Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 22, 1968 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 22, 1968 U PROTEST DENIAL OF I-S REMEMBER COURSE EVALUATION Bring 2 no. 2 PENCILS today Law student to enter draft complaint By RICK PERLOFF A University law professor will file a court complaint sometime next week protesting the denial of a I-S deferment to a University law student. Prof. Charles Donahue Jr. may act as the arguing attorney for the case with Selective Service Di- rector Lewis Hershey and perhaps the state and local boards as de- fendants. Donahue contends that Hershey is incorrect in denying the I-S.i He said the law permits any grad-: uate student called for induction who did not have an undergradu-. ate II-S after June, 1967 to re- ceive a I-S for the entire academic year, if the student is called dur- ing the middle of such a year. Generally second and third year graduate students are the ones affected. Donahue is one of a group ofr 35 professors both here and at Yale University who are chal- lenging the ruling.- t The Selective Service System originally took the position that no one who had received a defer- ment either for graduate or un- dergraduate study since June of 1967 was entitled to a I-S defer- ment if he was called for induc- tion. Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey now contends that if a graduate student is called for induction in mid-term the induc- tion should be postponed until the end of the term, quarter, tri- mester or semester, whichever comes first. Since Donahue believes the I-S deferment extends to the end of the academic year, he feels Her- shey is giving half of what the students are entitled to as a mat- ter of law. "All he's giving us is one of those half-ass compro- mises," he said. If Donahue's interpretation is correct, second and third year graduate students who lose their II-8 will still be able to qualify LIVE HIGH - EAT, OUT THE AMBASSADOR A Distinguished Menu Serving Lunches. and Dinner Daily. Staler-Biloit Located at 1-94 and State Road \t JUMBO - I M M-M-n-m-, yummie! A giant hamburger of 1 lb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, mayonnaise, onions, pickles and ketchup .. ALL THIS 'FOR ONLY 44c I- I W tMILING APEEDYrIaCn West ,of Arborland STEAK and SHAKE 1/2 lb. Char-broiled. Hamburger Steak,, Potatoes, Salad' 1.40 1313 SOOTH Spaghetti and Meat Sauce,, Salad,.Bread ard Butter 1.35 UNIVERSITY Open: 11 A.M.-2 A.M. Above Ad Worth 25c toward Dinner (One per Customer) MIKE and JOE ~ &* Yond A our Da to(Fova 4 P M f :3 P.M.#Mon hurs.&1Su AFr & Yo.adY aetCasa o va Restaurant & Cocktail ;Lounge, 11i W. MICHIGAN AVE. 483-3027 4 P.M.-1 1:30 P.M. Mon.-Thurs. & Sun. 4 R.M.-12:30 A.M, Fri. & Sat, Roostertail Upedek0 would like to introduce you to Detroit's largest+ 21-and-over-club by extending a FREE COVER CHARGE -COUPON- to you good any Friday night through 1968. Bring this coupon and legal I.D. and be admitted FREE excluding-Friday, Nov. 29 under the II-A exemption, the fatherhood clause. The 1967 draft law provides that students who had the undergraduate II-S since June,\1967 are not eligible for a III-A deferment. The denial of law student Tim- othy Sisson's deferment brought into question the consistency of administration of the law by the. State Selective Service Board. Donahue maintains Sisson's sta- tus was identical to that of Jack Radcliffe. '70L, who had been granted a I-S deferment under! the same Selective Service regu-; lation last week. However, State Selective Ser- vice Director Col. Arthur Holmes denied that any I-S deferments were given for a case such as, Radcliffe's. "The conly condition that a student can be classified II-S," Holmes explained, "is if he has re- veived a Baccalaureate degree be- fore July 1967 and never received a II-S since that time." Holmes then differed with Don- ahue in the date entitling gradu- ate students to deferments. June, 1967 was the date Donahue refer- red to. Two state Selective Service Sys- tems, New York City and Michi- gan, have granted I-S deferments: at least in individual cases. How- ever, many state and local boards do not seem aware that such de- ferments exist. Greg Curtner, '70L, emphasized jit was important to alert gradu- ate students of the deferments open to them. "There are over 200,000 gradu- ate students, many of whom are not aware that they have this; option. We're trying to do~ all we' can to inform students of their right," he said. Curtner has been assisting Donahue with the case. T w o Yale professors have brought suit in a Connecticut cpurt also challenging the refusal of a state selective service board to grant a student a I-S defer- ment. , Senator Joseph Tydings (D- Md.), a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has indi- cated he will alert the. White House of any case in which grad- uate students are not being de- ferred until the end of the aca- demic year in 1969. Judic to 11ear MSU editors EAST LANSING ( - Student editors threatened' with fines be- cause obscenities appeared in the Michigan State University news- paper have taken their case to the student-faculty judiciary. The 11-member judiciary coin- mittee - which includes s e v e n faculty members a n d four stu- dents - set Dec. 4 as the tenta- tive date for a hearing on t h e matter. Under provisions of the MSU academic freedom report, the ju- diciary may recommend action in the case and, since the report was approved by both students a n d faculty, it is "assumed" any rec omnmendations would be imple- mented, a university spokesman explained. Claiming the threat of fines is a form of censorship are State News editor-in-chief Edward Brill of Merrick, N.Y., ,managing editor James Granelli of East Detroit and campus editor Trinka Cline of West Union, Ill. State News general manager threatened to "lop off" the sal- aries of the three because they allowed the four-letter obscenities,. to be printed in a recent edition of the student paper. Brill is paid $75 a week as edi- tor and Granelli and MissC dine each receive" $60 a week. Berman said he and Brill had agreed ,the editors would notify State News printers, Willstaff, Inc., in writing if they intended to use objectionable language in print. No letter was written and Ber- man,' who was out of town at the time, did not know of the contro- versial article before it was print- ed. The article outlined a contro- versy at the University of Wiscon- sin, where the student newspaper had run into trouble with the uni- versity board of trustees for print- ing obscenities. The State News incorporated the words - excerpts from "Lady Chatterly's Lover" by D. H. Law- rence and James Joyce's "Ulys- ses" - in its own story. MSU president John A. Han- nah has said he believes there is no censorship involved in the case. "I think whoever was responsi- ble for the obscene article just wanted to see how far they could go," he said. "I don't think it's appropriate to run such words. DAILY CLASSIF EDS BRING QU(CK RESULTS 10.SHOP E ' "'° E11SSY _ Entertaining and D WATERFALL RESTAURANT Featuring FAT BOB and the Clarence Byrd Trio Thursday, Friday & Saturdc 2161 W. 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