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March 17, 1972 - Image 7

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-03-17

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Friday, March 17, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Sever

~' Friday, March 17, '1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Sever

DeLong's Pit Barbecue
FEATURES THESE DINNERS:
Bar-B-Q Ribs Shrimp
Bar-B-Q Chicken Scallops
Bar-B-Q Beef Fried Chicken
Bar-B-Q Pork Fried Fish
Fried Oysters
All Dinners Include Fries, Slaw, and Bread

TARR DIRECTIVE:
Draft numbers up to

Local leaders meet at Union forum

I

15 will be called up for 'discussion

of

pretrial

WASHINGTON VP--Draft Direc-I
1or Curtis Tarr today directed hisl
4,100 draft boards to order men
born in 1952 who have lottery num-
ber 1 through 15 to report for
Army duty on dates from mid-

By WILLIAM LILLVIS
Previously specific quotas were A forum of speakers explained
levied on individual states and lo- the complexities of pre-trial jus-a
cal boards. As a result, all boards: ;ice in criminal law Wednesday
did not reach the same lottery- night at the request of the Uni-
number ceilings. versity Office of Religious Af-
Selective Service officials esti- fairs Committee for a New Un-

CARRY OUT

FREE DELIVERY

OPEN: Mon., Wed., Thurs., Sun.-1 1 a.m, to 2 a.m.
Fri., Sat.-1I .a.m. to 3 a m.

314 Detroit St.

665-2266

207 E. LIBERTY

April tnroughMay 31. mated between 11,000 and 12,000
The action is expected to fill will be called in April and May,
most but not all of the 15,000-man with the main men involved class-
request for April, May and June. ed as 1A or 1A0 conscientious ob-
Tarr said he will issue the June jectors. The later includes those
call no later than early May. willing to do noncombat military'
duty who were in the lottery held
One reason for the uncertainty last August for men turning 20
of how much of the 15,000-man this year. It does not affect, those
call will be filled, Tarr said, is in the recent lottery, who were
that this is the first time the Uni- assigned numbers for next year's

derstanding of Justice (NUJ).
In the two-hour session Ann
Arbor Police Chief Walter Kras-
ny, Washtenaw County Prosecu-
tor William Delhey, District JudgeI
Pieter Thomassen, Public Defend-t
er George Alexander together with
a private attorney Pauline Roth-'
meyer and Ira Meyer of the Legal'
Aid Society traced their various
responsibilities in the pre-trialj
process.
The last hour was opened toj
any of some 100 people in thej
audience who had questions about
pre-trial justice. Victor Wallen,
who conducted the session, com-
mented, "We seem to have de-
veloped an elaborate system for
passing the buck."
Alexander emphasized the di-

recommendations on individuals lishing bail but there were no
after interviewing them imme- I rules.
diately upon arrest. They can by- Delhey noted that the decision
pass the courts and jail if the per- to allow a person his freedom be-
son has a problem such as drink- fore trial was particularly diffi-
ing or a clean record. cult, especially in the case ofI
Delhey called the practice j multiple offenders. "There is not
known as plea-bargaining "non- enough information," he said.
sense." He claimed that defense Third Ward City Council candi-
attorneys are never informed by date Genie Plamondon, said that
his office of recommended sen- j her husband, Rainbow People's
tences unless there are "special Party member Pun Plamondon
circumstances in the case." , plead guilty rather than spend 131
Delhey cited a case where ' months in a jail in another coun-
charges of felonious assault was ty because of the "inhuman" con-,
reduced to assault when a doctor I ditions there.
filed a report on the victim stat- I When asked why so many per-
ing he suffered only minor in- sons plead guilty, Delhey said,,
juries. "because they are guilty."
Thomassen said that he con- Krasny noted that "somewherel
sidered the severity of the offense in the machinery laws get passed."
and the past record when estab- ' He said that if citizens wish to

justice
reform the legal system they must
start with the laws which the
police must enforce.
Alexander pointed out that
more investigation needs to be
d -ne into the background of peo-
ple who are arrested so that an
accurate measure of that individ-
ual is presented to the judges
when the time for arraignment
comes.
In addition, Alexander recom-
mended that the office of the
Public Defender be used exten-
sively. "I think the public defend-
er can do a better job than a pri-
vate attorney," said Alexander.
"We deal with the same prob-
lems day in and day out and we
can develop more expertise in
dealing with the problems of pre-
trial procedure," said Alexander.

torm Nationai Canl has been used.
Under this, men are ordered intor
service on a nationwide basis.
FLARES
Your
Choice
$5
reg. to $24
CHECKMATE
State Street at Liberty

callup.
A small number of others also
will be ordered to report. These
are older men who have lost de-
ferments since Jan. 1 or whose
initial postponement of induction
expires in April or May. They re-
ceived their lottery numbers pre-
vious to last August.
Tarr also told the boar'ds to

BACK TO THE LAND
Community gardening organized

notify 10-class conscientious objec- lemma of the current bail situa-
tors-those not willing to do non- tion. "The person without money
combat military duty - born in sits in jail and waits for trial: the!
1952 who have numbers 1 through person with money gets out -
15 that they are obligated to per- that's the system," he said. A sub-
form alternate service. stitute for the bail system is pres-j
ently the subject of a committeeI
WASTED STAMP? of the Washtenaw County Bar As-
sociation, the public defender said.
The briefest correspondence on Alexander was unsure what the
record is thought to be that be- substance of this alternative
tween Victor Hugo and his pub- !would be. Later he said it could
lisher in 1862. The author,. on holi-; be similar to a "point system" in
day, inquired about sales of his operation in New York City, al-j
book, writing "?" His publisher though he hoped it could be more
replied: "!" imaginative.
The New York system uses five
categories of information - prior
record, employment, family ties ,
& (in New York area), residence and
time spent in New York City - to
1award points. Persons with suffic-
lent points are released at the
judge's discretion,
A member of the audience
BFA Programs pointed to another alternative in
Certificate Programs Genesee County. A Citizen's Pro-
For info contact registrar bation Committee can make

(Continued from Page 1) pants to have a family to garden
Judging from the attendance of with, however. The only require-I

GROW S first community meet-'
ing Wednesday evening, it has
succeeded in its efforts to attract
a diverse group. Senior citizens,'
students, and entire families came!
to learn the do's and don'ts of
gardening.
Adding some more of that;
"back-to-the-earth" flavor to the1
meeting were the RFD Boys, a,
blue grass group which played
songs they termed "ecologically
significant".
Bill Ames, the County Exten-f
sion Agent, presented a slide
showing families working their
land. He added "Gardening can
be kind of a family affair. It
seems we have been getting away
from working together as a fami-
ly unit. It's a learning process for
the children. Take advantage of
it."
GROW doesn't require partici-

ments are your own seeds and a
basic interest in gardening.
GROW has the land - 288 acres
donated by interested persons.
Garden locations are: County
Farm at Platt and Washtenaw,
Stone School and Ellsworth
Roads, Marshall Road between
Baker and Zeeb, the Ecology Cen-
ter Recycling Depot on S. In-
dustrial, Northside School, and
Pontiac Heights.
There are also smaller plots
within the city limits.
However, most of this land is
available only for this year. If
GROW is a success this year,
some permanent sites may be es-

tablished for the following years.
Although GROW has been quite
successful in obtaining land and
attracting interested people, they
are having problems finding
enough tools for the garden sites.
A plow, is especially needed since
some of the land is hard clay
which hasn't been worked for
several years. Plowing time is set
for April 15, after which interest-
ed gardeners may select a garden
site.
According to one GROW mem-
ber "Organic gardening is a lot of
hard woirk, but the more you put
into it, the more you get out."
Clearly the people from GRO
think the time is well spent.
R E
TMRUTIDE

Skim Milk
Natural Orgamiie
Skineare
'Now your skin can drink in all the benefits
of pure, sweet milk-and none of the fat,
which can literally be a drag on your complexion.
My new skin milk skincare is rich in
organic proteins-yet 100% fat-free.'
Charles Revson
3140 CARPENTER RD.
DLop ks Shopping Center
PHONE 971-1664 971-1665

Parsons
School of Design
66 West 12 St New York 10011

SAVE
UP
TO
$600
ON
NEW
'71 Toyota's
Full Factory
Warranty
19 TO CHOOSE
FROM
TOYOTA
ANN ARBOR
907 N. MAIN 0 663-8567

..... . . ..
"The Occult Significance of
The Aquarian Age"
A Public Lecture by M.L. GEPHARDT
National Field Worker and Lecturer for
The Theosophical Society in America
Sunday, March 19, 3:00 p.m., Michigan League
Centicore Bookshops, Incj
We're Making Room for
New Spring Titles
at 336 Maynard
Up to 50% off on a selec-
tion of books, originally
priced to $60.00.
25 % off on all French and
German Language books.
25% of f on all Prints,
Serigraphs, Etchings, Lin-
ocuts, and Woodcuts by
Baz, Bonnard, Chagall,
Cezanne, Motherwell, In-
diana, Picasso, and more.
10% off on all Posters,
framed and unframed
by Archipenko, Braque,
Frankenthaler, Giacomet-
ti, Gottlieb, Homer, Kan-
dinsky, Miro, and Picasso.
We're Open Mon.-Sat. 10-10, Sun. 11-6
~t
Bring Your Tired Tomes to
1229 S.-UNIVERSITY
We will give you 30Oj cash or
501;, credit (redeemable at either
store) for your used books - no
texts please.

-77 '

*AOVENT* BOEMNTS DAKNWO±

We sold 47 of these
stereo systems in just 4

jwe ek

.and it wasn't

N

C=
c"z
cJ
hx

just the low price that
did it.
the BSR RTS-20

C=
ew
Cr
C>
C1-
r
m:k

;t

FASST/Michigan Section AIAA/U-M College of Engineering
present a Major Address on Administration Policies
Wil1l M Magruder
Special Consultant to President Nixon on Technology
SPEAKING ON
TECHNOLOGY AND NATIONAL PRIORITIES
FRifAv kAADrF 17 Q.fnf D kA

IT'S THE BSR RTS-20 STEREO SYSTEM. A compact
music center for the dorm, apartment or home, and the
biggest system around for stereo savings. This space
saving music package centers around a strong, but sen-
sitive AM/FM stereo receiver. Featuring AUTOMATIC
FREQUENCY CONTROL-for drift free FM, and AUTO-
MATIC GAIN CONTROL to pull in those distant AM
stations. And don't let the convenient size of our Micro-
Mini turntable (5/" tall) fool you! This allows for
unique placement and it includes a cueing control and
adjustable tracking force that shapes it up as a profes-
sional performer all the way. THE SPEAKERS? Acous-
tically matched, wide range, and having a walnut grained
finish, they look as good as they sound. The BSR RTS-20
--only at Hi-Fi Buys
--and-
STILL ONLY $129.95

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