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October 21, 1973 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-10-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Pctge Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday,-October 21, 1973

I I

t -- -

----- - - -
.

Investigate Upper Division and Graduate Study
in Monterey
130 Miles South of San Francisco
Monterey Institute of Foreign Studies
A private liberal arts college granting BA, MA, Teaching Cre-
dentials, Certificate in Translation and Interpretation.

DAILY OFFICIAL Cox fired,
BULLETIN Richardson
.-----..resigns post

i

Cox: The crewcut
crusader crumbled

Education
History
International
Economics and
Management
Pflitical Science
World Area
Studies
Translation and
Interpretation

Languages and
Civilizations
Arabic
Chinese
French
German
Italian*
Japanese
Portuguese,
Russian
Spanish
*Summer Only

Monday, October 22
Career Planning & Placement: "Ca-
reer Opportunities for Women," repre-
sentatives from U of Chicago Law Sch.,
Lewis & Clark Coll., NYU Grad Sch.
of Bus. Ad., Northwestern Univ. Grad
Sch. of Mgt., Int'l Ctr., Recreation URn.,
noon.
Statistics & Human Genetics: C. Coc-
kerham, No. Carolina St. U, "The
Analysis of Gene Frequency," 4804 Med.
Set. II Bldg., 4 pm.
Physics: T. Fields, Argonne Nat'l Lab,
"Antiproton Annihilation at 2.3 GV/r."

(Continued from Page 1)
to prominent positions within the
administration within the past year
as the Watergate scandal began
unfolding.
THE CHAIRMAN of the House
Republican Conference said last
night the firing of Archibald Cox
would bring on a serious effort
to impeach President Nixon.

ernoon meeting with reporters. he was Cox the Piqued, adding:
"I'm certainly not out to get the "Except that he's so damned

(Continued from Page 1)
Cox avowed his intention to defy
the President's order during an aft-

Presidential counsel Fred Buz-
hardt, Cox allowed, "has behaved
in an entirely honorable way." But

Accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges,
Califcrnia State Board of Education. Veterans Approved.
GEORGE WILLIAMS, Dean of Admissions, will be visiting the
Uiversity of Michigan Campus, 9:00-4:30, Oct. 23. Interested
students check with the Career Planning Cr Placement Office.

a..,,. a., CL.3 l.V ,""
P-A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. Referring to Nixon's "extreme-
CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT lv unwise action," Rep. John An-
3200 SAB, 764-7456 derson of Illinois joined a growingj
SRecruiting m2number of Republicans and an ex-
Northwestern U.on, Gradmpu Sch of Mgt. pected barrage of Democrats in cri-
NotwsenUGa co gt.; ticzn io'fiigoCxad
N. Y. Univ., Grad Sch, of Bus. Ad.eticiZing Nixon's firing of Cox and
Univ. of Chicago/Law; Lewis & Clark1 break-up of the specal Watergate
College, Law; Oct. 23: Procter & Gam- prosecution force.
ble Co.; Consortium for Grad. Study

President of the United States," he
demurred. "I'm even worried, to
put it in colloquial terms, that I'm
getting too big for my britches."
BUT, STRAIGHT AS A RAMROD,
wearing the four-in-hand tie he re-
serves for courtroom confrontations
instead of the bowtie he usually
wears for professorial lectures, Ar-
chibald Cox, Yankee lawyer, made
it clear to the nation that he
wouldn't yield to President Richard
Nixon's proposal to compromise
the case of the Watergate tapes.
"I don't feel defiant" said Cox

slow!"
Finally, he was Cox the Dedi-
cated. "I am going to go about my
duties . . ." But also Cox the
Troubled. The President's propos-
ed compromise, he said, is incon-
sistent with pledges made to thej
Senate and through the Senate to
the American people.-
"I think it is my duty as the spe-
cial prosecutor," he declared, "to
bring to the court's attention what
I believe is defiance of an order j
of the court.""
HE APPROACHED his news

Archibald Cox

in Mgt.; Monterey Institute for Foreign
Studies.

WOMEN'S CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
Lunch Hour Discussions

sponsored by
CAREER.

The first in a series of informal group sessions where. you can hear representatives
from various employers and graduate/professional schools discuss their oppor-
tunities for women. All women welcome. Feel free to bring your lunch.
Mon., Oct. 22-12 noon
" University of Chicago-Law School
" Lewis 6Clark College-Northwestern School of Law (Portland, Oregon)
* New York University-Graduate School of Business Administration
" Northwestern University-Graduate School of Management
Held in the International Center Recreation Room
COMING UP OCT. 30: Cornell Univ. Grad. School of Business & Public Admin-
istration; University of Santa Clara (Calif.) Law School

THE MICHIGAN DAILY!
Volume LXXXIV, No. 40
Sunday, October 21, 1973
is edited and managed by students at
the University of Michigan. News phone
764-0562. Second class postage paid at
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published
daily Tuesday through Sunday morning
during the University year at 420 May-
nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104.
Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam-
pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and
Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states
and foreign).
Summer session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus
area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and
Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other
states and foreign).
itI

1 ~ l L;v; L\i113, ' GL V , ' x A ;V3 1 L il 11,V
greying in his 61st year, at a na- conference hand in hand with his
tionally televised news conference. wife, Phyllis, and showed her to
"I told my wife this morning I a chair near the table from which
hate a fight . . ." Yet he was Cox he faced newsmen and cameras.
the Defiant, saying he would fight His large hand pointed occasion-
for tape recordings of Nixon's ally.
Watergate conversations even to His voice rose and fell as it does
the point, perhaps, of initiating when he lectures on the law at
contempt proceedings. against the Harvard. As he spoke for the bet-
President. ter part of an hour, he apologized
"It isn't important because it in- "for being so professorially long-
terferes with Archie Cox," said the winded."
special Watergate prosecutor. "It's The son, grandson and great-
embarrassing to be put in the po- grandson of lawyers, Cox is neither
sition of having to say I don't want a stranger to Washington nor un-
the President to tell me what to accustomed to controversy. He
do." Yet he was Cox the Frustrat-; served as the late President John
ed, saying flatly: "My efforts to get Kennedy's solicitor general. After
information have been the sub- returning to Harvard, he negotiat-
jects of repeated frustration." ed with student protesters in 1969
HE WAS COX the Gracious. and 1970.

i
3
-,,

The oil moves follow decisions by,
Libya Friday and by Abu Dhabi
earlier in the week to stop oil ex-!
ports to the United States.C
These decisions, in turn, camef
after a meeting at which Persian
Gulf oil producing states agreed
to cut production progressively by
five per cent a month to bringI
pressure on supporters of Israel.
PREDICTION COMES TRUE
PINE BLUFF, Ark. (UPI) -
SThe caption under Martha Mit-
chell's picture in her high school
yearbook read:
"I Love its gentle warble, f
love its gentle flow. I love to
wind my tongue up and I love to
let it go."

U.S.-Soviet
(parley begins
(Continued from Page 1)

Liddy told to
assassinate
Anderson?.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Watergate
conspirator G. G o r d o n Liddy
thought he had been' ordered to
assassinate columnist John Ander-
son during the 1972 campaign,
Parade magazine reported yester-
day.
The magazine said that during
the course of a meeting with Jeb
Magruder of the Committee for
the Re-election of the President,
Magruder mentioned Anderson and
told Liddy: "We've got to get rid
of this guy."
LIDDY, according to Parade,
left the meeting and ran into Bob
Reisner, Magruder's assistant.
"I've just been ordered to kill
Jack' Anderson," the °magazine'
quoted Liddy as telling him.
Alarmed,Reisner ran back into
Magruder's office and confronted
Magruder.
"MAGRUDER and Reisner im-
mediately got hold of Liddy," the
article said. "Magruder explained
that he had just been talking
figuratively. He didn't want An-
derson assassinated-all he meant
was that Anderson's incisive re-
porting constituted a problem that
he would prefer to be rid of."
According to Parade Liddy an-
swered: "Where I come from that
means a rubout."
DUTCH MATRIARCHY
THE HAGUE (UPI) - The
Netherlands has not had a king
since 1890. The reigns of the late
Queen Wilhelmina a n d her
daughter, Queen Juliana, span a
total of 83 years.

Plac4m44t
744-7460

4

SPECIAL BLUE GRASS
and FOLK CONCERT
FROM NASHVILLE, TENN.
LARRY SPARKS
and The Lonesome Ramblers
SUNDAY NITE Only: Oct. 21
AT THE PULL
NEXT SUNDAY: The Michigan Men's Glee Club

ThiS fOmB
$2.00 830
THIS WEEKEND
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
BOB
GIBSON

.. - I

II

HILLEL WEEKEND at
CAMP TAMARACK
FRIDAY, OCT. 26--SUNDAY, OCT. 28
TOPIC: THE NEW WAR IN ISRAEL
AND AMERICAN JEWISH IDENTITY
WHAT ARE OUR RESPONSIBILITIES
AND PRIORITIES TOWARD ISRAEL?
Let's get away for a few days-release some frus-
trations and tension--and put our heads together.

i
,
r
E
I

U of M and EMU NITE
MONDAY
Bring Student I.D. and get in FREE
DISCOUNTS ON PITCHERS OF BEER

341 S. MAIN-ANN ARBOR

His name has been
synonymous with the
folk boom of the
sixties, the Gate of
Horn, GibsonkCamp,
etc. He's back and
better than ever.

A Moving Experience in Sound and Light

bon

L

1411 Hill TRET

-

I

Ned's Bookstore & Student Book Service
(formerly of Ann Arbor)
ANNOUNCE
GIGANTIC WAREHOUSE SALE
OCT. 1-OCT. 23
75,000 TITLES
All Books 50% OFF (or more)
THOUSANDS OF TITLES 25c -$1.00
(Would You believe 15c/lb.?)
Text on oil sub.: for. lang., quality paperbacks, B-M & Sci.
Amer. Reprints.
3800 PACKARD - 971-7820
(NEAR CARPENTER)
M-F 10-5 SAT. 10-3
The Blood Drive for Israel
Has Been Cancelled
The Israeli Embassy in Washington thanks- every-
one for their concern, but at this time no blood is
needed. Instead, money is needed for plasma kits
for burn victims.
Therefore, the Oct. 23 and Nov. 16 Red Cross Blood
Bank at Hillel will NOT take place.
Please call 663-4129 to make donations or._
stop by 1429 Hill St.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR
WILLINGNESS TO HELP

Dwop youn4e into a maiilbox

I

I

,rt,, 4.
J.G.L 6cc14

d4vlox

Lis 44tpe.~h
tC vdA Au$a

r

2n ,, &. A
,AZ~

rllrr rnr

r r

"You don't need a weatherman to know

the way the wind blows."

-Bob Dylan

TUESDAY
3:00-4:30
OCT. 23
SOCIOLOGY DEPT.

Are you in a whirlwind
OR
3re you in a state of calm
However you're feeling; if you're interested
in relating to others or discussing ideas,

I

Six models to choose from. Prices start at less than $23.

experiences and

problems, HOSS, Hillel

Organizations of Social Services, a new peer

:i:. i:;"i:. . . ....;.,. .......-...,.....'... . . ..... .::.....r

I

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