Page 4-Thursday, July 6, 1978-The Michigan Daily michigan mDAILY Eighty-eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor; MI. 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 37-S News Phone: 764-0552 Thursday, July 6, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan March for ERA T IME IS RUNNING out for the women of this country. Unless three more state legislatures can be induced to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) before the March 1979 deadline, women's rights will not be specifically protected by the Constitution, and they will be at the mercy of judge and jury. The prospects for short-term. passage are doubtful but this is no time to concede defeat. This Sunday thousands of women and men will march in Washington, D.C. for ratification of the ERA and, more immediately, for extension of the deadline, and they have our enthusiastic support. There is probably not sufficient time remaining to gain approval from three more states by the March deadline, but if it is extended there is a good chance it will win. Opponents of the ERA contend' erroneously that a deadline exten- sion would be dirty pool, if not specifically illegal. Rigid deadlines cannot be allowed to stand in the way of equal rights, particularly when the Justice Depar- tment has already stated that it is within the Senate's authority to extend the deadline. On Saturday night the Washtenaw County chapter of the National Organization of Women (NOW) will send a bus load of area residents to the march, returning early Monday morning. If you can spare the time and $35.00, we encourage you to call 995-5494 or Iris Fauri at 971-7052 to join the people who are lending their voices to a cause that asks for nothing more radical than a just constitution. Editorials which appear without a byline represent a consensus opinion of the Daily' editorial board. All other editorials, as well as cartoons, are the opinions of the individuals who submit them. Assault on civil rights By Ken Parsigian For ten years Congress has been trying, with little success, to revise the federal criminal code. The issue had languished in committee for several years before the Nixon administration finally brought it to the Senate floor in the form of the notorious S. 1 bill. At the outset, politicians generally supported the bill, and even staunch liberals such as Birch Bayh were taken in byFits superficial value. But several public interest groups - notably the American Civil Liberties Union - were not duped, and through their determined lob- bying efforts it was defeated. But, Phoenix-like, a new threat to civil rights has risen out of its ashes - Senate bill 1437/House of Representatives bill 6869. Like its predecessor, H.R. 6869 is an attempt to revamp the federal criminal code, and it is supported by many politicians who spurned S. 1, including Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass), one of the bill's cosponsors when it passed the Senate in January. But although cosmetic changes have been made, H.R. 6869 is just as dangerous asS. 1. In a direct assault on the First Amendment, the bill would create new laws or expand old ones in the following areas: "Obstructing a Government Function by Physical Interferen- ce; Obstructing a Government Function by Fraud; Hindering Law Enforcement; Obstructing a Proceeding by Disorderly Con- duct; Making a False Statement; Revealing Private Information Submitted for a Government Purpose; Extortion; Disseminating Obscene Material; Failing to Obey a Public Safety Order; Liability of an Accomplice and Engaging ina Riot." In addition to this ominous list federal law would be greatly ex- panded to allow most crimes to be prosecuted as conspiracies, attempts, or solicitations without the present requirement that the crime itself has been committed. One off-cited scenario depicts a citizen prosecuted for "soliciting the obstruction of a government function by physical interferen- A direct assault on the First Amendment, H.R. 6869 is every bit as dangerous as the old S. 1. ce" merely by trying to persuade a friend to join in a demon- stration that involved blocking access to a government building - even if the friend declined and the demonstation never took place! Had such laws been in ef- fect in the 60s, it is likely that thousands of civil rights and anti- war demonstrators Would have been imprisoned. The movemen- ts themselves would certainly have been severely weakened. The bill would also undermine the Sixth Amendment in that it minimizes the role of juries in trying criminal cases. For exam- ple, the new offense of "ob- structing a government function by physical interference" is normally a misdemeanor unless it was "committed in the course of a constitutionally protected ac- tivity, was non-violent, and did not significantly obstruct or im- pair a government function." Under H.R. 6869 the judge, not the jury, would make the decision on these critical isshes. The bill also authorizes for the first time "preventive detention" of persons charged with murder, rape, kidnapping, armed robbery and drug trafficking. Also, the bill reactivates the Logan Act which bars private individuals from discussion of U.S. foreign relations with foreign officials, and expands the federal ob- scenity laws along the repressive lines set by the supreme court when it gave individual com- munities the right to define obsc- enity. Another fault of the bill is that is would lead to longer prison sen- tences since the government would have the right to, apeal lenient sentences. The bill would also cut back "good-time" allowances to prisoners, and would permit judges to dismiss the possibility of parole for the entire length of the sentence. The biggest problem is that the bill does have some good section- s, which gives it broad-based support. It eliminates several of the more obious flaws in the old S. 1, most notably the broader ap- plication of the death penalty. It also improves the definition of rape and expands many of the civil rights laws. But the cost of these gains is far too high to justify passage of the bill. In- stead, the House should reject H.R. 6869 outright, but incor- porate its more sensible sections in a new version of the bill. Ken Parsigian is a co- director of the Daily's editorial page. ; LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Israeli court mocks justice To The Daily: ment to convert Sami's two week trip to Libya for The family of Sami Esmail does not recognize menturosofer m'lometitoaLibfor the verdict of guilty given to him by an Israeli Court ,terrprstraining s asoml elyint dbogli fg on June 7, 1978. We are outraged and shocked that For Israel to have Sami in Libya on September 4, a person can_ be found guilty without a shread of 1976 in a Hebrew confession (Sami does not know evidence presented other than a "confession" ob- Hebew) when in fact he was in Columbus, Ohio at tained under physical and psychological torture to that time speaks for Israeli's credibility. say the least. We know Sami much better than the (Congressman Bob Carr has informed us that Sami Israeli government and we are absolutely positive signed an apartment lease in Columbus on August that he was not a member of any guerilla 31, 1976). In an editorial to the New York Times on organization. We believe that his so-called "crime" June 2, 1978, two professors of law, Freedman and of membership in an illegal organizaion was a total Dershowitz, state that Sami's brother Basim was fabrication.by the government of Israel as an ex- allowed to visit him two days before he "confessed" cuseto convict him, and thus to set an example to when infact Basim was not allowed to see him until discourage other Palestinian-Americans from ex- one day after he "confessed." The distortion of this pressing their political solidarity with their op- fact along with many others in their article shows pressed and homeless fellow Palestinians. how far they had to go to try to defend Israel and its We can never forgive Israel for denying Samni the inhumane treamnofispsne. sacred right of being with one's dying father the last nh etratment of its prisoners. crucal ays.Forits nterogtorsto urthr sate On the basis of ourdirect observation of the Israeli crucial days. For its interrogators to further state criminal-justice system in Sami's case we can only that Sami did not really care for his dying father come to the same conclusion that thousands of other (whom they say is not worth 10c) is absolutely families of Palestinian prisoners have arrived at, atrocious. Their denial of torturing Sami is to be and that is that Israeli Courts are no different-than believed as much as their denial of a well-_ kangaroo courts and their trials are held mainly for documented article which appeared in the sunday foreign consumption. Rep. Robert Carr (D) of London Times on June 19, 1977 which charged Israel Michigan is quoted as saying, "You have to wonder with systematic torture of Palestinian prisoners if he was to confess freely, why it took so long for sponsored at the the government level. him to decide in a sense to hang himself, and you Upon graduation from Michigan State University have to wonder why a U.S. citizen was held without in 1976 Sami visited Libya to investigate em- charge for almost a month." We only wish that the ploymentopportunities at the expense of the Libyan three judge panel that convicted Sami had won Ara~hbnociist Party- panlmthtdcovictdySai ha won JUNIOR CRAMBER OF MA.E CIAUVINIST COMMERCE BOWOEN