PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE WO T~E MIHI--N---L FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 Expect Death, of Iraqi President To Cause A Struggle Between Nationalist Factions World News Roundup BEIRUT, Lebanon WP) - The death of President Abdel Salam Aref of Iraq in a helicopter crash may loose a powerful struggle be- tween pro-Egyptian and Arab na- tionalist factions, informants said yesterday. Iraq imposed a tight curfew, closed its airports, and sealed its borders. The radio in Baghdad, the capital, gave no hint of trou- ble although it asked the people Paphet on Housing Is Now Ready Gives Information Regarding New Eight Month Lease Option By SUSAN ELAN The Off-Campus Housing bro- chure, long delayed due to print- ing problems, is now available at the Student Activities Building. The purpose of this brochure is to acquaint students, parents, and Ann Arbor property owners with the University's off-campus hous- ing program and to describe the Off-Campus Housing Bureau's serv ices. The booklet is an enlarged ver- sion of last year's pamphlet with two major innovations. Behind the photograph of theb'campus on the cover, the new brochure includes a checklist of things to look for when choosing an apartment or furnished room, and an explana- tion of the eight-month lease op- tion. Eight-Month Lease The section on the eight-month lease option explains that several property owners are offering eight-month leases with accom- panying increases in rents to com- pensate for added operational costs and rental risks. To encourage the use of eight- month leases the University will no longer take disciplinary action against students who do not meet the requirements of a year lease while they are not enrolled in classes. In spite of this, University Tow- ers is the only major apartment using the eight-month lease op- tion, and it will raise rents on -ight-month leases by 25 per cent. r'The checklist was designed to bring to the attention of the student the important factors to be considered when choosing an apartment. It is a list of 25 partment features such as cer- tification by the city of Ann Ar- bor, adequacy of storage room b r ad q ay o st rg rom11proper. lighting, and general size in relation to the number of oc- cupants. Each feature 'is to be graded by the student from excel- lent to poor. Attractiveness It is hoped that this will make the student consider more than just the attractiveness of furni- ture and modern conveniences when choosing an apartment. A section on costs indicates in- creased rents for next year. The booklet states that "each student may expect to pay between $50 (very low) and $75 as his month- ly share in two-, three-, four-, or five-man furnished apartment." The rest of the brochure dis- cusses eligibility and procedures for moving off-campus, inventory cards, parking and transportation, and complaints and mediation. See Europe for Less than $100 Your summer in Europe for less than $100 (including transpor- tation). For the first time in travel history you can buy di- rectly from the Tour Wholesaler saving you countless dollars. Job offers may also be obtained with no s tr in g s attached. For a "do - it - yourself" pamphlet with jobs, discount tours and applications sends $1 (for ma- terial, handling, air mail) to Dept. V., International Travel Est.,, 68 Herrengasse, Vaduz, Liechtenstein (Switzerland). "to be steadfast in the face of this national disaster." When news came of the death of Aref, 45, in a crash Wednesday night near the Persian Gulf port of Basra, the man regarded wide- ly as a possible successor to the presidency was in'Moscow. Abdel Rahman Aref This is Aref's brother, Gen. Ab- del Rahman Aref, army chief of staff, who was in the Soviet Union on an arms buying mission. A dis- patch from Moscow said he would fly back to Iraq today. Should the general become pres- ident, he presumably would fol- low his brother's policy of fav- oring union with President Gamal Abdel Nasser's United Arab Re- public. Burned by the breakup of his union with Syria, Nasser has reacted cautiously to Iraqi merger proposals. Pitted against the pro-U.A.R. faction are army men and politi- cians who say it would be foolish to give Nasser, whose nation is poor, access to Iraq's oil millions. Premier Abdel Rahman Bassaz will be acting president until the cabinet and the Defense Coun- cil, both made up mainly of rank- ing army officers, meet to elect a president within a week, Baghdad radio said. A state funeral was set for to- morrow and a month of official mourning, with flags flying half staff, was proclaimed. Killed with Aref when the heli- copter crashed and burned were nine other persons, including In- terior Minister Maj. Gen. Abdel Latif Daraji, Industry Minister Mustafa Abdullah, the governor of Basra Province and the secre- tary-general of the presidential. palace staff. Baghdad radio gave this ac- count: The helicopter took off from Al Qurrah, where Aref had spoken at a rally in a stadium, for Basra. Two other helicopters carrying of- ficials and journalists followed. E Aref's helicopter vanished into the center of a sand storm and the1 last word from the pilot was: "I cannot see anything." The two other helicopters avoid- ed the storm and returned to the stadium. One pilot leaped from the cockpit yelling: "I have lost contact with the president's heli-t copter!" Desert troops set out to lookc for it but at dawn, with the heli- copter still missing, 10 planes took off from Basra, which lies on the Shatt al Arab Riber that flows into the Persion Gulf. A pilot spot- ted the burned wreckage near the village of Nashwah, east of the river. The Tehran paper Ettelaat re- ported the Kurdish rebel radio claimed a Kurd, Mohammed Am- in Barzania, shot down the heli- copter. The Kurds have been fight- ing in Iraq for independence. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Three squad- rons of Air Force F-100 jet fight- ers will be sent from the United States to Spain and permanently based there, the Defense Depart- ment said yesterday. A Pentagon spokesman said the move has no relationship to prob- lems with France which has served notice it wants all foreign mili- tary forces and bases out of its territory. There are no U.S. air squadrons in France now. The spokesman said the purpose chiefly is to lessen the strain on the U.S. Tactical Air Command "If a man love me, he will keep my words." John 14:23 CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 West Stadium which has been rotating three squadrons of jets from the U.S. to Italy and Turkey. In the future, the ePntagon said, the squadrons for Italy and Tur- key will be provided by U.S. Air Force units in Europe, * * * BONN-The U.S. and British governments open three days of talks today with West Germany on how to keep French troops in this country despite President Charles de Gaulle's pull-out from the North Atlantic Treaty Orga- nization. The three fear withdrawal of French troops from West German soil might give Moscow the idea that the Atlantic alliance had been badly weakened. MEXICO CITY-President John- son arrived yesterday on his first visit to a foreign capital since he assumed the presidency. Although the White House had emphasized the one-day trip is an informal one, Johnson, his wife, their 18-year-old daughter Luci and the U.S. delegation were re- ceived in the style of a state visit. CINEMA II presents EXAM WEEK ESCAPISM ,4 kiwe 9e1aPRaL/ MONDAY, APRIL 18 TREASURE ISLAND 41 7 and 9 P.M. Technicolor Tuesday, April19 THE LEGEND OF-SLEEPY HOLLOW and THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS 7, 8:30 and-10 p.m. in the MULTIPURPOSE ROOM: Undergraduate Library technicolor Admission FREE I Nomintd5 DIAL 8-6416 Nominated for 5 Academv Awards! Pa The most touching picture of the year!" -N }'.Post ***** A film to be cherished!" -N.Y. Daily News "Tremendous emotional appeal !" -N. Y. Herald Tribune "Compelling drama!" N. Y. Journal American "NEWMAN responds sharply bogeyman. COMING SOON as a cool and clean-cut M' -Time Magazine "A 100 PROOF PRIVATE EYE! See the movie by all means. 'Harper' will get to you a stiff uppercut." with all the impact of -Herald Tribune 2nd Hit Week Plays through April 20 starring SIDNEY P0uTIER SHELLEY roWINTERS "A SLAM-BANG MYSTERY YARN-crackles, snaps and pops with all sorts of familiar surprises and bubbles of biting dialogue." -Crowther--N.Y. Times aro ELIZABETH HARTMAN NEXT ATTRACTION AT THE - Wt 'ri STARTS APRIL 21st Paul Newman is 'Harper _111I I N--d DIAL 8-6416 . ,. "ONE OF THE BEST PICTURES I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" Brenda i ,, The New Yorke, "A PICTURE OF DISTINCTION!" "PULSES WITH THE TEMPO -Saturday Review OF YOUTH AND THE SOUND "FASCINATING!" OF TRUTH -A TRIUMPH!" --Tim Magazine -JudithCret, N Y. Herald Tribune STARRING R. LEE PLATT PRESENTS R T _ _ _ RIATUSHING HAM A RAYMONDUCIN___N__IMYSON______ STROSS PRODUCTION IIN A NEW FILM BY SIDNEY J. FURIE, DIRECTOR OF IHE IPCRESS FILE' EiTHKER R-;-rsI "Love in Four Dimensions" Coming: "How Not to Rob a Department Store" 4tO.CTARwRI N tiALPPAOICAt OROLM! LAUREN JUUE ARTHUR JANET PAME ROBERt BACALL *HARRISAHILLAI.E WIG IRNEWWAGNER INI'TERS TECHNICOLOR' ?ANAVSON* FROM WARNER BROS. U I -r A DIA 66-i64 i111 DIAL 662-6264 STARTING SATURDAY -= ". : ENDING TODAY DEAN MARTIN in "THE SILENCERS" At 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00 & 9:05 3 PLAYS FOR AS LOW AS $4.50! 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