Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 7, 1973 Page Tw~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 7, 1973, Out of the Whirlwind..C. A MOVIE HOLOCAUST WEEK "THE GARDEN OF THE FINZI-CONTINIS .." The story of a prominent Jewish family in the golden autumn before they too were consumed by the, holocaust that was Europe. ADMISSION 50c SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7th-8 P.M. HILLEL-1429 HILL ST. UN, U.S. DELIBERATE 'War breaks out Conflict disc ssed by leaders I 0/ 'r rw rMr i Association of Jewish Faculty & Grads GOOD EATIN' and GOOD MEETIN' (Continued from Page 1) ber, Sir Laurence McIntyre of Aus- tralia, with members of the 15-na- tion council. ANOTHER possibility was for a full-dress meeting of the council. It was unrealistic to expect such a meeting before today at the ear- liest, a U.N. official said. McIntyre was in touch by tele-. phone with representatives of the countries involved in the fighting,' a member of the Australian mis- sion said. Neither Israel nor the Arab side asked for a meeting. EGYPT'S PREFERENCE f o r the Assembly, where there is greater room for maneuver and no veto, made it more difficult to mus- ter a majority for Council action, observers -said. Foreign ministers and ambassa- warfare in that part of the world.; dors of Arab nations met and au- The department spokesman, Rob-: thorized Saudi Arabian Miniister ert McCloskey, made the remark of State Omar Sakkaf to declare following a second emergency their joint support for "the Arab meeting of the Washington Spe- states, victims of the Israeli ag- cial Action Group (WSAG). gression." The first WSAG meeting was At a press conference, Sakkaf held in Washington yesterday was asked if he expected an Arab morning while Secretary of State member to ask for Security Coun- Henry Kissinger was still in New cil action, he said they were await- York making urgent personal and ing instructions from their govern- telephone contacts with permanent ments. members of the United Nations MEANWHILE, T H E State De- Security Council and parties in- MENHIE THE tteD-volved in the fighting. I partment said last night that the United States will continue to ex- K I S S I N G E R returned to ert every effort to bring an end Washington later and convened to the Mideast fighting and is the second meeting. aware of the dire consquences of Attending, in addition to Kis- 0* singer, were Deputy Secretary of State Kenneth Rush; Joseph Sisco, the assistant secretary of state for Near East and South Asian affairs;1 defense secretary James Schles- inger; Central Intelligence Agency Director William Colby, and Ad- miral Thomas Moorer, chairman, of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Before the meeting, Kissinger talked by telephone with a number of leading senators. SENATOR GEORGE A I K E N (R-Vermont), the top-ranking Re- publican on the foreign relations committee, said that Kissinger gave no indication of any pending American action. "I know he (Kissinger) is doing all he can to quiet things down and I have an idea things will be quiet- in kR Middle East INVITES YOU TO A PICNIC SUNDAY, OCT. 7 at 4-7 p.m. at ISLAND DRIVE PARK CHARCOAL PROVIDED-BRING OWN FOOD Join us for "Frisbie" and "Football" Look for "Association of Grads" Sign (Continued from Page 1) have an all-out war with Israel. He saw the attack as an attempt to ob- tain partial gains in the hope that the United Nations would stop the fighting when the Arabs had gain- ed a foothold on the Israeli-held Eastern Bank and made consider- able gains on the Golan Heights. Herzog, a former military intel- ligence chief, said the Arabs were not prepared for the Israeli reac- tion which came. ASKED ON Israel radio why Egypt and Syria chose yesterdayI to start hostilities, he said they timed it to coincide with the be- ginning of the United Nations Gen- eral Assembly session to highlight the fact that the Middle East was still in a state of war. He said they also assumed that on the Day of Atonement Israel would be the least prepared to go to war. Herzog said the Arab decision had obviously been taken at the Cairo summit meeting of Egypt, Syria and Jordan last month. He said it remained to be seen whe- ther Jordan's King Hussein would intervene in the fighting. DESPITE HERZOG'S claim of a limited conflict, the people in ma- J jor cities of both Egypt and Israel braced for wtar. Tel Aviv, like all other Israel cities, was blacked out, and tha international airport at Lydda was closed down. In Jerusalem several hundred people gathered in the, darkness at the wailing wall to hear the blowing of the shofar, the traditional Jewish ram's horn, an- nouncing the end of the Yom Kip- pur holiday. In Cairo Egyptians clustered round their radio and television sets listening to the stream, of mili- tary communiques interspersed with martial music and nationalist songs. THE INTERIOR ministry order- ed a blackout, telling Egyptians to paint windows and car headlights blue and to turn off all lights in the event of an Israeli air raid. The ministry also called for vol- unteers to join government centers for civil defense and popular resist- ance training. The radio told people to stay calm and to go immediately to shelters if an air raid warning sounded. /r U JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. SALE Three-foot Square Floor Cushions Or Comfortable Bed Rests $10 Save now on cotton prints in a blaze of color, woven tapestries, Indian motifs, Turkish designs, gypsy patterns ...a whole collection of 36" square cushions to stack and toss in multiples, and a group of bed rests with arms for complete relaxation and comfort. Please park in the adjoining Maynard Street Auto Ramp. Jecobson's will gladly validate your parking ticket. seed Ifu t yUsn t ed down,"Aiken said. The spokesman also said the U.S. government has been reviewing (Continued from Page 1) -division: either undergraduate or emergency and evacuation plans housing lettuce boycott, two ques- graduate; and for Americans in the fighting tions on the Rackham Graduate -unit: depending on which school areas, but no instruction had been School, a question on dorm rates, or college the voter is registered issued for removal of either civil- and possibly a question on the in. ians or officials. tuition strike. According to Strauss, each vot- i THERE WILL BE 18 different EARLIER, it had been revealed er must vote three times, once in polling places for the election, that leaves had been cancelled for each separate constituency. The which will be open from 9:00 to sailors in the U. S. sixth fleet in three constituencies are determin- 5:00 on Tuesday, Oct. 9 and the Mediterranean. ed by: Wednesday, Oct. 10, and from 9:00 President Nixon learned of the -residency: where the voter lives; to 12:00 on Thursday morning, fighting in an early morning tele- Oct. 11. .,_phone call from Kissinger. I 'I The ballots will be counted on Thursday night and the results will be known by 9:00 Friday morning. SGC Elections, have always been expensive, and SGC has estimated this one will cost $5,000; however, Strauss feels he can run it for $3,500. . - i . ;, , E The Florida White House viewed the fighting with growing alarm, but withheld comment on any ac- tion it might decide to take in the United Nations Security Council or elsewhere to obtain a ceasefire. DA ILY OFFICIA L BU L LETIN TO.RY; ;":;";.V c: i '>v:""r""' " A