Thursday October 11, 1973, fH, MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thrdy Otbr11.93.H.IHGA AL Paae T.re. -1 Statesmen react to Agnew move (Continued from Page 1) no comment when asked if "This kind of thing is pretty would accept the vacant posi common among politicians - but should it be offered by Presid he got caught at it." Nixon. Many students, Democrats and Gov. Marvin Mandel, a De Human Rights Party members, crat who was Agnew's successor however, were overjoyed by the governor of Maryland, saidt news. new's decision to resign "m COUNCILWOMAN Carol Jones, have been a painful one, but a+ (D-Second Ward) said she was cision that took courage and de glad the country was "rid of the mination. He placed the stabi pig."? of the nation, the integrity of1 "I'm amazed that such crap was vicehpresidency and the security going on, even as late as 1972," the nation . . . above a polit said Jones. future ..." She said she regretted that Ag- IN MICHIGAN, Gov. Will new resigned on the relatively Milliken, a Republican, said minor charge of income tax eva- new's resignation was -"a tra sion. development : for the country PERHAPS the reaction of many certainly for the vice presider PERHAS the ectionma nby He said he regretted that the re students was best summarized bynain"snesarad Jerry de Grieck (HRP - First ed: "It isanow clearly in the 1 Ward): a. interest of the country to q'iic One down, a million more pol- resolve the matter as the v ticians and bureaucrats to go. president is doing." Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New William McLaughlin, Michi York, a Republican who has been GOP chairman, said, "You'rep mentioned as a possible successortigm on"sdwhnol to Agnew, said the resignation was s s quite a sure a great personal tragedy and a "I'm sorry it happened, bu tragedy for the nation." was probably best for all conec GOV. RONALD REAGAN, of' ed . r the longer he stayed California, himself a potential there, the more he was going to 1976 presidential contender, said he prejudged and the more the co was "shocked and saddened" over try was going to suffer." the resignation of Agnew. NOTE: This story was comp Reagan, who sought his party's from local reports and natio presidential nomination in 1968, had wire service copy. fIFrvou SEIE NEW~S HAPPEN CALL 76-DAJ.Y I VALUABLE COUPON WORTH $.4o I I rsu he ion dent mo-I r as] Ag- nust de- ter- ility the y of ical- iain Ag- agic and vt." sig- add- hest ckly Vice gan put- the (Continued from Page 1) Mloody tickets available. Contrary to previous reports, the Moody Blues con- cert slated for Nov. 8 at Crisler is not sold out. About 250 tickets, all of them $5.50, will go on sale today at the Union. SA slates meeting The Student Action Committee, organizers of much of the activity surrounding the tuition strike, has called for a public meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 126 of East Quad. The agenda includes reports on new develop- ments in the strike, a session on strategy and tactics, and a review of. the SAC steering committee and strike demands. Happenings ... include a meeting of the History Women's Cau- cus, made up of interested graduate and undergraduate women in the History Dept., in Rm 4601 Haven Hall- otherwise known as the History Lounge . . . and the first meeting of the new Hungarian Language Society, at 8 p.m. Rm 4203 of the Union . . . don't forget the weekly meeting of the Bach Club, tonight at 8 in Greene Lounge, East Quad . . . and there will also be a meeting of the Ba'hai Student Group tonight from 7:30 to 11:30 at the International Center . . . and there will be a meeting of the Ann Arbor Mental Pa- tient Project at 1420 Hill St. tonight at 7:30. The meet- ing is open to all past or present mental patients. OF..COKE! I I I 0 .a 0 II '0l 1 I I I 1 with purchase of our delicious 12or14-inch PIZZA SUBMARINES & PIZZA' 1327 S. University FREE, FAST DELIVERY!! U 6U011 Coupon expires Oct. 17, 1973 AP Photo L It it ern- Iin obe oun- iled onal - -ri" Gains by both sides claimed in Mid-east SEEKING DONATIONS to be used for Israeli relief, Barbara Kahn passes the bucket in a campus-wide campaign fqr funds initiated by concerned students and faculty. Jewish students seek. aid funds for Israel By CHARLES COLEMAN Blood can be donated for Israel In the wake of the Mideast war, at Hillel, 663-4129. an ad hoc group of students and O faculty members supporting Israel Other activities organized by the has been conducting a vigorous coalition include a vigil, beginning campaign to raise money and today and lasting throughout the blood donations for the country. week - to be held on the Diag The program, which has been in between 11~ and 1 p.m. each day. operation since Monday, involves The purpose of the vigil is to soliciting for donations door-to- "bring the war home', so that it door as well as a bucket drive on brn'ttbe foroe, soding tt the Diag. So far, more than $8,500 won't be forgotten, according to has been raised to go for medical Goldblatt. Join The Daily AdStaff Phone 764-0558 U I -- - --- - - :.t~kl~iyr~A AAr~ff~l,~rkrL L A L~w ." . ..i. i (Continued from Page 1) gle. Iraq reportedly has more than 200 warplanes, including Soviet- built MIG21s and long-range Soviet bombers. INFORMED sources in Rabat said Morocco had sent 1,600 more' soldiers to join Egyptian forces in the Sinai Desert, bringing to about 3,000 the number of Moroccan troops sent into the battle. The new unit was reported under command of Col. Hassan Hatimi, a former French army officer and a veter- an.of World War II and the French- Indochina war. Syria and Egypt reported shooting down a total of 24 Israeli warplanes yesterday, bringing to nearly 250 the total of Israeli air- craft that the two Arab countries claim to have bagged since the war began last Saturday. In the two-front ground war, Sy- ria Ignored Israeli claims of re- capturing the Golan Heights, taken by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war. RADIO Damascus said in a mili- tary communique that fierce fight- ing was continuing, but the report did not specifically mention the Golan Heights. The broadcast said Syrian forces had inflicted heavy losses on the Israelis in men and equipment and had captured an unspecified number of Israeli pi- lots. Newsmen taken by the Egyptian army to the east bank of the Suez Canal yesterday reported that{ Egypt is continuing to push men and armor across the 103-mile waterway into the Sinai peninsula. Newsmen visited the- southern end of the canal, and a pool report said hundreds of Egyptian vehicles were spread over the desert there.' Columns of armored cars moved toward the east, undisturbed by occasional Israeli artillery shells or flights of Israeli fighters, the pool said. SYRIA CHARGED that .in yes- terday's aerial action Israeli jets were hitting civilian targets in the raids on Damascus airport, the central industrial city of Homs and ports on the Mediterranean. The Syrian communiques made little mention of ground fighting, a possible indication it had tapered off or turned to Israel's favor. In Washington, President Nixon told Congressional leaders yester- day that the new Arab-Israeli war was likely to be a long hard struggle with no decisive turning point yet in sight. NIXON GAVE this somber as- sessment at a White House meeting at which Democratic and Republi- can Congressional leaders voiced their support for U.S. efforts to bring about a ceasefire and lay the groundwork for eventual peace in the Mideast, Nixon also said the United States was "trying its best" to mediate the "very dangerous situation." i i i. t r r ' r r i I aid and food for the Israel forces. B E R N I E GOLDBLATT, a spokesman for the Coalition of Con- cerned Students and Faculty in Support of Israel, said that blood donated will be sent to Detroit, from where it will be sent directly to Israel. AN INFORMATION booth will also be set up on the Diag to bring current radio and wire service re- ports to students. Anyone interesting in working on the information booth, vigil, and other issues, is urged to contact Hill l. NEW WORLD FILMt MART with GLENDA JA and * IAN RICHA *' The inmates of a French insane as k the death, in his bath, of the Fren at the hands of Charlotte Corday. * peculiarities in the result. The in *' dency to intrude upon the proceed under the guiding hand of the Ma stunning drama, an absolutely spe *' ness and revolution. Modern Languages Aud. adm. $1.25 double fe S 7::30 & 9:45 p.m. 4' YYYYY[! !t*k W*W COOP ACK AR D; ylum st ich Rev There mates' dings, a arguis D l-bindii 3 oture $2.00 presents- TWO Masterpieces of the Modern Cinema: lADE JOE HIL DIRECTED BY SON BO WIDERBERG (1971) "Working with fragments of folklore and history, Swedish film- * maker Bo Wiiderberg has fashioned them into a touching trib- SON ute. As he did in his most popular fim, ELVIRA MADIGAN, Wiiderberg sees events in soft focus. His abiding affecton for * lambent Ighting produces beautiful images. Joe is memorably played by Thommy Berggren (the lover in ELVIRA MADIGAN) age a play concerning whose diffident yet forceful manner and ingratiating uncer- olution leader, Marat, tainty with the English language make him the perfect ncar- are, of course, a few nation of Hill." -Jay Cocks, Time diseases have a ten- nd the whole thing is Two months ago this film was playing for audiences in Holly- )e Sade. It makes for g discussion of mad- wood for $500 a head. Now, due to a special non-theatrical arrangement it is premiering in Ann Arbor for one night only * at our usual sub-average price. I Modern Languages Aud. 4 TONITE ONLY- 7:30 & 9:45 P.M. YYYYYYYYYYYLYYY YYYY l tf'[f tf tS s [. t" tvvvf ttef , I EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY and WWWW Present Edgar Wne Oct. 30-8:00 P.M. Bowen Fieldhouse $4 Advance $5 at the Door } x xxxx 4-------------------- * I . I l T T T -- RELIABLE ABORTION SERVICE Clinic in Mich.-1 to 24 week pregnancies terminated by li- censed' obstetrician gynecolo- gist. Quick services will be ar- ranged. Low rates. CALL COLLECT (216) 281-6060 24 HOUR SERVICE I I TICKETS ON SALE AT: Ann Arbor Music Huckleberry Party Mart, J.L. Hudson's, Store, McKenny Union ~t -- - - ~~~~~-- e .. JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. quilt-lined brushed cotton jacket slated for top championship performance against the weather, no matter what winter pitches your way. . .and winning applause as the perfect team-mate for cuffed pants. Navy, wine or green with 6-inch wide striped. knit waistband and cuffs. 38 to 44 sizes. $30. By PETER SCHJELDAHL "PAYDAY" is a brilliant, nasty little chrome-plat- ed razor blade of a movie su- perficially about the last 36 hours in the life of a country- western singer. On a deeper level, it is a film about cer- tain forms of American striv- ing and desperation, a "road picture" that is not, for once, a sentimental odyssey, but rather a clear-eyed study of people whose lives are linked to the road, how they behave and what becomes of them. Its clarity is what makes it so extraordinary. It is a work f such dead-honest realism that it is hard to know how, except as a kind of literal truth, to take it. The common reservation of "Payday's" admirers so far -and the grounds on which its detractors have dismissed it--is that it fails to trans- cend its materials. This is a valid objection, I think, so long as it is advanced gent- ly. For the excellence of "Payday" occurs on a level qtiite separate from that of conventional drama. It is a work constructed with all the discipline and flair a good scenarist, good director and good casf can supply, but a work informed by a kind of ethical com- mitment to factuality close in spirit to the best cinema verite. It neither exalts nor condescends to its charac- ters, people whose nervous vitality and emotional isola- tion combine to give "Pay- day" its rough and ultimate- ly harrowing tone. :::::::. .:......... ............ .... ........... .. °:: t:::::::::.. ............... * lkC \)l7)-li)] I n ,"'. a..=