V'Vednesday, May 4, 1977 HNE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seventeen NI. nuclear foes tie up courts CONCORD, N.H. P --New Hampshire officials are trying to prevent a logjam when more than 1,400 anti-nuclear power demonstrators go on trial. Meanwhile, it is costing the state $50,000 a day to hold them in four National Guard armor- ies. The demonstrators, arrested Sunday after a 24-hour sit-in at the construction site of the Sea- brook nuclear power plant, with few exceptions have stood firm in their refusal to accept bail. THEY ARE demanding that all those arrested be freed without having to pay cash bail. Bail set during 24 hours of ar- raignments Sunday night and Monday ranged from no cash for some to $500 for others. Lt. Col. Herbert Geary, who is in charge of the detention, said 900 National Guard mem- bers are involved in holding the protesters, nmost of them men and women in their 20's. lIe said additional expenses for food and services put the total cost at $50000 a day. Geary said kitchens were in operation at the armories be- ginning with the noon meal Tuesday. About 800 of the de- monstrators were fed hamburg- ers from Burger King on Mon- day night, although a number of the demonstrators say they are vegetarians; and a breakfast catered by McDonald's and Dlsnkin' Donuts. TWO CIPIZENS groups hate led a legal fight against con- struction of the Pubhlic Service Company's Seabrook plant for more than five years. During that time, the stimated cost has increased from less than $800 million to more than $2 billion. And construction has been lim- ited to excavation for the first of two nuclear reactors, as fed- eral agencies have withheld ap- nroval of the plant's cooling sys- tem. Critics say the plant is locat- ed on- a potential earthquake fault, and that the hot water from its evooling system would threaten marine life in a near- by estuary. The utility says the plant is necessary to meet New England's energy needs in the 1980's. In Hampton, a small coastal resort comnsrity, officials were bely eginning to sort out the long list of defendants charged with trespassing dur- ing the weekend demonstra- tions. Iampton District Court, wirich has only two part-time judges, has jurisdiction over Seabrook. MALCOLM H A M I L T 0 N, court clerk, said the first 20 or so demonstrators tentatively were to go on trial Thursday. But he said officials were re- viewing the issue and the stag- gered court dates set during the :rraignment might be changed. Hamilton said the small court will have difficulty absorbing all the cases and that one option was to hire special judges at $50 a day= to help alleviate the load. "We don't have 1,400 cases every days in Hampton District Court," he said. ". . . but I'm certain the state is going to han- dle it. The judicial system isn't gong to break down." The state was expected to try the demonstrators in groups, but under the law each defen- dart may demand a separate trial. M E A N W 11 1I E, STATE tifficiils were reviewing how to pay for keeltiog the deonistra- tors' cofined arid ttome legisla- tors rliready were asking pri- vately what effect the costs will hse ois the state's alretils deli- crte budget. The state has two emergency funds totaling $150,000, but that would be used tip in less than three days. The budget provides no contingency fund for the Na- tional Guard. Any expenses incurred by the National Guard while under a stite rrihlizrtion wtold have (( cirimr trm the strile's gener- -r lud ret ihich already is tee- tering r the verge Of deficit, crtirrig tit a legislrtlive source kloi ;'gili ribit biidget mat- ters. Me~rwhile, som. of the dem- titnstrritrtrs under arrest contin- tied to c(timiplrin about their treatment. More than half of them are being held at the Man- chester armory with the rest distributed in armories in Con- cord, Dover and Somersworth. THE DEAN OF BEE'SQUICKIE QUIZ. Q: The best water for beer comes from: a) Big Duck Mountain. b) Underground from Tijuana. c) A small store in Macon, Ga. d) None of the above. A: (d) The way some beer drinkers talk about water, you'd think Alice found it in Wonderland. Not that water isn't important to a beer's taste. It is. Very important. But the fact is, virtually all brewers filter and further purify their brewing water. And Schlitz doesn't stop there. They put their water through what they believe is the most sophisticated purifying process of any brewer in the world. So when they're through, it's purer than the purest springwater. ATTENTION WOMEN STUDENTS The Women's Program Coorindator's Office is publishing a Directory of Uni- versity and Community Resources for Women in June '77. This is a student-oriented handbook that will list and describe organizations which provide services to women. Thus for we have compiled a list of campus organizations as follows: Academic Women's Caucus Telephone 764-5323 Advisory Committee for Affirmative Action for Women in Public Health 764-1380 Affirmative Action Programs . .. 763-0235 Anthropolo y Women's Cocus 663-5734 Black Women's Caucus ... 764-2990 Center for Continuinq Education of Women (C.E.W.),.... 764-6555 & 763-1353 Chicano Women's Seminar .. 995-1521 Child Care Action Center ..764-3487 Commission for Women 763-2203 Committee to Study the Status of Women in Graduate Education ... 764-9477 Faculty Women's Club 871-6654 Feminist Legal Services 763-4158 Graduate Women's Socioloqy Caucus 668-8770 History Department Women's Caucus 995-4764 Human Sexuality Committee Latin American Women's Grout .... 995-1019 Lesbian Advocate Office 763-4186 Medical Center Commission for Women 764-6848 Michigan Women In Science 763-0278 National Council of Neqro Women 761-5380, 994-5508 995-5650 Office for Women in Enqineerinq 763-5027 Or"ani"aaion for he Advancement of Women in Management 994-0661 Panhellenic Association (Sororities 663-4505 PAund House Children's Center 764-2547 School of Education Commission for Women 764-7554 School of Social Work Parent's Group School of Social Work Women's Caucus 764-6454 Society of Women Engineers 995-4274 Women's Athletic Department 763-2159 Women's Caucus, Political Science Department ..764-6394 Women's Prison Proiect (National Lawyer's Guild). Women in Communications, Inc. 764-0420 Women in Linquistics ; 764-0353 Ext. 21 Women Law Students' Association 763-4158 Women in Psycholoqy 764-2572, 764-6572 Women of American Native Tribes (W.A.N.T.) 761-1352 Women of the University Faculty . 763-4340 Women's Proram at Career Planninq and Placement 764-7460 Women's Program Coordinator Office (Women's Advocate) 763-4187 Women's Research Club .764-3482 Women's Studies Proram 763-2047 Women's Studies Facilitators Oranization 763-2047 Undergraduate Women's Oranization 763-4187 RELATED CAMPUS SERVICES: Alumni Association, Alumnae Council .... 764-0385 Counselin Center. .... . 764-9466 Counselinq Services ............ . . 764-8312 Guild House-Campus Ministry ....... 662-5189 Health Education Department 763-1320 Problem pregnancy counseling also available at Health Service .. ...........764-8329 Office of Ethics and Religion ..........764-7442 International Center Women's Hour ..... If you know of other organizations, formal or in- formal, that deal with the concerns of women but are not listed above, please contact us at 763- 4187 (from 1:00 to 5:00, M-F) or drop a note by at 3411 Michigan Union.