Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY I "IT TAKES 36 STEPS TO GET THERE But it's worth every step!" MIDDLE EARTH (in the loft) 215 So. State St. NEW HOURS: Mon.-Sot. 1 1 A.M.-10 P.M. Sun. 12 Noon-6 P.M. PHONE: 769-1468 H ILLEL 1429 Hill St. Tonight at 7:15 Student Sabbath Services Followed by' Oneg Shabbat HHH draws crowds at Wall Street rally I E 'Rv The A ccr .iafiwrl PresC 11 Lose Something? Find it with a Daily Classified NEW YORK - Hubert H. Hum- phrey quoted his political stock on Wall Street - in a mixed market - and then huddled with his run- ningmate and campaign manager to plan strategy for the final three and a half weeks of their uphill campaign. The vice president met with Sen. Edmund G. Muskie, the No. 2 man on -the Democratic ticket, and Lawrence O'Brien, national Dem- ocratic chairman and campaign chief, at his hotel suite. The main subject of discussion: how to .catch up with Republican Richard M. Nixon, still leading in the public opinion polls. Humphrey earlier took h i s search for campaign c a s h and votes to Wall Street and standing under a pink confetti shower E I lbs Check these details. Long wing styling. Hefty soles with storm welts. Hard heels. Husky Sulbei tinnpr laatlior Aiifbmv,+;r upper ather. A1uientic brogue look. Today's smart fashion colors. It's a traditional Live One w l # taking nothing for granted despite the signs that he is ahead and will campaign intensively in the wan- ing days of the race. "You are concerned about Amer- ica," he told a cheering crowd of 6,500 in a Moline field house. "You are concerned about what h a s happened to it." "And because of your concern I believe we are going to win we are going to win in Illinois, ' we are going to win America- and we are going to win big," he said. * * * PEORIA, Ill. - George C- Wal- lace, declaring that 'the Vietnam war "is the most important mat- ter facing the American people," bore down hard on foreign policy in speeches yesterday after an- nouicing he would send his run- ning mate, Curtis E. LeMay, to Vietnam. H I The third part~y presidential candidate, in stronger than usual- language, said in Peoria, "I'm go- ing to assure you that we will win MS U RESOLUTION: the "Vietnam war militarily wisih conventional weapons," should diplomacy fail. He said that both he and Le-, S tident t May had seen war, had been shot at, and, "We don't want to see any more war in the world." But EAST LANSING (P) - The In he said the way to world peace Michigan 'State University Board the was through a strong military pos-.(AS ture. 1 of Trustees has "consciously es- pas "When you are strong you can tablished the doctrine that stu- at go to t he conference stable," he dents are guilty until proven in- T said, "but when you are weak, you nocent," says the student govern- Joh can be blackmailed." ing body at MSU. gate *dent S --Associated Press [H on Wall Street CampoaI gn drummed a theme of Democratic prosperity. MOLINE, Ill. Richard M. Nixoni forecast yesterday that he "will win big" in the Nov. 5 presidential election, saying "the stakes are too: high not to h a v e 'a change in' America this year." The GOP nominee, campaigning I in Illinois and Ohio, said he is + a port blaststrustees by PLYMOUTH' * black . * tan 1 t * olive $27.00 TONIGHT ,ONLY Congregational Church. State and William 8 P.M. "aan uniN H the reco luti cere S of n a six-page position paper, Associated Students of MSU SMSU) criticized 'a resolution sed recently by the Trustees a closed meeting.' he resolution gives President: n A. Hannah or ,,his dele- e the power to suspend a stu- it whose activity, is considered immediate threat" to noral versity operations. .annah, who previously backed measure, later said he would ommend rescinding the reso- on that led to a "cremation" emony on his front steps. tudents there burned copies the MSU academic freedomi report, which they said was "dead" if the resolution were al- lowed to stand. "The Board of Trustees, by secretly passing this resolution, has circumvented the amendment procedures established in the academic freedom report," the ASMSU paper said. "Trustees have, in fact, placed themselves in a position superior to the report and reduced it to a hollow testimony to the -myth of academic freedom." "MSU trustees." the paper added, "cannot expect students to follow a freedom report if they do not." 4 14 - - I "The Paris Peace Talks-What Do the Vietnamese People Want" Representative Vietnamese Overseas Buddhist Association Former Acting Ambassador to the United States Since reigning as South Vietnam's Acting Ambassador to the United States in 1964-after a decade in its foreign service-TRAN VAN DINH has lived in Washington, devoting his energies to writing and lecturing in the United States and Canada in an effort to present a picture, of the situa- tion in Vietnam as he and his fellow Buddhists see it. STUDENTS SbTrSESTO2RE 619 E. Liberty-6-06 1 Ann Arbor Council of Churches Interfaith Committee for Religion & Peace, American Friends Service Committee, Office of Religious Affairs 2282 SAB i SPECIAL RATES 438 W. Huron FOR WEEKENDS 663-2033 1, U.. U U 1 'E The undersigned members of the student body and faculty of the University of Michigan and members of the Ann community at large associate themselves with people of good will throughout the world in condemning the suppr of Jewish spiritual and cultural life in the U.S.S.R. The evidence presented by the American Jewish Conference on Jewry and consequent protests from groups as diverse as 349 United States congressmen and many noted Western pean Communists leaves no room to doubt that the Soviet government continues to pursue a program calculated stroy the means of Jewish cultural and spiritual survival and to break the will of Soviet Jewry to live as Jews. Such a tice not only violates fundamental human rights, but it is contrary to the guarantees of Soviet law and asserted polic Alone among Soviet nationality groups, Jews are forbidden the schools and other institutions of Jewish lear teaching and publishing that is required if their heritage is to be perpetuated. Alone among major religious groups Soviet'inionJews are forbidden the right to have any form of nationwide federation of congregations or of c I e Alone among major religious groupsin the Soviet Union, Jews have no formal and official contact with their co ionists abroad. A systematic campaign of intimidation inhibits them from openly protesting these inequities. On Saturday, thousands of young Soviet Jews will crowd their re spect iv e synagogues and dance in the surr ing streets to celebrate the holiday of SIM CHAT TORAH and make their annual assertion of their Jewishness. We everyone who values human, rights of individuals and groups to join us on Sunday, Oct. 13 at 12 noon at the Hillel dation,1429 HillStreet,for a symposium on Soviet anti-Semitism designed to protest these inequities and to demon our solidarity with the Jews of the Soviet Union. Arbor ession Soviet Euro- to de- prac- y. n i n g, in the orgy. -relig- ound- invite Foun- strate i I' W Dr. Gerald D. Abrams Ellen Adams Ann Arbor Jewish Cultural School Stewart M. Benjamin Seymour Bell Leonard Berlanstein Alan Bloom Dr. and Mrs. Phillip"Booth Mark G. Brakoniecki Michael M. Breyer Barbara Cohen Jerry DeGrieck Howard t. Elfo rd Beulah R. Elving Dr. Phillip Elving Vicki Epstein. Or. Kasimir Fajans Edward Feldman Dr. Sidney Fine Heidi J. Fox, Paul and Vivian Friedman Dr Frnest G. Fontheim Mr. and Mrs. J. Gordon Susan E. Greenberg Kerry L. Greenbert Lewis A. Greenly Garry Grossman Dr. Alexander Z. Guiora Geri Natalie Gutstein Dr. Charles Hacker Walter L. Harrison Marjie Hauser Rhoda Konigsberg David H. Krantz Dr. Robert H. Lapin Erik Lippa Jdy Masserman Annette L. Menuhin Barbara F. Parker Harriet C. Parker Irwin Pollack Dr. John Henry Richter Phvllic Ronhenaum -r Doris Seligson Dr. Melvin L. Selzer . Mr. and Mrs. M. 1. Semmel, Eileen Silverman Robert Sternberg Alan M. Tigay Dr. Ronald S. Tikofsky Lynn Weiner Sylvia Wertheimer M. Yaron Mr. and Mrs. Robert Zand Alexander Gotz Mike Margolin Adena Greenberg Michele Sinkoff Dr. Joseph A. Reif Buzzy Gordon Wendy H imes Susan J. Shapiro Lisa Goodman'. Joel M. Levitt Mike Singer J. Baumer V i Ba-rrv L. Howard I I