The Michigan Doily-Thursday, July 24, 1980-Page 3 Si-i stage in pot offce 4 protesting registration _, By KEVIN TOTTIS Two draft-registration protesters were carried out of the Federal Building post office yesterday following a four-hour sit-in. The two men, David DeVarti and Christopher Berg, were among six per- .. sons who staged a peaceful protest by sitting along a wall adjacent to the win- dow where Selective Service registration was taking place to demonstrate their opposition to draft registration. SHORTLY AFTER the protesters arrived at approximately 2:15 p.m., Dave Addington, mail delivery manager., ,ordered them out of the * building, warning they were interfering with customer service. Be also said he had called the Ann Arbor Police. As the demonstrators moved away from the windows, so as not to interfere with postal business, a "support group" of seven persons began singing "All we are saying is let's give peace a chan- ce." When Ann Arbor police arrived, they explained they could not remove the * protesters from the building because it is on federal property, consequently federal police are responsible for the building., CARFON FOLTZ, a member of the group, said he did not feel the group was creating a disturbance. "We don't see ourselves as interfering," he said. "We're giving them business, everyone's bought stamps," he added. Dean Richard, manager of mail * processing, told the group they could remain in the post office as long as they did not hinder customers from coming in. "If, in fact, you do not impede postal business, I see no reason to take any further action," he said. He added, however, that the demonstrators would have to lesve by 5 p.m., when the post office closed. But at 5 p.m., members of the group were still undecided as to whether they would stay or lesve. After a postal of- ficial gave them "a couple" minutes to reach a decision,. and warned they could be arrested, three of the six protesters opted to leave the post office. "Some people have to be on the outaide working," demonstrator Chris Grossman said. AS THE THREE protesters remained in the post office, Federal Prosecuting Attorney Christopher An- dreoff was contacted by telephone and spoke with DeVarti and Edith Belly. During this time, postal officials issued them citations for "loitering and creating a nuisance," according to ° Hefty. ' While Hefly spoke on the , ~ telephone, DeVarti and Berg were r$ carried from the post office by federal , building police. Hefly walked out a few minutes later. The three will appear n,; ;.. federal court at p.m. today. "If they (19- and 20-year-olds ° r , ' registering for the draft) are ready to make that kind of commitment, the least I can do is stay here," DeVarti - said. He added the protesters will ' / return. ' , "I can't promise we'll be back every y ,; ' day (during the next two weeks), butIr° know people will be back here,' he '' ' 'y said. y < While in the post office, members o the group spoke with men registering > and discussed options open to themi- - cluding placing a sticker on the form .Y " saying the registrant is- acting under MDaily Photo by JIM KRUZ protest. " I'm going through with it DRAFT REGISTRATION PROTESTERS sit inside the lobby of the Liberty (registration)," 19-year-old Paul St. post office yesterday. Protesters have stationed themselves at area post Summers said, but added he would offices all week, urging would-be registrants to re-think their decision to register under protest. register for the draft. A CL Ursays egistraticon resisters m a gt auh By SARA ANSPACH Specie! to The Daily DETROIT-Young men who refl~se to register for the draft should be prepared to accept the consequences, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney warned yesterday. "It's a very serious offense-this is not breaking the 55 mile per hour speed limit," said David Landeau, who is helping defend the ACLU in the lawsuit which declares the registration pl n is unconstitutional on the basis of sex discrimination. ALTHOUGH LANDEAU. co-chair of a national commit- tee against the draft, said he personally admires those who make the decision not to register, he stressed the gravity of the issue, and said those who don't register cannot assume they will not get caught. The Justice Department has said it will systematically at- tempt to identify and prosecute those who do not register, Landeau said. And, according to Landeau, those who publicly announce they are not planning to register will be the first to be prosecuted. "'They (Selective Service officials) will try to make examplea of them, hoping to scare enough others to register," he said. THE MAXIMUM PENALTY for not registering is a $10,000 fine and five years in prison. According to Landeau, the government will try to create a giant surveilance system to find and prosecute young men who fail to register. He said the government may convince Congress for a privacy act exemption that would allow the Selective Service to use social security data to find delinquent 19- and 20-year-olds. Landeau called registrationsa "fizzle" and said he expects an "enormous problem in the fall when the results are tabulated. "THE TURNOUT HAS been very low-much lower than expected," he continued. Landesu attributed the light tur- nout in part to the virtual absence of advertising by Selective Service. The ACLU is concerned, he said, the government will try to prosecute untold numbers of young men who simply did not realize that they were supposed to register. "What about the kids who are hitchhiking through Europe this summer?" he asked. Those young men who pay little at- tention to the news, he said, also could be very confused about registration and may not understand that the law states they must register at their local post office within the next two weeks. "IT IS THEIR (the government's) fault, in a lot of these cases, that these kids are criminals," he said. The ACLU will monitor prosecutions of registration resisters, and will provide test cases if necessary to help prove these young men did not knowingly break the law, Landeau said. The Selective Service, he said, prepared many -public service commercials which television and radio stations refused to run because they were racist and/or they ad- See REGISTRATIOt1N. Page 10