The Michigan Daily vni xr Mn- 4As Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, July 22, 1980 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Protests, fights mar first day of registration From AP and UPI Construction workers singing "God Bless America" crashed a rally by 150 anti-draft demonstrators in front of Boston's federal post office building yesterday in one of several protests marking the first day of President Car- ter's military registration program. Police intervened to avoid a violent; confrontation between the two groups and arrested 20 of the anti-draft ac- tivists - who were chanting "Hell no, we won't go!" - dragging some to waiting police wagons by their hair. Another nine protesters were arrested in Greenfield, Mass., and eight in Har- tford, Conn. ELSEWHERE around the country, anti-draft protesters formed human barricades, held silent vigils and jam- med front-door locks at post offices. About 1,000 demonstrators jammed a cordoned-off section of Broadway in New York City for a sing-along rally with folk music. The registration program - which will affect an estimated four million young men - is being challenged as unconstitutional because women are not included. Last-minute efforts to halt the start of the program were unsuc- cessful, but the lawsuit on the basic issue is still pending. The Rev. Barry Lynn of the Commit- tee Against Registration and the Draft, said at a news conference in Washington that questions over the legality of the draft will increase non- compliance. "Resistance, anger and confusion will generate at least a 15 per cent non-registration rate, he said. IN THE government's only official response to the protests, Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti issued a statement saying, "Young men should know one thing very clearly: This law is in full effect" and it will be legally en- forced. The Boston demonstration occurred shortly before noon as protesters held a rally and then attempted to block the entrances of the federal post office building despite near 100-degree heat and threats from construction workers. The hardhats then invaded the rally singing "God Bless America." Police persuaded them to return to their con- struction site across the street and shoved the demonstrators away from the main doors of the post office building into the street. THE PROTESTERS sat down on the hot pavement and began singing Viet- See VIGILS, Page 2 V Moire uthan 200, local young men regit,6er for draft By SARA ANSPACH Some did it because they believe their country needs them. Some went without much thought because the government told them to go. And many of the more than 200 Ann Arbor men who registered for the draft yesterday fought with their consciences all the way to the post office. MORE THAN 175 people rallied against registration and the draft in front of the Federal Building for two hours yesterday afternoon, but the protests were peaceful and few would- be registrants were deterred. , Representatives from Committee Against Registration and the Draft and Public Interest Research Group in Michigan stood outside of all three Ann Arbor post offices for most of the day. See LOCAL, Page 3