The Michigan Daily-Saturday, August 2' 1980-Page 3 ... ... .r.".: ' .h.k ........ . ,n..........f.:.. .... ... .,..... ...... .f.a.....:{.,:,...................,:::.. .r":......," ::::::: a;}ox IEEEERMEEEEEEEEEEEMEMELocal Scene TURNOUT LIGH TER T HAN FIRST WEEK Registration ends 2d week By JOYCE FRIEDEN The second week of draft registration close yesterday, with turnout this wee lighter than last week, according to Ann office officials. Postmaster Dean Richards said a to people registered this week in Ann Arbor, 10 Selective Service and anti-draft groups hol views on the level of draft registration See story, Page 6. last week's total of 775. THIS WEEK MEN born in 1961 were r register, with Friday designated as a "mal for those unable to register earlier in the we According to 1970 Census Departmen there are 2,56219-year-old males living in A Richards emphasized there is no way to a registration has progressed since men can r any post office they happen to be near. "Wi law enforcement agency. We are merely data," he said. "How well the registration p Amtrak. to open De troit- east coast connection By ELAINE RIDEOUT Amtrak officials announced yesterday the opening of a new rail link from Detroit to Toledo that would connect Michigan travelers with an existing route to New York and other eastern ities. mtrak spokesman Michael Delany ..id the new run would extend the existing "St. Clair" run from Chicago to \etroit. "The new train will be known as the 'Lake Cities Turboliner,"' he said. "It will embark on its inaugural run August 3." ACCORDING TO AMTRAK official Jung Halee, the Chicago-Toledo run is one of several new lines connecting major cities, and was implemented as a result of a recent study by the Depar- tment of Transportation and Amtrak. "The study was directed by Congress," Halee explained, "to iden- tify cities of two or more that could be profitably paired." Halee said the goal of Amtrak is to provide direct and frequent service to and from areas that produce high volumes of traffic. According to an Amtrak spokesman, a rise in passenger rail traffic in Ann Arbor has produced a need. for a new, larger train depot. LAST APRIL, AN Ann Arbor Depot Task Force identified four development schemes that would improve rail passenger services. All improvements would be located near the present facility to the west of the Broadway St. bridge on either side of the tracks. The task force recom- mended the proposed depot be con- structed to allow for expansion and the possible inclusion of Greyhound and SEMTA bus facilities. See AMTRAK, Page 10 is the problem of Selective Service." IN MANCHESTER, Postmaster Marvin Kirk said, "We've had no trouble (with registration). We've been getting seven to 10 people coming in every day, and we estimated at the beginning that we would handle about 100 people in the two-week period." Local anti-registration supporters have established draft counseling offices to serve men who are un- decided on whether they should register. "It looked like fewer people came in this week than last week," said Suzanne Day, clerk for the Ann Arbor Friends Meeting, which operated a draft counseling office on East Liberty Street during the two weeks of registration. "However, this may be a result of the younger age group registering," Day continued. "The older fellows may have thought about it more and decided to do more research." AT LEAST ONE person registering yesterday said his job kept him from registering earlier. "It wasn't a difficult decision for me to make," said Eastern Michigan University student Dean Bowerback. I just thought about the penalties and decided I might as well register. According to an article appearing in yesterday's New York Times, a top Selective Service official said his office would be "serious about enforcing the law" against young men who failed to register. Selective Service Director Bernard Rostker said, "The kid who throws down the gauntlet to the gover- nment will be prosecuted." THE MAXIMUM PENALTY for those men who fail to register is a $10,000 fine and five years in jail. - But according to a handbook distributed by the National Resistance Committee, a leading anti- registration group, "Of those who are not discovered (not to have registered) most will simply be asked to register; few will be prosecuted." Rostker also said it would take about 90 days from today to determine how many men failed to sign up. For those who didn't register during the past two weeks, it is still possible to do so. Richards said the post office will continue to carry registration forms "until further notice." Sday in the life of... uy o , TEU, AA A negotiations break down once again By ELAINE RIDEOUT Negotiations between striking bus drivers and transit of- ficials broke down for the third time in four weeks yesterday as AATA's Board of Directors rejected a union request for concessions in five crucial areas. "The Board recognizes that its rejection of the union's proposal will rea'firm the status of impasse reached in the collective bargaining process," AATA said in a written statement released yesterday. BUT AATA DIRECTOR Richard Simonetta said that in the interest of getting the buses back on the streets, the board in- vited strikers back to work under the conditions of AATA's final offer presented the union last week. Members of the Transportation Employees Union (TEU) refused to ratify the final offer last Sunday by a vote of 112-18. Under the AATA back-to-work proposal, buses would be back in service by Monday. IF UNION MEMBERS vote to reject AATA's offer, Simonetta said the management bargaining unit would par- ticipate in no new bargaining talks until the union was ready to make some concessions. Union Vice-President Shelly Ettinger said - the union position all along has been, "no contract, no work. "We do not have a contract," she said. "We have a set of rules imposed by the management that we're supposed to work under." See TEU, Page 10