MAKING AIRPLANES QUIETER See Editorial Page Y 4A4 A6F r tgan ~E~aitM INDIAN SUMMER High-69 Low-42 Cloudy, partly windy Vol. LXXXI., No. 31 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 15, 1971 Ten Cents Ten Pages Ten Cents Ten Pages SGC votes funds for student employe unionK ey By LINDSAY CHANEY In an attempt to improve working conditions of student employes, Student Govern- ment Council last night voted to begin organizing a union of temporary student, workers. Acting on a resolution presented by member-at-large Joel Silver- stein, Council allocated $443.50 for ..........efort of the SGCOr - f ganizing Committee for a Tempo- rary Employes Association. Xx. ..University employes classified as "temporary" include students em- ployed in the libraries, dorm food lines, and the Union and L'eague h {:dining rooms. "Temporary employes receive no 4 k ' ' sick pay, no vacation pay, no health benefits and have poor job security," said Silverstein. "Some type of student workers' union has been needed for a long time." The. association, which the SGC Comitehpst establish can- .i~ not be officially called a "union" '' 4because it would not immediately meet state labor requirements, Silverstein said. The SGC committee contains two SGC members-Silverstein and Doug Richardson - and about 10 outside students. It will meet today to discuss recruitment procedures. The purpose of the SGC com- mittee is to establish the tempo- rary employes' association. After the first organizational meeting of the association, it will become a student organization and lose its status as an SGC committee. Approval of funding for the com- mittee came on a six to one vote which followed a lengthy debate. senThe resolution, as originally pre- A SELECTIVE SERV S:: sented by Silverstein, asked for an Ninsgedtera - itemized total of $493.50. tam all the a Dly-Rof Tesm tam all the names an - y- Council member Jeff Lewin im- - .-.----- Computing Center dedication mediately objected to an item of I UL Students punch out computer cards at the University's new Comput- $150 which. was tagged for adver- IN 'U' BU I ing Center on North Campus. Formal dedication ceremonies for tisements in The Daily. He claimed the center, which has been functioning since May, will be cele- the ads would duplicate the effect of a mailing to all student em- 5 brated today at 3 p.m. at the Chrysler Center for Continuing ployes. Engineering Education. Lewin also said advertising would -- be cheaper in the newly founded SGC newspaper-Student Action. GA DISSOLVES: SGC Administrative Vice Presi- dent Jay Hack agreed with Lewin. v o e ~ovt ivradm It pains my heart that a com- tudent . o mittee of SGC has to go out and get ads in The Daily, when SGC By SARA FITZGE has just started its own paper," City Clerk Harold Sa se oI faces revision Hack said, announced the details ! Silverstein argued that The Daily ial voter registration d has a legitimacy with students that will begin next Monday By GLORIA JANE SMITH , the SGC paper is lacking. The drive will be cond Plans for reorganization of the graduate school student govern- Council eventually approved the Oct. 18 to 22 and Oct. ments proceeded one step further last week when Graduate Assembly resolution with a $50 cut in the six fixed locations and (GA) voted to.dissolve itself and relinquish its duties to a proposed Ivitem for Daily advertising, of rotating sites inclu succsso oraniatin-Gadute edeatin. Silverstein said other, members and classroom buildings successor organization-Graduate Federation. ;of the SGC, committee included Registration will take If approved by the various graduate college governments within staff of the underground paper Up the full two weeks at the University, the federation will have a radically altered structure Against the Wall Street Journal, bowl, the Union lobb3 fron GA and will encompass a changed "sphere of duty," Jana and several AFSCME members. Avenue Fire Station, P1 Bommersbach, GA president explained. "The people from A F S C M E School, Ann Arbor Last spring, several groups challenged the legitimacy of GA. A h ato give us a hand in starting Center, and Clinton suit. claiming that GA was note _the association," Silverstein said. School. Hours will be STUDENTS AFFECTED measures alter draft law By JOHN MITCHELL Daily News Analysis Nightmares began again last month for thousands of college age men as President Nixon signed into law the Military Selective Service Act, marking an end to a three month draft holiday and extending the induction process until June 30, 1973. The new law reinstates the old concept of the draft, but includes several measures that in time may alter the admin- istration and aims of the Selective Service System and the eligibility of young men within the system. These measures include an option for Nixon to end the deferments of this year's freshman class, a uniform national lottery ceiling, a military pay raise, an extension'of the pro- cedural rights of draftees before their local boards, and a limitation of the number of men that can be inducted in the next two years. White House officials say the bill's provision that will allow Nixon to drop deferments for students who began full- time college schedules after July 1, 1971, is "expected to be adopted in the very near fu- ture." The end of the deferments will directly affect the 20 per cent of the nation's college freshmen who are already 19 years old, and the other 80 per cent of male freshmen who will receive their lottery num- bers in the first quarter of F r ". ::,< 1972. As they reach their nine- teenth birthday, they will be thrown into the eligibility pool by acquiring a 1-A status. "Allowing the draft of col- lege students eliminates a<> major inequity in the system," Selective Service Director Cur- tis Tarr said yesterday in a telephone interview. "It will make the system more clear- Tarr en ,cut, for there will be no waiting around to be called" nt * The provision will also lessen the burden on colleges that n- have had to deal with students more concerned with a de- ferment than an education," Tarr added. But few freshmen share Tarr's enthusiasm over the new provision. "The measure may be equitable," says Bob Heinrich, '75, "but it strikes too close to home for me to be pleased by it. Besides," he continues, "anything concerning the draft, ex- cepting its abolition, is unpleasant news." Another important section of the law calls for a uniform national lottery number ceiling, which last week Tarr set at 125. In the past years local and state boards have been granted leeway in choosing their own ceiling numbers in relation to un- quotas they were expected to fill. This year, however, they the are required by law not to exceed Tarr's figure of 125. ups, Tarr's decision virtually assures that I-A registrants with Hu- numbers exceeding 125 will not be drafted this year, but, on dent the other hand, it guarantees an induction notice in the near dent wend future for all I-A or I-AO registrants holding numbers below 126. been The ceiling is especially significant to those students hold- -to- ing II-S deferments with numbers exceeding 125. By declar- City ing to their local boards an intent to drop their deferments will on or before December 31, 1971, they will be eligible, but not such chosen, in this year's draft and therefore will not be con- sidered in the next years' calls. -or "It's a damn good feeling being able to think ahead ) 21 again," says Tom Loeb, '72, who holds lottery number 134 and have the plans to drop his II-S shortly, "but I don't think I'll be over- See KEY, Page 7 LAW SCHOOL SPEECH -Daly-Rolfe Tess ICE REGISTRANT consults with a local draft board representative after Preside t extension into law (above). In the same room stand the files (below) which co nd draft status of local registrants. DINGS: tobegin expanded r regstration drive RALD 3 p.m. at the Fishbowl and 3 to the September drive, when S unders has 8 p.m. at the other sites. ders opened registration, at of a spec- The schedule for rotating sites Fishbowl. However, several grc rive which will be: including the Democratic and . Oct. 18-19: Bursley and West man Rights-Radical Indepen .ucted from Quad. 3-8 p.m. parties and the Office of Stu 25 to 29, at Oct. 20-21: Alice Lloyd, 11 a.m. Services have urged him to ex a number to 2 p.m.; UGLI, 3 to 8 p.m.; Old registration to the dorms. ding dorms mail room, on Bishop St., 3 to 7 In addition, Saunders has 1 s. p.m. urged to register voters door :e place for Oct. 22-25: Kresge Medical Li- door. The issue is now before the Fish- brary, 3 to 6 p.m. and South Quad, Council with a vote expectec y, Jackson 3 to 8 p.m. three weeks when Saunders oneer High Oct. 26-27: Business school, 10 report on the feasibility of Community a.m. to 3 p.m.; Markley, 3 to 7 registration. Elementary p.m., and Parker House Lounge, More than 4,000 students 10 a.m. to Baith Housing, 7 to 9 p.m. about one-fourth of the 18 t Oct. 28-29: East Quad, 3 to 8 year-old bloc in Ann Arbor-] S- fl h representative of the constituency it purported to serve was brought before Central Student Judiciary (CSJ). CSJ gave GA until October to remedy some of the complaints against it. At approximately . the same time Rackham students approved a ref erendum creating a new Rack-: ham Student Government (RSG), leaving GA with serious questions concerning its function. The simultaneous reorganization of GA and the formation of RSG is resulting in what Rackham Dean. Donald Stokes described as "a sen-. sible division of labor." Graduate Federation would "not be a government," Bommersbachj stressed, but an attempt to "com- bine the resources and talents of graduate school governments to improve the quality = of life and education f o r post-baccalaureate students at the University." Council approves new site for housing Community Coalition By TAMMY JACOBS City Council in a special meet- ing last night approved a plan that will provide a new build- ing for the Community Coalition representing Ozone House, Free Medical Clinic, Drug Help and a federally-funded youth activi- ties program. The plan, once final details are worked out, will allow the groups to move from their pres- ent site at 301 Liberty St., to the larger Cadillac Garage Property on Washington St. sometime next month. Ozone house serves as a drop- in center for runaways and "street people," Drug Help as a drug crisis and education cen- ter, and the Free Medical Clinic as a place for indigent people to receive medical care. Coalition members had re- quested the new site contending that the present location is in- adequate. Matt Lampe of the coalition added that s e r v i c e s could be greatly expanded in the Washington St. Bldg., saying "we probably will not see this chance again." "The medical clinic, for ex- ample, is serving about 150 peo- LILLIE, FRIDAY ple a week," Lampe said, adding that the four rooms provided in the Liberty St. building were far too small for the program. He said the clinic will add dental care when it moves to the new building. Support for the project came from unexpected quarters when Bill Bott, president of the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce, expressed approval of the plan for both himself and the State St. Businessmen's Association. "Ozone house is the only via- ble thing I see right now," he See OZONE, Page 7 p.m.; D e n t a l School and Law registered since approval of School, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 18-year-old vote. Saunders has asked that deputy ;8------ d ve _ _ registrars call his office to sign up to work. In addition, he will be holding a training session for dep-; uties tonight from 7:30 to 9:30~ p.m. Republi( Students may register voters if e they have attended one of these training sessions and are registered voters. By ALAN WEINBERGER SGC Executive Vice President The N i x o n administrati( Jerry Rosenblatt has asked stu- performancehasadmenisarser dents who want to be deputy reg- of broken promises," U.S. R istrars to sign up with SGC s oit Donald Reigle (R-Flint) said1 can keep track of the students who night, challenging Republic become registrars, to drop President Nixon. Saunders' expanded drive ap- d pears to be in response.to criticism In a speech before about that the sites and hours of last law students, the Republi month's registration drive were congressman urged his audie not made convenient enough for to support anti-war Rep. P newly enfranchised students. McCloskey (R-Calif.), whoI Only two of the sites were on said he will enter the N campus until the second week of Hampshire primary, March ---------- - against Nixon. ;an urges Nixon defeat o's ries Zep. last ans 100 can nce aul has dew 7, t l Top High WASHINGTON 0P)--Herschel Friday, a Little Rock, Ark. attorney and Judge Mildred Lillie of Los Angeles are the leading prospects for two Supreme Court vacancies, a Senate source re- ported yesterday. Friday and Lillie were on a listnof six possible nominees, revealed Wednesday, whose qualifica- tions are being checked by the American Bar Association's (ABA) committee on the federal Courtprospects revealed said y rsterday that more than the six being hecked by the ABA committee are under con- sideration, but he declined to say how many more or who they are- Asked if the ABA would have time to investi- gate more than the six whose names have been mentioned and still meet Nixon's deadline of next week, a high administration official suggested the investigation could be very short if the nominee aG4 ain3.LNixon. "There's enough time between now and March 7 to do some sur- prising things in New Hamp- shire," Reigle said, calling for campaign workers and financial contributions. "And the potential ,exists to defeat Nixon outright in Massachusetts," he added. "If we do that, it would drive Nixon out of the race. The im- mediate impact of it would dam- age his ability to function in the political arena and as chief ex- ecutive at the same time," he added. Reigle, 33, claimed that Nixon has not fulfilled his campaign promises of 1968. "We were told by Nixon himself that he had a -Daily-Jim Judkis Donald Reigle czrt,,... ..,.,. ..t,.,-. ....a at.:..i. ..c