Wednesday, September 25, 1974 Israeliplanes blastArab g~uerilla sites THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Police separate races to halt school, scuffles TEL AVIV, sW)k-sm s Israeli planes blasted Arab guerrilla targets in southeast' Lebanon yesterday in a pre-emptive1 strike aimed at foiling terror.4 "raids during $he Yom Kippur holiday, the military command said. The jets roared into Lebanon and attacked "terrorist objec- tives for about 15 minutes near the village of Mazrat Beit Na- ful, a spokesperson said. All planes returned safely, he s-aid. The spokesman said the raid was meant "to keep the terror- ists busy" during the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur - the Day of Atonement t- which be-, gins at sndown today. Israel's last air raid against Palestinian guerrillas in Leban- on was on Sept. 15, the eve off the Rosh Hashanan Jewish new . year. Israel commemorated the first anniversary of the 1972 Middle' East war - which began on the Yom Kippur holiday - with memorial parades at military bases throughout the country. In an order of the day to the armed forces, the chief of staff Lt. Gen. Mordechai Gur, said: "During the year since the war, we have consolidated and1 strengthened the ranks, o u r: might has increased quantita- tively and we are striving un- ceasingly for qualitative i m - provement. "The Arab countries mayw' possibly be .recalling only their:AP.Ph:. initial moments of success in . . ".:::,:: ';: , , the war, forgetting their major def eat. ">"::;"::::,:..::.:. "We are aware that there are forces in the world aiding the _... y st ev ht-y.s._Ae y dndg r s g r r nF s Arab armies with modern weap-:::>>i:n;:met rga . d ons and political support. It is incumbent upon us to build uip a 4 national and military disposi- ,* PL.TI'LE : tion to withstand all that - to prevent war or wint."rs t The solemn fast of Yom Kip-e mern the ay ofe Atoegntg, e- gins at sundown today. Israel A ht advanced the observance of the-P war anniversary one day so as The established route ot tierere w ith een Military deserters leave their teporary quarters at Camp Att erbury, Indiana, to undergo processing for President Ford's The 1973 Arab-Israeli war be-'conditional amnesty program. About 140 are in camp with another 300 yexpected by the week's end. gan on Yom Kippur, which fell"'__- --- - -.___on October 6, according to the A DIPLOM ATIC PLEA: Jewish, lunar calendar. In a radio interview Gur cal-k. led for more volunteers for the -men than ever are signing up, Kissi n gtdeer ta lks. to UNo o there is a shortage of technic- i~ans.' There would be no extension! By WILLIAM RYAN subject at any moment to slid portions, with vast damage to; East not only because it col totetreya ainlsr-AP News Analysis ing out of control. the very 'underdeveloped' n a -' tains the seeds of East-We, ice for men, Gur said, but the Secretary of State Henry Kis- The world, said Kissinger, has tions they have purported them- general conflict but also bI 20-month duity for women might singer's address to the United,! been dealing with nuclear we a- selvs to champion. In the long cause it so stubbornly defies s( be increased to two years. Nations was a remarkable per-!I pons "as if restraint were auto- run the oil producers now wal- lution. Thus it continues to ad BOSTON (I) - Police patrol- led the corridors of Hyde Park High School yesterday, keeping apart groups of scuffling white and black students upset about court - ordered school busing. Meanwhile, abkpt seven miles away, some 200 persons demon- strated against busing near Charlestown High School, even though the predominately white Charlestown section of the city is not affected by the current busing integration order. POLICE SAID eight persons were arrested, mostly for dis- orderly conduct, in Charlestown and at Hyde Park High. One police officer was injured in Charlestown when bitten by -a demonstrator. School officials said class- rooms were calm yesterday at the rest of Boston's 200 schools, including South Boston High School, scene of several anti- busing disturbances. White parents in the F est Roxbury, Charlestown and South Boston sections of the city con- tinued their school boycott keeping hundreds of children wout of classes. BUSING OPPONENTS 'called yesterday "a day of mourning and urged children to attend religious services instead of classes. Uniformed officers were sum- moned into Hyde Park High, which was closed last Friday, by Headmaster John Best after groups of white and black youths fought in' the halls dur- ing the morning hours. Police said a black youth and a white youth were arrested at the school in connection with fights. A 17-year-old white boy suffered 'arm, injuries after po- lice said he was assaulted by black youths., an- est e- So-1 idd I ,; He said a special effort is being made to persuade Israelis living abroad to return home for military duty. A senior army officer is going to the United States to maintain -contact with Israeli citizens living there. formance, a sort of diplomatic cry from the wilderness whose. keynote seemed to be a plain- tive: "Is anybody listening?" The address had a pleading tone seldom encountered in pro-' matic." Yet there has been no real progress in breaking the strategic arms race, and whe- ther nuclear weapons remain under control depends precar- iously on unerringly correctl lowing in unaccustomed profits to the complexities and difficul-' could badly damage themselves, ties assailing the economies of and set in motion revolutionary' the West. forces against their antiquated- systems. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN{ yr ..;{5. "? r~ r: :,: ::h .i } ..y . .. :. . .. ... . ... .. . ... . ...... ........ ... _.. . ... .. . .. . ... Day Calendar Facts," 1040 Dana Bldg., 1 pm. Wednesday, September 25 Statistics Seminar: Prof. Louis WUOM: Live coverage, Senate Jensen, "Eigenvalues of Some Ma- l Rules Com. hearings on confirma.: trices Describing A Population ofj tion of Nelson Rockefeller as V-P, Variable Size," 3227 Angell, 4 pm; 10 am. coffee hour before, 1447 Mason, 3:30 Natural Resources: D. McCul- Pm. lough, "Grizzly Stories and Bear Physics General Colloquium: Philip W. Anderson, Bell Telephone Labs & Cambridge Univ., "Super- THE MICHIGAN DAILY fuity in He3", P & A Colloq. Rm., Volume LXXXV, No. 18 4 pm.1 "Wednesday, September 25, 1974 Computing Ctr.: B. Carnahan,j is edited and managed by students "Fortran IV Programming Lan-1 at the University of Michigan. News guage-11, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 pm. phone 764-0562. Second class postage Music School: Raymond Kreze- paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan 48106. sicki, organ, Hill Aud., 8 pm. 1 Published d a i i y Tuesday through General Notices] Sunday morning during the Univer CEW: Evening program, T h e sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann University Libraries and ' How to Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription, Use Them, informal orientation at rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); Undergrad. Library, 7:30-9:30 pm,] $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); Sept. 30, 1974; for info & registra- $12 non-local mail (other states and tion, contact 328-330 Thompson, foreign). 764-6555 or 763-1353. Summer session published Tues- - day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier Bill Posedel has returned to Acainpus area); $6.00 local mail. the major leagues as piteihng (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- coach for the San Diego Padr- local mail (other states and foreign). I es. ____ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ es. Classroom Experience for Credit Work in an elementary or middle school classroom CONTACT:j LAURA ROSA, 763-3548 PROJECT COMMUNITY 2204 Michigan Union nouncement of this sort, a tone readings of a procession of of near-desperation with the crisis, any of which could start vast complexity and enormous in motion an awesome progres- peril of the problems facing sion of events. the so-called advanced nations. THE DELEGATES listened THE WORLD, said the secre- solemnly - perhaps some of tary, has dealt with the econ- them even sullenly - and there omy as if "constant advancef were no interruptions for ap- were inexorable." But the econ- plause. It wasn't the sort of omy no longer responds to wish- speech that stimulates applause ful thinking in the industrial na- because it dealt with unpalat- tions. Inflation rages out of con- able facts. trol and major capitals seem The world, said the secretary, helpless. has been dealing with local con- Nations not long ago consider- flicts "as if they were perpet- ered backward' and even poor ually manageable." Now the are in the van of a devastating Western world is awake to the assault on major economies and realization that the M i d d l e the ultimate results are beyond East, Cyprus, Southeast Asia their capabilities to predict. and Korea, and a procession of The secretary warned them other situations are not only per- they could push the entire world petually unmanageable but are into a depression of immense THE SECRETARY echoed President Ford's warnings' about the burgeoning crisis of world hunger. It is likely to be aggravated in the current econ-I omic disarray by nourishing in the industrial nations an urge to take care of themselves first. AF new isolationism is palpably growing, for example, in t h e United States. Day after day the news is dis- mal and gets more so., One of the situations close to the core of world jitters is the Middle The University of Arkansas football team first appeared in a bowl game in 1934 when the Razorbacks tied Centenarv 7.7 in the Dixie Classic. The University of Michigan PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM presents N E WId YoRk POWER CENTERH i A MUSICL C 1OMEDY REVUE 'A BLISSFUL DELIGHT Jan. 17.15- Eves 8p m Sun Mat 3p TheNegro E 'e es Tso LAST CALL Mixed Leagues Sign Up Now Union, Lanes (EST MUSICAL A A I THE RIVER !NIGER ®' I VOICE LESSONS The Music Mart music stuidos are now offer- ing private instruction for voice. Beth Lindberg, currently with the U of M vocal department, and has worked a number of years with professional jazz groups, will be taking appointments im- mediately. Beth teaches both traditional and contemporary styles of music. For I I information call t 4 A large selection of Books from Cambridge Univ. Press Both cloth & paperback will be discounted: 50% on paperabcks 409% -90 %on cloth Bordrs ookShop 316 S. STATE Open: 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon.-Sat., 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. NOTE: These are slightly used or damaged books and do not include our regular stock of Cambridge Books. 769-4980 Ann Arbor Music Mort 336 S. STATE ST. Open 10-7 Daily; Sat til 6 r f' '1 momrrsis e A h I' k ( CUT YOUR STUDY TIME IN I TMI dg~ iwusibot I (r (, 'up J, r " i k " H ALF THIS SPRING! At Tonight's Mini-Lesson you'll actually improve your reading efficiency, both speed and comprehension, by using our techniques which have worked for over 1/ million people just like you. Whether you're a 'Lazy Reader" unable to concentrate, a "Word-at-a-time Reader" who spends days, weeks, and months reading material that should take minutes and hours, a reader who can't remember anything you read, or a "Skimmer," who reads fast but retains little...we can help you. All the advantages of Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics will be explained and demonstrated completely at the FREE Mini-Lesson. Stop wasting valuable time...you've got nothing to lose. everything to gain! Attend a free mini lesson WEDNESDAY, Sept. 25 THURSDAY, Sept.26 MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE STUDENT DISCOUNTS Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge Carpe~nter Rd.. Ypsilanti k The word st Sim mrs eder. -., !C The ay, der THIS CHANGING WORLD-A Commentary Some Years Back, We Decided (Perhaps Erroneously) That Our Message Was Not "Coming Thru"! Much of the "Campus Clientele" Did Not Seem to Be "Tuned" to Us-Our Prices "Were'Too High" (A Marginal Few Cents, by Michigan Daily Reportage)-Our Friendly, But "Establishment Image" Too Removed From Campus Norm. But, Much to Our Gratification, Times Have Changed! Today's Cam pus Collector of Coveted Platters & Cassettes, Wants Pleas- ant Service & Wide Choice of Variety, Be It Classical, Rock, Spoken Word, or Other-and Is Willing, When Neces- sary, to Pay the Price for Items Difficult to Obtain. Therefore, Our Ad Invites You to Examine, or Re-Examine, the Bountiful Recorded Treasures in Stock at the LMS-- Bask in Our Pleaasnt Atmosphere-Search Amid the Boundless, Well-Displayed, Oft-Sought-After Merchandise-En- f 1 E m El