Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 30, 1970 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1-ridoy, October ~3CJ, 191U Supreme College Press Service WASHINGTON (CPS) - For the second year in a row, the Supreme Court can be expected to be the major source of re- forms in the draft. Last term (October 1969 - July, 1970) the court ruled on several cases that the Selective Service System was overstepping its legal author- ity in its day-to-day functions. The Court found that Selective Service Regulations, which are written and put into force by proclamation of the President, gave many powers to the system which were not provided for in the law as passed by the Con- gress. Under the leadership of Chief Justice Warren Burger -- but usually over his strong objec- tion - the Court found that a number of regulations in con- flict with the intent or actual working of Congressional action, included regulations providing for priority induction of draft law violators, punitive reclassi- fication of college students, pro- secution of men who fail to register beyond their 23rd birth- day (after the statute of limi- tations expires) and excluding non-religious objectors to all wars from conscientious objector status. This year the Court is being asked to focus on two draft is- sues: the right of registrants to be represented by a lawyer dur- ing dealings with their draft boards, and the right of selec- tive conscientious objection to a particular war. In Weller v. United S t a t e s, the Court is being asked to over- turn a finding by Judge Peck- ham of the North District of California which dismissed an RIGHT OF REGISTRANT, CO. Court to hear two draft cases indictment against Weller for failure to report for induction. The District Court ruled in favor of Weller's claim when it found that a registrant may assume that he has any right which is not specifically denied regis- trants. One of these is the privi- lege of legal counsel at a regis- trant's appearance before the local board. The system h a s traditionally held, both in regu- lations and less formal docu- ments, that the meeting between the local board and the individ- ual registrant is not a formal, legal confrontation, and there- fore specifically excludes legal counsel from participation in such meetings. Judge Peckham, however, agreed with Weller's contention that the personal appearance before the local board is f a r more serious in terms of i t s potential effect on a registrants life and liberty than many other forms of administrative hear- ings where counsel has b e e n regarded as a right such as security clearance investigations. "Certainly, failing to estab- lish a conscientious objector claim is as serious as the im- pact of loss of access to classi- fied information," Weller said. "hardly what most people would consider a 'right.'" In the other major case, Guy Porter Gillette is appealing his conviction for failing to submit to induction on the grounds that his religious training and be- lief is unconstitutionally dis- criminated against by the re- quirement in the draft law that conscientious objectors be op- posed to all wars, not just spec- ific wars in which they might expect to fight. This "selective objection" is the crux of a major dispute over the whole conscientious objec- tor status. On one hand, some churches hold as a doctrine of faith that their members must decide for themselves whether a specific war is in conflict with their beliefs or not. These faiths hold that there are situa- tions in which war is a justi- fiable means of resolving con- flict, and that the individual is responsible to determine for himself and act in accordance with his determination as to the morality of a particular conflict. The draft law specifically ex- cludes these adherents to the just war doctrine, and has tra- ditionally required opposition to all wars as a primary precondi- tion to recognition. Presently, Selective Service officials oppose extention of this exemption to selective objectors because of difficulty in determining their "sincerelty." They seem to feel that many opponents of the war in Vietnam mihht take advant- age of this difficulty in sorting the "sincere" from\ the "insin- cere" as a springboard to escape service without meeting the sys- tem's r ig or o us requirements which are now applied to appli- cants for the exemption. Draft counselors agree that' an anti-system ruling in a case of this sort would greatly in- crease the number of COs. They feel, however, that the present regulations unjustly discrimi- nate against registrants whose convictions prevent them from engaging in wars such as the war in Vietnam. What will actually happen with these cases is up for serious question because of the uncer- tainty of newly appointed Jus- tice Harry Blackmun's effect on the Court's outlook on draft cases. Although the Court's re- cent rulings against the system have generally been by a margin of 5-3, it is entirely possible that Blackmun may be not only personally conservative on this issue, but also able to convince other justices to adopt a more conservative stance. 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