Saturday, October 23, 1916 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page F ,re Saudy coer2,17 KpMCIA AL I Irish j DUBLIN (Reuter) - Irish President Cearbhall O'Dalaigh resigned his post yesterday af- ter a stormy disagreement with the government, throwing the political scene into confusion. Prime Minister Liam Cos- grave went into emergency session with his cabinet after the President's announcement, which came three days after a government minister had called him "a thundering dis- grace." THE 65-YEAR-OLD Presi-1 president steps down Carter given edge in W illiamsburg debate' dent's resignation was thought likely to put severe opposition pressure on the Fine Gael-La- bour coalition government as the machinery to choose a new candidate as head of state went into action. O'Dalaigh had been attacked by Defense Minister Patrick Donegan because he exercised his presidential powers to delay anti-guerrilla - legislation giving the security forces greater pow- ers to hold suspects without charge. An-opposition Fianna Fail m6- tion to fire Donegan was voted minister of state and in partic- down in parliament Thursday. ular as a minister of defense?" O'DALAIGH, a former Chief Justice of Ireland who was chos-t en as an unopposed candidate for the presidency in Decem-' ber, 1974, gave no reason forI his resignation in a terse state- ment last night. But a letter from thej Presi- dent to Donegan made it clear that he saw no alternative butI resignation after the Defense Miniser's remarks and the de- feat of the opposition motion Thursday.1 The President asked Done-! gan, who had offered an apolo-] gy: "Have you any conception; of your responsibilities as a UNDER THE IRISH Constitu- g (Continued from Page 1) i ; 'i'i 7 , 1 tion a new president must be And Ford said Carter has slip- elected within 60 days, but it is ped id the public opinion polls, thought the government is un- although still leading; because likely to be able to find a candi- the Democrat "is inconsistent date acceptable to the opposi- in many of the positions that tion. he takes ..." An open presidential election But it was not the strident with candidates from both sides stuff of the campaign platform, could lead to the fall of Cos- or of some points in the previ- grave's government. ous debates. When the debate' was over, the candidates met Until an election, a presiden- in center stage, smiling, shak- tial commission, consisting of ing hands, exchanging the pri- the Chief Justice and the chair- vate words of men who know men of each house of Parlia- that next time they meet; one ment, will take over the duties will be President-elect and one of the head of state. will be a loser. Their familiar economic litan- ies came up repeatedly. I) leTM Now that's true love... TOWSON, Md. UP - Stewart Goldstein stood before the judge, waiting to be sentenced for hiring a man to kill his wife. Beside him was his wife Julia. "I really don't believe Stewart meant to do what trans- pired," the 25-year-old woman told Judge Marvin Land in Balti- more County Circuit Court. "STEWART MEANS a great deal to me," she said. "To lose him would be very painful." Her plea left Land unmoved, and he imposed a maximum 18- year sentence Thursday on the 30-year-old defendant. His crime? Paying a "hit man" $5,000 for a murder in April, 1974. The intended victim? Julia Goldstein, then his bride of nine days. THE MURDER NEVER occurred because Goldstein selected an undercover detective as the contract killer so he could collect on a life insurance policy. "I am really that much in love with Stewart," Ms. Goldstein said. "He's that important to me. If we can just get, this thing over and behind us, I think we would have a chance to make this' a normal and kind of happy marriage." GOLDSTEIN WILL be eligible for parole in three years., "All my life I've always considered myself to be a tough guy. I always used people, and I never cared how. much I hurt them," Goldstein said. "Now I know I'm no longer that tough guy. I no longer have the cocky attitude I once had. I'm afraid. I'm scared. Being in prison has taught me a lasting lesson. I realized Julia really counted." Rep. hopefuls. talk ed. funding, welfare public schools. Carter said he would not lend support to such a change. ! HANDGUN CONTROL: Car- ter said the only purpose of handgun registration would be to prohibit ownership by those proven incompetent to own a gran. Ford said registration does- n't work in jurisdictions where it has been required, and that the remedy for gun problems i; near-certain sentences for per- sons convicted of using a gun in crime. 0 SUPREME COURT: Carter endorsed what he called the progress of both the Warren and Burger courts. Ford said he was glad the court was modi- fying the decade-old Miranda decision which requires police to warn arrested persons of their rights to remain silent and have the services of an attorney. * CIVIL RIGHTS: Ford claim- ed quiet progress in civil rights bht Carter said he couldn't rec- ognize the President's descrin- tion of administration achieve- ments. The nuclear submarine Sea- dragon made the first under- water transit through the North- west Passage_ during August 1960. Pd. Pol. Adv. GEORGE > P M)CRAT for p * PROSECUTING ATTORNEY VIOLENT CRIME must be given top priority for effective prosecution. Priorities are misplaced when, as now, 13% .of 'mis- demeanors but only 50 of felonies go to trial. Prosecu- tion is not effective when, as now, 2 fetony cases in 3 ore dismissed or plea-bargained, often only fair adminis- trative convenience. George Steeh has the experience and ability to give us better performance. He will commit additional staff, time and other resources needed to effectively prosecute violent crime. Graduate Research Assistantships In Civil Engineeringy The Department of Civil Engineering at Princetor University invites applications for graudate study and research in the areas of Structures and Mechanics, Transportation, and Water Resources leading to M.S.E. and Ph.D. degrees. Annual re- search stipends start at $4,240 plus tuition and are offered to all admitted students requesting sup- port. For details and applications write: Professor Peter Lee Director of Graduate Studies Department of Civil Engineering Princeton University Princeton, N.J. 08540 w 0ITtrr~ X X tE / / Iti i t..,U < t I t O 1 itCARTER ATTACKED nation-, . 2 al unemployment and inflation ") ' problems as the fault of the ad- ministration, while Ford said "I '56 re ol naive don' thn merica can go on a big spending spree with a (Continued from Page 1) terizes this tendency as a wolelost ogfinewprograms that Shortly after Stalin's death "psychological outlet." federal budget." the Soviets replaced Hungar- Trying to leap the twenty-year ian prime minister Matyas Ra- gap between the revolt and now, Some of the tonics they touch kosi (whom Strumpel describes Strumpel and Racz often seem ed on which had not been dis- as a"ba dicato") wth mreto have difficulty pinning down cussed in their previous debates Nagy, who later led the revolt, their conclusions.included these: Both Strumpel and Racz agree 0 PLAYBOY INTERVIEW: "HE WAS TOO popular, too na- that the Hungarian economy isI Carter said in retrospect he tionalistic. The RussIans want- significantly better than when wished he had not granted an ed him to apologize for certain they left and that the political interview to the men's maga-, reforms but he didn't want to. atmosphere is looser, since peo- zine in which he discussed lust He was removed and replaced ple are less afraid to criticize of the heart and other sexual with Ernoe Geroe . . . It was - though they caution that it topics in a context of his relig- as bad as turning back". is still dangerous to speak out ious beliefs. "Nobody had weapons, no- on vital issues. * ABORTION: Ford repeated. body believed there could be his support for a constitutional armed resistance - it was HOWEVER, NEITHER Strum- amendment which would give spontaneous . . . a certain fer- - pel nor Racz can speculate states the right to limit abor-, mentation. We didn't expect' whether or not Hungarian so- tions. Carter again said he per- anything that devastating, but:? ciety would have improved with- sonally opnoses abortion but 11a 4, nl tn" l. . out the revolt. w ild rntfa r n rnc i i l This Game Goes ON and ON and- ON... ti 1 a m. tonight BILLIARDS at the- UNION "memo.. we idc teel there should be some change by people express- ing hemselves."t Barnabas Racz, who was in legal practice in Hungary dur-,1 ing the revolt, echoes Strum-1 pet's description of optimism. among Hungarians. "IT WAS A SHORT period of time where the people were united... a period of spon- taneous brotherhood", he says.I Racz, a political science pro-I fessor at Eastern Michigan University says conditions in Hungary since October 19561 have fluctuated between great- er freedom and "tightening of. the belt." "What characterizes Hungar- ians now is political apathy, cynicism and a turning toward, cogsumerism. It's a rather sad ' picture" he adds. E u 11 c w . , Racz adds that he feels "change depends on the inter- national situation and internal Soviet conditions." Both Strumpel and Racz de- scribe their roles during the! evolt as passive. HER VOICE softening, Strum-! pel described seeing the list of demands posted by thedemon-", strators and watching the pro-tetr iln rudteUi testors milling around the Uni- versity near her high school. But later in excited tones she: and Racz shared memories of: where they were at particular times during the eventful day. Racz describedwatching pro- testors scatter as the statue of Stalin came tumbling down, and Strumpel recalled watching chil- dren "play United Nations"' while living in a basement with her family after their house had been destroyed. Both Strumpel and Racz left: Hungary shortly after the revolt ended November 4. woui not favor a constvttonai amendment. " SCHOOL PRAYER: Ford here too said he would favor a constitutional amendment pro- viding for voluntary prayer in (Continued from Page 1) Dietrich suggested welfaref money be funneled back into education, and fraud in the sys-: tem eliminated. Another highly - debated topic' was unemployment, specifically the "right-to-work" laws which' eliminate union membership as a prerequisite to employment. BULLARD CHARGED the laws with keeping workmen's compensation wages and sick: benefits down. "The right-to- work laws are a fraud," he said. "The American Independent Happenings (Continued from Page 3) time or another, and brother it shows - the resulting mess gives us about ten funny min- utes of Woody Allen and 97 min- utes of incoherent tedium:. And ten minutes out of 3 total hours' of schlock just ain't the keenest way to spend a Friday evening - even in Ann Arbor. BOMB. EVENTS UAC Children's Theatre-Dis- appearing Goobies, RC Aud., E.Q:, 4:30, 7:30. Ark - David Amran, Ray Maiitilla - 9:30, $3. Judy Collins - UAC Major Events, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. What Every Woman Knows- See Wed. events. BARS Bimbo's - The Gaslighters. 6, 50c after ,8. Blind° Pig - Dave Workman. 9, $1. Casa Nova - Tom Savada, 9, no cover. Golden Falcon - Meloioso. latin-jazz combo, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Long- horn, 9, $1. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, blnegrass, 10, $1-1.50. Rubaiyat - Celebration, 9, no cover. Second Chance - Dennison Stars, '8, $2-2.50. HALLOWEEN MAKE-UP Clown white, grease paint, rouges, colored hair spray, and much more. WE CARRY FULL LINES OF THEATRICAL MAKE-UP BY * STEIN . Party favors right - to - work laws." Graham said. "(AFL- CIO President' George) Meany and others have used labor laws to gain power." Bullard stressed the need to "look ahead instead of back- ward. R.C. / E.Q. PLAYERS Present THREE ONE-ACT PLAYS THE BEAR BY ANON CHI KHOV dire ted by ( IRIS I INI (lLD I I PLAYIN6 WIHI HI BY AUGUS IL SI RI NDBI RG directed by [ESi It I )I ) BY TIM PRENVISS dire ted by the P1 AYWRIGH I OCTOBER 21,22,23 8 PM R.C. AUDITORIUM admtnisson $1 .0 WHAT DO YOU MEAN that's not a cositume? -Bewitched, Bothered and Be- wildered-by you. t Trick or Treat 'em in the C LASSI F IEDS. Put in your own Halloween message. DEADLINE, noon October 29. "We need people to organize RACZ SAYS THAT during and make democracy work in; visits to his homeland he sees unions and in government," he friends concentrating on ma- added. terial questions and he charac- - i I T RI OTICE LAST WEEK to have your YEARBOOK GRADUATION Portraits taken. Pictures end on Wednesday, Oct. 27th. CALL 764-0561 for your appointment, or go to the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St. between 9 a.m.-1 p.m. K and 2 p.m.-6 p.m. Remember-it's FREE and it's your only chance to be included in this year's k, In the time it takes to drive ur friend home, you could save hs life. for killing young people are most often other young people. Take ten minutes. Or twenty. Or an hour. Drive your friend home. That's all. If you can't do - - - - - - - - - DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y* I BOX 2345 ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852 1 I want to save a friend's life. Tl m ht lseIcnn dn If your friend's been drinking too much, he shouldn't be driving. I'