YOUR CHANCE TO HELP KIDS WHO NEED YOU: BE A TUTOR IN WILLOW RUN ! Work on Remedial Skills or Use Your Own Special Talents to Start an Extracurricular Project ALL MAJORS WELCOME Call 763-3548 and Make an Appointment to See Sharon Rosen or Come to 2547 SAB second .opiuI i'4*Uu jhRe a4I, 0frigtin Dat'ly NEWS PHONE: 764-05332 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0534 Sunday, September 21, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Fraternities relax rules to increase M r-) AMAHd -OVOLA44WOW, DIAL 8-6416 TODAY AT 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. FUR ALL }YOUNG LOVERS WHEREVER YOU ARErJ By CAROL HILDEBRAND For some, next week's campus, issue will be fraternity rush and fraternities in general. In a shortened one-week rush period several hundred men will look at the 43 fraternities on campus, either seeking a bid or just curiously noting merits and demerits of the system. To attract rushees, Inter-Fra- ternity Council (IFC) this year abolished a 50-year rule requir- ing coats and ties at rush. The move is in a way symbolic of the fraternities' larger at-' tempt to destroy the "look alike, act alike, think alike" image they have developed on campus. "Individuals may dress as they please." said Tom Mowry, exter- nal vice president of IFC. "It's artificial for us to be dressed up now." . Mowry estimates that Some 20 fraternities are really "anti-fra- ternities". These appreciate vary- ing viewpoints within the house, they are concerned with campus issues, and they are generally aware of a student's right to his individuality. About 10 houses, Mowry guesses, are still of the "rah-rah fraternity" vintage. For the past year IFC has been striving to extend its concerns to campus and national issues, as well as city problems. The Fraternity Representatives Association (FRA) was begun last year. Mowry, its chairman, says its purpose is to "find campus issues, study them, tell fraternity members about them, and elicit support for them." Fraternities have currently en- dorsed the University bookstore and the intra-mural building fund. Last year they endorsed the boycott of a local high-priced store, the rent strike, and t h e abolition of the language require- ments. Despite their "c h a n g e our as I know, there are only two like; image" offensive, fraternities still that, and those aren't much of have outspoken critics, however. fraternities anymore, but just "I don't think they do much places to live," he said. thinking about what's coming off Fraternities are generally veryI in the U.S. or on the campus. internalized operations, requiring They care about grad schools and little outside help and authority.. dates," observed Steve Touhey, Tom Schrader, treasurer of! '69. Delta Tau Delta, explained t h a t Touhey was president of his at his house one member is theI Phi Zappa Psi pledge class the fraternity's paid manager. Ano- winter of 1967, but eventually de- ther member, responsible f o r' pledged. ordering food, gets free meals. "The reason I got out was be- Paid actives or unpaid pledges are cause they weren't like that," responsible for cleaning. The commented Neil Dickman, anoth- cook, in fact, is the only non- er former fraternity member who fraternity member involved in depledged two years ago. "As far the house. rush Schrader estimates the average cost of fraternity living is $145 a month - incluidng d u e s and social fees. Dickman disagrees with him on costs also. "I haven't been there for two years, and I'm sure that everything has gone up since then. But when I was there t h e straight cost was $150 a month, and everything is tacked on from there," he says. "I also know that there are others which are even higher," he continued. "It's a pretty expen- sive way to live," he said. = -° ; The motion picture to be seen again and again- A ANd AWOMAN ACADEMIY+f AWARDS! WINNER.( the news today 1b) ThIe A '.o cdj) eN(l il/ d( .u0lt', cPres Sirii c Senate questions stock transaction, STEVE McQUEEN IN THE G REAT ESCAPE "Sheer escapism" -Fromm "Lies! All Lies" -Goebbels SAT.-SUN. at 7 and 9:15 SEPT. 20-21 Aud. A 75c DOUBLE FEATURE- ENDS TUESDAY SEN. MIKE MANSFIELD charged yesterday that the U.S. involvement in Laos had cost millions of dollars and hundreds of lives. Commenting in a report on a trip to Southeast Asia which included stops in Laos, Mansfield, Senate majority leader, said he doubts that U.S. troops are involved in combat in Laos, but warned that the cur- rent course there could lead to a Vietnam-style military government there. Mansfield said that U.S. military forces in Laos are numbered in the hundreds at a cost which exceeds $300 million a year. Sen. Stuart' Symington (D-Mo.) , has already announced that his Foreign Rela-; tions subcommittee on overseas commitments will begin closed hear- ings on Laos on Oct. 14. TROOP CONTRIBt'TING NATIONS besides the U.S. say they may soon follow the U.S. lead in withdrawing forces from South Vietnam. , However, at the meeting of foreign ministers from Thailand, Aus- tralia, New Zealand, South Korea and the Philippines in the U.N.. representatives of each country said they had no plans to withdraw any troops before the current withdrawal of 60,000 U.S. soldiers is completed in December. At the same time. Thanat Kjoman, Thai foreign minister, an- nounced that both the timetable and the numbers have been agreed upon for a withdrawal of troops from Thailand. Thanat refused to disclose specifically what these were, however. SEN. ROMAN L. IIRUSKA yesterday withdrew his n a m e from the race for the post of Senate minority leader. In withdrawing his name, Hruska threw his support to Sen. How- ard Baker Jr. of Tennessee, who is left in the race with Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania. Hruska, now serving his third term, had been regarded as the most conservative candidate in the race. Sen. Baker, only a freshman senator, labels himself as a middle-of-the -roader, while Sen. Scott is regarded as the most liberal of the three men. by Haynsworth WASHINGTON (-Supreme Court nominee Clement F. Haynsworth purchased $16,000 of Brunswick Corp. stock in 1967, six weeks after joining in a pro-Brunswick decision but before the opinion was announced, the Justice Department said yesterday. It said after checking with Judge Haynsworth and with his stock broker, Arthur McCall of Greenville, S.C., that the broker suggested the purchase and that "none of the facts indicate that information obtained in hearing the case entered into the purchase." - The department, in a letter fromUu Asst,. Atty. Gen. William Rehn- ,UCLA may quist to Chairman James 0. East- land (D-Miss), of the Senate Judi- 1 c c -Associated Preys 1J'inciii 9'protIest About 50 Biafrans, one carrying a casket filled with bones, danced and sang in front of the White House yesterday calling for the U.S. to secure freedom for their country. ST UIDNI T PRESDENT: Lower court convicts, tWo (Iraft protesters t ULYSSESA SUPERB FILMI ife Magazine "BRILLIANT, FORCEFUL AND RESPECTABLE x CINEMA ART". wthef, - :r ciary Committee, said also it is doubtful the case involving liens on fixtur'es for 10 bowling alleys, "could conceivably have affected the market value of Brunswick's stock." In testimony last week to the committee, Haynsworth, currently chief judge of the 4th U.S. Cir'- cuit Court of Appeals, said in list- ing his large stock portfolio "I have disqualified myself in all; cases in which I had a stock in- terest." Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind), who raised the question of the judge's Brunswick stock, called the matter "an amazing coincidence" andt said "My chief concern is with the way this matter looks to the public."' "It sure looks bad to the pub- lic," he added, although he went on to s a y he certainly doesn't! think Haynsworth "is on the take" or would be influenced by $16,000 worth of stock. The AFL-CIO, which is oppos- ing confirmation, issued a state- ment saying the case "shows again the indifference to ethical niceties which has marked h i s tenure on the bench." The labor organization accused Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and Eastland of acting in collusion "to1 t ire I)IaeI instructor By JIM HECK College Press Service San Francisco - The Univer- sity of California Regents m a y have turned UCLA into another San Francisco State late last night. Voting in the longest secret ex- ecutive session since the firing of Clark Kerr, the Regents decided to fire UCLA black philosophy professor, Angela Davis. She is an avowed American communist.. UCLA campus is expected to erupt in violence within the week if Chancellor Charles E. Young goes ahead with the decision, as expected. The firing is the fourth imple- mentation of a 1940 Regental by- law forbidding communists to teach on California campuses. The last time it was used was in 1950 after a McCarthy hearing held in the state. Sources in Sacramento an- nounced this morning the decis- i' EUGENE, Oregon 'CPS' The student body president of the Uni- versity of Oregon and a fellow student have been sentenced to two years in prison for 30 minutes GEN. LEWIS HERSHEY yesterday told a group of students of nonviolent protest against the he has no intention of resigning his Selective Service post. dit Mo.gan the president and Speaking to a group of about 450 students assembled for a con- David Gwyther, a veteran activist, vention of the conservatively oriented Association of Student Govern- face incarceration in a Lompoc, ments, Hershey denied earlier reports that he would resign if certain Calif. federal prison as a result changes were made in current draft procedures. aof their conviction in U.S. District At the same meeting, Hershey commented that his only reaction Court last June on three counts' to the cancellation of the November and December draft calls was of "disrupting Selective Service that he would "have another breather for a couple of months." Con- Proceedings." cerning the future, Hershey said he would fear a volunteer army and Both are currently free on bail tdraft would be instituted instead to appeal the conviction and sen- hoped a lottery datwudb nsiue nta.tence. The students were also addressed yesterday by President Nixon who claimed that "his administration was deeply concerned about Morgan acted as judge, Gwyther the frustrations on U.S. campuses which boil over into violence." as prosecuting attorney, and 12 tother students as jurors in mock trials conducted at Eugene and Roseburg, Ore. local draft boards' with using force to disrupt thex meetings. There were no injuries in the in-1 cidents and only two witnessest testified there had been physical contact between the students and1 the board members, but the prose-, cutor, a U.S. attor'ney, contended and the jury apparently agreed1 that the students' entry into theI meeting was in itself an act of force. Morgan and Gwyther claimed throughout the trial that they had! engaged in no forceful disruption, but rather had made peaceful ver- bal presentations to dramatize1 "LIKE A VOLT JOLT FROM THE THIRD RAIL! It hits even harder on the screen than it did on the stage!" Time Magazine LEROI JONES' "DUTCH MAN" CZECHOSLOVAKIAN POLITICAL LEADERS have appar- ently decided the political fate of Alexander Dubeek and many of his liberal supporters. The announcement made by the Presidium, to which Dubcek still belongs, indicated that after weeks of wrangling among Party Chief Gustav Husak, Dubcek, and his opponents, a decision has been reach- ed on fixing blame for events that led to the Soviet invasion. Speculation was that Dubcek will lose at least his Presidium seat, and Josef Smrkovski and a host of other Dubcek supporters probably will be purged from the Central Committee. most popular play in emu summer theatre history last winter. In each of the two mock trials, the students entered official board meetings en masse, staged a kan- geroo court in which board mem- bers were pronounced guilty of "crimes against humanity," and left after a short time. The mock jurors were never in- dicted, but Morgan and Gwyther were brought to trial and charged' hal lds the fujil PJ1L0 01 their opposition to military con- whitewash Judge Haynsworth in- ov.sRegan aunpdrhanceor scription. stead of conducting a fair and I Gwyther's attorney, citing a re- open-minded inquiry. cent case in which the same judge Joseph L. Rauh, counsel for the An eleventh h o u r attempt by sentenced a man found guilty on Leadership Conference on Civil I UCLA director of Afro-American 13 counts of federal tax evasion Rights, called on Haynsworth to Studies, Robert Singleton, failed to 30 days in jail, questioned the withdraw as a nominee. last night. Only he and Chancel- judicial priorities involved since, Rehnquists's letter said that the Ior Young were admitted in exec- he said, the tax evader is mo- c a s e was assigned to a three- utive sessions. He had warned the tivated by selfish ends, the draft judge panel including Haynsworth Regents "of grave consequences' law violator by high ideals. in October 1967 and "It is at this if they went ahead with the decis- But the judge, directing his point that the judges normally ion. comments at Morgan and Gwyth- consider whether they a r e dis- Singleton has not indicated er, said, "I don't know about your qualified in a case." After pur- what his newly organized depart- idealism. There is a question in chasing the stock in December ment will do, but the Black Stu- my mind whether you were sincere 1967 Haynsworth twice reviewed dents Union (BSUi has announc- or whether you were trying to the decision before it was issued ed it will "begin some form of po- avoid the draft." in Richmond. Va. tence activity." EATa_._. _.NERAL___ _._Av.__.._ "A STRIKING EXPERIENCE AND ONE WITH AN IMPACT THAT IS ALL BUT UNFORGETTABLE! Creates a shattering impact. A vision of undiluted harsh- ness and lanauane of untempered fury!" Hollis Alpert. Saturday Review SUNDAY - "Ulysses" - "Dutchman" 'TOLD WITH BRUTAL ELOQUENCE! Shirley Knight i close to perfect- tartling! Al Freeman Jr. is excellent ' ---Brendan Gill, The New York er "THERE HAS NEVER BEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS ON T1NE AMERICAN SCREEN!" William Wolf. Cue Magazine 3:00, 6:00, 9:00 - 5:00, 8:00 on a HOT tin roof eastern michigan university theatre Saturday September 20 7:00 and 10:00 P.M Sunday September 21 8:00 P.M. MONDAY and TUESDAY- "Ulysses" - 6:00, 9:00 "Dutchman" - 8:00 only FIFT0 'I'T1EAT'E 761-9700 ALL SEATS RESERVED-$1.75 FOR RESERVATIONS: 482-3453 Box Office Open Daily: 12:45-8:30 P.M. AIR-CONDITIONED DANIEL QUIRK AUDITORIUM BONUS PRODUCTION WINNER!3 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN NOW SHOWING 3RD A-r nrc'i 1A or) DDICT .C'rr September 20, 21 L'AVENTURA Dir. MICHELANGLO ANTONLONI (1960) The director of "Blow Up" and the soon to be re- leased "Zabriskie Point" presents this killer. 7 & 9 75 ARCHITECTUREI 662-8871 7 C AUDITORIUM Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, &9 P.M. Proqram Information 662-6264 ACTION & SUSPENSE LASER CONCEIT THE VERY LATEST IN ELECTRONIC ENTERTAINMENT "R"direct from its New York Pre- miere Showinq. See the Sonovi- ion Krypton Laser transform music inmo 4 colonr, ful -di t FOX EASTERN THEATRES ka FOX VILLa5E 375 No.MAPLE RD.-769-1300 JEOM1 LLA 4 . PROD MON.-FRI.--7:20 & 9:30 SAT._&SUN.--1-3 -----5:10-7 :20-9 :30 lHA presents BUFFY SAINTE MARIE Saturday, Oct. 4 - 8:30 P.M. I KRL.ULAK FK rI...,,L " V'A VVEI I