SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside Y Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom 4 i High--40 Low-29 See Today for details Vol, LXXXIV, No, 52 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 4, 1973 Ten Cents Einh t Pages i 14 i F If YOU SEE NEWSAPPCALL ALY s _ Position clarified In Friday's Daily we reported that a spokesman for the Arab Student Association had denounced the ex- pulsion'of pro-Zionist Jews from a campus forum on the Middle East War. The spokesman, Hamed Hamud called our offices yesterday to say the official view of the Arab Student Association is that the pro-Zionists were disrupting the meeting and their expulsion was justified. Happenings . . ... feature a lot of meetings and political events . Indochina Peace Campaign meets at 7:30 p.m. at 332 S. State . . . the Farah Strike Support Committee of Attica Brigade meets in the Green Lounge of East Quad at 7:30 . . . there's a Spaghetti Dinner and Dance be- ginning at 5 p.m. at Schwaven Hall, 215 S. Ashley. Donation is $2 per adult and $1 per child with proceeds to go to Clonlara School . . . Plymouth Outreach is sponsoring a Seminar on Human Rights for the Mentally Retarded from 1-5:00 p.m. at Markley Hall, Dining Room 3 . . . "Friends of Folk Music" gathering at the Ark, an informal get together from 3-5 p.m. . . . Monday pre- and post-natal child care is the subject of a meeting in the Community Women's Clinic Health Series - 7:00 p.m. in Rm. 68, East Quad . . . and Attica Brigade meets at 512 Hill at 7:30 p.m. " News dumps Dick The Detroit News, perhaps America's most staunch- ly pro-Nixon newspaper, calls on the President to resign in this morning's editions. The paper says Nixon's re- signation is necesary to avoid three more years "of the doubts, charges and recriminations which have already destroyed the President's ability to lead." The News editorial goes on to say that if the President does not resign, "serious consideration should be given to his impeachment." Martin Hayden, editor of the News, said the last straw for Nixon, as far as the News was con- cerned, was this past week's "missing tapes" incident. Don't drink the water Coast Guard - helicopters are patroling the South Texas gulf coast desperately searching for corroded barrels of deadly cyanide which have been drifting northward from an August shipping accident off the Mexican coast. Two of the barrels - one of them broken . .. were found Friday 30 miles south of Corpus Christi Texas. A Coast Guard spokesman said "if, the barrels are broken open, the cyanide could kill. It can be ingested through the skin. That's how dangerous it is." is. Israelis capture Russians? The London Sunday Observer says seven uniformed Russian soldiers were captured by Israelis on the Syrian ffront during the first week of the Middle East war. The paper says the Russians surrendered when Israeli troops overran their bunker in the first line of Syrian defenses on the Golan Heights. The Observer says the Israelis are hushing the affair up because of its diplo- matic ramifications. Sources for the story were not identified. " Boston plane crash Three crewman of a Pan American Airways cargo jetliner were killed yesterdayswhen their plane crashed in'a fiery explosion as it was, coming in for an emer- gency landing at Logan Airport in Boston. The plane - a Boeing 707 - had left New York enroute for Prest- wick, Scotland when the pilot reported trouble at about 9:05 a.m. and requested an emergency landing at Logan. The plane was heading for a runway when it plunged to the ground. There was no official explanation for the crash but an amateur radio operator said he heard the captain radio that he was losing power. " Washington cover-up Wendy Berlowiz, who has traveled across the country taking off her clothes to support nudity, stripped to the waist inside the White House yesterday. An officer of the Executive Protection Service quickly rushed up and covered her with his jacket while she sang her theme song, "I'm All Covered in Clothes." Berlowitz pulled off the stunt while on an official White House tour. She was not arrested, according to a Secret Service agent, because she wasn't staging a formal protest. Berlov'itz's crusade for nudity began in May, 1972, when sh- was fired from the University of Oklahoma for teaching a class in the nude. "Fight! Fight! Fight!" Julie Nixon Eisenhower, her daddies biggest (and perhaps only) remaining fan, believes it's time for "all of us in the administration" who still believe in Nixon to stand up for the embattled President. Eisenhower said her "day of decision" was October 26 - the day her father put the nuclear bombers on alert. When she heard some people say Nixon had done it to divert attention from Watergate, she scrawled "Fight. Fight. Fight." all over her appointments calend'ar, Eisenhower said. On the inside .. . LSA faculty to vote On purity motion Monday, the Governing Faculty of the literary college (LSA) will consider a proposal which, if approved, would drastically alter its structure by pro- viding for the equal representation of the college's students. Although the proposal is given little chance of adop- tion, its presentation to the faculty highlights a quiet movement by a small but active group of reform advocates who are working to reverse the current faculty domination of academic decision-making in LSA. THE PRIORITY goal of this movement is parity- equal representation of students and faculty in college governing units. Once attained, parity would facilitate a whole series of liberalizations in college academic regulations. At present, the faculty is invested with the main governing authority in LSA. Technically, all LSA faculty members are voting members of the governing faculty-a body which meets once a month under ,the chairmanship of LSA Dean Frank Rhodes. CRITICS OF this system charge that professors who show up for Governing Faculty meetings are not necessarily representative of the diverse interests of the college. community as a whole or even of the faculty itself. Further, they contend that the body's unwieldy size, infrequent meetings and difficulties in raising a quorum renders it incapable of dealing quickly with important issues. Often, they point out, it takes six months or longer for definitive action to be taken by the faculty. Officers of the LSA Student Government-a 15 mem- ber representative body elected by LSA students-are leading the drive to reform the Governing Faculty. THEIR PROPOSAL, sponsored by LSA Student Government Vice President Chuck Barquist and Prof. Marvin Felheim, chairman of the American studies department, would replace the present set-up with a representative assembly composed of fifty faculty members and fifty students. Under the proposal, faculty representatives would be elected from their departments. Representation would be proportional to the size of the department's faculty. Student representatives wo'ld be elected from five divisions randomly assigned at registration. AT PRESENT, LSA Student Government spokesmen point out, students have no vote in the college's top legislative body. "Meaningf l representation for all See LSA, Page 2 0I r>. i z - aliop Running attack, shines in 49- 13, M victory By DAN BORUS Lee Corso knew he would have days like yesterday when he assumed the head coaching reins at Indiana. What he didn't know was that it could be so bad in just one half. That's all it tools for the Wolverines to officially welcome the energetic Corso to Michigan Stadium as the Maize and Blue piled up 42 points in the first half and then played lackluster football to the 49-13 conclusion. DISPLAYING A DAZZLING running attack and a crisp, though infrequent, passing game, the Wolverines looked like the number one team in the land as they cooly dismantled the charged-up Hoosiers early. Big gainers seemed the order of the day as three Michigan scores came from more than twenty-five yards out. The anno'inced crowd of 76,432 had plenty of reason to rise to its feet this perfect football day as Chuck Heater, Cordon Bell, and Dennis Franklin scampered through the pursuitless Hoosier defense. For a while it looked like the Wolverines -would find themselves on the low end of the score for the first time this season. On a first and ten at the Indiana 47, Ed Shuttlesworth, Michigan's powerhouse fullback, fumbled the pigskin in the air and Indiana's Bill Atkinson nabbed the ball and raced to the Michigan 22 before Keith Johnson made a desperation tackle. The no-nonsense Michigan defensive unit took the field and put an' end to any dreams of upset. Three plays netted the Hoosiers minus COACH BO SCHEMBECHLER rips into an unsuspecting official yesterday who had the unmiti- gated gall to call one against the home -team. Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM INDIANA RECEIVER Trent Smock, 81, hears the footsteps of approaching Michigan defender Craig Much as he leaps high to snare a pass. The little offense the hapless Hoosiers were able to generate came through the air. KISSINGER, MEIR CONFER: Is-raelis chargeArabs' two yards and a Willie Jones pass down fell incomplete. AN EXCHANGE of punts, includ- ing a 56 yarder by Michigan's Barry Dotzauer, gave Michigan the ball at its own 44, where the Maize and Blue settled down to the busi- ness at hand. Quarterback Dennis Franklin dropped back behind good pass blocking and lofted the ball towards wingback Clint Haslerig. After an excellent move, Haslerig made a fine grab, turning around to nab the over-the-head toss at the In- diana 28 yard-line. A couple of jabs at the line and an Indiana personal foul placed the pigskin at the 11. With second and eight at the Indiana nine, Chuck Heater took a Franklin pitch off the option and raced unmolest- ed and uncontested for the first TD. No one wearing Indiana white and red was close as the Michigan front line sealed off the running lane. THE SCORE must have had its psychological effect on Indiana. Punter Jim Wenzel, under little- pressure from Michigan's rushers, squibbed the ball off his right foot. When the ball stopped, it was first and ten at the Indiana 33. Five plays later, it was 13-0 Michigan with Ed Shuttlesworth on the score. During the brief drive, the home crowd got another See WOLVERINES, Page 8' President toughs it out in Fla. retreat to flanker Rodney Harris on fourth wi0th ceasef ire. i By AP and Reuter THE SKIRMISHES came as in- Egyptian Third Army soldiers tensive diplomatic activity con- threw a footbridge across the Suez tinued in several capitals in big- Canal and tried to break through power efforts to bring the Arabs Israeli encirclement yesterday but and Israelis toward a peace settle- were shoved back in a sporadic ment and solidify the still-fragile three-hour b a t t 1 e, T e 1 A v i v cease-fire. charged. The Israeli military spokesman, Israeli Premier Golda Meir con- Col. Nachman Karni, said other ferred in Washington until 2 a.m. Egyptian troops on the east bank yesterday with Secretary of State of the canal tried to improve their Henry Kissinger. Theirgtalks fol- positions "here and there" near the lowed similar meetings Friday Giddi Pass in the Sinpi peninsula. among Kissinger, Syrian Deputy He said they also were repulsed. Foreign Minister Mohammed Za- Jws protest Soviet concert at Hill And. viola tion karia Ismail and Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmy. Meir's h a s t i 1 y arranged late night session with Kissinger at Blair House caused her to post- pone her departure for home. KISSINGER WILL meet again first with Egyptian Foreign Min- ister Ismail Fahmy and is keeping President Nixon informed of the discussions by telephone, said Ro- bert McCloskey, State Department spokesman. Kissinger's main topics of dis- cussion with Meir and with Fahmy apparently are the prisoner of war situation, the Egyptian blockade at the entrance to the Red Sea and the status of Egyptian forces on the East Bank of the Suez Canal. In another development yester- day, U.S. officials said Joseph Sisco, the assistant secretary of state for the Near East, probably will go to Damascus later this month for t a I k s with Syrian leaders. KISSINGER DEPARTS tomorrow for Cairo and other Arab capitals. He altered hisschedule to add Tijnisia as a stop. Meanwhile, the Soviet first deputy foreign minister, Vassili KEY BISCAYNE, Florida (Reu- ter)-President Nixon worked 'and relaxed at his home here yester- day, apparently turning his atten- tion from the Watergate affair to concentrate on the Middle East and afuel shortage in the United States. Nixon left Washington abruptly on Thursday, leaving behind a city seething with talk about the bomb- shell disclosure that the taped rec- ord of the President's conversa- tions about Watergate was incom- plete. SPECIFICALLY key Nixon con- versations with former aides John Mitchell and John Dean were said never to have been recorded as a result of technical problems in the taping system. Observers believed Nixon wanted to get away, from Washington to. assess the tumultuous develop- ments of'the past two weeks, which have led to serious talk in Congress of moves to force him from office. But, according to White House officials,. the President is busying himself here dealing with other matters of national importance. NIXON WAS IN the study of his bayside villa at 8:00 yesterday morning, conferring by telephone with Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer on diplomatic efforts to bring peace to the Middle East, the White House said. Nixon also concentrated on pos- sible actions to deal with a worsen- ing fuel shortage. Officials said he was expected to announce actions next week to con- serve oil and petroleum products, possibly including mandatoryhal- locations to refiners and whole- salers coupled with an appeal to the American people voluntarily to cut down motoring and use less energy in heating their homes. WHITE HOUSE officials sought See PRESIDENT, Page 2 By DAVID STOLL Nearly a hundred people picket- ed and passed out leaflets outside the performance of the Leningrad Philharmonic at Hill Auditorium last night, protesting the treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union. The demonstration was sponsored by the Committee for Soviet Jew- curity guards were stationed in- side the building, but no trouble was reported. The unusual secur- ity measures may have been prompted by a near-fracas at the Union Thursday night, which oc- cured when pro-Arab sponsors of a Mideast forum forcibly expelled eight Jews from the meeting for . . .Sunday Magazine features a story about ica's only magic factory in Colon, Michigan . . Michigan's drubbing of another hapless opponent Amer- . and is the :..:..::.....::.