January 9, 1969- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Paem ThrAt4 January 9, '1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I uyt= i f if Ct. , 7 the news toda b, The Associated Press and College Press Service CHARLES DE GAULLE'S EMBARGO against arms shipments to Israel came against opposition within his government yesterday. One .Gaullist National Assembly deputy, Jacques Hebert, went on a privately owned radio station to call the embargo "inadmissible."a The French press presented a nearly united opposition to the president's embargo order. Information Minister Joel le Theule retorted that "Israeli influence has made itself felt . . . in the information media." Informed government sources said that Foreign Minister Michel Debre is bitter because he was not consulted and be- cause of his long identification with French support for Israel. GASOLINE SUPPLIES were reported ample by most of the nation's major oil companies yesterday as a strike by 60,000 oil workers entered its fifth day with no settle- Early registration brings late return By MICHAEL THORYN If the campus seemed a little dead yesterday, blame early registration. A large butdundetermined number of students who had the energy to advance classify and register during the Univer- sity's first early registration Dec. 4-20 haverlittle reason to return to Ann Arbor prior to classes that begin today. Students willing to skip the first days of card shuffling may not return to snowy Ann Arbor until Sunday. Those who had to register and those who dropped or added courses moved through Water- man yesterday at almost un- precedented speed. The n er 2) c.I-kitrc. z P ment in sight. i ve suens em- The most serious shortage appeared to be Michigan where py by the registration and the striking Oil Chemical and Atomic Workers ,union said csieitra iofan fee a ments about 10 per cent of the service stations have shut down, seemed to agree that the early mostly because drivers won't cross picket lines to deliver gaso- registration made their work line, easier. The union said it was arranging for emergency deliveries "It's been a lot more relaxed," of fuel to Michigan's state hospitals and prisons. said a pretty woman who spent the past three days checking IBM cards. "The lines are not THE U.S. COMMAND is clinging to a hope that more asI ong." On Monday, 4700 stu- American prisoners of war may be released soon by the dents registered. y s Viet Cong. "It went rather smoothly," The hope is built chiefly on clandestine radio broadcasts said a student in the process of by the National Liberation Front, the political arm of the scrapping all but one of his Viet Cong, last month that allied officials should be ready to courses and adding new ones. receive prisoners in various areas. But, since three Americans "I'm impressed." were . freed New Year's day, there has been no further men- Surveying the milling people from a running track above the tion of future releases by the NLF. fee payment room in Waterman, One U.S. spokesman said the command did not believe Registration Director John Ste- the escape from the Viet Cong of three prisoners of war had wart smiled broadly. He had hurt the prospects for more releases. spent most of December herd- 9 0 *r ing 13,624 students through ear- LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN urged yesterday that a full ly registration and much of the rest of his working time since time professional be selected to succeed him as chairman - of the Democratic National Committee. " O'Brien said that in his farewell speech next Tuesday to Increasect in the National Committee he will recommend that the commit- tee "be run like a good sized business operation." For this tol be possible, he said, the chairman or a second man must be forEshe full time,.o Of the three leading contenders for the chairmanship, NEW YORK 01)--Apprehension only former Gov. Terry L. Sanford of North Carolina is in a over a "credit' crunch" is growing position to take a full time post. The other two are Sen. Fred as interest rates climb and the R. Harris of Oklahoma and Rep. James G. O'Hara of Michigan. availability of lending money " * * tightens. SIRHAN BISHARA SIRHAN'S ATTORNEYS moved For the third time in six weeks, formally yesterday to set aside his plea of innocent in major banks raised the prime rate, order to quash an indictment charging him with mur- the basic interest charge on loans derinR eto the most credit-worthy cor- dng Robert F. Kennedy. . porations this time to a record Judge Herbert V. Walker said that the motion was not 7 per cent in New York City, necessary and that the attorneys should prepare a motion to banks were also on the verge of an quash the indictment in writing. increase in rates on personal loans The defense also renewed a motion for separate juries to finance automobiles, home ap- juispliances and home improvements. for the trial itself and for a decision on the penalty. The re- The;new ncrease bro ears The new increase brought fears newed motion was promptly denied. that a crunch was developing. The judge also denied a motion for a 30-day continu- While high interest rates alone do ance so the defense can question the jury commissioner about not bring on a crunch, they are the makeup of the selection list for trial jurors who indicted evidence that bank's funds are in $irhan. Walker explained that there had been time to ques- great demand. tion the commissioner and that the idea must have occurred This tightening affects business to the defense before. and individuals, slowing corporate October planning the Waterman operation. "Late registration b e g i n s Thursday,"' Stewart said. Stu- dents who missed the 4:30 p.m. deadline yesterday must pay a $15 fee before they will be al- lowed to register. The late registration process will be conducted in room 1514, LS&A Building. Both Stewart and Ernest Zim- mermann, assistant to the vice president for academic affairs aresunsure if there willbe an early registration for the fall, 1969 term. Zimmermann out- lined the problem. "From fall to winter, we have a fairly steady group of people," Zimmerman said. "From winter to fall we can't be sure." Last fall, 300 students who registered failed to pick up their materials. "It's a long time between April and September," Zimmer- mann added. "The problem is not knowing who is coming back." Kay Towle of the Junior- Senior Counseling Office said work there went "very well." "We did a lot less counseling than usual," he said. Today, when students will need a counselor's signature to drop and add, Mrs. Towle ex- pects the office to be crowded. A secretary in the honors of- fice agreed. "There seem to be fewer students," she said. "Park- ing is still easy." Though the registration mood was pleasant, some students still have complaints. "Why do we ,have to fill out these inane ad- dress cards when our address doesn't change?" a woman ex- claimed. terest rates, Igh ten credil Ek Israei By The Associated Press B Amid reports that Israel either the has a nuclear bomb or will soon retr have one, Prime Minister Levi unt Eshkol yesterday bitterly ruled out pea France as a potential peace-maker E in the Middle East. den An NBC news report last night oni said Israel is expected to have an one blasts - om A-bomb oth Eshkol and Eban hold idea that Israel would not reat from the cease-fire lines il she was assured of a lasting ce. shkol declared French Presi- t Charles de Gaulle's embargo arms to Israel was "not only a. -sided indefensible act by one ereign state toward another." is damages theprospects of Le in the Middle East," he said. This action can be compared that of binding the hands of of the disputants in an arena is threatened by the other- this by a third party which claim to objectivity and to a BULLETIN BEIRUT, Lebanon (IP)-Rash- id Karame, a hawkish partisan of Egypt's President Nasser, was asked yesterday to form a new Cabinet to replace the Lebanese government that col- lapsed in the wake of Israel's comando strike on Beirut air- port. It appeared certain that the move would turn Lebanon to a harder pro-Arab, anti-Israel line in the Middle East dispute. effective delivery system for nuclear bombs within three years. sov "Th peat to t one who and lays role of peacemaker in our area. The military governor of El "From such a party, the call for! Arish, Lt. Col. Menachem Babioff, peace sounds hollow indeed." told newsmen in Tel Aviv the re- In Israel, military operations settlement was prompted by hu- continue. manitarian reasons and the. fact Israel's armed forces have be- El Qantara, long battered in Is- gun clearing all civilians from El raeli-Egyptian artillery duels, is a Qantara on the Suez Canal, one restricted military area. of the cities in Arab lands that The International Red Cross is they have occupied now for 19 supervising the operation. A Red months. Cross representative, Jean Engi- Troops started moving El Qan- man, said the Israelis operated tara's 243 Egyptian families yes- under a section' of the Geneva terday to quarters in El Arish, 80 Convention providing: "An occu- miles to the east on the Media- pying power may undertake the terranean coast. They were prom- total evacuation of a given area ised work there and schooling for if the security of the population so their children. demands." New supervisors year attacking I I6erumle; rumored begin In a report from Washington on the Huntley-Brinkley Show, NBC By JIM HECK said Israel embarked on a crash The new 13-man County Board program to produce a nuclear of Supervisors held its first meet- weapon two years ago. ing Tuesday dealing several fero- "The tipoff to its success in the cious blows to Sheriff Douglas J. development of a nuclear bomb," Harvey. the report said, "came when The supervisors denied a request American intelligence services dis- that Harvey be supplied with a covered Israeli agents quietly buy- full-time paid auditor, began an ing special materials and part investigation into his use and ac- which could be used only in nu- quisition of police dogs, and elect- clear weapons." ed as their chairman Harvey's Foreign Minister Abba Eban, most vehement and vocal critic, speaking with Eshkol before a Bent Nielsen. conference of world Jewry, urged Harvey, who begins his second Israel to go forward from "bel- consecutive term as sheriff this ligerency to hate." month, has been the target of board criticism for the last two years. de m andsHarvey demanded an auditor be" attached to his department be- cause of "the load of bookkeeping dumped on me." Last year's sup- s e ervisors demanded a running audit of his finances. were difficult to get. The rate of A new district court set-up now housing starts collapsed because requires Harvey to file hisfines litte mneywasavalabe fr jand costs directly with the county little money was available for easurer mortgage loans. Individuals found i t uer. it hard to get loans to finance In the past, Harvey needed only purchases of automobiles, appli- to file his fines and costs with the ances, furniture and other majorc "I'm not a bookkeeper," Harvey items." In a surprise move, the super- visors voted to disband the present 39 board committees in favor of five more comprehensive ones. Last year's supervisors had ap- pointed many of their retiring members as heads of the 39 com- mittees. The action, in effect, eliminates many of the old sup- ervisors from participating in the new board structure. The supervisors spent most ofj their first meeting setting new rules to govern, the new 13-man body. Prosecuting Attorney Wil- UIarvey liam F. Delhey advised the board for two and a half hours on the new rules, The supervisors must also set their salaries, a task that is usual- ly done quietly by political bodies. Several members indicated the board may ask for a compensa- tion comparable to that of a state legislator. State legislators now receive $15,000 per year. Last year's board chairman, Robert M. Harrison, will continue meeting with the board as the county's newly elected clerk. ALsselbly postpones student membership on com1miittee 3 r r s 1 t1 C i and more expensive to obtain loans. Indications of a possible crunch were seen in mid-Decepnber when the Federal Reserve Board boosted its discount rate-the interest at which its member banks borrow money to build reserves for lending to their customers. The intention of that action by the Federal Re- serve, as well as the recent boost to 7 per cent, was to slow the pace of economic growth and stem in- flation by reducing the amount of available money. Interest rates in general have been moving upward for several months as it became increasingly apparent that a combination of higher taxes and tight money were not having the desired effect of cooling down a badly overheated economy. Yet despite h i g h interest charges, corporations have con- tinued to borrow at a fast rate in fear of even higher rates ahead. The term crunch came into general use to describe a money crisis in 1966 when the tightness of lending money triggered a so- called mini-recession. Expansion slowed because loans EIGHTY CUBAN SURVIVORS of a group that drove a tractor-trailer under fire to seek asylum at Guantan- amo Naval Base in Cuba were flown to Miami yesterday. A U.S. State Department spokesman said many others in the party did not make it to the base when Cuban soldiers opened fire. Some refugees estimated as many as 150 persons had been involved in the escape attempt Monday night. expansion and making it more difficult for consumers to obtain loans. With the economy surging ahead despite the government's hope that the 10 per cent income tax surcharge would slow it down, the demand for loans has swallowed up much of the banks' lending money. As a result, it is harder Funds available were diverted to those willing to pay the highest interest. The result was a snowballing ef- fect on the economy. Manufac- turers sold fewer cars and other products on down the line either' because the consumers couldn't' obtain financing or were unwilling to pay high interest rates. The gross national product to- tal of all goods and services - showed its first decline in terms of constant dollars in the first ~quarter of 1967. Leif H. Olsen, senior vice pres- ident and economist of New York's First National City Bank, sees the possibility of a crunch developing. But he doesn't expect it to be as severe as that of 1966 because money is still not so scarse as it became in 1966. Kevin Winch, senior economist for Rinfret-Boston Associates, a New York economic consulting firm, sees a parallel to the 1966 money situation. But he, too, doesn't expect it to become as ser- ious as in 1966, for the same rea- son. However, banks already are ex- aming loan applications more se- verely-than a few months ago. told the supervisors. He claimed he could no longer fbe responsible for $2,000 "laying around the de- partment" because it has not yet been properly audited. But at the heated insistence of County Treasurer Sylvester A. Leonard, the supervisors decided Harvey was capable of doing the work himself. Leonard claimed the extra aud- iting burden was on his depart- ment and not the sheriff's. "And I haven't asked for any more help," Leonard told Harvey. ,"He doesn't need an account- ant," Leonard advised the board. Harvey also requested a pay raise for his deputies. Nielsen, who chairs the new board with seven years past ex- perience in county government, campaigned heavily in November, on the suggestion the sheriff's po- sition be appointed by the board, rather than elected by the county residents. Nielsen has initiated several of the investigations into Harvey's department, which last year cul- minated in an official investiga- tion by the state auditor general of Harvey's finances. Nielsen is considered a moderate Republican. By ROB BEATTIE The Senate Assembly delayed implementation of a proposal to, include students on its Research Policies committee, asking / the committee to clarify the proposed method for selecting student mem- bers. The action came at the As- sembly's December. meeting.. The plan, submitted with the approval of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, suggested that one undergraduate and three graduate students be given full voting rights on the re- search committee. DEVISE METHODS In October, the Assembly passed a resolution urging all committees to work out methods for including students in their activities. The motion required, however, that all new plans for the selection of stu- dent members be submitted to the Assembly for approval. The research committee, which advises the vice president for re- search on general matters of clas- sified and unclassified University research, was the first of SACUA's nine committees to submit a plan for student representation. This is not the classified Re- search Committee (Coon Commit- tee) which passes on particular classified projects. "We are ready to go ahead with student reperesentation as soon as the Assembly gives us the green light," said Prof. Robert Elder- field, chairman of the research committee. The committee plan called for the selection of the undergraduate representative by Student Govern- ment Council "in accordance with regular procedures." NOT SO SIMPLE The procedure outlined for se- lection of graduate students was not so simple. Elderfield com- mented that the committee had problems in choosing a method for selecting graduate student repre- sentatives since not all graduate students are affiliated with Grad- uate Assembly., The committee therefore de- cided to divide all graduate and professional students into four divisional classifications: biologi- cal and health sciences, physical sciences and engineering, social sciences, and humanities and the, arts. Two nominees would be selected from each of these areas after consultation with student groups within each division. GA would then select the three members of the committee from the eight nominees with the stipulation that no two members come from. the same division. Assembly members felt that the wording of the proposal was un- clear as to who woulO nominate the students from each area. 'They objected more to the word- ing of the proposal than to the principle of the thing," Elder- field said. He commented that his 'com- mittee is working with SACUA on a streamlined proposal which will be presented to the Assembly at its meeting this month. STUDENT MEMBERS Two of the Assembly's eleven committees, the Student Relations Committee and the Civil Liberties Board, had student members prior to the Assembly's proposal. Several other Assembly commit- tees have expressed an interest in adding student members, but no other proposalsrhave been sub- mitted for approval. The Classified Research Com- mittee, chaired by Prof. William Coon of the medical school, has withdrawn a student representa- tion proposal because vacancies have occurred in' the committee's membership. The remaining mem- bers felt that the committee should be at full membership before a- mechanism for the selection of s t u d e n t representatives was chosen. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10 RABBI JAMES GORDON OF YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK WOODS SPEAKS at the FIRST HILLEL SABBATH SERVICE OF THE SEMESTER 7:15 P.M. On "PREMARITAL SEX AND THE JEWISH MORAL CODE" SATURDAY, JANUARY 11 RABBI GORDON ALSO SPEAKS ATSHALOSH SEUDOTfat 12:30 on: "WHAT INGREDIENT DOES JUDAISM OFFER A HAPPY MARRIAGE?" TO ATTEND THE LUNCHEON, AS WELL AS THE TALK, RESERVATIONS MUST BE MADE IN WITH THE KOSHER KO-OP 663-4129. PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM Alas IMOGENE I 'CHANTIN&I, -' attS, N.Y hapruan, N .Y. News C C"A SMASH 1111" COCA lB1' --fife Mai Nadel, World 3c1i. 6 KING + DONOVAN ~R o8ERT ANVERSON S ALAN SUN DER RAND KATIE S44ERMAN MITCHELL EFL1N LLOYD COME TO Student Book Service and visit PETE SHERMAN SANDREA DON BREITER I . L I I ADVANCE The most complete supply of NEW and USED TEXTS and PAPERBACKS is at the Student Book Service I: Sell a POT in Daily Classifieds SUNDAY, JANUARY 12 ISRAELI FOLK DANCING at 2-4 DELI PLUS at 5:30 m I1 I i