PAGE TWO THlE MICHIGEAN DAILY JF'RtAv- UURTTATV 9 141 .................... I'ii.ill:12, i'L'[SIt ;HICY . 1;Jt 7S 5 _ .. , . . _ -n 1 Dodging the Draft- Legally cinema "A PICTURE OF GREAT POWER. 'The Fear': A Greek Tragedy By ART GOLDBERG Liberation News Service "'low To Stay Out of the Army" by Conrad Lynn (Grove, $1.25). Grove Press has just begun dis- tributing a thin paperback vol- ume that at first seems over- priced at $1.25. The book is not another long-lost erotic master- . piece. It has only 126 pages and, worst of all, it was written by a lawyer. But this new book may be one of the more valuable Grove has distributed in recent years. Its subtitle is "A Guide to Your Rights Under the Draft Law." The author, Conrad Lynn, is a well- known civil liberties attorney who has specialized in draft cases since World War II. Lynn's intentions are as clear as the title of his book. From his wide experience with draft. cases, Lynn knows where the draft law is vulnerable and where it is not. He knows how the draft machin- ery can be clogged up, and how and where it can be fought. The book in effect is a manual on how to fight the selective service sys- tem. Some highly interesting and generally unknown bits of infor- mation stand apart from the rest of the book. For .example, a man who now applies for conscientious objector status no longer has to be a pacifist. He need not even be a member of an organized re- ligious group, or prove, a belief' in a "Supreme Being." For those who would fight se- lective service on its own terms, Lynn points out that no lawyers are necessary (they are specific- ally barred) in filing appeals with state and national appeals boards. He notes that a case can be tied up in the draft machinery for as long as two years, for only the, cost of postage. The draft boards must supply-all appeal forms. Draft resisters are presented with a variety of suggestions. Fore- most among these is the advisa- bility of demanding a jury trial.. Lynn cites one case where two consecutive juries would not Con- vict a black~ draft resister even though all the evidence seemed to be against hin. There is an additional reason for demanding. a jury trial. According Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in co- operation with professors from stanford Ulniverslty, University of California, ;and Guadalajara, will offer July 1 to August 10, art, folk- lore, geography, history, language and literature courses. Tuition, board and room is $290. write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stan- ford, California 94305. 111. to Lynn, Chief Justice Lumbard of the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said last winter that if every draft objector insisted on a jury trial, two per cent of the men called into service could force the entire federal court system to ai standstill. Lynn was the attorney for David Mitchell, perhaps the original draft resister. Mitchell refused in-, duction on grounds of political4 principle, namely that the war in Vietnam violated the rules for- mulated. by the Nuremberg Tri- bunal. Lynn reviews Mitchell's case and points to it as a classic way in which the draft should be resisted. Readers will also find out that they may be accepted by Canada as a landed immigrant through the mail. They need not make a trip to Canada before applying. Members of . certain left-wing political groups will perhaps, be surprised to know that in some cities, depending on the local boards, many of them receive I-Y deferments. 'These deferments usually go to members of the Communist Party, the Progressive1 Labor Party, Youth Against War and Fascism, and in some cases SNCC. . Mon. thru Thur. 7-9; Fri. & Sat. - RICHARD LEST By BARBARA HOCKMAN fears, and brings his parents' hat- "The Fear" (currently at the red upon him. They have a mur- Campus) was made in Greece by derer on their hands and must Greeks with Greeks. This is a hope never to be found out. novelty for us, since the Greek To be really effective, I think, films we have seen ("Zorba," the movie should penetrate the "Phaedra," "Never on Sunday," boy's character more than it does. "The Greek Passion") were all We look at him, but seldom get "international" in their manage- into him. Moments where we lack ment and direction, even though either sympathy or empathy be- they exuded that peculiar Hellen- come ludicrous. ic spirit. Yet, like a short story with a This movie was written and di- surprise ending, the film has some rected by a man named Costas interesting twists. It isn't only a Manoussakis. His script is of a study of one unfortunate persont small, tight tragedy that inter- in the company of luckier ones., twines typical Greek social prob- In the beginning the emphasis lenis - as they are found in those other films - with a couple of basic human conflicts into a sus- pense story. The story is essentially a de- scription of a sexually frustrated, utterly introverted young man who resorts to rape and, conse-I quently, murder, for the satis- IA faction he can't find anywhere else. In the small farming village where herlives, discretion is thebNTERN much too shy even for discretion. Ironically, he sees his friends, his sister, and even his father 1 "animalistically" eating the flesh of forbidden fruit. But his crim- HELS inal attempt only increases hisjpV1II A - - - - - - - - -- - 'is on the total household, a cold,I tense place, where the parents! have been estranged from each other since early in their mar- riage. Their hostile relationship, which had appeared completely hopeless, evolves into a relation- ship of more tender sensibilities because of the son's act, as if he were their scapegoat. Occasionally, Mr. Manoussakis ovedoes his experimentation with photographic effect. But he is clearly trying to coincide the mood of the story with the type of shot and the color of shot fusing black and white). The Fear', which has been called the best picture ever made in Greece, by an Athens critic, still holds its position as a picture of great power. A tragedy of sex frustration that strikes you as eminently logical. -.Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post .I ) i,* For th inostmatuw ofaudiences- the .most raistc of m0otion picuirs. Dial 8-6416 Sat. Matinee $1 .50 -;; Eves. & Sun. $1.75 INKI RMONIC LA, Conductor 24, 8:30 itorium Ill Subscribe to The Michigan Daily I' 1 I 1-3-5-7-9-11; Sun. 1-3-5-7-9 HELD OVER. E k iwkMMof .A '%" r mIL H A JORMA PANUI SAHT., FB. H ill Aud lilt , ow, zMennWW "WW I1 WITHOUT ITS PANTS ON!" -Ramparts Magazine "I WOULD LIKE TO SEE IT 20 TIMES!" -San Francisco Chronicle "IT TRULY HURTS WHEN YOU LAUGH!" -Stewart Klein, WNEW-TV "QUALITY AND IMPACT!" -Ellen Frank, Michigan Daily I1 Program: A Requiem in Our Time........E. Rautavaara Incidental Music to "Belshazzar's Feast" ...... Sibelius Scherzo and Forging of the Sampo from Kalevala Suite ...... Klami Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64 ............ Tchaikovsky Tickets: $6.00-$5.58-$5.00-$4.00-$3.00-$2.00 MUNICH Chamber Orchestra HANS STADLMAI R, Conductor THURS., FEB.29,8:30 Rackham Auditorium Program: Concert.ino No. 3, A major. ..........Pergolesi Concerto for Violin and Strings...............Stadlmair Divertimento in B-flat, KV159 ............Mozart. Concerto for 3 Violins and String Orchestra, D major . .. . J. S. Bach Tickets: $5.00-$4.00-$2.00 11 PPESENTS National Theatre of Canada SHAKESPEARE'S "A Midsummer Night's Dem with aa DOUGLAS RAIN MARTHA HENRY as Bottom as Titania Directed by JOHN HIRSCH Designed by LESLIE HURRY . SOLE U.S. ENGAGEMENT! A AprlH 1-6 Mende ssohn Theatre . LO rYt- - - - SNEAK PREVIEW SUNDAY 9:00 P.M. SEATS NOW ON SALE at PTP Ticket Office, Mendelssohn Theatre ' r 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor Starting TODAY . MICHIGAN PRICES- Mon., Tues., Wed & Thus. Eves., Sat. Mat.: Orch.: $5.50, 4.56, Bac. $5 0C, 4.00, 3.00. Fri. & Sut. Eve: Or( h.: $6 00, 5.C, Balc.: $5.50, 4.50, 3.50 Thursday Mannee: Orch.- $, 00, 2.00, Balc.: $4.50, 3.50,2.50 I _______ I;, U WTATE NO 2-6264 ACADEI R AWARD NOMINA MY 4Ir AT IONS 0METROCOLOR and FRANSCOPE SWed t., Sun.13 57-9 Mon., Tues. Thur. Fri. 7-9 ADD YOURSELF TO ROE0BBEN' RUN C~AD I Including: * BEST ACTOR (Warren Beatty) ' BEST PICTURE BEST ACTRESS (Faye Dunaway) BEST DIRECTOR (Penn) 1 BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (Estelle Parsons) TWO BEST SUPPO'RTING ACTOR (Pollard and Hackman) Uj XL FAY'SPiB D%?] DmEr i 4 CROWDING THE SCREEN WITH ITS POWERS AND PASSIONS... ONE OF THE BEST-LOVED OF ALL LOVE STORIES! Thomas Hardy's unforgettable novel of a woman's pride and fall. METRO-GOLDITIAN-AYER RESINTS A JOSEPH JANNI PRODUCTION * JULIE CHRISTIE TERENCE STAMP U k