Wedmosdoy, Octcber 24, 1 X73 Pact Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,,,,,,_ c rayc rk rac ;lq Middle East fighting continues iContinued from Page 1 ) tion required the complete with- drawal of Israeli forces from all Arib territory occupied in Jun, 1967, and afterwnrds. Syria further understood thlvt he legitimate national rights of the Palestinians would be safeguarded under terms of the resolution. It was the first official report by the Syrian government that it was prepared to observe the truce. As the Pentagon reported arms shipment cutbacks yesterday, Pres- ident Nixon held urgent consulta- tions with Kissinger on the Middle Enst crisis. During the weekend there had been reports that the big powers were trying to create a cease- fire by using their arms shipments as barg!ining weapons. The Pen- tagon said shipments were contin- uing but "at a somewhat reduc- ed rate.' OFFICIALS ADDED that the supplying of heavier military equipment, such as tanks and Tapes hold secret planes, by ship is continuing with- -u( measureable change. State Department spokesman R o b e r t McCloskey flatly de- nied that the United States had threatened to cut off its arms sup- plies to Israel if the Jerusalem government did not accede to the cease-fire arrangement. U. S. officials said, however, that a joint U. S. - Soviet agreement to limit arms shipment might follow implementation of a cease-fire as a first step toward an over-all arms limitation accord for the Middle East. The officials stressed this was on- ly a hope and that there was no agreement on any limitation, al- though the matter was discussed during Kissinger's brief visit over the weekend to Moscow. SINCE EARLY LAST week, the United States has been airlifting nearly 1,000 tons of ammunition and other supplies each day to Israel. The .Russians have been supplying a similar amount to the Egyptians and Syrians. AP Photo ISRAELI SOLDIERS wearing flak vests and helmets watch as an Israeli tank rolls over a pontoon bridge on the Suez Canal. Officials said the tank was returning to the East bank of the canal. Ni xon agrees to release tapes (Coiitinued from Page t)( HOUSE SPEAKER Carl Albert of Oklahoma and other Democratic leaders moved to avoid an early floor vote on the issue by ordering the House Judiciary Committee to begin an immediate inquiry into possible grounds for impeachment. Such an inquiry is the "normal origin" of an impeachment pro- cedure; alternatively, the House may bypass this step with a floor vote. House Democrats were fear- ful yesterday that an early vote would have negative results and squelch future impeachment con- sideration. Democratic floor leader Thomas O ' N e i 1 1 of Massachusetts said "there is no question that (Nixon) dampened" the outcry for im- peachment by announcing the tape release, but urged that the Judi- ciary Committee inquiry begin im- UAC loses backers mediately as planned. REP. OGDEN REID (D-N.Y.) told The Daily he felt the Presi- dent's action removed "the most dramaticbut not the most im- portant issue" from further dis- cussion of impeachment. GOP Congressman Marvin Esch, of Ann Arbor told The Daily he saw the tape release "definitely taking the wind out of a lot of this impeachment talk" but felt Nix- on's actions would "probably not" restore public confidence. Earlier Esch issued a statement blasting Nixon's actions of the weekend. "I am shocked and dis- mayed," he said. "The President has brought upon us a crisis of tonfidence that we can ill afford to face. His actions will leave a permanent shroud of doubt over any further investigations of this matter." REP. PETER DUPONT (R-Dcla- ware) told The Daily the announce- ment from the President was "good news but as far as im-- peachment goes it doesn't change anything."' SContinued from Page 1 ) tee the President said he had ap- proved executive clemency for Watergate defendant E. Howard Hunt and that there would be no problem raising $1 million i, hush money for Hunt and the six otner Watergate defendants. "Unquestionably," C o x s a i d, "confirmation of Dean's testimony would aid the grand jury in de- terminling the existence, member- ship and scope of a cover-up c1n- spiracy. Conclusive disproof, on the other hand, would raise a question of perjury by Dean ." -EXTENT OF discussion among Nixon, Dean and Haldeman be- tween 10:12 and 11:55 a.n. on March 21. "All accounts," Cox said, "confirm that the sole sub- ject was the Watergate break-in and wiretapping and. the subse- quent cover-up.'' -What was said during a meet- ing among Nixon, Dean, Halde- man, Elhrlichman and White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler at 5:20 p.m. that day. "The sole topic of conversation was Watergate." Cox said. "Dean has testified that it was clear to him after this meet- ing that the cover-up would con- tinue." -What the President, Dean, Ehr- lichman, Haldeman and Mitchell said at an hour and 43-minute meetingMarch 22. "Dean, Mit- chell, Ehrlichman and Haldeman each have testified that the meet- ing centered in general on Water- gate . . . This meeting is likely to reveal the knowledge and motives of the participants. -T H E CONVERSATIONS be- tween the President and Dean on April 15, 1973. Dean has said the TICKETS NOW ON SALE! Pi'esident told him he had been joking about the $1 million and acknowledged that he had been foolish to discuss executive clem- ency with former White House aide Charles Colson. "If true and accurate," Cox said, 'this testimony would indi- cate an important dimension to the cover-up conspiracy. If false and misleading, a perjurious in- justice has been done for which the grand jury can return an In- dictment." Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard END TODAY! 1214 s.unisiy "I Could Never Hove Sex With Any Mon Who Has So Little Regard for My Husband" at 1,3, 5, 7,9 pm. Theatre Phone 668-6416 STARTS TOMORROW NOW RATED Shown Thur.-Fri. at 9 p.m. Only PLUS SHOWN THURS. & FRI. AT 7:30 ONLY Thur Oct 25 One Night Only The 11th HOUSE featuring LARRY CORYELL AFri-Sat Oct 26,27 MOSE ALLISON Coming Nov 1.2.3 LONNIE LISTON SMITH iHE NEW PHOENIX IPERTORY W4 COMNY T Edord Hc, ,- Mot. -8 p c' q 0,.c'ors.mH~ ' Pr qtr, Stephen Po A-, r Thurs., Oct. 25-8 p.m. Fri., Oct. 26-3 p.m. I ]I (Continued from Page 1) tion of the governing structure,? program structure, and finances of UAC-will be drawn up by a com- mittee of representatives from OSS, the League, the Union, UAC and other groups. ACCORDING TO UAC Coordi- nating Vice P r e s i d e n t Mark Thomas, "We really don't know which way it will go" in terms of outcome. In terms of sponsorship, "every- thing from a totally student con- trolled board to a totally adminis- tration board has been suggested," said White. "We'll probably land somewhere in the middle ground." THOMAS S A I D administrators have favored an at least par- tially administration board, wnich might give the group UAC more sway and credibility with the Re- gents. Eventually, said White, the plan must be approved by the Regents, since UJAC was created by the iie- gtnt and is defined in the Re- gental by-laws. Before that, however, it wll have to gain approval by the Of- fice of Student Services. THE COMMITTEE will present the proposal to Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson by Jan. 15. UAC hopes to have the proposal before the Regents by March. Although Easthope said he has not received acceptances from all the people chosen to serve oi the committee, "students will clearv dominate" the group. EASTHOPE ADMITS that while a number of present UAC policies will be reconsidered, "We don't want to lose the character of UAC." Sat., Oct. 27-8 p.m. RACHEL JOHN ROBERTS McMARTIN a GEORGES FEYDEAU odoo'.d by SUZANNE PAXTON GROSSMANN WHITEHEAD directed b R STEPHEN PORTER Sat., Oct. 27-8 p.m. - t - - ma- Sun., Oct. Sun., Oct. 28-3 28--8 p.m. p.m. New resolution approved tContinued from Page1 1 ro were withdrawn from the Suez Canal at the request of Egypt a few days after the latest war start- ed on Oct. 6. There were 88 ob- servers assigned to various areas of the Israeli-Syria sector. The intensity of fighting yester- day created the possibility of argu- ments over just where the battle lines were drawn on Monday, when the first cease-fire was to have taken effect. After the vote, Soviet Ambassa- dor Jacob Malik accused Israel of violating the cease-fire. U.S. Am- bassador John Scali told the coun- cil there had been charges of vio- lations by both sides and it was impossible at the moment to de- termine their accuracy. THE ARGUMENT flared when Malik called for immediate adop- tion of the new resolution and the Chinese envoy, Deputy Foreign Minister C h i a o Kuan-hua, ob- jected. Chiao charged that the United States and the Soviet Union were using the Security Council "as a tool to be juggled at will," The argument between Malik and Chiao broke out and the council president, Sid Laurence McIntyre of Australia, called in vain for or- der. He then gaveled the session into suspension w h i 1 e tempers cooled. f u RACHEL JOHN ROBERTS McMARTIN FRIEDRICH DUERRENMATT "optsd by MAURICE VALENCY d.rct.d by HAROLD PRINCE // Vwl PS -owl tWR '.: L ML-7 mca*js r<4 f F HAROLD PRINCE A Tickets on sole at PTP Box Office Mendelssohn Lobby, Mon.-Fri. 10 o.m.-5 p.m. For further information call 764-0450 2333 E. 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