Saturday, November 6. 1975
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Page Five I
Satuday Novmbe 6, 976THE ICHGAN AIL
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Rhodesian raid on guerrillas
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threatens topple conference:
GENEVA, Switzerland () - and the guerrillas killed three, operations but, according to our
Accounts of killing and destruc- they said. information, a full-scale pre-
tion in a white Rhodesian raid The presidents of the five Ari- emptive strike that has left an
on black guerrillas last weekend can states surrounding Rhodesia uncounted number of villagers
threatened yesterday to break arranged a weekend summit a n d Mozambiqueans dead,"
up the conference on Rhodesia's meeting in Tanzania in order, claimed a senior source in the
future. black diplomats said, to consider delegation of Robert Mugabe,
The talks, aimed at arranging possible military countermoves the spokesman for the guerril-
for transfer of power from Rho- against Smith's white regime. las.
desia's 278,000 whites to :ts 6.4 U.S. Secretary of State Henry Joshua Nkomo, a partner of
million blacks, failed again to Kissinger, whose initiative got Mugabe in a "patriotic front,"
agree on a target date for the the Geneva conference started, told reporters he is sending one
shift to black rule. The dele- ordered a senior American en- of his field commanders to as-
gates dispersed without setting voy to go from Nairobi o Lu- sess the situation along the
a date for a new session next saka, Zambia, then to the Tan- Rhodesian-Mozambique frontier.
week, leaving to British chair- zanian capital of. Dar Es Salaam A member of Nkomo's delega-
man Ivor Richard the task of to be on hand for the meeting tion said, meantime: "Rhodesian
keeping the conference alive. of African presidents. planes, tanks and armored cars
launched their attack while
Following the latest session, THE ENVOY, Asst. Secretary Smith was in this conference
over the edattackrbsswhiteed of State John Reinhardt, is to talking about a peaceful settle-
Rhodesian forces against guer- confer with some of the presi- ment. Now he has gone home
rilla bases in Mozamzique last sad then come to Geneva to reflect on the performance of
weekend.OneaccusedRhode-for meetings with conference his forces. To us it seems as if
Sian Prime Minister Ian Smith chairman Richard and with Kis- he has been cheating, cheating
S Psinger's special representative, not only the conference but also
ofcheatig by tkig art in sAmbassador William Schaufele. Kissinger and his South African
peace talks while his troops
were carrying out the raid. Salisbury security officials friends . .
have claimed their raid last
IN ADDITION, security forces weekend into Mozambique, in On Sept. 15, 1962, the United
in Salisbury, Rhodesia, reported which they reported several hun- States and Britain agreed to in-
ydred guerrillas- killed and a crease their joint research and.
yesterday that Rhodesian troops large cache of arms seized, was
killed 10 more black nationalist a "hot pursuit operation" fol- development of weapons.
guerrillas in new clashes over lowing guerrilla attacks into
two days. The security forces Rhodesia.
also killed two black civilians "These were not hot pursuit Everything is
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JR. WALKER
AND
the Alistars
special guest masquerade
SUNDAY, NOV. 7-8 P.M.
$3.50 (Dancing) 994-5350
'il
it
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_ kill
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Chi Psi Fraternity
PRESENTS
A Special Midnight Concert
WITH THE
David Bromnberg Band
DVI r"I {
FRIDAY; NOV. 19 at Midnight
MICHIGAN THEATER
603 E. LIBERTY, ANN ARBOR
Advance Tickets $5.50. Day of Show $6.50
Tickets available Mon.. Nov. 8 at Discount Records( both
stores), Aura Sounde & Schoolkidd Records and in Ypsilanti
at Where House Records.
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
.:o : ....:r~t $.. .:..;.,'....r:4rr....:'.:........'v...................
DAY CAENDARAnthroposophical Student Assoc.:
DAY CALENDAR London Eurythmy Group, Trueblood
Pendleton Arts Ctr.: Marilyn Theatre, 8 p.m.
Young "Oral History," Union, noon. MUSKET: Lerner & Loew"s "Can-
Pound House Children's Ctr.: elot," Mendelssohn, 8 p.m.
"Children's Fair & Open House," Univ. Club: Roots, jazz trio; U
games, songs, 'magician, 1024 Hill, Club, Union, 8:30 p.m.
1 p.m. . Musical Society: Guarneri Quar-
Football: U-M vs. Purdue, broad- ; et. Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m.
cast over WUOM, 1:15 p.m. Musical Society: Chinese Acrobats.
Hockey: V-M vs. Minnesota, Yost Hil1 Aud., 8:30 p.m.
t Ice Arena, 7:30 p.m. -
IEclipse Jazz: Thad Jones/Mel Lew- CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT
is Orchestra, big band jazz: League >SUMMER PLACEMENT
going this weekend
20 game machines,
lanes of bawling, &
22 billiard tables
at the
,busy UNION
open till 1 a.m. tonight
These two Russian
ably curious about
can only speculate
the basses.
Hey lid(le diddle
girls, encountering a bass fiddle for the first time, were understand-
the big stringed visitor and had to inspect it from every angle. One
that they spent their backstage time running around and touching all
1 I
iCAT 7'
to
be
touher
WASHINGTON () - Students DR. JOHN A. I). Cooper,
planning on attending medical AAMC president, said the new
school will be taking a tough test will put more emphasis on
new examination that test spon- problem solving and less on
sors say will be a better gauge memorized learning.
of a student's ability to solve "The New MCAT incorporates
problems rather than just mem- the latest testing methodologies
orize data. and will reflect the advances in
test included 86 items mixing An advantage of the new test
knowledge and application of is shown in the science part, an
biology, chemistry and physics AAMC spokesman said. With
in a single assessment. separate scores in the sciences,
The new science test allows a student who doesn't do well in
100 minutes to do 145 items that one area should be able to take
test knowledge in the three make-up work in that specific
sciences separately. Then stu- area.
dents will get another 70 minutes. "The new test requires mor
for an additional 72 items deal- reasoning," the spokesman said
ing with applications of the three "Students may find it tougher
sciences. atfirst.hbt it n cte*
atftjbut it Ou*tLd~ ett e suLi
Univ. of Virginia offers a Sum-
Smer Mental Health Fellowship Pro-
;ram. Students would rotate
throughout various services - child
al/recreational therapy and other
fields. Further details available.
Lakewood Landscape Designers,.
Illinois. Landscape architect stu-
dents would work in Chicago area
suburb area. Will interview here
Register by phone (764-7456) or in STAMP EXHIBITION BOURSE
personSE
Briarwood Mall Community Room
SATURDAY, NOV. 16-10 AM-8 PM
SUNDAY, NOV. 7-11 AM-5 PM
r A
r; PUBLIC IS INVITED
s 310CretrRaAn ro9-41
The old Medical College Ad-'
mission Test (MCAT), well
known for 30 years as a hurdle
to be cleared before applying to{
medical school, will be replaced
next spring with what is called
the New MCAT.
The Association of Americap
Medical Colleges, sponsor of
MCAT, said Thursday the newi
test will be longer, more stren-.
uous and, generally, just tough-
er.
MCAT, created in 1946, has
been a primary tool used by
nearly all U.S. medical 'schools
and many abroad in selecting in-
coming students. Other consid-
erations are grade point aver-
ages, interviews and letters of
recommendation. There are 15,-
700 seats in the 115 medical
schools in the-United States.
the test is given twice a year
at more than 400 locations
around the world to a total of
more than 45,000 students, most-
lv in their junior or senior years
of college.
The New MCAT premieres
April 30 to an estimated audi-
ence of 31,000 students, mostly
in the United States and at
English-speaking schools in Can-
medical science, changing needs
for doctors and widely differing
medical school curricula," Coop-'
er said.
"It will provide an enlarged
basis of information to assist
c
IN VERBAL skills, the old 20-
aLtLJ, ULI NIugC a CIeT
as they learn to prepare forthis
kind of exercise.
admission committees in select-. minute test included 75 ,items1
ing students," he said.i k primarily dealing with relating
THE NEW TEST will take a words to each other. The new
full working day to complete, exam allows 90-minutes for 73
twice as long as the old one. items dealing with gathering
Here's how certain categories
in the tests compare: analyzing and evaluating infor-
In science, the old 60-minute mation.
. ..... . . . .
UAC Musket/MM Productions
GAMGELAOT
. Secil dded Performance,!
I Tonight
All Seats General Admission
1_________-
""""
Ai
nnouncing the 2nd Annual
MICH IGAN ENSIAN
PHOTO CONTEST
NO THEME!
Enter anything and everything. Winners to be published in 1977 MICHIGAN-
ENSIAN YEARBOOK. Grand Prize and 1st, 2nd and 3rd place prizes for both
B&W and Color categories.
RULES:
1) 2 categories-B&W and Color (prints or transparencies--8x10 aximum,
don't mount prints)
2) Entry Deadline-Dec. 3rd. Bring or mail entries to 2nd floor business office,
Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard. Enclose SASE for return of prints.
3) Winners to be announced Dec. 6.
!1l
WIN A FREE
W vINDJ M ER CRUISE
GARGOYLE, U. of M.'s own humor magazine, is giving away a
free 6 day Windjammer Caribbean cruise. To win, put your
name, address and phone number on a card or paper. Write
"I READ THE GARGOYLE" across the top and leave the card
with any participating store on State St., N. University, S.
University or Liberty St. The cards will be picked up and a
winner will be chosen. Full rules and information may be
found in the Fall 1976 GARG or at the Student Publications
Building. THE DEADLINE IS NOV. 10, 1976. a
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I am submitting... photographs. CHECK ONE: B -W.. COLOR.
NOTE: Identify EVERY print or slide with Name, Address and Telephone No.
E
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SPONSORS:
Big George's, Folletts,
Ulrichs, Bivouac,
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NAME...... ...........................................
* ADDRESS........ ........ ................. ........'
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