Pcr a Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, January 11, s ,1977 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, January 11, 1977 STEVES LUNCH Arabs 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY (Continued from Page!) HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIALTY and thus exempt from extradi- EVERYDAY SPECIALS tiOn. stAll Day Beef Stroqaiof FRENCH AUTHORITIES step- Bekatped AlDl efSranf up security vigilance 3 Eaqs, Hash Browns, Chinese Pepper Steak againstreprisal attacks at ma- Toast & Jelly-$ 1.35 Eaa Rolls jrFec iprs Home-made Soups, Beef. Israel and the West German Ham or Bacon or Sausane Barlev, Clam Chowder, etc. state of Bavaria, site of the with 3 Eaqs, Hash Browns, Home-made Chili Toast & Jelly-$1.95 Yeaetable Tempuro Munich Olympic Games mass-a (served after 2 pnm.) acre in which Abu Daoud is a 3 Eoas, Ribe Eve Steak, Homburer Steak Dinner- prime suspect, both asked the Hash Browns. Toast & , Spahetti in WineSauce French to continue holding him Jellv-$2.25 Beef Curry Rice in a Paris jail pending formal Baked 'lounder Dinner We make Three Eaq Omlets Delicious Korean Bar-b-a Beef extradition decisions. Eleven Is- (Bul-ko-gee) on Kaiser Roll raeli athletes and a Germanr -Western Omlet Fried Fresh Bean Sprouts policeman were killed in Mu-1 -Bean Sorout Omlet Kim-Chee nich in 1972. The seizure of I the Israelis allegedly was su-r Monday-Friday 8-8 pervised by Abu Daoud fromt Saturday 9-8 a safe distance outside the Mu-t t 4Sunday 10-8 nich Olympic Village.t S769-2288 A Munich court issued an ar- 76-28rest warrant yesterday for Abui 1313 So. University Daoud and sent it to Justice Ministry officials in Paris. is I~q The Phi Chapter of Zeta Beta Tau, one of Michigan's all timet largest and most successful fraternities, is finally making it's return tor the Ann Arbor campus! The National Headquarters, on behalf of the UM Alumni of ZBT, are seeking young men to form the nucleus of a new ZBT chapter on campus. We are looking for men who wish to start THEIR own fraternity -based on their own ideas. Located in a new house, these men can carry on the rich traditions of ZBT which for nearly 70 years was a vital part of the UM community, and which produced scores of outstanding alumni ... Andrew Goodman (Bergdorf-Goodman) and Mike Wallace (C.B.S.) to name a few. If you are interested and would like to know more please call 663-4554, or send a card (or drop by) to ZBT, c/o Fraternity Coordi- nating Council, 4010 Michigan Union, with your name and phone ( number and we will be in touch with you. ZBT., Why just join a Ir'ternity when you can build your own. protest arrest PROXMIRE ANGERS HARRIS: IN BONN, a Justice Ministry spokesman said he could not explain why the French coun- ter-intelligence service arrest- ed Abu Daoud. He said no Ger- man authority had issued a prior international warrant for the man reputed to be a found- er of the Black September ter- rorist gang. He said Bavarian authorities sent an arrest warrant only aft- er they were informed the French were holding him. Shortly before the Bonn state- ment, French officials said Abu Daoud had been arrested with- in hours of receiving an inter- national warrant from West Germany. They could not im- mediately clarify the discrepan- cy. The newspaper Le Monde said it had established that no sen-. for French ministers had been notified in advance of the ar- rest and speculated it may have been a lower level operation. ARAB AMBASSADORS, re- ceived at the Ouai d 'Orsay by the Foreign Ministry's secre- tary-general, Jean Marie Sou- tou, expressed their "profound concern" over the "unfriendly act" towardsthe Arab world, Syrian ambassador Abdel Ka- rimc said. Observers noted it was the first time since the end of the Algerian war in 1962 and the start of France's develop- ment of close relations with Arab states, that such terms had been used. The Algerian official newspa- per El Moujahid commented that the arrest had "stripped naked the anti-Arab face of the French administration." Meet the Senate Soviet Baptists hail Carter inauguration, WASHINGTON (IP) - Patricia Roberts Harris angrily defended' her sensitivity to problems of c blacks and disadvantaged Amer-E icans yesterday during hearingse on her nomination to head thet Department of Housing and Ur-t ban Development.c The verbal wrangle eruptedt when Sen. William Proxmire,r chairman of the Senate Bank-t ing, Housing and Urban AffairsI Committee, suggested the de- partment "needs someone sym- pathetic to the problems of thec poor." HARRIS, A member of a pres-c igious Washington, D.C., law1 firm and former ambassador to Luxembourg, snapped back: Snow - i i blankets campus, (Continued from Page 1)1 The storm is expected to move into New England today. University grounds crews have been busy since Sunday night clearing roads and park- ing areas on campus. University Grounds Manager Ken Wanty said that clearing the area around the University Hospital and commuter parking lots was the first priority for the, cnnw, rarnn rr~wRO~, nrnaof "You do not understand who by criticizing Carter's failure to I am. I am a black woman, the appoint someone to the housing daughter of a Pullman car wait- post who had a background in er. I am a black woman who housing and urban affairs. even eight years ago could not "'Do you have that kind of buy a house in parts of the Dis- track record? Frankly I can't trict of Columbia. I didn't start? find it " he said. out as a member of a pres- BUT PROXMVIRE then told tigious law firm, but as a wo- the nominee: "You are never- man who needed a scholarship theless going to e confirmed, to go to school. If you think Ii. . . overwhelmingly. Because have forgotten that, you are anyone in the Senate these days wrong." who calls for q'ialificalions other "It's not enough to be black than brains and character for or to be a woman or to be poor Cabinet officers is regarded as or to have any particular kind somehow unrealistic, and you of disability to understand the certainly have both brains and problems of so many people," character." said Proxmire (D-Wis.). Harris. in her opening state- PROXMIRE, who later said ment and under questioning by he was undecided whether to! the committee members, said support or oppose her, predict- she slitnorts: ed the Senate would- confirm -Piblic housing "so long as Harris. Carter's only black Cab- there is a disequilibrium be- inet nominee, as the new HUD tween hoising supply and hous- secretary. ing demand." Her nomination received en- -The federal income tax de- thiisiastic support from other diction for mortgage interest committee Democrats, as wellI pav"'ents. as Sen. John Tower, the ranking1 -Exnansion of the urban Renublican, who said he was I homesteading program in which "enormously impressed by Mrs. rumdown center city housing is Harris' background and intel-. made available at practically ligence." I no cost to persons who renovate Proxmire opened the hearing it. Kissinger tells of American strength (Continued from Page 1) church a "servant of Satan" when they broke away in 1951 to form their own group, see themselves as victims of anti- religious repressions. They be- ADVERTISING IN THE:I MICHIGAN DAILYI DOESN'T COST'. IT PAYS- I4 764-554 lieve the official church, which claims 480,000 members to the issidents' 40,000, has knuckled under too much to Soviet au- thorities. The dissident Baptists will have no direct access to Car- ter, however. The only ones who might -have contact with him would be the official Bap- tists, then only if Carter tours the Soviet Union and visits the official Baptists' central Mos- cow church as former Presi- dent Richard Nixon did in 1972.1 IF CARTER asked whether the snow re Soviet Baptist need help, Bich- contracted kov said he would reply, "We University. rely on God and not on the. princes of men. We will deal UNIVERS with any obstacles to our work confirmed: through our faith."]ofre t rlated death Bichkov claimed a loud ever, a h campaign overseas on behalf said: "It's1 of Soviet Baptists could only one had su slow down "progress" in rela- from shove tions between the Soviet gov- juured in ernment and the religion's fol- dent. We ha lowers. it." This is the same point made The snow the Uonivr by officially recognized spokes- shutdown people for Soviet Jews and night repai Russian Orthodox believers, halls were and a main reason that such morning. spokespeople are viewed as The Was' traitors by religious dissidents. iff's departr They see them as serving the dents, but government's cause by trying The Ann to stifle criticism of the Soviet postponedi Union abroad. night meeti moval work has been to firms outside the SITY Hospital had no reports of snow-re- hs or injuries. How- ospital spokesperson hard to tell if some- ffered a heart attack ling snow or been in- a snow-caused acci- ave no way to record also caused one of sity's five boilers to . Crews spent the iring it. but lecture still chilly yesterday >htenaw County sher- tment reported an in- 'fender-bender" acci- no fatalities. Arbor City Council its regular Monday ing until tonight. (Continued from Page 1) honesty calmed ouir troubled land," Kissinger said the Car-, ter administration would inherit "a nation recovered." "The new President and the new secretary of state, Cyrus Vance, deserve the support of all Americans," Kissinger said. IN DISCOUNTING suggestions of Soviet superiority, Kissinger took direct issue with at. least two teams of experts, one work- ing with the CIA and the other outside the government, who have warned recently that Mos- cow appears on the verge of surpassing the United States in military and nuclear strength. "I do not believe that any American administration would permit a situation to arise in which the Soviet Union could achieve military strategic su- periority over the United Stat- es. However, Kissinger went on, the "essence" of the situation is that "military superiority has no practical significance" when the two superpowers each have the capability of destroying civ- ilized life. NEEDED: 4 students with 20-20 vision (or corrected to 20-20) to participate in visual form detection experiments. One hour is required per day (same hour each day), Monday-Friday, beginning Jan. 13 and ending Apr. 19. You must be available all term. Pay $2.50 per hr. If you are interested, call Thelma at 764-9398. A WON OWA W- k ra, err "THOSE WHO ARE still talk- ing abot superiority are not doing the American people a service," he said. Later, at the Capitol, Vance called the subject of military superiority "a mixed bag." Answering reporters' questions, he said: "In some areas we are superior to the Soviets and in other areas they are super- ior to us. Over-all, there is gen- eral parity between the two nations." However, Vance quickly add- ed that he had not "had a chance to examine recent es- timates of Soviet military cap- abilities. Vance had a closed two-hour session with some members of the Foreign Relations Commit- tee. He will testify on his nom- ination to succeed Kissinger at an open hearing today. Kissinger's apoearance at the National Press Club had its light moments, with frequent refer- ences to his celebrated verbal duels with reporters over the credibility issue. - HE ACKNOWLEDGED "dup- ing" reporters at least once - when he denied in 1975 that he had set out for the Middle East already carrying a list of Is- raeli prisoners to be released by Syria. Kissinger said he was guided by "humanitarian con- sideration" in telling some re- porters who traveled with him that he was negotiating for the prisoners' release. Press Club officials teased Kissinger by preceding his speech with the "Long Ran- ger" th Mme. And a belly dan- cer fronr Vienna, Va., operating under the name Shadiah but in reality Linda Dinsmore, bounc- ed onto a table in front of the secretary for some energetic wiggles and hip tosses, and then grandly tossed her blue veil at the surprised Kissinger. In a serious vein, he told the reporters that what may at times appear to be a "lack of candor" is really a govern- ment trying to make up its mind about a policy. He appealed for an end to "a state Nof perpetual inquest" into government by the press which he attributed to cynicism brought about by Viet- nam and Watergate. He said it was time for the United States "to build a new foreign policy consensus" sim- ilar in scope to the post-World II period. "This should be a time," I is- singer said, "when the Ameri- can people rediscover their un- ity." FLIQUAQY LSAT SEMtINARS START JAN. 28 12-Student Avg. Classes 5 Specialist Instructors 18 Class Hours c ;Id Cr art imCeja ES W'eseh+ EXHIBITION AND SKIE ..,, of fine art prints l/f featuring the works of Chago, Dad, Matisse, Gauguin, Van Gogh, Breughef, Cezanne, Frankenthaler, Homer, Klee, Miro, Monet, Magrtts, Picasso, Rembrandt, Renoir, Tououae-Lautrec, Wyeth , and others. INCLUDING: M.c.EScHER, HELIOS, and prints never before seen in the Ann Arbor area over 1200 different prints -T .Sad. s LO.. C J r\ r NEW SELECTION EVERY DAY! he, ~Aowl P~lcES ARE: r Mosr.Jnov 10 Qa- 9 - NI ilduk r, I U, ar1 .4, __ if, r-% Ac" F/