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November 01, 1973 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-11-01

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Thursday, November 1, 1973 T

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Pompidou calls for summit

-- #

PARIS, Reuter - President
Georges Pompidou yesterday pro-
posed a Common Market summit
meeting before the end of the
year to seek a joint European pol-
icy for a permanent settlement of
the Middle East crisis.
In pressing for an emergency
meeting of the nine Common
Market heads of government, he
expressed regret at Europe's
absence from the Middle East
bargaining so far, and deep con-
cern that the United States and
the Soviet Union had been left to
arrange a ceasefire on their own.
"THIS WAY of doing things is
dangerous" Pompidou told a
cabinet meeting, "Because ex-
perience has shown that a private
understanding between the two
great powers can just as well
lead to a general confrontation as
serve detente."

Government spokesman Jean-
Philippe Lecat announced that
Pompidou had written to his eight
market colleages with the summit
proposal, suggesting it should be
the first of a series of regular
European summit meetings. '
lie left open the exact date
and place but officials said he
would not oppose Paris as the
site.
IT PROBABLY cannot be held
until December because Pompi-
dou is due to meet British Prime
Minister Edward Heath and West
German Chancellor Willy Brandt
over the next four weeks.
He defined the purpose as "to
establish a procedure under
which in times ofcrisis represen-
tatives of the nine governments
would hold an emergency meet-
ing to define and adopt as far as
possible a common position of
these governments."

The last Common Market sum-
mit -was held in Paris in Octo-
ber, at that time, the nine heads
of government vowed to work for
full European union in all spheres
by 1980.
THE SURPRISE summit call
came as the Europeans appeared
caught in an uncomfortable
squeeze between their desire to
remain good friends with the
United States, coupled with sym-
pathy for Israel, and their anx-
iety not to incur the wrath of the
oil-producing Arab states.
But Pompidou exhorted the
Europeans to take some positive
common stand on the ' Middle
East because they had direct his-
torical, geographical and eco-
nomic links with the area.
"FOR THESE REASONS and
for many others, and while under-
lining our loyalty to our alliances

meeting
and to cooperate with the East,
it seems to me indispensible that
we put the strength of European
construction to the proof and the
test, as also our ability to con-
tribute to the settlement of
world problems," Pompidou said.
His statement to the cabinet,
quickly made public, did not sug-
gest what the Common European
stand on the Middle East should
be.
But it will clearly be shaped in
part by the oil crisis, which
threatens to cause serious fuel
shortages in Europe, and by the
American outburst against Wes-
tern Europe's alleged non-coop-
eration in U. S. Middle East poli-
cy.
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Paul Dudley White dies at 87

BOSTON (A') - Dr. Paul Dud-
ley White, a world - famous lead-
erin the war against heart dis-
ease, died yesterday. He was 87.
White, who was White House
physician for President Dwight
Eisenhower, died at 11:50 a.m.
EST of complications related to
a recent stroke, a spokesman at
Massachusetts General Hospital
said.
WHITE SUFFERED a mild
heart attack in December 1970,
followed by a mild stroke last
June. He was hospitalized last
August to have a blood clot re-
moved from his brain.
For more than 50 years, White
campaigned for the cause of
moderation and exercise as the
ways to prevent or delay heart
disease.
He saw peril in man's drift to-
ward the soft, easy, push-button
life of modern civilization and
Scampaigned for man to use his
body or lose it.
"NATURE IS ON OUR side if
we are reasonable," he said.
"We can control our destiny

by changing our way of life -
by eliminating tobacco, getting
real exercise, keeping your
weight down and not eating too
much fatty foods with cholesterol.
"Keep moving, and keep think-
ing," White continued. "Don't
let your brain atrophy. Too many
people, die from disuse of their
bodies."
The small - framed physician-
with his blue eyes peering from
behind gold - rimmed glasses -
practiced what he preached:
daily walking, bicycling no
smoking, plus moderation in diet.
THE KEY TO KNOWLEDGE
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by
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MANY OF HIS colleagues cred-
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care than any other physician of
his time.
He was among the first to re-
cognize that the blocking or con-
stricting of heart arteries in cor-
onary thrombosis did not neces-
sarily mean a short life or life
as an invalid.
When Eisenhower was stricken
with a heart attack in 1955, White
was named the President's chief
medical consultant.

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0h-48II 2 >. SNI NYPIA I

1

r

0

Two Point

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Pollution.,

v9

2333 E. STADIUM BLVD.
below the Frontier Restaurant
(near Washtenaw) Ann Arbor
AMPLE FREE PARKING
Call 663-9165 for information

0

is

The Litter Point.
Someone just tossed
a can on the ground.
Use this point
to point it out.
Maybe next time
he'll toss it
in a litter basket.

The Air
Pollution Point.
Don't close
your eyes
to that smoking
smokestack.
Point it out
to someone}
who can do
something about it.

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