~1 Page 20--Friday, May 11, 1979-The Michigan Daily House Committee passes draft registration Court: Bred fish not included in Indian pact WASHINGTON (AP)-Renewal of draft registration for all 18-year-old men was overwhelmingly approved yesterday by the House Armed Ser- vices Committee. The committee rejected 30-4 an ef- fort to take the renewed registration out of a $42 billion weapons authorization bill. The bill was cleared for House action by a 35-2 vote. THE PROVISION WOULD require all young men who turn 18 after Dec. 31, 1980, to register in case the draft itself is ever reinstated in a war or emergency. The provision specifies men, but it requires the president to recom- mend back to Congress details on how he wants to carry out registration and whether women should be included. President Carter has taken no position on whether draft registration should be renewed.. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Harold Brown has said he still hopes the present Selective Service System can be beefed up to meet war mobilization requirements without renewing registration. The amendment to knock draft registration out of the bill was made by Rep. Patricia Schroeder (D- Colo.), who said the committee should wait and decide the entire issue of how Americans would be required to fight any future war. Schroeder is co-sponsoring a bill to require all young people to serve in wartime either in the military or some civilian alternative service. LANSING (UPI)-A state appeals court ruling handed down yesterday contradicts a federal court decision on the issue of Indian fishing rights and has Michigan environmentalists bewildered. U.S. District Court Judge Noel Fox ruled Tuesday the Bay Mills and Sault Ste. Marie Chippewa Indians were guaranteed unrestricted fishing rights under two 19th Century treaties. Fox said the state has no power to regulate fishing by those tribes. BUT THE MICHIGAN Court of Ap- peals said yesterday the Indians have no treaty right to take fish artificially planted in the Great Lakes. Meanwhile, Indian fishermen plan to resume fishing in Lake Michigan and Grand Traverse Bay as soon as a tribal imposed ban on such fishing expires May 15, a spokesman said yesterday. Elmer LeBlanc said tribal leaders who have pledged to continue the ban beyond next Tuesday are playing politics. "I DON'T KNOW why they agreed to the ban in the first place," LeBlanc said. "They can't close the bays to fishing just on their own concerns." LeBlanc said at least seven Indian crews are ready to start fishing in currently banned areas following Fox's decision. The only way to overturn unlimited Indian fishing rights would be through an act of Congress abrogating portions of the 1836 and 1855 treaties, Young said. Such legislation has been introduced by two Michigan congressmen, Robert Davis and Don Albosta. Milliken considers two prison expansion proposals Contued from Page9 seeking sites for new prisons often have the state Department of Corrections to their questions and concerns. Meanwhile, legislation ensuring local been stymied by fierce resistance from follow in picking new prison sites. residents are heard when the state the communities under consideration. The state would be required to Suits could be filed to halt prison con- plans to put a new prison in their com- THE BILL, sent to the House floor on establish advisory committees in the struction if the procedures were not munity has cleared the House Correc- a unanimous committee vote yester- affected communities and hold public followed or if local residents didn't like tions Committee. day, seeks to avoid these conflicts by hearings at which citizens could the way a completed prison was being In recent years, state officials establishing an elaborate procedure for demand formal written answers to operated.