The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 42-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, July 19, 1980 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Court k'is draft registration plan Ruling turns on sex bias issue From wire and staff reports PHILADELPHIA--The government's draft registration of young men scheduled to begin Monday is unconstitutional because it excludes women, a federal court panel ruled yesterday. The court "permanently enjoined" the government from requiring the registration of any male under the current law. The ruling means the government cannot proceed with registration unless it obtains a stay of the ruling from a U.S. Supreme Court justice, pending an appeal to the entire Supreme Court. A justice could allow registration to continue as scheduled while the full court considers the matter. THESE LEFTOVER CAPSULES, used by Selective Service employees during the last draft in 1973, can stay in storage-at least for now. A federal court yesterday blocked President Carter's registration plan, scheduled to begin on Monday. In wrake of eleventh hour ruling: Reaction mixed in A.2, nation THE JUSTICE Department filed a motion for a stay last night with the clerk of the Supreme Court in Washington. Court spokesman Barrett McGurn said the motion went to Justice William Brennan, who supervises the district that includes Philadelphia. If Brennan refused the request for a stay, according to University Law School Dean Terrance Sandalow, the government could request that the en- tire Supreme Court enter into a special session to take up the matter. Brennan, who was reported to be spending the evening at his Nantucket, Mass. home, could not be reached by Daily reporters for comment. WHEN ASKED whether he thought Brennan, who has a record of suppor- ting liberal causes before the court, would grant the request for a stay, San- dalow said, "I couldn't guess. I wouldn't think that his general disposition on the matter of registration is really what's determinative here. What matters is whether he feels this is serious enough of a question, and whether he finds the government's argument sufficient enough to warrant the issuance of a stay." "Complete exclusion of women from the pool of registrants does not serve important governmental objectives," ruled Third U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals Judge Max Rosenn and District Judges Joseph Lord III and Edward Cahn. President, {arter .,ld sought registration of both men and women, but Congress decided to exempt women.. "WOMEN DO serve a useful role in the military and provide important skills," Cahn wrote in the 41-page Philadelphia opinion. "Congress could not constitutionally require registration under the Military Selective Service Act of only black citizens, or only white citizens, or single out any political or religious group sim- ply because those groups contain suf- ficient persons to fill the need of the selective service system," he said. Registration of four million men was to start in post offices across the nation on Monday. The government planned to register men born in 1960 next week, and the following week to register those born in 1961. Next January, registration was to begin for those born in 1962. Af- ter that, men were to register whenever they turned 18. FAILURE TO register is punishable by up to five years in prison and a fine of $10,000. In its motion for a stay, the Justice Department said the lower court ruling leaves the country "without a means of conscripting an army, and seriously handicapped in the event of a national emergency." More immediately, the department said, the ruling injects "insurmoun- table confusion" into the registration system and "undercuts an important constituent of the president's response to the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan." By STEVE HOOK When President Carter proposed the return of draft registration for American youths last winter, a huge network of organizations was formed - both to prepare for its return and to prevent it. So when the eleventh hour decision - that the plan was unconstitutional - Daily staff writers Lorenzo Benet and Nick Katsarelas filed reports for this story. was made yesterday afternoon, the response was equally fragmented. After the registration plan was killed by a federal court in Pennsylvania, various groups involved with the issue were contacted, and the responses of their spokespersons appear below: * American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) - For the organization that has led the fight against renewed draft registration, yesterday's ruling was more than welcome. Howard Simon, See OVERALL, Pages