SGC RECOMMENDATION See Editorial Page Y e 3k ig au Daiti, SPRITELY High-79 Lowv-s9 For details see Today Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 29 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 9, 1973 Ten Cents h1 Ten Pages x I UW SEE NEStAPPEN CALL DAILY Rally planned In the,wake of the eruption of war in the Middle East, a group known as the Coalition of Concerned Students and Faculty has called a rally for today at noon on the Diag to show its support for Israel. Former editor honored The Daily's own Sara Fitzgerald, former editor-in- chief, has added another feather to her journalistic cap, winning a Sigma Delta Chi award for newswriting not under deadline. Fitzgerald, now a reporter for the St. Petersburg Times, was awarded for work that appeared in The Daily. Previously, she received the 1973 grand prize from the Detroit Press Foundation. She will be recognized forher most recent achievement at a Sigma Delta Chi convention in Buffalo next month. 0 New U' program The University celebrated Columbus Day yesterday by announcing a new program that will study the Euro- pean "age of discovery with a $180,000 Mellon Foun- dation grant. Under the auspices of the William Clem- ents Library, the Institute for Studies in the History of Discovery, will provide funds beginning next fall for graduate students in the field of history, geography and English literature to re-examine the period of European explorations from the 15th through 18th centuries. In addition, the program will sponsor a scholarship using the Clements Library, publications focusing on new in- terpretations of the period, and at least one conference of scholars in the area. "This field has been overlooked in recent years, and our program will focus attention on these problems from a new perspective," said Doug- las Marshall, library curator of maps_ and program co- ordinator. 0 Oops! In a story about the Student Rights Party in Satur- day's Daily, we neglected to mention one of SRP's candi- dates - Phil Cushway. Cushway is running for a council seat in the independent housing division. Happenings .. . are headlined by an LSA Coffee Hour which fea- tures the Linguistics Dept., at 2050 Frieze Bldg. at 3 p.m. . .. Michael Harper reads poetry at Aud. 4, MLB, at 4:10 p.m. . .. films include Sjoman's I Am Curious Yellow at Aud 3 at MLB, Altman's McCabe and Mrs. Miller at Aud. A, and Hawk's Ball of Fire at the Arch. Aud. Government sworn in A new Greek government, headed by Premier Spyros Markezinis, 64, was sworn in yesterday to prepare Greece for its first gneral elections in 10 years. Markezinis was charged with forming a government a week ago by President George Papadopoulos, who in June proclaimed a republic after deposing the exiled King Constantine. The new 40-member civilian cabinet will replace the army-backed regime that ruled the country since the coup in April, 1967. "I am convinced that the elections must be held so that everyone will accept te fair manner in which they are conducted," Markezinis said in a na- tionally-broadcast address. Sources close to Markezinis said the parliamentary elections would most likely come next April. Another immolation Taking a lead from a recent shocking Boston murder, a band of teenager youths in Edinburgh, Scotland, set fire to a man Sunday who was drinking with a friend in an alley. John Hamilton, 46, a transient, survived the attack but was reported in critical condition. Three youths grabbed him and doused °him with the highly flammable alcoholic beverage he had been drinking and then threw a match on him. Two men passing quickly smothered the flames with their jackets. Police held three youths for questioning. Inoperative funding Uncle Sam gave the small community of Hiseville, Kentucky a revenue-sharing check for $1,727 and now he wants the money back. More than half of the money -which represents about $727, more than the town's entire annual budget - has already gone toward re-M modeling City Hall. 'The government wants the funds back because it maintains that Hiseville received too much last year. Said Mayor William Phillips, "We've complied with everything we were supposed to. And now they say they want their money back I don't know what to think . . . We're not a bunch of crooks," he added. ' report reveals salary inequities By PENNY BLANK According to a report issued yes- terday by the University Affirma- tive Action Program, women and members of minority groups em- ployed by the University receive lower salaries than do their male, non-minority counterparts. The report reveals that men get a higher mean salary than do wo- men in all instructional classifi- cations. AND MINORITY professors weie found to receive salaries below the total mean for non-minority males. Affirmative Action Program Di- rector Nellie Varner said yesterday M.ided6 4 front UN s plit on how to halt war in Mideast UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (?-A special session of the Security Council on the new Middle East war adjourned' without decision last night after the United States split with the Soviet Union and China on how to stop the fighting. U.S. Ambassador John Scali ask- ed Israel, Egypt and Syria to halt military operations and "return to the positions before hostilities broke out." URGING AGAINST debate on who is to blame for the new war, he said this wojld be "the least dam- aging way" to move from con- frontation to negotiation. But China, one of the five mem- bers of the council with the right of veto, said: "If the council is to adopt any resolution at all, it must condemn all acts of aggres- sion by the Israeli Zionists and de- mand the immediate withdrawal by the Israeli Zionists from all the Arab territory they occupied." Chinese Ambassador Huang Hua branded as "preposterous" Scali' s proposal that Egypt and Syria re- turn to their positions before the outbreak of fighting on Saturday. THE' FOREIGN minister of Egypt, Mohammed Hassen E-Zay- yat, said Israel had struck first. Going into the background of the breakout, he said the Security Council, except for the United States, had favored demanding Is- rael's withdrawal from Arab terri- tory taken in the 1967 Middle East War. "But the collective will of the council was paralyzed and render- ed inoperative" by an American veto last July 26, Zayyat recalled. SCALI AND ZAYYAT addressed the council shortly after Secretary General Kurt Waldheim asked the council to pass on an Egyptian re- quest for withdrawal of the UN military observers along the Suez Canal to Cairo. Normally there are 90 UiN ob- servers in 17 posts along the canal. Some of these observers reported the Egyptian crossings as the new war broke out early Saturday. They reported no Israeli crossings. Scali said the United States "re- ceived indications" that hostilities were imminent shortly before the actual outbreak. It "immediately undertook intensive diplomatic ef- See UN, Page 2 Discrimination against women and minorities that she was not surprised by the findings. "Both discrimination and lack of capable women and minority appli- cants in the job pool can account for the findings," she said. VARNER MADE it clear, how- ever, that the "bias against wo- men and minorities," has played a major role in the current situa- tion. The 500 page report, put to- gether in compliance with an exec- utive order to all institutions in- volved with Federal contracts, was submitted to the Dept. of Health Education and Welfare last July. It was not made public until yes- terday, however. The report outlines goals and timetables to correct employment discrimination against women and minorities. IF IT DOES NOT meet with HEW approval, federal contracts with the University could be held up. These federal contracts are crucial to the University because many research projects depend upon them for their funding. The report contains hundreds of pages reviewing University per- formance in utilizat.ion of women and minorities according to avail- ability, employment procedures, salary analysis, and countless ta- bles, charts and exhibits of inter- University communications. The University is bound by this report to make every "good faith effort" to meet their self-imposed goals by spring of 1976. The Uni- versity must also make annual re- ports to HEW on progress toward correction of disparities in pay and practices. AN ON-SITE review of the Uni- versity is also expected by HEW officials someitme in November. The Affirmative Action Pro- gram is a revised and updated ver- sion of the University's policy statement on equal employment of S On 1969, with detailed analysis of past and present employment proce- dures to see if recruitment, pro- motions, complaints and grievanc- es are dealt with properly and fairly. Ability, achievement and tenure of the individual is ideally the de-, ciding factor in these practices without regard to sex, race, age, color, creed, national origin, ances- try or religion. TIME TABLES for adoption of the program are extensive and spe- cific in the report for each depart- ment and area of the University See 'U', Page 7 two war continue igtig IS inconclusive Asrabs sra1e1s both y . -claim some victorie's By Reuter War continued to rage in the Golan Heights and across the Suez Canal last night with Israel claiming to have repulsed the powerful two-pronged Arab attack and Egypt reporting its capture of the provincial capital of Kantara in the Israeli-led Sinai Peninsula. Egypt said its forces were penetrating into Sinai and Syria claimed to be pressing its advance across the bitterly contested Golan Heights. In addition, Egypt claimed it had destroyed Sinai oil wells'used by the Israelis. MEANWHILE, Israel said it launched a successful counter-offensive which saw its troops advancing on Syria to the North and frustrating the Egyptian invasion from the West In a report confirmed by both sides, Israeli planes were said to have bombed and strafed the re s r Egyptian city of Port Said on the Mediterranean Sea. Israel said only military targets in the city had been struck, but Egypt reported. t x b o numerous civilian casualties. The o o attack raised the possibility of a repraisal raid on an Israeli city. Egypt said its troops had raised the Egyptian flag above Kantara Conflicts captured by the victorious Israelis in the 1967 Six-Day War. Israel branded the Egyptian report ridicu- lous, saying Kantara had been in pbed ruins and uninhabited since the 1967 conflict. AP Photo ISRAELI TANKS (above) pass through Druse village in the occupied Golan Heights, the second day of fighting with Egypt and Syria, while yesterday (below) Syrian troops inspected the wreckage of what Syrians said is a downed Israeli Phantom jet fighter, somewhere in southern Syria. COURT TEST LOOMS: MILITARY FORCES f r o m Al- geria, Morocco and Iraq are al- ready reported to have joined the battle against Israel and Sudanese President Jaafar El-Nimeiry an- nounced he too was sending troops to what he called the "Liberation War" against Israel. Egypt and Syria claim to have downed at least 159 Israeli planes -well over a third of the Israeli total air strength. However, Israel said its planes were in total com- mand of the skies over both Sinai and the Golan Heights. Israel claimed to have knocked out 400 Syrian tanks in fierce bat- tles in Golan and to have sunk an Egyptian minesweeper in an en- gagement in the Gulf of Suez. EARLIER YESTERDAY, Israeli Chief of Staff Gen. David Elazar told newsmen Israel had no com- punction about crossing the 1967 ceasefire line into Egyptian andt Syrian territory. Asked if Israeli forces had cross- ed the Suez Canal into Egypt, Elazar replied, "Not yet." But ask- ed if Israeli troops had battled their way into Syria, he responded y that Israeli forces were moving ht from their own territory "to the n other side." The White House disclosed yes- - terday that President Nixon had - appealed to Soviet Party Chief nt Leonid Brezhnev over the weekend as to join in a concerted big-power 1- effort to restore peace in the Mid- ti. See MIDEAST, Page 2 By CINDY HILL The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) yesterday established a committee to investigate possible conflicts of interest arising from professors as- signing their own textbooks, tapes, and other classroom materials to their students. The formation of the committee was prompted by an article in The Daily, Aug. 8, that revealed "a vast number" of University facul- ty members were assigning 'their own books to students in their classes. SACUA has appointed a three- man committee to investigate the issue. Serving on the committee are: Alvin Goldman, associate profes- sor of philosophy;. Joseph Vining, associate professor of law; and George Haddad, professor of elec- trical engineering and director of the electronics physics laboratory. BUT .THE .COMMITTEE'S and SACUA's - most immediate problem seems to be defining the issue. "This conflict of interest has got to be handled on a broader basis than just textbooks," said Haddad. "There are so many aspects of conflict of interest." According to many members of SACUA, the broader-based question is, are faculty members using their time in such a way that the student is suffering, and if so, to what degree? Council pa: boundaries SI By GORDON ATCHESON Republican City Council members members last night approved an amended ward boundaries plan, despite Democratic and H u m a n Rights Party (HRP) charges that the alterations constitute gerry- mander. The changes move some 700 voters from the Third Ward, a GOP stronghold, into the Foux and shift an equal numbe erally liberal voters f Fourth to the Third. LAST APRIL, the Re won the Fourth Ward by margin primarily because in the liberal-radical con Although approved b5 ses ward proposal rth Word count, the plan may not officiall r of gen- go into effect since council's rigi rom the to amend the boundaries has bee under legal challenge. ,publians Mayor James Stephenson pro pabnaranw posed the specific changes to cor a narrow rect alleged errors in the pre3er of a split plan, adopted last December & a compromise between the Dem y a 74 crats and HRP who together dom --- nated the prior council. . COUNCIL MEMBER Caro] Joit 0 (D-2nd Ward) charged that Steph enson's proposal corrected none the "errors" and indicated th move was merely a gerrymander S While denying an effort to ge rymander the wards, Stephenso aid WPC admitted many of the errors ha nel. not been corrected in his plan Errors in census information fo Ot the inside . . 0 Local women join together t increase voice in city politic ... The Editorial Page features Ev Ehrlich discussing the dynamics of the rental housing market. . Tony Cecere's "Notes from Backstage with the U Symphony" graces the Arts Page . . Bob McGinn expounds on the up-coming gridiron battle with the Spartans on the Sports Page. h1- ie r. an d n. )r SGC elections begin, large turnout urged By CHERYL PILATE A group of local women have banded together to initiate action to initiate their own legislation in- dependent of their local govern- ment and referendum allows the sion - making process," s spokesperson Rachel Kan By JEAN LOVE Student Government C o u n c iil Elections Director Ron Strauss yes- who are funding their own govern- ment. If they really want to change something they should get out and