Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 14, 1975 P~~~e Two TH~~~~~E MIHGNDIYFiaMrh1,17 .. _ Movie and Coffee House I "The House on Cheleuce Street" (Hebrew with English subtitles) The story of an immigrant family's struagle to survive in 1946 Palestine.. 8:00 P.M.-$1.25? H I LLEL-1429 Hill Street 663-3336 M MANY OF OUR CUSTOMERS ARE "WORLD TRAVELERS." KNOWING THE WIDE CHOICE OF REPERTOIRE IN OUR STOCK, YOU MAY WELL WISH TO TELL YOUR ' "FRIENDS & ACQUAINTANCES IN FAR AWAY PLACES" 40 ABOUT OUR SHOP. You may not know that we ship records and cassettes y anywhere, thru-out the world. An item in stock will be procured: if at all possible. -40 MUSIC SHOP+ THE MIDWESTS MOST COMPREHENSIVE RECORD SHOP 417 E. LIBERTY 662-0675 It Pays to Advertise in The Daily Vinam batth (Continued from Page 1) lift was halted, the pokesper- cluding an American aid offi- son said. This compared with cial, two other Americans and the usual daily total from Tan Australia's top d i p 1o m a t in Son Nhut airport here of be- Hanoi. tween 12 and 15. The Americans were identifiedI as Edward Dolan and Robert ISeidl, both of Washington, D.C., and George Miller, an official of the U.S. Agency for Interna- tional Development in Vientiane, Laos. Officials said DolanAnd Seidl' worked for a company named Moore Business Forms. The Austrailan charge d'affaires in Hanoi, Graham Lewis, also was among the victims, officials! said. X4.Al XHITT 1V .A BUT THE spokesperson said the shipment of rice and fuel was keeping close to schedule. In yet other developments yes- terday, the House of Represent- atives Foreign Affairs Commit- tee rejected, 18to15,al ist ditch compromise to provide the Cambodian government with emergency military aid. The vote, coming a day after the House Democratic caucus erupts overwhelmingly opposed a n y military aid, amounted t, a near fatal blow to the Ford ad- ministration's hopes of winning approval of new military aid } DESPITE a last-minute ap- pearance by top State Depart- ment officials during the com- mittee meeting, the committee rejected a compromise proposed by a subcommittee Wednesday which would have allowed $82,- 500,000 in additional aid f .the Phnom Penh government ac- tively sought a political settle- ment. Three of the 12 Republican members of the full committee voted against the compr~inuse. Meanwhile, Senate Democrats were planning to consider in their closed door caucus yester- day a resolution opposing all ad- ditional military aid to Cam- bodia and South Vietnam during the current fiscal year ending June 30. By KATE SPELMAN Student Government Council (SGC) last night accepted David Faye's and Calvin Luker's joint withdrawal from executive vice presidential consideration. I Luker made the announce- ment of the joint withdrawal during an officer's report and explained that the move was prompted by the feeling that Council could not realisticly re- solve the issue in the remaining time of Council's term. FAYE WAS absent from the meeting and unavailable for comment but Luker, a Vietnam veteran, said, "I do not feel my presence on Council would serve to alleviate the problems and internal conflicts, but could in fact promote them. There- fore I feel it better just to get out. I am resigning as Director of Student Organizations and do not foresee any activeinvolve- ment with SC after that, Luker concluded. legally and democratically elect-' ed SGC president she be named the longest presiding SGC presi- dent in SGC history - four terms." SGC officers quit candidacy THIS MOTION is the last of ly. the long train of legislation by Further SGC to note that the last three cluded th SGC elections have been alleged- to the Ii ly rigged. naign toa Eliot Chikosky claimed, "This further a motion means nothing. It deals $450 tot with hanging pictures in SGC American chambers and the "whereases" planned c have no legal significance. As; These every student knows the opin- pile of ion of SGC doesn't make a bit unsigned of difference anyway." Allen. He Bob Black countered saying, allocation "This is a resolution of opin- months c ion and obviously the opinions not been. expressed in each clause of the financial: motion represent the feelings of the Council." DAVID Faye, when contacted last night, claimed that he didn't take the motion serious- action by Council in- e allocation of $1,000 ndochina Peace Cam- aid in lobbying against tid to Cambodia, and the Group on Latin Issues for their conference. allocations join the others, that remain by President Reddix Shas not signed any is for one and a half claiming that he has convinced of SGC's solvency. 1 4 i1 t ivMAN WrilL thxe Americn airlift into Phom Penh from Saigon resumed on schedule CORTES RAISED CANE yesterday after b e i n g inter- NEW YORK (P) Her- rupted Wednesday by a rocKet nando Cortes, conquistador of attack on the Cambodian capi- Mexico, appears to hve been a tal's Pochentong airport. ~ Mxcapast aebe pioneer sugar planter, also. A A U.S. embassy spokesperson grant in 1529 gave him "five said three rice flights had al- leagues from the city of Vera ready been run yesterday by Cruz," a little village named the three "stretched" DC-8 jets La Riconada - the Indians at present operating on the called it "Yzcalpan" - where emergency shuttle. he built a sugar mill, according Only six flights had been con- to Sugar Assn. historians here. pleted yesterday when the air- Cortes built a second mill near Tetecala in the state of Morelos, using stones from the "The Hot Dog Open" pyramid at Xochicalco. It's still there on the Rio de Cana and is MARCH 15 & 16 called El Ingenio. A third fac- BafllTournament tory at Atlacomos was still working in 1891. GEO membership ratifies contract i t S1 21 1 A SIMILAR resolution was THE VACANCY for the execu- approved Wednesday by the tive vice president was created Democratic caucus in the House in January when Reddix Allen by an overwhelming vote f left his post to fall the position of president left by the resigna- Senator T h o m a s Morgan, tion of Carl Sandberg. This ac- chairman of the committee, said tion indicates there will be no the administration lost all hopes executive vice president before of a compromise in yesterday's the April elections. vote when acting Secretary of Council also passed a motion State Robert Ingersoll testified acknowledging that David Faye against a provision cutting off has been elected to the SGC presidency twice in SGC elec- all military aid by June 30. tions and "will have his picture That provision was contaned included among those of other in the compromise approved SGC presidents (elected, stuffed, Wednesday in a subcommi-tee self-styled or other)." The motion continues, "Where- headed by Representative Lee as Rebbeca Schenk (1971-72 U-M UNION BILLIARDS II TODAY! 13th Ann Arbor Film Festival Free screeninq today at 3:00 with performance by Friend's Road Show. Screeninqs to- night at 7, 9, & 11. Tomor- row at 12:30 p.m., with performance by P e r o the Clown. Toniqht at 7 &s 9. Winners & highlights Sunday at Architecture Aud. & An- gell Hall. Tickets on sale nightly at 6:00 p.m.-no a d v a n c e sales-Tickets sold for that night's performance only. $1.25 Old Architecture Auditorium TAPPAN at MONROE Program info-662-8871 The festival is co-sponsored by Cinema Guild & Dramatic Arts Council (Continued from Page 1) April15 the union may file suit1 in a small claims court against' those GSAs who have not paid the fee in full. WILEDEN suggested t h a t GEO issue letters to non-union GSAs explaining their obligation under the agency shop clause, "and make people aware of the fact that we're serious." However, sentiment ran high among the union stewards to downplay talk of legal action and issue the letter as "an in- vitation to join the GEO.' "It is desirable to keep threats to a bare minimum and more important to coax people into membership," one steward con- tended. IN DISCUSSING the scrke aftermath, union stewards de- bated the issues of pay docking and post-strike grievance filing procedures. Former union negotiator San- 11 dy Wilkenson suggested to the stewards that "there will tne a number of areas where we'll want to file grievances the min- ute the contract is signed." Several stewards echoed Wil- kenson's contention and pro- posed that the first grievances filed ask for all GSA graders to be re-classified as teaching assistants under the new con- tract provisions. The stewards will choose a six member temporary grievance committee to "aggressively" track down all possible griev- ances and commence filing pro- cesses. A flurry of questions came from stewards seeking methods to recover wages docked during the strike, with an equal amount of suggestions ensuing. Wileden simply recommended that each GSA requesting wages not received during the strike approach their individual de- partment chairperson "with the best tactic they have." Hamilton. Council president) was the last{ ITemple University: Tyler School of Art in Rome ACADEMIC YEAR OR SEMESTER ABROAD Painting, Drawing, Printmaking, Sculpture, Art History, Italian, Humanities School and Pensioni short walk from Spanish Steps Cultural trips to other Italian art centers Graduate or Undergraduate university credit r - - - i - - ' . to - 101fr% 0 '1 a - 1-1- I- -- .. 101 9t U RENT ME I 4- < o " 4a mo , {{ '4 Vj Y .5Sa' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . X0 's ' 0Y ..........::;:.... . P l e a s e b ri n g o r m a ilsb'ai }:s#} ych e c k s t o :"!{ M i c h.....:.ig a n e n s i a n ,".:: 4 2 0 M a y n a r d ,::v . i