NEW IMPETUS FOR SHIELD LAW See Editorial Page IY it A ~aitF STICKY High-ds Low--G4 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 30 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 10, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages !FlZJ SE NLS APP CA.-xity Prof. dies Geology Prof. Claude Hibbard, curator of fossil verte- brates in the Museum of Paleontology, died suddenly in his office yesterday. He was 68. Hibbard was considered to be an expert in late Cenozoic and Cenozoic fossils. ,LSA Dean Frank Rhodes termed the death "a grevious loss," and said, "It is characteristic that Claude Hibbard died as he lived, in harness, and that on the day of his death he should come to his office in the Museum long before the building opened." Hibbard first joined the University faculty in 1946. He is survived by his wife, a daughter and two granddaughters. Funeral arrange- ments are incomplete. Prof. honored Mabel Rugen, professor emeritus of health education has received the 1973 William A. Howe Award-the high- esthonorin the field ofschool health-it was announced yesterday. Rugen, a University faculty member for four generations, was cited by the American School Health Association for "an outstanding contribution to the health of children throughout the world." 'Medical Mediators' Anyone who feels they have been treated unfairly or inhumanly by a medical institution in the city can now bring their complaints to the Free People's Clinic. The clinic has established an advocate service, known as "Medical Mediators" which specializes in dealing with hassles in the field of health insurance and medical cafe. The service is available Monday, Tuesday and Wednes- day between five and eight p.m. They can be contacted by calling 761-5079. " Happenings .. . . ..are topped by an organizational meeting for this year's Ozone Homecoming Parade at 500 Spring St. at 10 p.m. . . . Frank Baldwin talks about Filipino troops in Vietnam in Rm 124, East Quad, at 7:30 p.m. . . . the U of M Ski Racing Team meets in the lobby of the Union at 7:30 p.m. . . . Swami Satsvarupa, editor of "Back to Godhead" magazine, will s'peak on Yoga at 7:30 p.m. in-the Wesley Lounge of the United Methodist Church on State and Huron . . . the Student Counseling Office is holding an orientation meeting for anyone in- terested in peer counseling at 7:30 p.m. in 1018 Angell.. Medical ethics? The American Journal of Psychiatry says more than one out of 20 doctors queried in a nation-wide survey admitted to having sexual intercourse with their patients. Even more - 13 per cent - said they engaged in some kind of erotic practices such as petting. The survey in- cluded interviews with 460 doctors-psychiatrists, ob- stetricians, gynecologists, surgeons and general prac- titioners. More bugging The liberal-oriented Institute for Policy Studies in Washington filed affidavits with the Senate Watergate Committee yesterday claiming they had been infiltrated, wiretapped and bugged by federal agents. The commit- tee says it learned from a former FBI informant that the FBI and Washington police joined in an operation to rip-off their documents. The affidavits claimed that the institute is being harrassed, by the Internal Revenue Service because their views differ from those of the administration. Saxbe hangs it up Maverick Republican Senator William Saxbe of Ohio announced yesterday he will not seek re-election when his term expires in 1974. Sen. Saxbe, 57, gave "personal reasons" as an explanation for. his retirement. He joins four other Senators-Democrats Bible of Nevada and Hughes of' Iowa, and Republicans Bennett of Utah and Cotton of New Hampshire-in announcing their intention not to run again. Saxbe was a donsistent critic of Nixon, most vocally during the Christmas bombing of North Vietnam last year. Russo-Japanese treaty The Soviet Union indicated yesterday that negotiations between Russia and Japan on a peace treaty have run into serious difficulties. Apparently disputes over terri- tory are holding up approval of the accord which would officially put an end to World War II for the two nations. On the inside . . . . ..Roy Chernus interviews pianist Gyorgy Sandor on the Arts Page . . . Charles Bloom writes about Michi- gan's injured tailback Harry Banks on the Sports Page ... and on the Editorial Page a former mental patient writes about problems of organizing mental patients. A2's weather Israelis bom Damascus rom Suez amid fierce retreat fighting Syrian capital takes hieavy Civilian losses By AP' and Reuter Israeli warplanes bombed the Syrian capital of Damascus and hit military targets deep in Egypt yesterday while tanks and infantry were reported locked in "ferocious battles" on both fronts in the Mideast war. Though they claimed to have stabilized the situation along the Golan Heights; the Israelis admitted they have pulled back several miles from their previous positions in the Sinai Pe- ninsula. LATE LAST NIGHT a Cairo communique said the Egyp- tians had stabbed nine miles to the east of the 103-mile canal. Israeli officials maintained that the Bar-Lev line of outposts used in the 1967 war had been abandoned and that their forces were holding a defense line some three miles to the east Daily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY THE INTENSE EMOTION and sorrow of prayer is reflected in the faces of several of those who attended yesterday's Solidarity For Israel rally held on the Diag. A peaceful counter-demonstration in support of the Arab position was held simultaneously. 700 show By STEPHEN SE A crowd of about7 gathered peacefully on yesterday to express sol Israel on the occasion o outbreak of war in the M Behind the Israel der a crowd of about 100 supporters circled the D holding signs and coup strating. The demonstration be short statement in He] introduction was follo short speech by Psych Alexander Giuora. He claimed the Isr aware of Arab mobili first move or risk bein were counselled not to ;BTsolidaritI LBST aggressors in the court of world was fa 700 persons opinion. Israel had been betrayed, regrett n the Diag he concluded, attacked in a weak- taking idarity with ened state on their holiest day,. del emr f the latest Yom Kippur. said, ." Jiddle East. destru monstration A BREAK in the speeches was a fund Arabs and provided by Jill Coliman, LSA, as brothe iag silently, she lead the crowd in a song sup- He q nter-demon- porting life for Israel. "We f The main speaker of the after- sons.V gan with a noon, History Prof. Arthur Mendel, making brew. The next addressed the rally. "I have wed by a addressed other rallies for other MEN: ology Prof. causes before, but this is the first peal fo time I've spoken for my people," for ac aelis were he said. "During my recent trip to ning u zation, but Israel I discovered my people and would ng branded what they do mean to me." home,' make the The mood of the demonstration speakf on Dia g, Israel for r from militaristic. Speakers :ed that the bloodshed was place for any reason. Men- nphasized that spirit when he It's obscene to rejoice in the ction of our enemies, for in amental sense they are our yrs." [uoted Golda Meir as saying, orgive you for killing our We can not forgive you for g us kill yours." 1DEL concluded with an ap- or help. "If you're just here cheap thrill or a tingle run- p and down your spine, it be better if you stayed he said. "Let your actions for your heart." A NEWS ANALYSIS U. S. sources A ra b-Israeli evaluate, By FRED S. HOFFMAN AP Military Writer WASHINGTON 6P) - U.S. mili- tary analysts believe the Israelis can push Egyptian and Syrian forc- es out of the Sinai Peninsula and the Golan Heights area, but only at ''a very considerable cost.'' Defense Department and other U.S. government analysts are not saying the tide has turned for the Israelis, as some Israeli generals have claimed. "THE ISRAELIS are proceeding about as expected, but they are behind schedule," one official said. "The Arabs are doing better this time than they have in the past." The key to swift Israeli victory in the 1967 war was its mastery of the air, gained in a surprise pre- emptive strike catching much of the Arab air force on the ground. This air dominance permitted co- ordinated warplane and armor as- saults that decimated Egyptian tank and infantry units. But this time, U.S. sources said, 41 N 11tB ANON x Mr Hermon SGolan a lance the Israeli air force has had ser- ious problems trying to knock out Soviet-built surface-to-air missiles missing during the 1967 six-day war -on both the Egyptian and Syrian fronts. UNTIL THESE missiles are neu- tralized, Israeli warplanes cannot range freely against Egyptian and Syrian armor and infantry forma- tions. Sources said that about 35 of the approximately 40 Israeli warplanes lost through Monday night fell to surface-to-air missiles, principally the lethal SA6, designed to deal with low flying airplanes. The Egyptians and Syrians are reported to have lost about 100 warplanes, some on the ground when Israel attacked five Egyptian airfields and some Syrian fields. IF THE reports are accurate, each side would have lost more than 10 per cent of its air striking power. According to intelligence assess- ments reaching Washington, t h e Egyptians have penetrated the Sin- ai along an irregular front ranging from five to about 15 miles of the Suez Canal, short of Israeli's main Sinai defense line based in key passes through high ground. The Egyptians were said to have some70,000 men and between 600 and 800 tanks, some powerful Soy- A check at the United Jewish Student Appeal booth revealed that it was doing brisk business. After a prayer for peace by the Reverend Ed Edwards and a few more songs, the rally ended. The gathering was sponsored by the Coalition of Concerned Students and Faculty. The groups behind the name are the local Hillel or- ganization and the Israeli Student Organization. A spokesperson for Hillel' added that in a larger sense the demon- stration was really sponsored by the people of the community rather than any formal organizations. AS THE CROWD dispersed, the Arabs, who had been marching silently during the demonstration, began to chant slogans supporting their position in the Middle East. President of the Arab Student Organization, Ahmed Beshareh, stated that the Arabs were there to show disagreement with what they termed the Israeli aggression. Be- shareh said, "who started the war is immaterial. This is a continua- tion of previous hostilities and can't be treated separately." "We are not aggressors," he con- tinued, "we're attacking land which is our own. We support the various United Nations resolutions which call for an end to Israeli aggres- sion." Following the demonstration the Arabs left en masse. ~'U' starts n ew vshort course program By MARY LONG When playwright Arthur Miller strides to the lectern in Trueblood Aud. next month to talk about his plays before 200 eager students, the event will represent the high point of the University's greatly- expanded mini-course program. Mini-courses are two-week pass/ fail offerings on subjects that gen- erally don't make the curriculum of any department. So mini-courses constitute their own department this term, having grown in number from one or two last year to more of the canal. In other developments Israeli jets knocked out a radar , station in the Lebanese mountains near Barouk, 18 miles east of Beirut. Lebanon, a noncombatant in the 1967 war wants to maintain the same status in the current hostili- ties according to .reports from the area. The bombing of Damascus which resulted in considerable civilian casualties was regarded as the critical military development in a day of heavy fighting on all fronts. THE RAID and a dogfight with Syrian jets brought half an hour of terror and confusion to Vire an- cient Syrian capital. Women and children cowered in cellars and shopkeepers hurriedly closed their shutters. , The three-story Soviet cultural center was heavily damaged along with other buildings and private homes in the diplomatic quarter of Abu Rammaneh. Oleg Fomin, the Soviet embassy cultural attache, condemned the strafing of the center and told re- porters: "My government will not keep silent at this barbaric ac- tion." INITIAL REPORTS from Da- mascus said some 30 Soviets were killed in the bombing but later statements indicated that no Rus- sians had in fact been killed. At least half of the buildings hit were the homes of foreign United Nations and other international ex- perts. Among the dead were a Norwe- gian U. N. truce supervision offic- er, his wife and daughter and the wife of an Indian U. N. food and agricultural organization expert named Patashariya. THE AIR ATTACK on Damascus was in retaliation for a Syrian bombardment of Northern Israeli settlements with long-range Soviet- made Frog missiles over the past two days, Israel said. In Tel Aviv, Maj. Gen. Aharon Yariv told a news conference, "It is not going to be a short war. The people of Israel can expect no easy and elegant victories." See ISRAELI, Page 2 ? (ol(r (j 1fcf vi Gazah; Syran, Israel Soviets protest bombing UNITED NATIONS (Reuter) - Soviet delegate Jacob Malik last night walked out of the Security Council in protest when Israel ex- pressed its condolences for the loss of life in yesterday's Israeli air raids on Damascus, capital of Syria. Malik interrupted Israeli Ambas- sador Yosef Tekoah to say he was "unrwilling to hear excuses and condolences from the representa- tives of the murderers and inter- national gangsters." IN THE RAID the Soviet cultural center was hit and some uncon- firmed reports said the Soviet Em- bassy had been struck. Russian delegation spokesmen here said they knew nothing about the em- bassy having been hit. Other Soviet delegates remained in the chamber after Malik walked out. The council was meeting for the second time in an effort to find a fornmula for a ceasefire in the new Middle East war. DELEGATES, most of whom ap- peared to be from Arab countries which are not members of the council, loudly applauded Malik's rebuke. The president, Sir Laurence Mc- Intyre of Australia, r e m i n d e d them, and members of the public in the gallery, who joined in the applause, that the council's rules forbid such demonstrations. Malik earlier spoke of press re- ports of "barbaric bombing and gangster acts by Israeli planes" against the Soviet cultural center. U.N. SOURCES yesterday said that no Security Council resolution on a ceasefire would emerge until See RUSSIAN, Page 2 i I New developments in the Middle East DAMASCUS, Syria - Israeli jets bombed this capital city and the central Syrian city of Homs in a new escalation of the Middle East war. Witnesses said many civilians were killed or wounded Direct hits were reported on the Defense Ministry and a radio- television station adjoining one of the city's largest squares. TEL AVIV - Israeli warplanes hit military targets deep inside Egypt, the military command said, and ground forces "contained" counterattacking Syrians in the Golan Heights. A military intelligence chief admitted that Israeli forces had pulled back two or three miles from most of their original defense lines against Egypt along the Suez Canal and that it was "too early to say that we have broken the Syrian army." BEIRUT - The Defense Ministry said Israeli jets knocked out a radar station in the Lebanese mountains near Barouk, 18 miles from Beirut, and that Israeli troops fired on the southern Lebanese village of Blida. CAIRO - The Cairo military command said its tanks were pushing the Israelis eastward on the Sinai Peninsula and consoli- dating the Egyptian hold on the east bank of the Suez Canal. The command said troops destroyed more than 100 Israeli tanks in a fierce battle in central and southern Sinai along the canal. Egyptian officials further claimed that Israeli jets had at- tacked Cairo and that 16 Phantom jets had been shot down. Four 1 7 Zu fiP~~'~ I i\i ~j / ; '