August draft calls WASHINGTON () - Selective Service an- conscientious objector who mu nounced yesterday that men with lottery numbers sating two-years duty in public up to 75 will be called in August. raising the ian role. callup ceiling from No. 50 set for July. Pepitone ordered the draft b At the same time the acting draft director, armed forces preinduction exan Byron Pepitone, indicated that the draft will not candidates with numbers throw reach beyond No. 100 this year and it is un- iously the cutoff for examsv likely to reach that number next year. A Selective Service spokesme Those to be called in August will get thetr the actual draft may stay at 75c notices in the mail starting July 3. beyond that. The August call will bring the total drafted in 1972 to 31,100, passing the halfway mark to the Men with low numbers lo 50,000 Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird has large numbers in the last half set as the ceiling for this year. No draft calls year the draft reached No. 12 were issued the first three months of this year. stayed there. The year before The April, May, June callup totaled 15,000 and midyear and stayed there. 7,200 were sent notices to report next month. A great deal will depend a Those being drafted are mainly men born in most recent change in the rules 1952 who are classified 1A, 1.AO and 10. tion. Starting next month m A 1A is a man available for military service. Reserve or National Guard a A 1AO is a conscientious objector willing to go their induction notices up to 10 into military for noncombat duty. An 10 is a draft reporting date. up .st serve compen- service in a civl- -oards to schedule is for priie draft gh No. 100. Prev- was No. 90. an said, however, or not reach much se deferments in of the year. Last 5 in midyear and it reached 195 is on how much the s affects the situa- en may join the fter they receive days before their MEN WHO HAVE draft 1 themselves standing in lines page three ottery numbers under 1001 may find just like these. RELIEF'. hligh-74 Low-El Cloudy, cooler, chance of showers Wednesday, June 21, 1972 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN News Pho ie: 764-0552 Dems sue Nixon unit i over offc break-in DEMOCRATIC BIGWIGS Lawrence O'Brien, chairman of the national committee and Joseph Califano, committee counsel, dis- cuss the party's suit against the Committee for the Re-election of the President. The suit stems from an attempted break-in at Democratic headquarters over the weekend, MORE TECHINICALT IES Offagain on again MI is offagaint LANSING (P)--Another minor technicality yesterday blocked validation of marijuana petitions by the Board of State Canvassers. The board has approved the form of the petition, but it re- jected the full petition because it was not accompanied by a certificate from the printer that the size of type used conformed with law. The petitions will continue to be circulated, however, and a statement from the printers will be submitted very soon, accord- ing to Michigan Marijuana Initiative (MMI) representatives. Some 50,000 petitions have been in circulation since May 15 seeking to put the question of a constitutional amendment that would legalize marijuana on the November ballot. Some 265,000 signatures are needed to put the measure on the ballot. MMI says they have collected over 5,000. The board had earlier rejected a petition format because it didn't state where the proposed amendment would be inserted into the constitution. "It's a minor, technical thing," said Perry Bullard, local attorney representing the backers of the drive. Signatures on petitions now in circulation will be valid if the board approves the petitions. The board is not expected to meet before next week. Deadline for submitting signatures for November ballot meas- ures is July 10. But MMI could continue collecting signatures for two more years and submit the measure for the 1974 ballot if they don't get enough for next fall's election. The proposed amendment would eliminate criminal penalties for possession, use, or preparation of marijuana. The amendment would not change laws prohibiting operation of machines or ve- hicles while under the influence of marijuana. WASHINGTON ' - Calling the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquart- ers a "blatant act of political espionage,' party Chairman Lawrence O'Brien sued the Com- mnittee for the Re-election of the President and others yesterday for $1 million. The civil suit, filed in U.S. District Court, contends that the break-in Saturday was an in- vasion of privacy and that the Democrats' civil rights were vio- lated. O'Brien said also the alleged attempts to plant bugging devic- es during the break-in was in violation of laws against wire- lapping. Five men, including James Mc- Cord, chief security officer for both the Republican National Coinittee aid the somittee in charge of President Nixon's re- election campaign. were arrest- ed Saturday at the Democratic national headquarters in t h e Watergate apartment-hotel com- plex. Math GOP committees an- nounced Monday that McCord has been fired. O'Brien said the Committee to Re-elect the President is re- quested in the complaint to open its records and divulge its exact ties with McCord. It wants list- ed all payments made to Mc- Cord and reasons for them. Former Atty. Gen. John Mit- chell, chairman of the Com- mittee for the Re-election of the President, said the lawsuit "re- presents another example of Kicking Quaalude According to Drug Help of- ficials Quaaludes - a common street drug in the city - are highly addictive and with- drawal is a dangerous process. Withdrawal, they say, is safe only under medical supervi- sion, and "cold turkey" with- drawals can be fatal in some cases. Both Drug Help (761-HELP) and the Free People's Clinic (761-8952) can arrange free medically supervised with-. drawal. These agencies urge anyone who suspects he or she may be addicted to call or visit. sheer demoogiiery on the part of Mr. O'Brien." Mitchell called the legal action a political stunt. O'Brien said as far as he is concerned the break-in had a "clear line of direction to the Committee for the Re-election of the President" and there is a "developing clear line to the White House." However he declined to say that the Republican National Committee was directly behind the break-in. He said the court suit would determine the facts. The Washington Post report- ed yesterday that a consultant AMA votes to I)aek reduced pot Penalties to the White House speil coun- sel Charles Colson is listed in the address books of two of the five men arrested. The news- paper reported that federal sources said the address books contain the name and home num- ber of Howard Hunt, the consult- ant, with the notations: "W. House" and "W.H." A White : House official said Hunt last worked for the White House March 29. for a regular daily consultant fee. The Post said Hunt worked for the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency from 1949 to 1970. SAN FRANCISCO ')-A com- promise proposal on marijuana placed the American Medical Association (AMA) in favor of making possession of small amounts a misdemeanor. Members of the AMA's House of Delegates, after 45 minutes of quiet debate yesterday, re- jected language containued in ain AMA board of trustees' re- port and a subsequent referenue c o m m i t t e e recommendation which would have called for re- moval of possession as a crim- inal act. The compromise proposal was offered by the California dele- gation. As adopted, the critical lan- guage which has been the focal point of the AMA convention attended by almost 9.000 doc- tors finally read: "This AMA House of Delegates does not condone the produc- tion, sale or use of marijuana. "It does, however, recommend that the personal possession of insignificant amounts of that substance be considered at most a misdemeanor with commen- surate penalties applied. "It also recommends its pro- hibition for public use and that a plea of marijuana intoxication should not be a defense in any criminal proceedings." Also approved was language that called for the nation's lar- gest medical group to pursue a policy of discouragement against marijuana, Speaking in favor of the Cali- fornia measure was a represen- tative of the Student American Medical Association and Dr. Eugene Ogrod, the recently elected house delegate who rep- resents the nation's interns and doctors training to be specialists. "We feel it's inmportamut Io make a first step to begis treat- ing marijuana as a medical mat- ter and reduce penalties . . ." he said. But Dr. Preston Ellington of Augusta, Ga., who led the fight to remove the matter entirely from the report, said: "What is insignificant? Is it 50 pounds of marijuana?" Other doctors argued that the AMA had no business involving itself in a legal msatter. Others said the AMA has a restonsi- bility to express its leadership in the area. As originally presented to the AMA by its board of trustees and before the reference com- mittee changes, the key lan- guage read: "Possession of mari- juana for personal use and transfer (not sale) of insignifi- cant amounts should not be criminal acts . . ." The reference committee had left the language intact, removing only those por- tions referring to transfer and sale. The AMA called earlier for strict penalties for persons com- mitting crimes with firearms, but rejected impassioned pleas that the doctors' group strongly back gun control legislation at a national level.