THE MICHIGAN DAILY . aturday, December 12, 1974 THE ICHIAN AILYSatrday Decmbe 12,197 Kissinger in Egypt, negotiations to begin (Continued from Page 1) beg for sympathy and charity," ing Israeli leaders "depends on his Heykal said., uccess or failure in Israel." He said Egypt was fully alerted and would never allow Israeli HE INDICATED that it would i plans to materialize. be on Monday or possibly Sunday,! IN CAIRO, a UN spokesperson though a U.S. spokesperson saidrINtCai cabe spckesersn Kissinger was expected here on reported a noticeable tncrease n Monday.the ceasef ire violations in Janu- Monday. ary between Egyptian and Israeli Fahmy said he will leave for forcestranged along the Suez Ca- Moscow on Wednesday or Thurs- nal front. The count was 34 inci- day whatever the outcome of Kis- dents including nine exchanges of singer's talks here and in Israel. fire and 25 firing incidents. Fahmy was originally due to leave The spokesperson reported that for Moscow Saturday but postponed in the area west of Fayed, near his departure. Ismailia in the central sector of, Gill era: Unfulfilled promises .hf The minister said he understood1 the U.S. had also been in touch with the Kremlin since Dayan's Washington visit., KISSINGER, THE architect of# the six-point -agreement on imple-. menting the October ceasefire, was last in Egypt just under a' month ago and had two long pri- vate meetings with the president at his countryside residence out- side Cairo. Sadat, who had an attack ofj bronchitis shortly after Kissinger's. December visit, had been in Aswan most of the time since then. Egyp- tian officials said the president. hopes to return to Cairo shortly, although Kissinger's second round of talks is expected to take place in Aswan. Aswan is a symbol of Soviet as- sistance to Egypt. It is the site of the high dam in the construction of which the then American Sec- retary of State John Dulles refused to participate in 1956. AS OFFICIALS from the two sides waited for Kissinger to ar- rive, Eilts met informally with Fahmy and other members )f the Egyptian government ona hotel ter- race overooking the Nile cataract. The group included Hafez Is- mail, Sadat's adviser for national security affairs. Later, Chief of Staff Maj.-Gen. Mohammed Abdel Ghany El-Gam- asy joined Fahmy 3at the ontel, though Eilts was no longer there. MOHAMMED Hassanein Heykal, editor of Al Ahram, and a clase friend and confidant of Sadat, said yesterday that Israel was trying to divide the Arabs and weaken Egypt's position through the Ge- neva Peace Conference. He wrote that Israel might feel that the Geneva conference was a good start towards the break up of the Arab front. Egypt was en- gaged in the conference on the po- litical and military levels. Jordan was there but only on the p'litical level while Syria was absent al- together, he said. "The Arab world does not know exactly where it stands, and the oil has shifted from the war front to the auction hall," he added. ISRAEL ALSO wanted to sow suspicions between the Arabs and the Soviet Union. "The Arabs would seem to have stepped for- ward towards an American solu- tion after going to war with Soviet weapons," Heykal said. Israel's strategy had not been changed although it now had anew formula. The object remained the same: "The isolation of Egypt completely and turning her upon herself to lick her wounds and to the canal front, there had been three exchanges of fire lasting for a considerable time. He said that the United Nations' T r u c e Supervision Organization (UNTSO) reported two cases of the Israelis using anti-tank mis- siles southwest of Fayed. Otheri weapons used in the incidents in- cluded machine guns, tanks and artillery. THE SPOKESPERSON said that about 10 Egyptian soldiers who, had moved to an advanced psi-' tion in the Suez area in January were still there. The Egyptian authorities agreed to withdraw to' the previous positions "but the cy-' cal Egyptian forces had not witn- drawn yet," he said. The spokesperson reported a E heavy artillery exchange in the Egyptian area south of Adabyia near Suez Abdel Gb Thursday. In the afternoon another (secondf 45-minute exchange took place near Suez. Three Egyptian trucks parked in the compound of the UN Finnish Rec battalion were set on fire as a' result. The trucks were used in D . carrying non-military supplies to Daii the Suez City and the Third Army.I (Continued from Page 1) H Guienze said Gill is "as close to being totally rehabilitated as any r prisoner I've ever seen." Parole officer John Stacy termed him "a brilliant human being, an ambi- tious and persuasive leader. Lee Gill's version? "I ran that place (Milan) in eight months. I had more to do with what went on down in the jail than the goddamn warden did." Gill was paroled under the aegis of the prison's study-release pro- gram, an operation he helped de- sign. The program involves classes for prisoners at the University, and is didn't take long for Gill to move from parolee to enrollee-as atconcentrator in Public Policy Studies. THE CAMPUS political arena saw Gill rise quickly from South Quad Minority Council president, to SGC Vice President for Minor- ity Affairs, and finally to the po- sition he vacated Thursday night. Meanwhile, there was a notice- able improvement in Gill's per- sonal effects. He became involved in a concert promoting operatior which has staged a string of sell- out shows. Gill and Smith, Inc. has so far netted nearly half a mil lion dollars in net profits, accord ing to Gill. Also, he claims to be AP Photo receiving upwards of $1000 for each of his numerous speaking engage ments on other campuses. ohammed Hence the self-styled "modest il Fahmy sort of guy" usually showed up ). [ for SGC meetings clothed in a dashing array of f'shionable shirts and high-heeled shoes. FOR A TIME, it appeared that the new SGC president would re-. vive the Council through sheer personal force. The black, green and red colors of black liberation began appearing on SGC letter- heads; sober working sessions re- placed the zoo-gone-wild atmos- phere prevalent in SGC meetings under previous administrations. The eloquent Mr. Gill lingered in the spotlight for several months after his election made headlines from Chicago to Detroit. He initi- ated the tuition strike with an im- passioned speech to some 600 en- tering freshmen in early Septem- rber. Gill challenged the new stu- dents to "rise up together against the University's tyranny. The plea produced a roaring ova- tion from the audience and tongue- tied amazement from Allan Smith, the University's vice president for academic affairs, who shared the podium with Gill on that remark- able night. * But the tuition strike soon lost whatever impetus Gill had pro- 2vided. By late October a discour- aged Gill sat in his office next - to a pile of unused strike leaflets - and said, "I did what I could,. . we, the Council, did what we could, but the students just wouldn't pick - up the ball." THE FALL semester was punc- t tuated by attacks from Gill's op- ponents. The charges of illegality a and fraud went unproved, but the constant banter of "he's a crim- inal" must have taken its toll. The list of allegations included embezzlement of Council funds, theft of an SGC desk, assault and battery, and failure to properly enroll as a student. The blockbuster was the em- bezzlement charge: an anonymous leaflet chock full of libelous over- tones declared that Gill tried to pocket some $8500 by making a questionable SGC financial trans- action. A Daily investigation pro- duced no evidence of wrongdoing, but the incident raised enough questions and drew enough public- ity to sabotage Gill's waning in- tegrity. GILL, THE winner-against-all- odds, was cast in the uncomfort- able role of the loser who cheated and got caught. No one could prove that he cheated, but the campus saw in SGC a weak double image: a number of Council members in- cessantly voicing their distrust of Gill, and a president who said lit- tle and made fewer and fewer pub- lic appearances. But from his election to his resignation, Gill ran Council meet- ings with a calm, impartial effec- tiveness that moved both support- ers and opponents to reflect at his departure: "He kept SGC from flying apart." In the jurisdictional chaos that has already engulfed SGC since Thursday, the Council may soon regret the exit of the remark- able Mr. Gill. Sadat reviews the situation President Anwar Sadat (center) reviews a military map at Aswan with Lt. Gen. M hani Gamaswy, Egyptian chief of staff (far left), Egyptian Foreign Minister Isma from right) and Hafez Ismail, Eadat's adviser for national security affairs (far right d and Use y Classifieds A Public Seicee ThsNewspaper A The Advertising Coune C This ad is the work of Orrie Frutkin and Gavino Sannah 0 Would you be willing to tell the world, "I did this?" After all, you're pretty good at what you do. Probably proud of it, too. Well, most of us will never get to sign our work. And maybe that's a shame. Because as good as we are, it might make us better. And we can afford to be. Whether we're teachers or short-order cooks, farmers or steamfitters, sales managers or city ar & ILA rt~ /MI Of ... u~i~rulI~~bJ11 n,~t~t SW I I OPEN DAILY 12NODN-482 3300; WA 1U N Y 1> Ntt h6I N TWT, 9A LI !IO S 11 I r --L- -v- i 6 I I rr. ' ;' 1' lad:. M ' ', i T I OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION - 764-0558 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 a.m-4 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS - 764-0557 10 a.m.-4 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY-12:00 p.m. DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 MONDAY thru FRI DAY-12 p.m.-4 p.m. Deadline for Sunday issue- THURSDAY at 5 p.m- We'll all have more to show for it. More money, for one thing.:: Because we'll be giving each other our N money's worth for the products, the services and even the government we pay for. . For another thing, we'll be giving Amer- ica a better chance to take on our foreign business competitors. Not just here. All around the world. That would help bring the lopsided balance of payments back onto our side. And make your dollar worth more. Best of all, as we hit our stride, we'll be protecting jobs here at home. For ourselves and the future. And we'll have a deeper sense of satisfaction in the BY jobs we've got. You don't have to sign your work to see all these things happen. And more. Just do the kind of work you'd be al I RI K