page three a i ROCKIN' High-87 Low-65 Partly cloudy and warm chance of evening showers Saturday, June 5, 1971 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN News Phone: 764-0552 Kunstler gives views on pot laws By CHRIS PARKS Over 200 people, many of them law students, crowded into a small, s t u f f y lecture hall at the Law Quad yesterday, listening to radical attorney William Kunstler- speak on marijuana laws, and the drive to free John Sinclair. Kunstler, in a short preliminary ad- dress, concentrated on the inequities of current marijuana laws, calling the cur- rent "free John Sinclair" campaign "a central point in the campaign to under- mine these indecent laws." Sinclair - founder of the W h i t e Panther Party --- is presently serving a 912 to 10 year sentence for possession of marijuana. While seeing "very little hope" of free- ing Sinclair through the traditional ave- nue of appeal, Kunstler expressed faith that "pressure of the people" on Gov. William Milliken to commute Sinclair's sentence could'be successful. He called the campaign against mari- juana laws, symbolized by Sinclair's case "extremely important from a social, political, and legal standpoint". Kunstler characterized marijuana as a "political issue of enormous import," claiming marijuana laws have been used to "persecute, harass, and intimidate" young people, The police, he claimed, use these laws to "repress political movements" by se- lective drug raids and even planting the drug on dissidents. He called on young people to "organ- ize around this law" as a political cause. A major legal point against the law, according to Kunstler, is the lack of evi- dence that the drug is either harmful or narcotic. He cited reports by a Presidential com- mission, Harvard University, and t h e University of Oregon to back his con- tention that marijuana is not dangerous. "I find it monsterous and stupid," he declared, "to have laws against a harm- less weed. In a further attack on marijuana laws he cited inconsistency in the penalties for use of the drug which range from life in prison in Texas to a proposed 15 day maximum sentence in the Dis- trict of Columbia, Kunstler also mentioned wide socio- logical effects criticizing what he. called "stone age ideas" about the drug. See KUNSTLER, Page 6 William Kunstler speaks at Law Quad JUNE 14 ELECTION Vote on school funds crucia By ANITA CRONE Daily News Analysis Despite the many issues raised by the field of candidates for the three openings on the Ann Arbor school board, much of their goals depend on a variable over which they have little control: money. For along with the 12 candidates on the June 14 ballot will be a school bond- ing proposal acknowledged to be crucial for the maintenance of the local system's current services. Both the $12,847,000 bonding proposal and an increase in the school millage rate from 32.5 to 35.1 mills are cur- rently necessary, school officials claim. The bonding issue would help to allev- late heavy overcrowding in schools in the southeast and northeast sections of Worker ends *pbliceations bldg. protest A student employe in the print shop at the Student Publications Building yester- day ended a three-day protest after learn- ing the University is preparing to issue a response in his case. Bern Pedit, '72 Engin., had fasted and, along with several supporters, picketed the publications building in an attempt to force the Board for Student Publications to act on a list of labor grievances. The board controls the financial opera- tion of the University's student publica- tions: The Daily, the Michiganensian yearbook, Gargoyle humor magazine, Generation literary magazine and the Stu- dent Directory. x James Thiry, University manager of employe and union relations, said yester- day his office would respond Monday to a union request for clarification of Pedit's working status during the period from Oct. 10, 1970 to Feb. 28, 1971. Pedit, a pressman's helper, is seeking See EMPLOYE, Page 7 town and the millage boost would off- set the effect of recent inflation. If passed, the bonding proposal will provide funds for two new elementary schools in the overcrowded areas. Also, the bonding proposal would pro- vide funds for a new elementary school to replace the present Mack school. Mack, with 45 per cent black enroll- ment, has the highest proportion of black students of any Ann Arbor school. If the bond issue passes, classrooms would be added to Dixboro, Carpenter, Mitchell and Pittsfield elementary schools. The $12.8 million dollars would also be spent to build a 20,000 square foot ad- dition to the main branch of the Ann Arbor Public Library. The 2.6 mill increase would c o v e r inflation in operating school district ex- penses and would simply maintain the current level of operation, with a small salary boost for teachers. To emphasize the shortage of money, the Ann Arbor Board of Education re- cently announced lay offs for 256 non- tenured teachers, claiming money could not be found to pay them. At Wednesday night's meeting of the Board, however, 140 of the teachers were re-hired, perhaps the result of heavy fire directed at the board by the community for not consulting with school principals before deciding which teachers it would let go or rehire. The problems in Ann Arbor are not unique. School districts throughout the state are finding it increasingly diffi- cult to convince voters to increase mil- lage. In addition, though each of the board candidates has come out in favor of the millage and bond proposals, t h e r e is some dissatisfaction with the way money from the state is handled. The Micehigan naily, edited snd managed by students at the University of Michigan. Dews phone: 764-0552, Second Class postage paid at ""n Arbr. ichga" 4" Mvnai" t " An Kay McCargar, School of Education graduate student and candidate for the board, says school boards throughout the state should organize and lobby in Lans- ing for a complete re-evaluation of aid to public schools. Marcia Federbush, a member of the committee who presented a report on sexual discrimination in local schools to the school board recently, feels that-the ooards budgetary priorities should be re- ordered. Federbush's proposal called for an end to listing classes on the basis of sex, and and a move to change textbooks, to elimi- nate alleged sexually stereotyped social roles their characters possess. The proposal also calls for admittance of women into industrial courses, such as the home-building course, 'Usfamous frog croaks The famous Guttman saddle frog has died an obscure death at the University Amphibian Facility of apparent natural causes. The frog, who gained brief local acclaim as possessor of an extremely rare mutant, was brought here on a special flight from Oxford, Ohio for scientific studies last No- vember. Zoology Prof. George Nace, who directs the Amphibian Facility, said the one-in-a- billion frog had not been doing well in re- cent weeks. "Fortunately, Nace said, the frog's sur- vivors include approximately 3,000 tad- poles." The Guttman saddle frog belonged to a species commonly known as green frogs. However, it had a yellow body and a dark brown mottled "saddle" of pigment (skin d color) on its back. Nace said that the pathological examination to determine the cause of -death is being done in such a way that the frog will be preserved for display. Nace said that the chances of smother saddle frog occurring in nature are almost