Friday, October 1'5, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven' Frda, cobr 5 171TE ICIGNDALYPgeSee STUDENTS AFFECTI Key changes alter c (Continued from Page t) of the wage-prices freeze on No-1 joyed until the draft ceiling is set vember 14, the new pay scale will at zero." substantially boost a recruit's sal- Local .draft counseling centers ary from $3,155 a year to $4,872. advise students with numbers over "The pay raise provision signi- 125 not to drop their deferments fies the last e x.t e n s i o n of the until the latest possible dates. They draft," Secretary of Defense Mel- nbte that although the ceiling has vin Laird announced last week, been -fixed, it could; in special cir- "for we now have the means ofE cumstances, be changed by Tarr achieving an all volunteer army by: as late as mid-December. mid-1973." But officials at Washington But the plans for a volunteer selective service headquarters tend army are still in the speculative to disagree. "Those with lottery stage, and an official involved in numbersgreater than 125canrestPentagon preparations for the new assured they will not be drafted,' force says he sees "little chance says-one high ranking official. "It for the volunteer army to become would take a, disasterous turn of a fact in the next few years." events, such an an all-out war, for Even if a volunteer force is es- Tarr to consider altering that tablished by Laird's date, a sub- number she addsstantial number of those who lose numbr,"she dds. Itheir deferments in 1973, can be On the other hand, Tarr em- drafted, for the selective service phasizes that any person 'holding system has been authorized to al 4 -A status with a number under a.,-- ten-- - -u i.uie*;-Aa ED Court contenders namedHRLU HURON LOUNGE Ir ft la , omible nomination of Lillie. PRESENTS WIN Lt'E El gration before the supreme Court Clark, who practiced law for 15 vmar mu. on a number of occasions. years in Jackson, Mississippi, first ! MICHAEL J. KAYCI a A m o n g the new procedural Friday, who is considered a rac- gained prominence in 1962 as a rights of draftees guaranteed by ial moderate, "would make a sig- state attorney when he defended&JOSEPHRICCI the bill are provisions allowing in- nificant and distinguished contri- Gov. Ross Barnett against federal dividuals to testify and give evi- bution to the court," Rep- Wilbur contempt charges arising from the folk and soft rock dence on their' behalf at all draft Mills (D-Ark.), chairman of the state's fight to keep James Mere- board levels, to call their own House Ways and Means Commit- dith from enrolling as the first Friday and Saturday witnesses, and to insist that a tee said yesterday. black student at the University of quarum of the board be present to Lillie, a 1938 law graduate of Mississippi. NO COVER--REG. PRICES make a decision. the University of California at Bacon, a former assistant U.S. E These new rights, combined with Berkeley, is a state Court of Ap- attorney, is known as a strong ~ ,-BER Ni a provision now requiring draft peals judge for the 2nd Appellate advocate of law and order. She SJuday- boards to give written reason for District in Southern California. helped write the District of Colum- their decision's, are aimed at im- She previously was the first bia's c r im e bill- with its "noc 124 Pearl at Huron Hotel proving the chances for a draftee woman to serve as presiding judge knock" search and preventive de- to be heard, potentially liberaliz- of the Domestic Relations Court of tention provisions-as an aide in !YPSI ing the process of obtaining a con- Los Angeles. the Justice Department. sriavnrinus nhi can~r %tatuq_ California's Democratic Sena- Bvdwhhan.lwerebu; ,3t'*t.'~fl.'U~i~AO t~M~t~tByrd whoUaJ has , a, f la de 1. ree ~t b t r a But despite "improvements"con-j tained in the bill, the Selectivej Service Act of 1971 is an ex-I pected, but major, defeat of anti- war congressmen, groups and in- dividuals throughout the country. i , E I k w --v""° - ".-d raf~t 14U,000 men in that iiscai 125 will be drafted. An induction Year-over' forty thousand more delayed by appeal, pre-induction tha-ilverfte tis adr t examination or reclassification- than will be drafted this year with provded hat tats ha notbeentheceiling at 125.-- provided that status has not been Three other measures contained changed-will make no difference. in the bill are aimed at providing The person will be drafted in this fair treatment for registrants be- call even if the calendar year has fore their local boards and achiev- ended" ing a greater possibility for regis- Perhaps most significant in its trants to select their mode of ser- long term effects is the $2.4 billion vice in the system. pay raise included in the bill. Nix- These provisions include: on calls this provision "a big step' -A limit of twenty years service toward an all volunteer armed on local draft boards, with boards force as it remedies the long required to reflect racial and re- standing inequities in military pay ligious breakdowns of their com- for the lower grades of service-' munities; Three months of heated debate by congressional doves following the draft's lapse last June pro- duced a clause that asked Nixon to end U.S. Indochina operations "at the earliest possible date." This is a diluted version of a Senate-. passed amendment that called for1 total withdrawal in nine months if U.S. prisoners of war were re-t leased. The new law contains no effec- tive mechanism for assuring an. end to the war nor does it block the passage of further draft acts as the volunteer army still ap- pears at most a possibility. In the meantime, the old system remains, and 300,000 men will be: called in the next two years- tors, Alan Cranston and J o h n Tunney, had no immediate corn- ment on President Nixon's pos- Ozone to move (Continued from Page 1) said. "Working with their own people, they'll perhaps do a bet- ter job than anything we can do." The plan passed last night would allow the Ann Arbor Building Au- thority to purchase the property through a bond issue, and lease it to the city, which would then sub- lease it for one or two years to the Community Coalition. has never passed the bar, was once' an organizer for the Ku Klux Klan but later denounced the organiza- tion. He voted for the two Nixon appointees to the Supreme Court rejected by the Senate - Judges Clement Haynsworth. Jr. and G.! Harrold Carswell. Roney is a former president of the St. Petersburg Council on Hu- man Relations. He has called for widespread judicial reform, claim-' ing that a system created 200 years ago for 12 states arV two million people is now inadequate. introduces a completely new eyeshadow collection for > \ t att. s \\ y1\ * , -Self-Portrat Eyes Powdered shadow colors. Pale. Vivid. Serena: A little wild. Each as personal asyourmoods And, beautifully capable of reflecting them, In "nkberry Blue. Plu-wood Strawberry. Twenty three shades. To color your eyes any way you feel. And create your own self-portrait. As per- sonal as your signature. Powdercream Shadow 4.00 -Ultrafrost Shadow 4.50 Powerfrost Shadow 4.00 Shadow I (twin tones) 5.00 (Each with applicator.) 10GET ATTENTION men." Although the pay raise was froz- en by Nixon until the expiration Attica prison nmates fast ATTICA, N.Y. UP) - About 130 inmates of Attica state prison were reported yesterday to have con- ducted a silent fast Wednesday in a memorial to "all the brothers murdered Sept. 13." Kenneth Kimmerling, a New York lawyer and member of the, Attica Defense Committee, said the 130 included about five felons held in the prison's segregation area. He said 'those five were regarded as the activists in the Sept. 9 to 13 riot which cost 43 lives-32 pris- oners and 11 prison employes. Kimmerling issued a statement, saying "in memory to all the brothers who were murdered on Sept. 13 inmates in segregation engaged in a silent fast that began 'Wednesday. morning." He said none of the fasters took liquid, food, Or his 20-minute exercise period. Kimmerling said the fast con- tinued until midnight and would Rbe repeated. on the 13th of every month in memory of the slain brothers." -An extension of the procedural rights of draftees before their local boards; and -A two year alternative service provision for conscientious objec- tors administered under the direct supervision of selective service na- tional headquarters. The first measure is especially, important since it not only limits' the number of years a member can serve on the board and requires. the board to be representative, but' also changes the age limit for people serving on the board from a 30 to 75 span to an 18 to 65! r a n g e. This 'may significantly: change the average age of board members, which now stands at 62, and affect the ability of draft age men to explain 'their stance on any issue concerning their status to the board members. Therefore, the sublease to Com- munity Coalition would basicallyi hold the property for the city untilE the expected parking structure is built, and allow the Communityj Coalition and its affiliate groups a place to expand for two years. MNOWN THIS WEEKEND-Sat.-Sun., Oct. 16-17 The Last Chapter narrated by Theodore Bikel what started out as a report of the destruc- tion of Polish .Jewry has become a glowing account of its whole epic history A Dc HEAR 12 EXPERTS DISCUSS The Museum in Contemporary Society THURS., OCT. 21 WHAT IS AN ART MUSEUM? Peter Selz,* Dir., U. of Cal. Art Museum, Berkeley ! Sherman E. Lee, Dir., Cleveland Museum of Art ! Bryan Robertson, Dir., Museum of Visual Arts, State U of NY-Purchase ! Walter Hopps, Dir., Corcoran Gallery FRI., OCT. 22 INVOLVEMENT: COLLECTOR, VOLUNTEER, CRITIC HenryCT. Hopkins,* Dir., Fort Worth Art Center Museum ! Clement Greenberg, critic, author ! Grace Glueck, NY Times critic 0 Frederick S. Wight, Dir., The Art Galleries, UCLA SAT., OCT. 23 THE MUSEUM AS AN EDUCATIONAL FORCE Harry Parker Ill,* Vice Dir, for Education, Metropolitan Museum-* Joshua Taylor, Dir., Nat'l. Coll. of Fine Arts, Washington, D.C. ! Martin Friedman, Dir., Walker Art Center, Minneapolis ! Mrs. John De Menil, Collector/ Trustee/Director, Institute for the Arts, Rice U, Houston *Moderator A North Wing Dedication Event at the Detroit Institute of Arts 11 a.m. - LECTURE HALL OCTOBER 21 - 22 - 23 Admission each session at door $1.50 (students 60c) 8 P.M. HILLEL-1429 Hill 5C State Street at North University West Stadium near Liberty I Fl //IW/jft 0' 00 (17 -0+ . 'n a n .- w 1 i . t ' i CL y0 V.. CC t hi We Rent to 21 Year-Olds and Up STARTING AT $5 PER DAY AND 5c PER MILE Read and Use Daily Classifieds - -n I I Fish and Chips Luncheon.. . ..........95c (One Piece of Fish and Chips) Fish and Chips Dinner .................. . . $1.25 (Two Pieces of Fish and Chips) (172 Royal Fish Banquet ........ .. .. . . (Ten Pieces of Fish-Serves 5-7 People) Chicken Luncheon....... . ... . . (Two Pieces of Chicken and Chips) Chicken Dinner ....... ... ... :... . (Three Pieces of Chicken, Cole Slow and Roll) Squire's Spread ......... . . .. . . . (Nine Pieces of Chicken-Serves 3-4 People) Duke's Delight...................., (Fifteen Pieces of Chicken--Serves 5-7 People) King's Feast.................... . . (Twenty-One Pieces of Chicken-Serves 7-9 People.) Hot Corned Beef Sandwich .... ...... . Hot Ham and Cheese Sandwich ........ Bermuda Hand-Dipped Onion Rings ... Shrim p Dinner ................... . . ... (Eight Pieces of Shrimp, Chips, Cole Slow and Roll) Scallops Dinner ... . ......... ........ . (Nine Pieces Scallops, Chips, Cole Slow and Roll) Fresh 100% Beef Hamburgers.....:. . (Old-Fashioned Style) $4.25 .. 79c .. $1.39 $2.39 $3.99 . $5.29 . 79c .. 79c .. 45c $1.79 $1.79 ea. 39c I a aQ Batter Dog .............. ................ . .. 19c