The Michigan Daily-Friday, February 22, 1980-Page 3 Students learn of draft By JOYCE FRIEDEN University engineering students found out how they can stay out of the armed forces - and what kinds of work they can do if they should be drafted - at a talk by two commnunity leaders last night at the West Engineering Building. The speakers, Rev. Tom Shoemaker of the Ann Arbor Wesley Foundation and Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) Captain Ken Close, addressed 15 engineering students on the topic of "Engineers and the Draft." Shoemaker explained the options available to engineers who do not wish to be drafted. He cited draft resistance - publicizing one's opposition to con- scription - and simply not registering for the draft as two alternatives that are "outside the law." ONE OPTION "within the law," ac- cording to Shoemaker, is to- file as a conscientious objector (someone op- posed to participation in any war for ideological reasons). After explaining the process of becoming a conscientious objector (CO), Shoemaker cautioned, "The largest group of people who desire to become conscientious objectors wind up in the military. This is because they didn't know their rights or how to defend their claims." He emphasized the importance of applying for con- scientious objector status as early as possible. "Draft boards look askance at people who file for conscientious objec- tor status after they receive their draft notices," he said. Close focused on the opportunities available to the engineer upon being drafted. He explained that draftees who score high on the induction tests generally are inducted into some sort of corps (such as the engineering corps) while those who get lower scores are assigned to specific jobs, such as cook or clerk. WITHIN THE engineering corps, there are several divisions, including civil engineering (designing bridges), combat engineering (clearing mine fields), and cartography (drawing combat maps). "What you do as an engineer in the Army is nothing like the work you do here (as a civilian)," Close said. "In the army, your jobs are very much related to combat." Both Close and Shoemaker seemed to feel that Carter's registration proposal does not mean the draft is imminent. "Any talk now beyond and up to registration is pure conjecture," Shoemaker said. He urged those again- st registration to write their Congresspersons in protest. "Let no one assume that we are going to have the draft, because (to do so would disregard) the governmental process of feedback. You can.still have some say in the registration issue," he added. Close emphasized that if registration were put into effect, it might actually prevent a war. "Registration would serve as a deterrent to world aggression. It would show aggressors that we would have the willpower of the American public behind us if it became necessary to fight," he said. Paul Mazursky's 1976 ' NEXT STOP, GREENWICH VILLAGE LENNY BAKER, CHRISTOPHER WALKEN, SHELLY WINTERS, ANTONIO FARGAS and ELLEN GREEN in Mazursky's "AMARCORD"-A romantic comedy based on his own experiences as a struggling young actor in New York City. The young Masursky leaves his Jewish mama (Winters) for a Greenwich Village apartment, a love affair, and a wild assortment of fun-loving friends. By the director of AN UNMARRIED WOMAN among many other films. Short: CLOSED MONDAYS-museum art objects come to life on their day off. Sat.: MADAME ROSA Sun.: Raoul Walsh's MANPOWER CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7 &9:1 S OLD ARCH. AUD. $1 .50 -I Introduced by The English Department in conjunction with The Symposium in Critical Theory presents a public lecture by FREDRIC JAMESON Professor of French at Yale University "MARX ISM & STRUCTURALISM" MONDAY, FEB. 25-4 pm RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER 1.. STAR BAR 109 N. Main St.-69-0109 APPEARING TONIGHT: OalYV rnoto by LIbA RLAUSNER REV. TOM SHOEMAKER of the Ann Arbor Wesley Foundation and ROTC Captain Ken Close address approximately 15 students last night on options open to engineers who do not wish to be drafted. DICK SIEGEL and His Ministers of Melody 2 drinks for the price of 1 between 9 and 11 "Ann Arbor's Original Honky Tonk Dance Bar" r Residence Hall Council to initiate paper recycling program among Hill dorms By MAURA CARRY Whey Markley, Mosher-Jordan, and Stockwell residents return from their spring break, they'll be tying up their old newspapers in bundles and turning them in to be recycled, as part of a trial or pilot recycling program that may ex- tend to all residence halls in the fall. The recycling program is being organized by the University's Residen- ce Hall Council. "Recycle Ann Arbor" wili be picking up papers from the three dorms every two weeks, once the program has been announced and publicized in the halls. If the pilot program is a success, all the dorms will be participating next year in a campus- wide recycling project. t COUNCIL chairperson Carol Cachy explained that the recycling project is only one of the ideas that the Residence Hall Council has for next year. The Council, she said, was re-instituted this year by the Housing Office after a three-year absence, in order to get more student input into housing decisions and policies. The council's purpose is two-fold - first, to work with Housing and make the students' opinions heard, and second, to work out problems within the residence halls by bringing students from the different halls together. "We're kind of a com- munication link," Cachy said. Cachy explained that the council, which has one representative for every 360 students in each hall, meets with the housing directors every week to go over policies and make suggestions. Studen- ts need to know that they can go to their hall representatives with complaints or ideas, and know that the reps will take the comments directly to the top of Housing that week, Cachy said, The representatives on this year's council were elected in their individual halls last fall. Cachy explained that fall elections are necessary if freshpersons are to be able to run. "RESIDENCE,. HALLS are predominantly freshmen, and we need this input," she said. To be elected as a representative, a student needs to live in a residence hall, but may not be a staff member. Presently there are 26 positions on the council, about 20 o f which are filled. The other positions will be filled when more elections take place after spring break. STARTING TONIGHT! Showing Tonight at 7:05 ONLY Sat. Sun. 1:05-3:05-5:05-7:05-9:30 TheUlimate Csmic Coredy! 4c T' iir GET HAPPY SAVE $$$ FILMS Gargoyle Films-The 39 Steps, 7, 10 p.m., The Lady Vanishes, 8:30 p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. Cinema Guild-Next Stop, Greenwich Village, 7, 9:15 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Alternative Action-Love and Death, 7, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. AAFC-An Unmarried Woman,.3, 7, 9:19 p.m., Assault On Precinct 13, 7 p.m. ; Drive He Said, 8:45 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema Two-Sullivan's Travels, 7, 10 p.m.; The Great McGinty, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Germ.Lang. & Lit.-Metropolis, 7 p.m., Lec. Rm. 105, MLB. MEETINGS U-M Folklore Society-Friends of Traditional Music-Social, 8:30 p.m., 802 W. Washington.-_ Hillel-Meekreh Shabbat dinner, 6 p.m., Markley Concourse Lounge. Reform minyan, 8 p.m.; Oneg Shabbat, 8:30 p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. SPEAKERS English Department-John Douglass, "Creative Anarchy and Invention," noon, 7th floor Haven Hall, Seminar Room. PIRGIM-Zolton Ferency, "Criminal Code Revision,"= 7 p.m., Kuenzel room, Union. WUOM-Prof. Ann Siedman," South Africa: A Golden Parish for the West," 10 a.m., WUOM, 57.14. La Raza Law Students Association-Jose Angel Gutierrez, "Racism and the Legal System,"8 p.m., Lawyer's Club Lounge. UAC Viewpoint Lectures Alpha Phi Alpha-Dick Gregory, "Civil Rights in America Today." 8 p.m., Union Ballroom. CEW-Virginia Nordby, "Issues in Achieving Equality for Women," noon, Michigan League Conference rooms 4-5. Dept. of Medical Care-Jo Surpin, "An Experiment in Prospective Reimbursement," 11 a.m., 3000 Vaughn , SPH. Ctr. for S. & S.E. Asian Studies-Thomas McCormick, "Rainy Seasons with the Jains of Gurarat, 1979," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm. Museum of Zoology-Steven Arnold, "Recent Developments Sexual Sele&- tion Theory," 4 p.m., Lec rm. 2, MLB. Museum of Anthropology-Lawrence H. Keeley, "Micro-wear analysis of Stone Tools and its results at Belgian Epi-Paleolithic Site," 8 p.m., Lee. rm. .2. Hillel-Yahuda Radday, "Despoiling the Egyptians: The Computer and the Bible Text," 8:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. PERFORMANCES PTB Guest Artist Series-"Eden", 8p.m., Power Center. RC Players-"Exit the King", 8 p.m., E. Quad Aud. School of Music-Faculty Harpsicord/Viola da Gambe Recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Ark-National Recovery Act, Fiddle and Banjo, 9p.m.,1421 Hill St. Canterbury Loft-"Waiting For Godot," 8 p.m., 332 State St. Pendleton Arts Ctr.-soprano Carolyn Tion, music of Copeland and Ber- nstein, 8 p.m., Pendleton room, Union. MISCELLANEOUS at + OPEN 7 DAYS for Lunch & Dinner Sun & Mon 'til 9 PM Tues-Thurs 'til 11 PM Fri & Sat 'til 1 AM 1301 S. University 665-2650 HAPPY HOUR . MON.-THURS. 8 PM 'til Close Hamburgers $1.69.....................SAVE French Fries 254........ .............SAVE Local Draft Beer Mug 504 ..............SAVE' Pitcher $2.25........... SAVE' House Cocktails 994 .............. . ....SAVE 51C 55t; 204; 75C< 26C iDAii 'BANNON-BRNNARELLE' JOH CARPEINTER& DAN O'BANNON JOHCARkNTER -"JAC IIARRIS -"DAN YBANNON & RON COBB Frmn A TAI IC RELEASINGCOR1P1ORKION PG PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGENSTED !Iad m t L QAUJ I E k P dI CSOME MATERIAL MtAY NOT RE SUITABLE FOR CIELDEIN . 4 i 11 1 "IT'S A GRAND OPENING" All U of M students, faculty and staff are welcome! ! Come Celebrate SUPER FRIDAYV I a ti a k i t a E t t f " k 4 6 g A M 1 p ° e t " k rt r rt r 4 M i WE WILL HAVE: I 4-11 p.m. in the "New" University C/ub " 5O Beverages " Complimentary Appetizer Table " Hot Hors D'oeuvres I * Wide Screen T.V. video tapes featuring Mr. Bill, Richard Pryor Live in Concert, and The National Lampoon Show - - * U 0 - _ tt _ It ,/