-, Doge Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 25, 1972 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 25, 1972 G ravel speaks here; blasts U.S. secrecy. By GORDON ATCHESON Throughout his term in the Sen- "The s u r v i v a I of humankind sate Gravel said he hasardently should not be left to politicians but opposed the existence of the peace- should be in the hands of the peo- time draft. He. said he expects the pie," said Sen. Mike Gr'avel yes- current draft law will not be ex- terday afternoon. tended next year.,.Gravel also said he favored amnesty for all con- Gravel (D=Alaska) addressed a scientious objectors, exiles, and 200-person crowd at the UGLI Mul- swar criminals" including William tipurpose Room. He emphasized Calley. the American public's need and right to knowv about the affairs of. Toward the end of his speech government. Gravel hit United States foreign er .policy hard, charging "the people Gravel claimed "98 per cent of in power believed we needed sec- what is now secret should be made recy to fight the cold war-from public, which can only improve the that time laws have kept informa- government. Now the electorate tion from the American people. It cannot evaluate issues. It just does may have been the beginning of not have the facts." the end." SPEAKS AT UGLI Weicker backs GOP hopefuls f i ' 3 ., , ; E . j l e By ANGELA BALK "These threerguys represent ev- erything I'm trying to do in the Republican Party," said Senator Lowell Weicker (R-Conn) in a campaign speech yesterday in sup- port of Sen. Robert Griffin, Con- gressman Marvin Esch, and Mi- chael Renner, Republican candi- date for the Michigan House of Representatives from the 53rd dis- trict. About ten persons, including Ren- ner, were present for the meet- ing in the UGLI Multipurpose Room. The Republican party, accord- ing to Weicker, "has said "no" to labor and minorities in the past, but it intends to change this policy in the future. Weicker's mission, he said, is to create "an image of warmth and caring for people" for the Republican party and thus helpj to make what he called "an en- tirely different party." Griffin "speaks for the people of Michigan" and is not afraid to stand out for his constituents against the party, said Weicker. He went on to say that he did not con- sider that the Republican party had a dominant ideology but that I "a good Republican is a Republi- can who's elected." Weicker's favorable opinions of Griffin and Esch come from work- ing with them, he said. He added that he was not campaigning for ,them because his party sent him but because "I wanted to." Weicker said that the Republi- can party will appeal to young votersbecause Republicansyare "implementers" who "can make the ideals (of young people) reali- ties." Weicker's speech in Ann Ar- bor was sponsored by Students for Renner. "The Cursed and the Blessed: The Generation of Aushwiz and Jerusalem-A Dialogue with the Theologians" DR. EMIL FACKENHEIM and DR. IRVING GREENBERG UNIV. OF TORONTO UNIV. OF NEW YORK The Holocaust as an orienting experience-(a (a Sinai and the Exodus) challenge to faith-faith and doubt after the Holocaust. The end of the secular-religious Jew dichotomy; Holocaust as the test of communal stand- ards of humanity and the positive as well as negative conclusions we can draw from tht experience; technology and science after Auschwitz; Ausch- witz and Jerusalem. What is there left to believe in about God, man, history.and Judaism? THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26 8 P.M. HILLEL, 1429 HILL Later at a news conference, he blasted the Nixon administration for . the Watergate affair. He charged "Richard Nixon is totally involved in Watergate. No one else' on the face of the earth would have had any use for that infor- mation." Gravel said he believes the pub-I lic is just beginning to realize the implications of the Watergate af- fair, which he says could provide the impetus to propel George Mc- Govern into the White House. Still Gravel conceeded "the national (Democratic) ticket is in a tough situation." During the speech, Gravel also condemned Defense Department spending. He said the defense budget has risen $8 billion since last year, pointing to overkill as the major reason. "By 1976, we will have enough warheads to de- stroy the Soviet Union 56 times. They will be able to destroy us 22, times. Obviously w e' r e well ahead." He continued his analysis "if the United States had an open foreign1 policy, we would benefit the thirdI world nations instead of the dic-' tatorships of the world." Gravel characterized South Korea as such a dictatorship operating under the guise of democracy. Gravel went on to claim the United States is slowly losing its own democracy. He assessed the current state of democracy as "a child accepting paternalistic infor- mation and paternalism is the most sophi'sticated type of tyranny." The solution, according to Gra- vel, is "allowing the people to know everything. They will make mistakes, but I'd rather take my chances with that than with the current paternalism." Gravel, who has been stumping across Michigan for the last two days, concluded both his speech: and news conference bythanking his hosts in Ann Arbor, Demo- cratic hopefuls Bob Carr, Marvin Stempien, and Perry Bullard. 3I IV, "Quantity Rights Reserved! r WESTGATE SHOPPING CENTER Daily 9:30 to 9:30 - Sunday 10 to 6 I ' . . U U a a I , I I I I ~ I ~"~ ~aENER x THE ' TENNA "SLIM-LINE' COMPACT" A CITY NOTICE Ann Arbor Cablecasting Commission A public meeting of the Commission will be held at 7:30 P.M. on Friday, October 27, 1972, in the Council Chamber at City Hall. The meeting will be devoted to Commission dis- cussion and voting on amendments to the draft operating rules for the Public Access Channel, followed by action on a motion to adopt the amended rules. The draft rules were pub- lished in the Ann Arbor News on Sunday, October 15, and are available for public inspection from the Commission's Secre- tary on the third floor of City Hall. Persons wishing to propose specific amendments to the draft rules may do so by submitting them in writing to the Commission's Secretary, not later than 4:00 P.M. on October 27. For the Commission by: SIDNEY G. WINTER Chairman Date of Publication: Wed., Oct. 25, 1972. WINTER TERM COURSES OPEN TO NONSPECIALISTS Departmrent of Slavic Languages and Literatures 8 TRACK CAR STEREO TAPE PLAYER Russian 101. e. Russian 111. Russian 446. Russian 450. Russian 452. Russian 453. Czech 485. LANGUAGE First-Year Russian. See Time Schedule for times. 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