothing "The method of picking the jury, the special findings and doz- wrong with the client giving press ens of other things will give us a interviews." reversal," he said. Rabinowitz noted that the trial "The lawyer has to do a public of Black Panther Huey Newton re- relations job to make the com- ceived a lot of publicity because all munity aware the case is going the Black Panthers stood outside on," he continued. the courtroom. SUPPORT THE GRAPE BOYCOTT BOYCOTT A&P NO EXCUSE. Grape workers in California average less than $1500 a year and are denied the right to unionize. NO EXCUSE. Fight this injustice by refusing to shop at A&P until it stops selling and profiting from California grapes. NO EXCUSE. By DAWN FLANNERY Rabinowitz stated that the law- Although scheduled to speak yer undertaking such cases should For more information call 662-5834 evenings. yesterday about labor relations, A. have some sympathies with his H. Raskin, assistant editorial di- client and his positions. He also_________ rector of the New York Times, ap- alleged thathis was not the law- pealed to his audience much more yer's duty to try to dissuade people y ourself when he strayed from his assign- from taking such stands. J i JJ O)r- ment. Rabinowitz also charged that Raskin spoke in Rackham Am- the judge in the Spock trial pre- the Dail Staff Toda phitheatre, the third speaker in judiced the case considerably by the arserie of University lecturers in jdcd-tecsecnierbyb journalism sponsored by the jour- nalism department. In answer to a question; Raskin embarassedly admitted that the Times hadn't intended to create the stir it had caused with its ar- tcedo ie rsdnteetSpiro ws gnew s bne Pesident-elet home UNION-LEAGUE T E UNION-LEAGUE state, Maryland. In a recent seven inch editorial, the Times resur- Agnew' involewsst iary con EUROPEAN CHARTER FLIGHTS Agne's ivolemen in coflict! of interest case while governor of Maryland and commented upon it. Times ran the story on a "slow" FLIGHT 1 May 4 DETROIT-LONDON Sabena Saturday in an unobtrusive place June 1 BRUSSELS-DETROIT an the edit page. However, the fol- lowing day, they were besieged with piles of criticism from both FLIGHT 2 May 8 NEW YORK--LONDON Sabena Republican candidates and many Au. 17 BRUSSELS-NEWYORK of their subscribers. Despite the controversy t h e Times raised on the Agnew issue, FLIGHT 3 June 29 NEWYORK--LONDON Pan Am Raskin nevertheless maintained Aug. 14 PARIS-NEW YORK that an editorial page does not greatly influence people's support of a presidential candidate. I Only flights backed financially by the U niversity In the body of his speech, Ras- Only I.A.T.A. Charter to Europe this summer kin didn't show much hope for the future of publisher-labor union re- Fly with SCHEDULED, RELIABLE, experienced airlines lationship. With ironic optimism Service-ALL jet-more leg room-Open bar-entertainment- Raskin observed that the tragic plus much more demise of four of the former sev- en New York dailies, leaves only Sign up in UAC offices 2nd floor Union three quarreling publishers to dis- Mon. thru Fri. 2-5 p.m. agree. His principle fear is that "if long disappearance becomes a way ANY QUESTIONS, CALL 662-4431, EXT. 23 of life for the newspapers, people may stop looking for them even when they are on the stands." I A I DR. GERHART NIEMEYER* Department of Government and International Studies University of Notre Dame will speak on T I PR LI OF Today: Draft Card Turn-in NOON ON THE DIAG (UGLI Multipurpose room in case of rain) Following the rally: 1) Open House: 1-7 p.m. new resistors will be at 802 Monroe (basement) to talk about noncooperation 2) Liberation classes: a. The Draft 1-3 p.m. 825 Tappan No. 6 b. Prison 3-5 p.m. 825 Tappan No. 6 c. Resistance as a process 7 p.m. 802 Monroe (basement) d. Racism 1 p.m. 819 S. State No. 3 e. Radicals and Philosophy 2 p.m. 802 Monroe (upstairs) f. Drama 3 p.m. 439 S. Division No. 2 and No. 3 g. SDS and Socialism 4 p.m. 618 Church No. 1 h. Women's Liberation 7 p.m. 825 Tappan No. 6 i. Western Economic Impact on Asia and Africa 7 p.m. 819 S. State No.3 j.Anarchism 3 p.m. Canterbury House Lounge 330 Maynard k. Authoritarian Classroom Roleplaying 2:30 p.m. N. Lounge Michigan Union (First floor, turn right) I. Ways of liberation: Zen, Yoga, Taoism, Vedanta, Psychotherapy 4 0 ER IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Friday, November 15 r 4 Room 3-C, Michigan Union 4FOOMPM FREE ADMISSION