Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 22, 1972- Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 22, 1972 N. Viets, U.S. continue meets By AP and Reuters PARIS-U.- S. Presidential envoy Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese negotiator Le Duc Tho met late into the night yesterday, in an attempt to put the final touches to a Vietnam peace settlement. The two men met for the second time of their current round of talks in the Paris suburb of Gif-sur-yvette. For the first in their three years of meetings, no mystery surrounded the site of their talks, and journalists crowded around the villa where the meeting was held. The meeting was punctuated by laughter and joking on the part of Kissinger and Tho, suggesting that the discus- sions may be going well be- hind the total news blackout. Kissinger was ordered by Presi- dent Nixon to fly to Brussels today to confer with Indonesian President sessiSuharto on progress in the peace talks and arrangements to super- vise the hoped-for Indochina cease- fire. Indonesia, along with Canada, Poland, and Hungary has agreed to GENEVA (M)-The second phase in principle to contribute to a of the Strategic Arms Limitation peace - keeping force that would Talks (SALT) between the U.S. supervise a cease-fire. and the Soviet Union began yes- terday. In Vietnamn, the government ra- reddio said yesterday that chances for saingt e on sent a essage a halt in the fighting appeared+ saingrstwth the hopess of ltanh mmnn and warned the nation kid" rest with the success of theo be ready for a political struggle sessonsagainst Communism. The opening round of the secondI phase, called SALT II, is likely to "When the shooting is over an- last until shortly before Christmas. other struggle will appear, andI It is designed to lay groundwork the South Vietnamese people will for further negotiations that could have to fight hard if they still last for the duration of the five- want to live in freedom and de-t year interim SALT agreement mocracy," the official Saigon radio signed by Nixon last May in Mos- said. COW. The broadcast also revealed thatf That agreement was the culmina- special committees were being es-I tion of the SALT.I talks that began tablished and political action train-I in 1969, and resulted in a per- ing teams were being sent! manent ceiling on anti-ballistic mis- throughout the country to prepareI siles and a five-year freeze on the the people for anti-communist ac- total of long-range offensive sys- tivities.j tems. Indians plan protest at Thanksgiving site PLYMOUTH, Mass. (R) -While tants. It is a private, nonprofit costumed "Pilgrims" renew a organization. 350-year-old Thanksgiving Day ob- At a wharf near the Plymouth servance here tomorrow, a group Rock shrine is a copy of the May- of Indians plans a symbolic fast flower, and it is there that the in what they call a "day of protest fast is expected .to take mourning." place. "As most Americans sit downl Freeman said the point should to a traditional Thanksgiving bermade that Indian'and white meal," the United Americans of man got along very well in Ply- New England said in a state- mouth from the time the May- ment, "these Indians are fasting flower landed there in 1620 until to mourn the loss of Indian life, a bloody war fought with the land and culture, which for them Wampanoag Chief King Philip in began with the arrival of the Pil- 'the early 1670s. grims." Massasoit, father of Chief King The group organizing this year's Philip, signed a peace treaty with protest said it will include repre- the Pilgrims soon after they land- sentatives from the Wampanoag, ed, promising not to harm them APPhto Narragansett, Passamaquoddy, as long as he lived. Later mem- Chippewa a n d Rappahannock pers of his tribe taught the Pil- Chipewa n Rapahanockgrims how to grow corn. tribes, all Northeastern tribes. im how torow crn "I thinkitsamsunouae In 1970, after a ceremony at the "Irthofktit's a most unfortunate Plymouth Rock, a number of In- turn of things," said David B. Free- dian protesters went aboard the man, director of "Plimoth" Plan- Mayflower II, climbed the rigg- tation, "I feel very strongly in ing and threw some mannikins favor of Indians getting together overboard. Officials estimated the bu. t thissort of thing s damage at only $100 to $200, but very disruptive." asked police to remove the pro- 'As far as action is concerned, testers. it should be in Washington," Free- man said. "Foscusing attention on a little place like this doesn't ° seem to be of much value to the Indians. Of course, that's just one man's opinion."~ He added thatthehplantation's A PERSO only concession to the holiday is jcA P R 0 the preparation of more food than Q usaul, which is offered as true Pilgrim fare to any visitors. Plimoth Plantation is a re-cre- ation of Plymouth as it appeared in 1627, with costumed workers cooking food, making barrels, tend- ing livestock and doing other jobs .,.'.. performed by the original inhabi- . .j i i HAPPY TH ANKSGI VING! JAY, -AVE, CHET, AND HAROLD U-M BARBERS & STYLISTS Open Today Til 5:15 p.m. V 0 Eskimo Art Carvings and Engravings 0 INDIA ART SHOP 330 Maynard St. Join The Daily AP Photo HENRY KISSINGER lunches at a Paris restaurant yesterday with an "unidentified girl." Israel, Syria ight over Golan x By the AP, UPI and Reuters TEL AVIV-Israeli and Syrian tanks and planes waged a furious, eight-hour battle along the Golan Heights cease-fire line yesterday -the worst outbreak of fighting in the area since 1970. Both sides issued conflicting reports about the conflict, which ended shortly before nightfall. An Israeli military spokesman claimed Israeli jets shot down six Syrian MIG 21 fighters and destroyed 15 Syrian tanks. In Damascus, Syrianiauthorities re- ported the downing of two Is- raeli aircraft, and the destruction of 14 Israeli tanks and at least five artillery batteries. The fighting was sparked by an Israeli air raid on a Syrian army position and three Arab guerrilla bases seven miles inside Syria. It came in reprisal for guerrilla raids against Israeli settlements in the occupied Golan Heights. Syria replied with artillery and Read Daily Classifieds tanks, and both sides traded gun- fire while dogfights between the rival airforces swirled overhead. The Israelis considered the sit- uation serious enough to warrant a visit by Defense Minister MosheDayan, who toured army positions and civilian settlements. The violent fighting along the Golan Heights ceasefire line raises some delicate questions about Syria's relations with its closest allies-Egypt, Libya and the Soviet Union. Syria is linked with Egypt and Libya in the year-old Federation of Arab Republics, and all three members have pledged to come to each others assistance in the event of an attack on any one of them. This is not a formal obligation under their constitution, which only says a member government may inform the federal authori- ties about any internal or exter- nal threat "so that they might take the essential measures with- in their jurisdiction to preserve security and order." But last September, after a large Israeli attack on Lebanon and amid fears of one on Syria, the federation's ministerial coun- cil met in Cairo and announced that any attack on a member state would be considered an at- tack on the federation as a whole -and would be repelled. There has been no suggestion yet that the Israeli attacks on Syria have yet reached the stage of calling for a joint federal counter-attack. But as each exchange becomes more serious, the prospect must loom larger in the strategic think- ing of the Arabs. NAL GIFT 0 The monogrammed CIRCLE PIN 6 is a campus tradition 4A' if5T Although the current meetings are mainly to set the stage for more talks, the opening round could revive issues that brought much discussion in SALT I. The Soviets might again raise the subject of the presence of U.S. ntclear equiped aircraft in Europe. In turn, the Americans could insist that Soviet intermediate-range mis- siles pose a threat to U.S. allies on the continent. The United States also might re- new its suggestion that proposed talks on mutual and balanced force reductions could provide a better forum than SALT for such Europe- related issues. The first meeting of SALT II lasted about 95 minutes. American officials said the session was "characterized by the same degreeI of concentration and seriousness" that prevailed during the earlier talks. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan.tNews phone: 764-0562. second Class postage paid at. Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer-1 sity year. Subscription rates: $10 bys carrier (campus area); $11 local mail; (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesdayl through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mali (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign), Join us Thanks, Dinner Wed., fro (we'll be all day T )imWIIL for a -giving Special m 11:00 closed Thurs.) FOODS Y&SYAU fW many sizes and finishes to ./3TRI choose from STERLING,GOLD FILLED, OR 14 KARAT GOLD No charge for engraving ^ from $4.00 0 16 Nickels Arcade for beautiful jewelry STOP IN AND BROWSE N.,. a->. oso ,osc t r ac XUEEEXE5 ~)5& SWTCSZ fWA) OP*' T1&-7915~ womw L WEDNESDAY is SINGLES NIGHT SHE I "A BRILLIANT FILM-STUNNING.! It showers intelligence on parched lips, reviving faith in posi- tive artistry and sophisticated cinema. It is a moral comment on the total degeneracy of the British upper class. The shafts are aimed both high and low and hit with a shattering accuracy. Rare indeed is the perfection a n d polish provided off screen and on. Even rarer is the complexity of humor, the easy slide from slam-bang-bladder to slithering stiletto to music-hall A~L'!N BUJCK PBO6uCDG PETER O'TOOLE ALASTAIR SIM ARTHUR LOWE "UNADULTERATED THE 4111 ULING CLASS HARRYANDREWS -CORAL BROWNE MICHAEL BRYANT GRAHAM CROWDEN NIGR.GREEN WILAMMERVYN " CAROLYN SEYMOUR - JAMES VILLIERS ~. EmPERJEOM .wos.aJULES BUCK& NUTTINESSI" -Susan Stark, Detroit Free Press uch intensity that it may unt memory. O'Toole be- funnv disturbina. finally "Peter O'Toole-a performance of s trouble sleep as surely as it will hau ins whereo nthar ntorsst nn He is i I m