Wednesday, November 7, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pace Three ~ Wednesday, November 7, 1973 THE MKHIGAN DAILY r COURT INTERVENES: N.Y. fireman strike ends By The Associated Press New York fire fighters aban- doned their picket lines yesterday and returned to duty after a five- hour strike that officials said placed the city "in a condition of immediate peril." The first strike in the 108-year history of the New York City Fire Department began and ended on a chilly November day that saw police and civilians join a fire chief in battling one blaze and a truck bearing only two firemen arrive to cheers at the scene of another. The city averages 323 fires daily. "I'm immediately calling off the action of the firemen," Rich- ard Vizzini, president of the 10,- 900-member Uniformed Fire- fighters Association, said after a conference in state Supreme Court. Members of the union be- gan reporting to their firehouses shortly thereafter. WHILE IN Milwaukee, Wis., National Guardsmen continued to man city fire stations as a work slowdown continued for a third day. Officials said more than a third of the 300 firemen scheduled to work the day shift had not reported, despite a court order seeking to halt the epi- demic of "red flu." Trans World Airlines' entire fleet of 249 planes remained grounded, meanwhile, as a strike by the carrier's 5,000 cabin at- tendants lasted a second day. Viet Cong rockets hit Saigon airbase And strikes continued in New York against 48 private, nonprofit hospitals and nursing homes and against the Daily News, the na- tion's largest selling daily news- paper. THE NEW YORK firemen's walIgout came to an end after the union and the city agreed to sub- mit their dispute to an "impasse panel." The panel is authorized to recommend a binding settle- ment. Vizzini said he was calling his men back to duty because of "the gravity of the situation and be- cause of the responsibility and dedication of fire fighters." The walkout was in defiance of a court order and state law. People! Music! Food! BACH CLUB PRESENTS Sherry MEYERS, violin Frank NEZWAZKY, piano performing music by BEETHOVEN, CHAUSSON, MOZART, and (of course) BACH Thurs., Nov. 8-8 p.m. E. Quad, Greene Lounge EVERYONE INVITED! No musical knowledge needed ADMISSION: 50c celebrate the season: PUMPKIN PIE served afterward FURTHER INFO: 761-9578 uac-daystar and South Quasi I LI IINI' AND UPRISIANG Friday, Nov. 9th 8:30 p.m1. South Quad 600 E. Madison (must show I.D.) SECRETARY OF STATE Henry Kissinger passes Moroccan honor guard yesterday on his arrival at the royal palace in Rabat for talks with King Hassan I. issinger tours 1east as fight1ng flare. By The Associated Press would be "of paramount import- Israeli and Egyptian troops ance.". traded small-arms fire across KING HUSSEIN flew to Ku- the Suez cease-fire line yester- wait yesterday for talks with Ku- day while Syria reported Israeli waiti leader Sheik Sabah al Sal- jets fired rockets at its positions em al Sabah and to the Saudi 4- on the Golan Heights. Arabian capital of Riyadh for a These cracks in the Middle meeting with King Faisal. East cease-fire were reported as Last night Hussein flew to Da- Arab leaders worked out arrange- mascus for talks with President ments for a summit' conference Hafez Assad of Syria, Damascus iin Algeria late next week and Is- radio said. rael disclosed the number of its The missions were believed to war dead. be part of intensive Arab diplo- Israel announced that 1,854 Is- matic activity to set up a sum- raeli soldiers had been killed and mit conference in Algiers, where 1,800 wounded in the Middle East an Arabtconsensus toward a fighting, the largest toll in any peace settlement is expected to conflict with the& Arabs since be forged. the first fight for independence SOVIET DEPUTY F o r e i g n in 1948, when nearly 5,000 died. Minister Vasily Kuznetsov was also traveling in the search for THlE PREVIOUSLY SECRET a peace settlement. He held talks death toll was a blow fora acoun. in Damascus with Syrian lead- try of 2.8 million. It was the pro- ers amid reports his next stop portionate equivalent of 138,750 would be Baghdad. Americans. In Damascus a Syrian military U. S. Secretary of State Hen- spokesman charged that two ry Kissinger, meanwhile, arrived formations of Israeli jets roc- in Tunis yesterday for the second keted Syria's advance positions stop of his Middle East peace in the central and southern sec- tour after an overnight stay in tors of the Golan Heights but Morocco, where he conferred were driven off by Syrian jets with King Hassan II. and missile batteries. He said Following a meeting with Tu- Syria suffered no losses. nisian President Habib Bourgui- It was the first reported out- ba, he scheduled meetings with break of hostilities on the Golan President Anwar Sadat of Egypt front since Oct. 24 when Syria in Cairo today. Egyptian govern- accepted the U. N. - sponsored ment spokesman Ahmid Anis cease-fire that ended the fourth said Kissinger's talks with Sadat Arab-Israeli war in 25 years. m Up A MILITARY spokesman in Tel Aviv reported shooting inci- dents along the Suez front, in- cluding firing on a barge which the Egyptians attempted to float across the canal near Port Suez where the Egyptian 3rd Army is cut off by Israeli forces. In Tel Aviv it was ' also an- nounced that Israel had author- ized a 50-truck convoy to car- ry badly needed food and water to the 20,000 men of the 3rd Army stranded behind Israeli lines. The convoy. was in addition to the first 125-truck supply fleet approved by Israel 10 days ago under pressure from Washington. Word of the new convoy reached the tense cease-fire front just as the last seven trucks of the original convoy were being un- loaded. A spokesman for U. N. peace- kseeping forces said U. N. troops had been unable to deploy into Israeli-held areas of the Sinai Desert because "the Israelis are still examining the practical as- pects of their support to the U. N. emergency forces." He did not elaborate. Egypt demands that Israel pull back to this position before there can be any exchange of prisoners or other steps taken toward a peace settlement. The Israelis apparently have yet to supply their map of the Oct. 22 line, which the U. N. forces are under instruction to restore. SAIGON - UP) - A rocket at- tack on the government's Bien Hoa air base and the storming of two army outposts near the Cambodian border signaled the first phase of a new Communist offensive, Saigon authorities said yesterday. A barrage of 35 Russian-made 122mm rockets hit the big air base and nearby civilian areas just before daybreak yesterday, destroying three F5 fighter bomb- ers. The government said one soldier and a child were killed I in the bombardment and 22 sol- diers and civilians were wound- ed. The Bu Bong and Bu Prang bor-! der camps were overrun Mon- day. Spokesmen said yesterday that about 260 soldiers from the camps are still missing and it was feared they had been wiped out.I A GOVERNMENT communique said the number of military and civilian dead on both sides since the Jan. 28 cease-fire has topped the 50,000 mark, standing at noon yesterday at 50,044. Of these, the communique said} 37,763 were North Vietnamesej and Viet Cong dead, 10,498 South Vietnamese military personnel and 1,783 civilians. The South Vietnamese govern- ment has b°°n predicting a new Viet Cong 'offensive for the last several weeks as the Communists took a number of government outposts. But so far there has been no sign of a wide general of- fensive. THE ATTACK on Bien Hoa, 15j miles northeast of Saigon, mark- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 54 Wednesday, November 7, 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. Publishedi daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- I 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).j Summer session publishea 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). ed the first time the base has{ been hit and the heaviest attack1 so close to the capital since the cease-fire. A Viet Cong spokesman said the rocket barrage was in retalia- tion for the alleged bombing of Communist - controlled territory by planes from the base. AI SMORGASBORD WEDNESDAYS 6-9 p.m. $395 1. cold vichysoisse 2. coq an vin 3. potatoes anna 4. shrimp newburgh 5. boeuf burguignone 6. rice 7. swedish meat balls 8. vermicelli 9. breaded veal cutlet 10. fresh garden green 11. tarragon peas 12. eggplant parmesan 13. beef oriental 14. veal hearts 15. chicken giblets 16. cheese casserole 17. sliced beef 18. fried chicken 19. barbecued ribs? 20. fried cod fish 21.,black olives 22. greek olives 23. green olives 4. dill pickles 25. celery 26. carrots 27. green onions 28. crab apples 29. red peppers 30. radishes 31. corn salad 32. sliced cucumbers with sour cream 33. sliced tomatoes with fresh dill 34. red bean salad 35. greek bean salad 36. italian green peppers 37. greek stuffed eggplants 38. sliced beets 39. garlic sauce 40. herring 41. portuguese sardines 42. anchovies 43. cod fish caviar mousse 44. cod fish red caviar 45. liver pate 46. sliced jambon 47. sliced salami, 48. sliced cold turkey 49. chicken salad 50. russian fish salad 51. tuna fish salad 52. cottage cheese 53. sliced mushroom in dill sauce 54. eggrolls 55. hot mustard sauce 56. stuffed eggs bonnefemme 57. cole slaw 58. cold salmon 59. fresh tuna in soyu sauce 60. butter 61. home made bread 62. sliced tongue 63. horse radish sauce 64. chicken wings Japanese 65. fried squid 66. smoked pork chops 67. potato salad 68. russian salad 69. macaroni salad 70. jellied fruit salad 71. tossed green salad 72. chef's dressing 73. french dressing 74. 1000 island dressing 75. russian dressing 76. tartar sauce 77. hot sauce 78. bacon crumbs 79. croutons 80. parmesan cheese 81. sliced onions 82. eggplant salad 83. cocktail sausage 84. hors d'oeuvres 85. stuffed grapeleaves 86. greek feta cheese 87. swiss cheese 88. ceddar cheese 89. bread pudding 90. rice pudding 91. creme caramel 92. baked apples 93. house cake 94. peaches 95. mandarin oranges 96. orange sliced candies 97. bananas i I i I i.x CONTEMPORARY MUSIC FESTIVAL. UNVERSIITY OF MICHIGAN PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE CHARLES OWEN, director UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SYMPHONIC WIND ENSEMBLE HARRY McTERRY, conductor WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1973-8 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM FREDRIC RZEWSKI..... . . . . . . . . . "Les Moutons de Panurge" ROBERT KELLY ...............Toccata (for marimba and percussion) MARIO DAVIDOVOSKY ...... Synchronisms No. 5 percussion and tape) DANIEL PERLONGO ............Changes (for wind ensemble) ANTHONY IANNOCCONE ..............................Interlude ELLIOTT SCHWARTZ...............................Eclipse l Presented by the University of Michigan School of Music OPEN TO THE PUBLIC WITHOUT CHARGE JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. inspiraionsit Yi h wrob toppers cor a inspirations to her w ardrobe, a be to shift the scene from skirts to pants to jeans. Select from a multitude of styles, designs, fabrics. . .in a wide choice of great colors and prints. S-M-L sizes. Shown: Side-draped top in acetate/nylon matte jersey with floral print on black, $16. 4h4& M~iUJ V- - Budapest's Best Following their recent triumphant American debut tour, the BUDAPEST SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA returns for another coast-to-coast tour this season. Their conductor is Gyorgy Lehel, a leading champion of Hungarian composers, and the featured soloist is pianist Gyorgy Sandor, who premiered in 1946 the Bartok Concerto he will play on this program. DEBUSSY: Two Nocturnes BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 1 ANDRAS SZOELLOESY: Musica per Orchestra USIAvEkITY r MUSICAL %SOCIETY