PAGE TWO THE MICIGAN DlAILYV ~ i Y . K7.iM is V JLU"A7 1 , d 1. Day light Ruling Returns END GRADE STANDARD: Proposed Alteration of Draft Law Eases Student Deferment Criteria To Bo LANSING (AP)-The State, Su- preme Court yesterday tossed the red hot controversial time tissue' back to the Board of State Can- vassers. Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley has' ruled that the instant the can- vassers officially certify the peti- tions seeking a November, 1968, election on the time issue, the state automatically will go on Eastern Daylight Saving Time. Certifying the time issue for the ballot, Kelley held, suspends the law to keep Michigan on Eastern Standard Time, enacted by the pegislatrue and signed by the Governor. Robert F. Montgomery, state elections director, meanwhile was making telephone calls to see if three of the four-member Board of Canvassers could be rounded up ard of to meet today and settle the issue. Montgomery said there "was a, possibility but not a probability" the canvassers might be able to get together for the today's meet- ing. "If they are willing to come in on Saturday; we could be making a switch to daylight saving time as of Saturday midnight," Mont- gomery said. Political Ball Game "The ball game isn't over yet," insisted Attorney Tom Downs. Downs reported the Farm Bureau and bowling alley and theater in- terests that oppose certification of the referendum petitions to en- able the time switch that would push clocks one hour ahead. Down said because there were so many federally-related issues involved, he might theoretically have the right to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. 'He also said he plans to argue against the validity of the peti- tions when the canvassers do meet. Pressed for Time' Downs said he would have to consult with his sponsors before deciding whether to make any further legal moves. He added he probably would be pressed for time and would have to act before the canvassers meet. Seven members of the State Su- preme Court handed the time issue back to the canvassers after hear- ing oral arguments from both sides yesterday morning. The judges then huddled to- 'gether for an hour and a half before issuing' their order, Unanimous Order Harry F. Kelly, acting chief justice in the absence of Chief Justice John R. Dethmers; read the order, noting it was unani- mous. The order stated: "It is ordered that the plain- tiff's complaint for mandamus and injunctive relife, brought here for determination by the court's order of May 23, 1967, is denied. The court's order staying the board of state canvassers from making of- ficial determination of the sul- ficiency of such referendary peti- tion is dissolved. An opinion or opinions will follow." Main Argument The main argument offered by Downs was that Congress specified the time change should be made on the last Sunday in April. This was not done in Michigan. A referendum, he also contend- ed, should legally be sought only 90 days after adjournment of the Legislature. He further claimed the petition forms were incorrect, mostly on the grounds they con- tained a lengthy explanation on the first sheet. Robert Derengoski, state solici- tor general, said Congress had spe- cified the states could exempt themselves from coming under Daylight Saving Time by law. { The referendum, he said, is a part of the due process of law. Derengoski cited an opinion from a three-judge federal panel in Detroit which denied an in- junction sought to prevent the canvassers from acting on the petitions. One of the federal judges said, he reported, that "the court was not convinced the Congress did not know of the referendum pro- cess." This ,he said, is support of the legality of the referendum. Editors Note-Scores of pro- posed changes in the nation's military draft law have been bandied about in recent months. Now congressional negotiators have reached agreement on a proposed new law expected to win final approval soon. Here, in question and answer form, are details of how the proposed plan would work.- I WASHINGTON () - The pro- posed new military draft law Con- gress is whipping into shape makes it easier for college students to win deferment. And it permits President John- son to go ahead with his an- nounced plan to put 19-year-olds at the top of the available man- power pool. The present procedure drafts men inverse order or age from 25-years-olds on down. But Vietnam war d e m a n d s have brought the age of inductees down to 19 or 20 in many draft board districts already. The proposed new law, approved this week by Senate and House conferees, would go into effect for four years starting July 1. It also provides for a speed-up in settling appeals from local draft board decisions, preserves the vir- tual autonomy of local draft boards and prohibits the President from changing the present selec- tion system without another law. Johnson had proposed a nationall Canvassers lottery plan of random selection. College students who now must make a case before their local draft board to obtain a deferment -and then stay in the top half of their class to keep the deferment hereafter would be deferred -as a matter of legal right if they re- quest. And they wouldn't have to maintain a high scholastic stand- ing. They would have to keep up with their classes and meet the academic and other standards of their school. Here are some of the questions most often asked about the pro- posed new law and the answers as supplied by congressional draft experts: Q. What basic change would the new law make? A. The major change affects students. The proposed new law would require draft boards to grant' deferments upon request for undergraduate students pursuing fulltime courses and meeting their schools' academic and other re- quirements. The deferment would be a mat- ter of right. The old law left it to the discretion of draft boards and conditioned the defermention the registrant remaining in the upper half of his class. Deferment Duration Q. How long would the defer- ment last? A. It would end when the stu- dent completed his undergraduate work, left school or reached age 24, whichever comes first. But, if he became 24 in the middle of an academic year, he would be al-' lowed to complete the'year. Q. What would happen after a student completes his undergrad- Regulations for graduate student group, preceded by students whose deferments will be issued by the temporary deferments have ex- President. He has indicated defer- pired. Top priority now are the ments will be limited to qualified 25-year-olds. medical or dental students or 19-Year-Olds others pursuing schooling in fields Q. What are the chances of of critical need. being drafted at age 19? Even these regulations are not A. Statistics show that about two binding on draft boards but they of eveiry seven persons now eligible usually are followed. for induction actually are drafted. Transfers The Pentagon expects to meet all Q. Would a deferred student lose of its monthly draft requirements his deferment if he transferred from the 19-year-old group and from one school to another? from students whose deferments A. No. have ended. Q. Does the proposed new law Q. If a young man isn't drafted affect the status of registrants I at age 19, what are the prospects studying for the ministry? for being inducted later? A. No. Divinity students will,1 fr egdted ater? continue to have a legal deferment A. If he gets past 19 and world so long as they continue their stu- conditions don't get worse, his dies. If they abandon them after chances of not being inducted are passing their 26th birthday, they very good. A new crop of 19-year- are liable for induction until they will go into the eligibility reach 36. pool ahead of him. Q. Does it make any changes in Q. What provision would affect the present priority, categories for conscientious objectors? induction? A. This category would be based A. No these priorities are de- only on religious training and be- termined by local draft boards un- lief. It could not include essential- der presidential regulations. The ly political, sociological or philo- President has said top priority for sophical beliefs or a merely per- induction will be the 19-year-old sonal mdral code. New 'Print ShopA ttracts Local Art Enthusiasts Delicate Airplane Artwork Auctioned by N.Y.'s Christie (Continued from Page 1) Lot 1 (one of the Scouts) went for $800 'ton a manfroma elc- tronics company. Lot 2 (plans for the Scout)-$85. Lot 3 (the Fok- ker Triplane)-$1000 to the elec- tronics man again. Lot 4 (second Scout)-$750 to a Mr. Moss. Lots 5 and 6 (plans)-$80 .and $45. Lot 7 (a tailplane assembly)-$130. Lot 8 (the crashed Scout dating back to Independence Day)-$100. Lot 9 (a huge facsimile of the model box)-$550. Time: about one minute per lot. The casualness of the bidding disturbed no one. A small, but lucrative, drama then erupted. Mr. Moss could not pay or was non-existent, The bid- ding re-started at $600, the elec- tronics man again to the fore, with his straw hat in one hand and the other rising slowly to top each bid. Claus Oldenberg (the painted sculptor of 'hamburger' and 'slice of cake' fame) had de- cided that the Scout would make a fine addition to his collection. The electronics man dropped out, while Rauschenberg took up the bidding, which then took on the aura of 'Monopoly' rather than real business. The two art- ists fought it out alone, with the solitary exception of an interjec- tion from Mrs. Oldenberg, out- bidding her husband. In the end: "To Mr. Oldenberg for $1450." Art or toys? Everybody agreed that the planes, David Haxton's box and Mary Ashley's magnifi- cent plans on some sort of silvered material, were beautiful construc- tions. And in this case you can't say that "my five year old son could have done better." In the final analysis we have to note that the planes are sc4led- up models (not scaled-down planes) and are simplified in a number of ways-no covering, en- signias or other embellishments. They stand there as skeletons. They have a subtle monumental- ity, the two-thirds scale bringing them down to a human scale which contradicts their massive- ness. Maybe it was only the strange- ness of the inspiration that made us say "toys." After accepting this strangenses I find a whole world of formal elegance, beauty and humor, which does not deny toy-element, but rather interacts with it. 9 FILMS 'La Fuga' Mosaic Tells- Story qjj r rustratea '1 mmna By BARBARA HOCKMAN In the beginning we hear a woman told there is nothing she can do about the situation; in the end a man questions the good of knowing the truth. "La Fuga" is another film about a person unable to love, and it handles this question with a deli- cate understanding. Somehow it has managed to hide judgment be- tween the lines from where we must derive it ourselves. Piero is the child of La Dolce + DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ,1K.4\'Jr' MJJ " :.Mt~t~u "rMr,:." Lt : ::v J %V: J "W"."v."" .". "," JJh " ." f 4~h M " rs Vita. Yet, her life has none of the sweetness, hypocritical that it may be, of her parents. She lives in lavish insecurity, har- boring well-hidden guilt and frus- tration. The woman at the be- ginning and the man at the end of the film (Anouk Aimee and Paul Guers) seem to have the love for Piero (Giovanni Ralli) that she seeks but will not accept. Although the psychiatrist's couch reveals the mosaic picture of her life to us, that inner knowl- edge is finally rejected by im- patient Piero. But before she ends herself in some unknown "trage- dy," we have witnessed meaning- ful slices of her unfulfilled days. For these, the hackneyed modes of diary-flashbacks, interspersed with some Bermanesque dream se- quences, are used with a magnifi- cent novelty and freshness. Still, we are not seeing her through any eyes but the cam- era's. And the cameras are so sharp and yet so inconspicuous, in- advertently determined, that see- ing this movie is like reading a flowing novel where all pictorial images are formulated within our own minds. The precise dialogue has a literary quality what is mouthed by each character is pe- culiar to him, highly expressive of his significance in the story. Andrew's words are the strict, terse intellectualism which help Piero to feel unloved by her phys- ics professor husband. "To An- drew, everything is clear and rea- sonable . . . I am groping in the dark," she says. uatc work or becomes 24? A. He immediately returns to 'the pool of registrants most likely Is it her fault? Is she the ig- to be inducted and would remain norant, incapable mother she ac- ; in that status for one year. cnses herself of being? Additional Deferment Dr. Borghi (Enrico Mario Saler-Q. Could such a student get an- Dr. orgmchiEnr bouario er- other deferment? no) knows much more about Piero A. The new law says there shall than he will tell Andrew. He knows be no further deferment except the faults of Andrew in the rela- for extreme hardship. Being a tinshodhiishe knows Piero's husband or father would not give childhood history-the central, him an automatic deferment. brutal facts of child and parental Q. Does the proposed new stu- love, which form one's habits as dent deferment procedure apply standing. "There are no frigid only to future students or does it well as neuroses. His words com- affect those already in school? bine jargon with brotherly under- A. It would apply to all. women, only sexually immature Q What would happen to a ones," he advises. Why couldn't he student who becomes 24 before help the helpless woman? completing his four years of un- At the close of this tightly com- dergraduate work? pact, smoothly complex film, the A. He would be eligible for im- psychiatrist tells the physicist, mediate induction. both in front of a nuclear power Q. Would a registrant deferred plant, that when man can control for undergraduate work be eligible his unconsciousness, he will have for a graduate deferment? true power. A. Not as a matter of right. By GAIL SMILEY There's a new gallery at 2131 E. Washington. It's The Print Shop, owned by Peggy Pater Ben- nett and Lloyd Cross. The Print Shop is a place to go. They have etchings, lithographs, engravings, woodcuts, serigraphs' and experiments in art of all kinds. On exhibit now are works from Cramer, Ecker, Haxton, Pas- co, Pater, Ross, Simpson, Eding, Read, Lahti, Wright, Ettinger, and Beaver. For Rent But the most exciting thing about the Print Shop is that it's a place to go and work and talk about art with artists. There are studios available for renting and a workshop with facilities for etching, silkscreen, and woodcuts. There's a new Renaissance of arts happening at the gallery. Artists in all fields are in and out talking abut new things to do. A strong quartet ' directed by Bob Whetman now conducting at In- terlochen will perform in the fall. There's a nightly gathering of writers, painters, musicians, and film-makers drinking coffee on the house and talking, talking, talking until 11 p.m. Dorothea Suino is working on a film done partly in The Print Shop. She is the wife of Mark Suino, University professor of Russian. The film will be shown at the gallery in early August. George Manupelli, University professor of. arts, has offered a film as dona- tion to The Print Shop. The Print Shop plans to make facilities available for anyone in- terested in performing. The Ron Brooks Trio will be there soon. Peggy Bennett reports great suc- cess in this new, exciting cultural adventure. The community of scholars and artists contributing their efforts free of charge and available for consultation are Mary Ellen Sedgeman, Gina Rice, Fran Wright, Linda Fowler and Rozalind Beach. a1 Phone 434-0130 ,AiaaaOn CARPENTER ROA" The- Area's Finest Drive-In is easy to reach - 2 miles south of Washtenaw Rd. on Carpenter. BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 P.M. The Daily 'Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of 1Michigan for which The Michigan. Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 ,p.m. Friday for Satarday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a mai- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organiaston notices are not accepted for pubicat ion. For more information call 764-970. SATURDAY, JUNE 10 Day Calendar University Players Children's Theatre -"Nobody Loves a Dragon." Today and tomorrow, 2 p.m., Trueblood Aud. Cinema Guild - "The Incredible Shrinking Man": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. General Notices Student Government Council Approval of the following student sponsored events becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All pub- licity for these events must' be with- held until the approval has become ef- fective. Approval request forms for student sponsored events are available in Room 1011 of the SAB. Hiller Foundation, Fishbowl table, June 9, 12 and 13, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Fish- bowl. Doctoral Examination for Marshall August Walcat, Jr., Chemistry; thesis: "Studies of Fission-Product 152Pm and 152Nd," Sat., June 10, Room 3005 Chem- istry, at 9 a.m. Chairman, H. C. Griffin. Doctoral Examination for John Matthew Potter, English Language & Literature; thesis: "Andrew Marvell's Latin Poetry," Sat., June 10, Austin Warren's residence, 848 E. University, at 9:15 a.m. Chairman, Austin' Warren. Doctoral Examination for Kenneth Eugene Biesinger, Fisheries; thesis: "Micronutrients as Possible Factors Limiting Primary Productivity in Cer- tain Alaskan Lakes," Sat., June 10, Room 1032 Natural Resources, at 1 p.m, Chairman, K. F. Lagler. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: General Motors Styling Staff, Gi Technical Center, Warren, Mic.--Sec- retary to Personnel Director, short- hand necessary for labor negotiations meeting minutes, other varied duties. City of High Point, N.C.-Personnel 'Director, also serves as admin. asst. to City Mgr., man, young, with or without grad work. Pref. 'MA in public admin., poll. sei. bkgd., prefer some exper. in municipal field or personnel work Manufacturers Life Insurance Co., Southfield, Mich.-2 Trainees for Mar- keting Dev. Program, start at South- field branch, extensive trng. of 2 yrs., go into mgmt., admin., brokerage, ORGAN IZATION NOTICES head office work or sales MBA, MA poli. sci., or econ., prefer single, under 30. Uni-Royal, Inc., Allen Park, Mich. -Programmers and Systems Analysts for new 360 IBM system Will train, some exper. preferred, not necessary for programmers, computer oriented men or women, BS/BA Bus. Ad., Mktg., Mgmt., Engrg., Math and others. New Holland, Division of Sperry Rand Corp., Grand Island, Neb.-Industrial Engrs. Recent graduate with few yrs. exper Prefer IE exper. in work meas- urement, methods improvement, and cost reduction, may assume project re- sponsibilities. Management Consultants, Chicago, II1.-Vice-president for major firm in aircraft-aerospace manufacturing in- dustry, 40-50 yrs., degree in Aero. En- j grg., 10 yrs. exper. in positions of highi responsibility. *~ * * For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. m ,.,, . im "BOLD IN PRESENTING FACETS OF AMOUR, ILLICIT AND OTHERWISE! A REFLEC- TION OF MORAL DECAY...STARKLY, ! CFTEN EROTICALLY REVEALEDI SHOCKING ...!9RESTING, SERIOUS DRAMA!" -Weiler, New York Times ADULT MOTIONPICTURE FROM SWEDEN) lffriffb rMAI ZETTERUNG ,'wreawdb* PROMNENT FILMS DIAL NOW 8-641 6 FIRST NC RUN GET OUT OF THEIR WAY ... IF YOU CAN ! ECOMMENDEDFOR MAREAIENE )W SHOWING FIRST RUN sIOWN AT 8:35,& 11:50 FARMFR .PAHAYIS IN*..GOLOR 4 ALSO " LOHNUE, ANDREA SHOWN AT COLOR """""' >;{ :: 10:25 ONLY BY DELL CO. After Sophocles, Yeats, Growtowski, Artraud, et al OEDIPUS RED from LUGG'S PLAYERS USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN-j NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, Sun., June 11, 9:45 a.m. 'worship service with Pastor Scheips,, "Christianity and Life's Anxieties," 11 a.m., Bible class on "Christian Per- - sonality." Lutheran Student Chapel, Hill St. at Forest Ave, Sun., June 11, 10 a.m., worship service; 11:15 a.m. discussion group; supper and program at Campus Chapel, 1236 Washtenaw. Speaker, di- rector of Office of Economic Oppor- tunity-"Poverty Program&is it Work- ing?" ' June 13, 14, 1S-7:30 P.M; June 16-7:30 & 9:30 P.M. CANTERBURY HOUSE ii Tickets from Centicore Bookshop, S.U. "Plaster of Paris" Boutique, Maynard/E. William And at Door GmICIGA. NOW DI AL 5-6290 1i r i I 1 'p ". p w{1y,+u",;. e".";.;}:.;., . j. :.""+ . '.:o<;:""a..,tiiS; ti . "" '",:" "{{{ y } ,<'":;'y' :?;:b y'" r', :;:y{:"Y.itti: ;}:::::<;}{:;ii:^:S .:L:: "'res""?::S"::::4}: ". ".' +? ;ifi,: Id41 Y"9"M Y S11''J.". \'".":h11 ".". ..1"M '.""A :i ":1 '."X44'i.11Yi.Y"+i'1 Yh'.1'.Y:".L".i::"":{h".:"."# ::":tl!""J:'::":"::}e ."."V ":{{'::" :":"::"::::":.'J:'":'.'r': t'i.' THE MOST FANTASTIC $3,000,000 CAPER THAT EVER HAPPENED! CINEMA II presents ALEC GUINNESS in THE, HbRSE'S MOUTH TECHNICOLOR "A triumph! 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