Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 1 PageTwoTHE ICHGAN AIL "I would like to be a cow," Walt Whitman. If you would like to be one too,, come and browse. AT DAVID'S BOOKS Yoghurt sales soar TO BE SIGNED IN DESERT New rules (Continued from Page 1) # spooned their way through 500 mil- lion half-pint containers of the stuff, or some $125 million worth. DAIRY INDUSTRY marketing men talk with missionary z e a l about using advertising to "edu- cate" consumers about the pleas- ant taste of yoghurt. One reason they're so enthus- 209 S. State 663-8441 iastic is that yoghurt is a fairly high profit item that helps to fat- ten the skinny earnings of most dairy operations. Sources say that the profit, before advertising and promotion, is about eight cents n every 32 cent cup of yoghurt, com- pared with a penny on a 35-cent quart of milk. And it is this high markup that has contributed to the growth of a new secondary yoghurt industry - the manufacture of electric yog- hurt-makers for home production. BUT THE BIG commercial man- ufacturers scoff at the possibility that sales could be dented by a do-it-yourself trend. f T h e - 1 ' Paulist Is modern man of today working for tomorrow seeking answers to the problems that beset us in cities and suburbs in parishes and on campus praying sharing counseling celebrating i The Paulists modern priests on the move serving Christ throughout North America For more information about the Paulists, send for THE PAULIST PAPERS-a new vocation kit of posters, articles and recordings. Write to: Father Donald C. Campbell,. Room 103 PaIUlist Fathers 415 West 59th St., New York, N.Y.10019 Meir OKs truce threatening RENT CONTROL POLITICS IN THE FREE MARKET r 1 2 3 4 5 DO YOU GET 25% off of new books in stock? 20% to 10% off on all books ordered? Used books at Kamikazi prices? Free out of print searches? Only at DAVID'S, 209 S. State 663-8441 (Continued from Page 1) wire across the shell-pocked road. There are a few Egyptian mill- tary police and troops there, two or three UN oficers and a cl ister of unshaven Israeli soldiers strol- ling in the sand or perched behind machine guns of their halftracks. There are two dusty little tents - Egyptian and Israeli -separ- ated by a few yards of no-man's land. Thehbackdrop of the historic spot for halting the fourth .Arab- Israeli war in 25 years is littered with battle wreckage. The Israeli military command said yesterday that a Liberian oil tanker hit a mine in the Gulf of Suez, slightly damaging the ship, and that Syriannforces directed ar- tillery fire at an Israeli patrol and that the Israelis returned small- arms fire. BUT A COMMAND spokespersor in Tel Aviv, Col. Nahman Karni, emphasized "the incidents were not very catastrophic and they have to be kept in perspective." Meir described two of the most essential Israel objecti'ns: * "There should be i cease-tire3 on the sea, in the air and on the ground," she said. "For it is im- possible to have a cease-fire in only one place and have shooting in another. * "Secondly, there is a strrng basis for hope that not much time will pass - I can say not many days - when we will see our men - prisoners - returning from Egypt." DentI image 'Continued from Page 1) T O M W I ED E R, Democratic chairman of the city's Second Ward, gave a different perspective. "The quotas were arbitrary any, how. One of the problems with the quotas were that only certain groups were represented. What about groups, say, like the white bluie-collar workers? "The affirmative action program is, at best, a speculative venture. It's so hard to pred ct-you don't know what the activism will be," Wieder said. Wieder added, "If the thing fails' and is unrepresentative like pre- vious ones, you may see mass dis- sention and people walking away from the party." A lecture by: EV EHRLICH National Co-ordinator of Union for Radical Political Economists MONDAY November 12 7:30 P.M. Multipurpose Room UGLI sponsored by: U.G.P.S.A. II I I th ann arbor film cooperative is sorry to announce the CANCELLATION of CABARET originally listed in our published schedule for this Wednesday and Thursday, November 14 & 15 IT WILL BE REPLACED BY I _ _ a I - SKI BANFF I II NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP presents * * * I- i I l r i 1 MARCH 3-9 LAWRENCE OLIVIER and PETER O'TOOLE in SLEUTH (CANADIAN ROCKIES) Total Cost $250.00 (at 7:00 &9:30 p.m.) From the director of FIVE DAY LOVER and THAT MAN FROM RIO. Love the Marx Bros., but TIRED of the Marx Bros.? If so, then we invite you to witness the most daring, dashing and swashbuck- ling comedy since A DAY AT THE RACES. JEAN PAUL BELMONDO AND CLAUDIA CARDINALE in Phillip de Broca's CARTOUCHE!N TUESDAY NOVEMBER 14 RENATO SALVATORI AND' MARLON BRANDO in Gillo Pontecorvo's BURN One of the rare cinematic achieve- ments of the decade, Pontecorvo achieves a depth of feeling for the spirit of his characters that is rarely achievedby, other film- makers. Burn was suppressed by United Artists in this country, and abroad, forcing Pontecorvo to change the title from "Quemada" to "Burn" which would presum- ably de-popularize the film by conjuring up visions of inflama- tory rhetoric and ghetto insurrec- tions. UA also made Gillo change the occupier from Spain to Portu- gal so as not to jeopardize the market for UA films in Spain. SEE IT! Brando's favorite performance. Wed. & Thurs. NOVEMBER 15 FELLINI'S AUDITORIUM "A", ANGELL HALL-$1.00 C L 0 W N S U U TRANSPORTATION: Charter Flight from Windsor, and bus transfers. LODGING: 6 nights at the Voyager Inn, 2/room. SKIING: 5 days lift tickets for Sunshine Village, Mt. Norquoy and Whitehorn - Temple Ski areas. Optional glacier skiing available. APRES SKI: Pools, saunas, night club. ONLY 17 SPACES LEFTOF 50 TOTAL OFDEPOSITS: 668-7225, 663-7178 or U-M SKI CLUB I 1200 protest in. state capital to impeach Nixon (Continued from Page 1) entertained with anti-Nixon skits and songs, as a carnival atmos- phere reigned. There were numerous signs, in- cluding one which declared, 'in- peach Gerald Ford." "I'm just thinking ahead," said its carrier, Sean Doyle, a Lan- sing Community College student DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Sunday, November 11 DAY CALENDAR Musical Society: The Little Angela, Power, 8 pm. Music School: Faculty Chamber Con- cert, Rackham Aud., 4 pm. (WUOM live broadcast, 91.7 FM) Monday, November 12 Science, Technology Future Societies, Seminar: M. Ross, "Social Implications of Physical Energy," E. Cons. am., 4th. fl1. Rackham, noon. Physics: R. Glauber, Harvard U, P-A Bldg. Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. I Q "A THEATRICAL MIRACLE!" -Life Magjazine ~+ THURSDAY NOVEMBER 16 I 7:30 and 9:30 Modern Languages Aud. 3 7:30 and 9:45 Modern Languages Aud. 3 7;30 and 9:45 Modern Languages Aud. 4 May be seen with BURN, 50c off PRESENTED BY Office of Student Life EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY Nib Wi itaso &e oung. BOWEN PIELDHOVSE November 14, 1973 8:30 P.M. Tickets available at McKenny Union Ticket Booth, Annr Music Mart, Huckleberry Party Store. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 58 Sunday, November 11, 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 Arbor area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail htr states and foreign). JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. We save you money when you fly. Winter's a great time to visit Europe. The crowds are gone. The prices are down. And TWAs Youth Fares are even lower than they are during the summer. To qualify, you have to be between 12 and 23 and make your reservations within seven days of your departure. /12 I From Chicago, round trip to: London $293 Paris $305 Madrid $305 Geneva $310 Rome $310 Athens $395 " .. Airfare does not include local airport tax or security charges. International airfares chan We save you money when you land. i~7P Inge Jan, ,'74 I * ~ ". _, * U You'll get guaranteed accommodations without advance reservations at a student hotel for just $5.20 a night, in 50 European cities. 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