The Michigan Daily-Thursday, December 8, 1977-Page 7 State rep, area judge debate juve'nile justice By JUDY RAKOWSKY State Representative Lynn Johndahl and Washtenaw County Juvenile Court Judge Francis O'Brien exchanged for- mulas for improving the state's juve- nile justice system in Michigan in a de- bate at the Friends Meeting House last night. Discussion centered on whether the juvenile couits should rehabilitate or punish; the decriminalization of status offenses (those crimes which are charged against juveniles but not adults); and equality of the legal rights of youths and adults. O'BRIEN POINTED OUT that until recently juveniles were not even allowed to hear their rights upon being arrested. "They are potected by the Supreme Court, just like adults," he said. Juve- niles are now also safeguarded by their attorney and by the right of appeal, he said. Johndahl, whose three-year-old juvenile justice code reform bill is still being debated in an ad hoc subcommit- tee, spoke of the rehabilitative role of the juvenile justice system. Johndahl said: "Rehabilitation of juveniles is in the best interest of so- ciety." He explained that even though the present juvenile justice system is not criminal, the results of it are just as bad as the criminal system. "Of the 6,000 children held per year in secure detention pending trial, more than one third of them are status offen- ses." Johndahl went on to say that these youths might be guilty only of truancy from school, running away from home, or possession of liquor, yet they're held over for trial longer than adults ac- cused of rape or theft. O'Brien cautioned that courts should not give up the power to intervene and exercise its power to remove the juvenile from soceity. "If the stae divests itself of the authority to deal with a youth, a great deal of harm may be done.' Johndahl surmised that criminal courts should be the last resort for any juvenile cases. "We can't use the courts as scapegoats for community problems and that's what we've done. Let's share accountability.' O'Brien's final point reinforced his view that "people don't have to go, through court to get service." When people come to court they are referred to the social service organization that might best aid their problem. Johndahl said increased unem- ployment causes increased crime, and pointed out that poor people's children are more likely to go to prison than others. "I'd mortgagetmy house" to keep a child out of court, he said, "but I have the resources; others don't." Hussein, Assad confer in Syria DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Jor- dan's King Hussein conferred yester- day with Syrian President Hafez Assad in the first of a series of Arab reconciliation sessions that will take the king to Egypt and both leaders to Saudi Arabia this week. Egypt and Syria, allies against Israel in the 1973 Middle East war, have split in the past three weeks over Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's peace overture to the Is- raelis. The mission by .Hussein, whose nation is the other Arab "confronta- tion state" bordering Israel, was announced only after it was under way. He flew to a military airport near Damascus and was greeted without ceremony by Assad. The two leaders went immediately to Assad's residence for five hours of private talks, where Hussein is believed to have urged Assad not to carry opposition to Sadat's peace drive to the point of no return. There was speculation here that Hussein suggested both Syria and Jordan attend Sadat's peace talks in Cairo, to begin Dec. 14. Hussein flew back to Amman, his capital, last night for an overnight rest before continuing to Cairo, where Egypt's official Middle East News Agency said he would be met by Sadat today. It said he would then go to Saudi Arabia. By R. J.SMITH With Wire Reports In a drastic move to obtain salary fringe benefits, Central Michigan faculty members have threatened to strike rather than accept present university contract terms. They did not specify, however, when they would walk off their jobs. The 594-member faculty associa- tion has declined university offers to raise instructors' fringe benefits 23.6 per cent over the next three years, opting for a package that would provide a 24.9 per cent increase over the same period of time. The contract does not cover teaching assistants. CHIEF UNIVERSITY negotiator John Weatherford voiced optimism that a strike would not be necessary. "I thought yesterday we were very, very close. It's a funny time to strike . . . there aren't any issues; there's nothing but plain bucks. It's just a 1.3 per cent difference." If the strike occurs, it would be the first such walkout in the university's history, a fact that has many school administrators up in arms. BUT EVEN WITH exams coming up, studentsarestreating the whole affair as a Christmas gift from the school. Sophomore Ken Smith said, "I don't think people are too con- cerned with it . . . If exams get canceled before vacation, they'll just have them after Christmas, And that would be too bad!" "It's kind of been a farce so far," said Shawn McCarrey. "There's talk about going to the' bar or something while they strike, so I wouldn't say people are very con- cerned about it." RECORD HIGH CHICAGO (AP) - The National Council of Bar Examiners says bar admissions in 1976 reached a record high for the seventh consecutive year. The NCBE, an affiliate of the American Bar Association, says the total number of people admitted to practice in 49 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands was 35,741. Exact ad- missions figures for Florida were not available, the NCBE says. CMU professors threaten to strike Congress a (Continued from Page 1) thing to do." "We've had deep respect for the views of people on the other side of the issue," he said. "There was no black or white on this thing. There was a lot of gray." Sen. Edward Brooke (R-Mass.), who has led the fight for more permissive abortion payments language, described the compromise as discriminatory. "WE'LL HAVE TO live with it at least until next year when I'm sure this issue will be back with us again," he said. Despite his reservations, Brooke said the language does provide "better coverage for poor, indigent women who need abortions" than a provision adop- ted last year. That allowed abortion payments only when a woman might die because of a pregnancy. The abortion question is entangling some federal employes' paychecks because the bill that funds the Depar- proves abortion aid iments of Labor, Health, Education and authorization for the agencies. Without Welfare (HEW) and the other agencies an interim funding authorization the also pays for the Medicaid program, lemployes would receive only one the government's primary means of week's pay instead of two. funding poor women's abortions. EARLIER, THE House voted 178 to The disagreement has delayed 171 against a Senate proposal that passage of a $60.2 billion appropriations would have ended the four-month-long bill which was to provide funding for impasse. the departments during fiscal year It called for abortion payments when 1978. a woman might die because of a full- THE ABORTION issue was;,the last term pregnancy, in cases of rape or in- remaining area of disagreement on the cest which are reported promptly to legislation. The two interim funding law enforcement or public health of- measures that Congress has passed ficials and where a woman might suffer since Oct. 1 to insure agency funding serious, long-lasting physical health have authorized spending at the fiscal damage. 1978 rate, so the agencies have not been The amendment the House finally losing money by the delay. agreed to, offered reluctantly by Rep. An interim funding resolution was Bob Micel (R-Ill.), added a needed by today to ensure full pre- requirement that two physicians certify Christmas checks for employes with that a woman would suffer serious, the departments of Labor and HEW long-lasting physical health damage along with those of 10 smaller agencies. because of a pregnancy before she The abortion dispute has delayed could become eligible for a federally enactment of a $60.2 billion funding funded abortion. the Rnn arbor AIMr cooperative. TONIGHTI Thursday, December 8 LA MERVEILLEUSE VISITE (The Marvelous Visit) (Marcel Carne, 1975) 7 & 9-Aud A This strikingly beautiful tale of fantasy by the director of CHILDREN OF PARADISE is based on an H. G. Wells ghost. story. An extraordinarily handsome boy is found naked and unconscious on the beach. When he comes to, he claims that he fell from heaven! The film, then, is the chroncile of the singular bizarre events that occur in the stranger's presence. "An absolutely unforgettable experience . . . it has a kind of unearthly beauty!"-Alan Twyman. In French, with subtitles. ANN ARBOR PREMIERE. ADMISSION $1.50 FBI suspected plot (Continued from Page 1) censored to delete material classified secret or' otherwise exempt from disclosure. The material may be of greatest value for what it shows about the inside operation of the FBI as the bureau han- dled one of its most important missions ever. It is a picture that has emerged only in vague outline until now. Two hours after Kennedy was pronouncd dead in a Dallas hospital at'2 p.m. EST on Nov. 22, Hoover wrote that he had told the president's brother, At- torney General Robert Kennedy, that Oswald was the assassin and that he had been apprehended near the Texas School Book Depository where the shots were fired. But on Dec. 12, Hoover confided to his chief aides that he was troubled by the conspiracy questions and was unsure how to resolve them. Reporting on a conversation with a caller, Hoover wrote, "I said I personally belive Oswald was the assassin, that the second aspect as to whether he was the only man gives me great concern; that we have several letters . . . written to him from Cuba referring to the job he was going to do, his good marksman- ship and stating when it was all over, he would be brought back to Cuba and presented to the chief." Hoover continued, "We do not know if the chief was Castro and cannot make an investigation because we have no in- telligence operation in. Cuba." The reference was to Cuban chief of state Fidel Castro. The FBI is restricted to domestic operations, and the CIA gathers in- telligence abroad. It was not clear whether Hoover meant to imply that the CIA, as well as the FBI, had no operations in Cuba. During this period, the FBI maintained liaison with the CIA although Hoover later severed the relationship. On the same day he wrote of his con- spiracy questions, Hoover told the State Department and the CIA he considered the letter an apparent hoax. But he asked-those agencies to pass along any information they might gather about it. The letter, as translated by FBI agen- ts, referred to Oswald as "Friend Lee" and said: "After the affair, I am going to recommend much to the chief. . . . I told him you could put out a candle at 50 meters. . . . Leave nothing that could lead to your trail and when you receive my letters, destroy them as always. "After the affair, I will send you the money and we will see each other in Miami as always." It was signed Pedro Charles. Hoover reported that another letter mailed from Havana and addressed to Robert Kennedy "alleged that Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President Kennedy at the direction of Pedro Charles, a Cuban agent." The letter bore the signature of Mario del Rosario Molina. FBI analysts determined that both letters were prepared on the same typewriter, signed with the same kind of pen and ink, and mailed in the similar envelopes. Because of those circumstances, "It appears this matter represents an attempted hoax," Hoover wrote. Nurses present demands (Continued from Page 1) Barron. The council, which represents 800 non-supervisory registered nurses on campus, began negotiations with the University in an all-day session Tuesday.1 "Progress was made," said Uni- versity spokesman Jay Lutz. "We think it was a productive session. NEITHER BARRON nor Lutz would comment on the possibility of a contract extension. Barron would not elaborate on the nurses' specific economic proposals. However, she said that economics is one of the "main issues." Although a date has not been final- ized for the next bargaining session, Barron said there is a possibility that it may be held December 21. The sun is an average star. Some stars are nearly 100 times more massive, and some are only one- hundredth times as massive. JS ! Complet 'Lp Catalog neluding Argo, elefunken and 1'iseu Lyre NowOn Sale! 3 Record Set 2 Record Set VERDI R CHARD BONYNGE PAVAROTTI SUTHERlAND- HORNE WIXELL GHIAURC?. BONYNGE -i fqHAIOVSK THE PtANO MUSICdf CHOR~N THE NUTCRACKER THEP USITAoCH N VCompeteJVLADIMIR ASHKENAZY rnet AnsrmTHREE WALTZES- TWO NOCTURNES QtXMAZURKAS POLONAISEFANTAISIE . BRAR(A. ii per disc 798 Series per disc GIRANADOS GOYESCAS --- --r TREASURY SERIES *m0-ov~a6$3.98 list The Ch cap~mplony U AN 11N 0T SrGeorgsoi o HOLY NIGHT Now On Salet Kurt Hube e"rf-N W naW Philhanon Prices Good Thrupr disc - December 15th 87per " " ' Ow Mediatrics presents MARATHON MAN A chilling nightmare with DUSTIN HOFFMAN as a grad student, long-distance runner pitted against a Nazi dentist (SIR LAWRENCE OLIVIER) who prefers to work without anes- thetics. Rated R (1976) FRI., DEC. 9-7:30 & 9:45 pm Natural Science Aud. $1.50 ART WORLDS PHOTO WORKSHOPS 2 hrs./wk., 3-6 wks., $28 -- free lab time available Photo, Introduction Photography1 R Photography I Darkroom I Darkroom II Darkroom III CamroDorkroom I PHYSICAL ARTS Camera/Darkroom I 1'% hrs/wk, 7 wks, $26 Color Printing11/r rc wce s $26 Color Slide Devel. (E6) free practice space available Cibachrome Printing Institute of Creative Arts 994-8400ART STUDIO CLASSES 99free studio time available 2131/2 So. Main St. 2. hrs/wk, 6wks, $26 Acrylic Painting DANCE STUDIO CLASSES itePr olor 7rin/k,7 ws $6Creative Draw/Painting 70 mins/wk., wks, $26 LfeDrawing,Beg. free studio time available life Drawing, Anatomy Life Drawing, Adv. Ballet, Beg. am & pm life Drawing, Practice Ballet, cont., am & pm Sketching Modern, Beg., am &pm Calligraphy Modern, Cant., am & pm Papermaking Jazz, Beg. Graphics, Offset Jazz, Cont. Intaglio Printing Tap, Beg. Ltorp Tap, Cant. Ltorp Creative Dance Silkscreen Printing Batik Afro Dance Sculpture I, Clay Blues and Jazz Sculpture 11, Casting Belly Dance 1,, III, IV, V Sculpture, Wood, Stone Ballroom, Bea. U_-..-