THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 5, 197 3 THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 5 1973 Windsor: new home for draft' resister (Contiiued fromi Pages 9 Canada. Grannemann blames it, in large part, on the upheaval- so fundamental he likens it to getting religion, in the jarring fundamentalist sense. Be took lonely counsel with a few professors and decided: 'In all my conscience, I could not go., Passing off the U-haul trailer he loaded and hitched behind his Volkswagen as preparation for departure to Ft. Leonard Wood, he struck out, instead, with his wife and daughter for Sault Ste Marie. With a chuckle, he remembers now, how frightened he was at the border, how clean-shaven and trimmed of hair-and how he even wore white socks to look as conservative as possible. le told the border guard, none- theless, as he rolled down his window: "I'm a draft dodger." "DAMN ridiculous war, isn't it?" the Canadian replied. But still . . - Len Grannenani catches hin- self defending the United States. "Soneonelt say. 'Yoa don have any sensitivity ts vour black people down thesre. You've cas- trated them, you've herded them into ghettos, you've done all kinds of crazy things to them.' SAnd I'll sa, 'Well, let's not for- getbtut the C anadian Indians. HIE 1(11LPSno grtdgesHis draft card, scorched, is displayed in a frame on the wall. "But thats kind of a joke, I suppose. I didn t want to burn the whole thing, you know I wanted tos make sure my name was stsll on it My wife and I lit it, and I blew it out so I could put it on the wall.It serses as kind of a reminder . ." And he declines to sit in judg- ment, asking only that his con- science be respected-as he re- spects the consciences of those who chose to go and fight. "What I have given up, I think, is a lot for what I've wanted and what I've believed in." Amnesty? No. Nt something he particularly needs. "I would- n't go back to stay. "BUT I'D like to visit . . To see for the first time in four and a half years his mother, who had said, "You're kidding, of course," when he'd first called home-with quarters and dimes because he hadn't dared call col- lect-and who had begged and pleaded for busm to come back. And his father, who'd told him in a second phone call that he'd gone to the members of his draft board-"probably one of the most difficult things he'd ever had to do in his life"-and gotten their assurance that if Len would come back quickly all would be forgiven . . . AND HIS brothers, particularly Virgil, whom he most painfully remembers saying flatly: "Come back. You're making a big mis- take. You know you're destroy- ing your father-our father- and destroying your mother - our mother - and destroying me. Yo''e done a terrible thing'"- and frosn swhoms he hasn't heard a word since. To turn Washington, Mo., from a place in his nightmares where he walks the streets as a criminal back into the place where blue- gray mountains mean hunting and fishing and canoeing . . . HAIRSTYLING As You Like It! NEW TRENDS FOR 1973 TRIMS-SHAGS AND-itAZORCUTS 2 SHOPS-- 611 E. UNIRSITY 4S. E.USLBERTY D cola Barbers Carnegie study OKs American colleges Wants gas shortage investigated Sen. Jim Abourezk (D-S.D.) tells a Washington news conference yesterday he's written a letter to President Nixon calling for an immediate investigation by the Justice Department of "an ap- parent anti-trust violation in connection with the present oil and gas shortage and skyrocketing of prices and profits of the major oil companies." ERVIN OPPOSED: Cox urges delay in t0evised ug probe (Continue rin,,P ages2) ports "partof a careful coordinated strategy . . to prosecute a case against the President in the press using innuendo, distortion of fact and outright falsehood." YESTERDAY, Warren acknowledged the President had conferred with Dean and said the topics included Nixon's own Watergate inves- tigation, administration policy on citing executive privilege and hear- ings on the unsuccessful nomination of L. Patrick Gray to be director of the FBI. Asked about Warren's comments on not supplying logs of the conversations, Cox told newsmen lse has been assured of access to all documents, files and other papers in the executive branch. SHOULD THE SENATE continue its televised hearings, Cox said, it will "make it impossible to get at the truth from bottom to top." In his letters to Ervin and the other senators, the special pro- secutor said "the continuation of hearings at this time create grave danger that the full facts about the Watergate case and related mat- ters will never come to light= and that many of those who are guilty of serious wrongdoing will never be brought to justice." Even before Cox's statement, committee member Herman Tal- madge, D-Ga., had called suggestions of postponement "presump- tious in the extreme." COX SAID his office has expanded its investigation of all illegal activities in the 1972 presidential campaign beyond the break-in at the Watergate office building headquarters of the Democratic Na- tional Committee. Cox cited these reasons for his belief that public hearings will interfere " Witnesses often come forward because of fear of heavy prison sentences, a fear that would be relieved by chances that pretrial pub- licity at the hearings could forestall successful prosecution. * Premature disclosure of testimony and investigating leads can aid others in fabricating explanations, increasing the difficulty of get- ting truthful information from potential witnesses. * Witnesses tori between conscience and loyalty to superiors are more likely to give information to the special prosecutor than in front of television cameras, STOP THE BOMBING March from Watergate to Justice Wasingo, D. C.-Sat., June 16 -MASS MEETING- To Organize Buses and Send-Off Rally WEl,UE 6-3540 SAB-SPM Sponsored by The PCPJ-People's Coalition for Peace and Justice (Coatinued brm Page 3) institutions got p o o r e r marks from the commission. The commission s a i d educa- tional justice could be improved by determined efforts to find places in colleges for young peo- ple from low-income and minor- ity groups-with adequate finan- cial assistance for their support. IT ALSO recommended special efforts be made to find qualified members of minority groups and women for consideration for fac- ulty positions. The commission viewed higher education's role in the critical evaluation of society as "quite uneven in the past and uncertain for the future." It said individual members of the campus community, but not the institution or its corporate bodies, should engage in such activity. However, the commis- sion cautioned such individuals to keep in mind that "they are not the only people in society with a right to evaluate society." THE COMMISSION noticed that American higher eduscation had become "heavily 1 o a d e d with functions" over the years, rang- ing from providing financial sup- port for students to advising and instructing persons and organiza- tions outside the campus. The commission said American Dr. Spock will speak at Med School counter commencement Morens is convinced th iiSpok was iumped for politicat reastis. THE '0N1I11'.TTE, %sihich its- cludes no students, maintained that Yosing was picked because of Spoclk's poor speilking abilities. But conmsittee members refused to relet se the minutes of the controversial meeting. It has since been suggested that few, if any, of the commit- tee members have ever heard Beis Spock speak. Spock's topic for the counter commencement will be "society and health care." Also speaking will be Kay Weiss of Advocates for Medical Information. The sponsors say they aim tii keep the event open to the public and free of charge. higher education had not reorder- ed its purposes decisively since the period around t870, when it greatly expanded its functions to include research and service to society and opened its doors po- tentially to the mass entry of students. DAILY OFFICIAL BUILETIN Tuesday, June 5 'TEACHER CORPS / PEACE CORPS PROGRAM: A rep will be in office June 57to interview candidates. Open for grads. who majored in Eng. (B. A. in Eg.n or Secondary Teacher w/major in Eng.) Three yr. program leading to M's degree ( yr. at Lackawanna Pub. Schools. & 2 yrs. w/ Peace Carps, par- ticipating in Afghanistan. Interns re- ceive $90/wk & free tuition. ACTION/PEACE CORPS/vISTA witl be in Rm. 3529 o the SAn, June 12. 13 & 14 to discuss opportunities with interested students. Appts. not nee. but do stop by to visit with the reps. Applications avauable for candidates interested inI positionss of Fligtht At- tendant (Stewarsis t aewardesesss Eastern Air Lines Inc. Ck in this office for details, Openings withs Jewish Cominunity Centers Nation-wide uerasocist aWrt- ers, Nursery School Directors, Phys Ed Instructors, Cultural Arts Director, Business Mgr., Public Relations. Con- sit bootet"-aJW Personne Reporter~ ini this office "DAZZLING" WillamWolfCu' n' OLR/ll P (..i\IN BUggY MUSI END SOON H NEXT "Man of La Mancha" * .. . Mackinac .Jacks MUSIC-DANCING Live Rock 'n Roll Bands (6 Nights, Tues.-Sun.) Tequila Night 215 S. Ashley Open 8:30 P.M. 761-6455 sponsors DR. BENJAMIN SPOCK Thursday, June 7 7:30 P.M. Micgan -LeageBallroom 1 '