Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 24, 19714 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 24, 1974 ClassroomExperience for Credit Work in an elementary or middle school classroom CONTACT: LAURA ROSA, 763-3548 PROJECT COMMUNITY 2204 Michigan Union Swami speaks to followers Resister raps on amnesty (Continued from Page 1) In Baba's presence, some wept unashamedly or smiled, while others closed their eyes in meditation. According to' his followers, he awakens shak- ti, or divine power in others, bringing them to an intense awareness of themselves. Intoned Irwin, "Baba's fol- lowers are a mixture of all dif- ferent continents and religions. All he wants is that you add meditation to your life." Dur- ing the ceremony yesterday, saris fluttered against blue jeans, the Indian language clashed with French and En- glish tongues, and Earth shoes stood outside the ashram door next to slippers and high heels. AFTER a vegetarian feast was served up to Baba's fol- lowers on neatly sectioned plas- tic trays, Baba ascended an ornately carved, yellow velvet throne set under a large circus1 tent. Disciple Chidananda describ-, ed the similar setting he en- countered at his first meeting with Baba: "There he was on this great big bed, watching color TV with his teeth in a jar." One follower explained the' luxurious trappings that ac- company Baba: "We like to make things as cushy as pos-, sible for him, because we love him." FLUTTERING his hands, smiling broadly, and occasion- ally scratching his head, the bearded Baba was not disposed to answering philosophical ques- tions early in the day. He told one woman, "I have nothing in my stomach to answer you with. Come back at 4:30." Peggy Bendet, who gave up her post on a Honolulu newspa- per to follow Baba, explained: "It's important just to be with him, to experience him." Baba, who is visiting here for two weeks, advised those seeking spiritual awareness to "hang out with swamis." Russell Kruckman, who left his job as an English teacher at Indiana University when Baba "blew my mind," said, "Baba has a total lack of neu- rosis. He has complete free- dom." (Continued from Page 1) E years, you believe it, and it's pretty hard to turn your back on it and say 'bkay, I'll do it your way.' That's like agreeing to the draft itself, your accept- ing punishment for doing some- thing you believed was right. I wouldn't do it." He also stressed emphatiac- ally that the conditional am- nesty plan is "cruel and inhu- man punishment". "You know," he said leaning forward in his chair and brush- ing back his long brown hair, The persecution and assassination of Jean- Paul Marat as performed by the inmates of the asylum of Charehton under the direction of the Marquis De Sade. Being Peter Brook's film of the play by Peter Weiss. With Glenda Jackson, two-time Academy Award winner, Patrick Magee ("A Clockwork Orange") and Ian Richardson, commonly known as TONIGHT-Sept. 24 only-i & 9 PM.-$1.25 TOMORROW at 7, 8:45 & 10:30: EVERYTHING ABOUT SEX All showings in AUDITORIUM "A' ANGELL HALL uT Subscribe to The Daily Interns to take action "I see those guys coming out of their prisons' on the tube, and I know what's going on in their heads. The whole trip is looming over their heads again -they have to face their con-. sciences and do it all over again. Why is Ford doing that to them?" MICHAEL was reluctant to let his full name be used, be- cause he felt the label "draft- dodger" hid his identity and reasons for refusing to go to war. "I used to get introduced as, 'This is Michael, he's a draft resister.' And that's not what I am, I'm Michael, who ddidn't want to get drafted." "Each draft evader is a dif- ferent person, and that's some-. thing Jerry Ford doesn't realize. The conditional part of this am- nesty business is totally whack- ed. How can anyone lay down a conditional thing for everyone?" If given the chance to do it all over again, Michael says he would begin by not registering for the draft. "I always feel bad that I participated to that de- gree," he said. BUT HE DOES not regret his decision. "It did a lot for me in shaping the way I want to live," he said. "If I hadn't resisted, and gone to jail, I'd probable still be in that nowhere tow working in a factory. I had lot of time to think in those twenty months." In Spring of 1968, Michael was twice ordered to report for a pre-induction physical, which he ignored. Then, in June, he re- ceived a draft notice, and agair paid no attention to the govern ment. The following fall the authori- ties responded to his actions by sending the Federal Bureau of Investigation to take a state- ment from him. But it wasn't until 1969, one month after Nix- on took office, Michael point: out, that he was arrested. "Y; know, hand-cuffs, the whole I But they had to chase me do : the street," he laughed. ' "But I'm finished now, it's' all over, I finished my forty months parole last May. I've thought of writing something, an article, about 'Michael the draft resister.' But I only come ur with one thing, one sentenc that .says the whole thin Michael is negative." LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, Sept. 24 12:00 Noon U. of M. International Center SUBJECT: "SPRAY CANS vs. ATMOSPHERIC OZONE" SPEAKER: DR. RALPH CICERONE Associate Research Scientist in Space Physics COST: 50c For reservations Sponsored by: Coll 662-5529 ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER (Continued from Page 1) "great majority" of the work at the hospital. "They couldn't run it without us, there's no ques- tion of that," he said. Acting University Hospital di- rector David Dickinson said, "I doubt very much that the house officers would do anything that would interfere with the welfare of the patients." HOA and University bargain- ing teams have been meeting since July 1 on terms of a new contract. Negotiations reached a standstill earlier this month, and a state mediator was called in. AFTER one meeting with the mediator last Tuesday, accord- Solve your math problem s * as easy as IT._ ing to Sonderstrom, the sides remained deadlocked. The un- ion president said that while the HOA had made concessions on wages, fringe benefits, and, working conditions, the Univer- sity had remained "inflexible" in its bargaining. "The University remained ad- amant th'at their initial position was final, and have made no other offers," Sonderstrom said. University counsel William Lemmer, who is on the admin- tration bargaining team, disa- greed, saying that "there has been quite a bit a movement from both sides." LEMMER called the work slowdown threat "premature" and said last night that both teams had agreed to meet with the mediator again soon after reviewing their latest proposals. There appears to be substan- tial disagreement between the sides on salary issues, fringe benefit packages, and working conditions. Sonderstrom says that the proposed University two-year wage hikes of 6-8 per cent would be halved by a proposal to classify all physicians as Uni- versity employes, thus eliminat- ing certain benefits that the doctors receive at Wayne Coun- ty General Hospital, where they are considered county employes. Benefits include cost of living wage increases, free meals while working, and added in- surance benefits. These fringes have an estimated monetary value of $$700 per year. The interns and residents ro- tate their working year between University hospital, the Wayne County facility, and the Ann Arbor Veterans Administration Hospital. (Continued from Page 1) t troversy and threat of tragedy that would have surrounded his candidacy. THE MOST immediate politi- cal beneficiaries of his decision, whose timing was perhaps more surprising than its contents, are the other Democrats who have either begun or have been con- templating 1976 presidential bids. Minnesota Sen. Walter Mon- dale's potential candidacy, for instance, has been overshadow- ed by the possibility a Kennedy candidacy might wipe out much potential liberal suppoft. Sen. Henry Jackson of Wash- ington faced the basic handicap that even potential backers feared he would be unable to win the Democratic nomination from Kennedy. MONDALE and Jackson may be the closest things to front- runners at this early, indecisive stage. But Kennedy's decision seems, if nothing else, to guar- antee a long list of entrants and to increase; the" chances of a deadlocked convention. Some possibilities, such as Gov. John Gilligan of Ohio ar Sen. 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