Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 11, 1975 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 11, 1915 SUNDAY & MONDAY %All You Can Eat" includes unlimited trips to our famous salad bar, choice of potato or vegetable and loaves of hot home baked bread. Udall rips Ford's Unearthly Rioting escalates in economic policies duo cause northern Portugal ADULTS . CHILDREN 0 0 0 0 0. $3.25 (under 12) . $1.75 (Continued from Page 1) tice "the politics of inclusion" if they are to win the Presi- dency in '76. "We need Gaozge Meany, Mayor Daley, and the Southern moderate wing of the party to support our candidate," he emphasized. He decried the party strife of earlier years: "The lesson for '76 is don't let them divide you. D o n 't pit environmentalists against the labor movement, the farmers against the consumers." Although Udall spent much of his time attacking Ford, he con- tinually returned to the theme of Democratic unity. Discussing the profusion of candidates within his own party, he said, "We better sort them out. We better get our heads together and get a winner this time." WHEN ASKED about the de- teriorating financial condition of New York City, Udall quipped, "the problems of New York are the problems of the nation." lHe predicted that unless cer- Served Sunday Noon 'Til 8 P.M.-Monday 5 P.M.-1 1 P.M. tank , . tan policies are implemented soon, every major city will ex- IMV'Je perience the fate of New Yrk. "Detroit will be next, and (Continued from Page 1) then Baltimore, Philadelphia, calling themselves followers of and on and on," he declared. "The Two" phoned the host, OPORTO, Portugal(P) - Full- cratic Union (UDP) building. scale political rioting with ex- Fire was returned from the changes of gunfire, volleys of crowd. grenades and paving stones swept through the center of; SEVERAL attempts were Oporto early Saturday, injuring made to help the UDP by politi- scores of people. t cal gangs allied with thevCoi- Some groups did battle from munists. There were violent behind makeshift street barr- scuffles with iron bars and ces Stvscn the irre o h at the Holiday Inn West 2900 JACKSON RD. 665-4444 THE ARIZONA CongressmanI advocated a three-pronged at- tack on the dilemmas of the American City-approval of the Humphrey-Hawkins F u 11 Em- ployment bill, the implementa- tion of a viable system of na- tional health insurance, tne fed-, eralization of the welfare sys- tem. After his talk at the League, Udall attended a reception in his honor at the Ann Arbor home of Wilbur Cohen, former Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare in the Johnson ad- ministration. The crowd there was com- posed mainly of local Demo- cratic party regulars and po- tential Udall supporters. AT THE reception, the presi- dential candidate reiterated a few of the points that he had made earlier. His straightforward, relaxed tone was present, but the strains of the campaign trail were showing in his wearied face. Udall had traveled in Ihwa, Nebraska, Wisconsin, id Mich- igan, some of the time being spent under the sharp question- ing of conservative columnists Rowland Evans and Robert No- vak. SVictor Boc, and said HIM fol- lowers numbered 9 to 100. They said they were calling from Col- F A NOSTALGIC RETROSPECTIVE OF CLASSIC 1950's TELEVISION A 150 MINUTE ORGY ! KOSHER MEAT CO-OP Organizational and Ordering Meeting Sunday at Noon at H I LLEL orado. I BUT AUTHORITIES in Color- THE BATTLE began when a ado can find no trace of "The Maoist group bent on avenging Two" or their HIM followers in the murder of a militant in Lis- the state. bon attacked another leftist However, yesterday, Doug party's headquarters and tried Green, superintendent of Bonny to set it afire. Dam in eastern Colorado, said What began as a fight be- he had talked to the leader of tween two minor leftist parties 20 people camped near the dam, over a grudge killing spread to and said they went to a new include thousands of others, site in Nebraska. drawn to the scene in a climate "THEY KNEW they were go- of growing political tension. ing to be taken from earth and Witnesses said concussion picked up by some form of ex- grenades, rocks and shots came traterrestrial life, but not when from inside the Popular Demo- or where," said Green. Green said in a telephone in- terview he had talked with Frank Lamb, who said he was Is alj part of a group that lefthWld port, Ore., last month. Green quoted Lamb as saying his group was moving on to Nebras- 01 field s ka to join others from the Wald- port group. Meanwhile, officials said the (Continued from Page 1) investigation in Lincoln County, Emergency Force. Ore., was being called off and American oil technician Billy Trooper Gibson would be as- Marcum of the Mobil Oil Co. signed to other work. A police signed the receipt for the two said the investigation found no Ras Sudr oil installations on be- evidence of fraud or other half of the Egyptian government crime. in a short outdoor ceremony, HIM BEGAN to get attention The peace agreement calls for in the media when about 20 per- eventual turnover of the entire sons who attended a Sept. 14 Abu Rudeis oilfield complex. meeting in a Waldvort, Ore.,A motel. and a second gathering FIVE MINUTES before the near Egene, Ore., left the area turnover, Israel completed load- smdenwho were drawn to the ing its last 2,000 tons of crude oil Waldnort meeting by newspaper from the occupied Egyptian ads and handbills said "The':. Two" appeared to be in their ,' 40s or 54s. They were dressed in DAILY OFFIC] identical casual outfits and i :.:"<.<,r.:::: : , spoke in slow, measured tones. Saturday, October 11 Bob Thompson, a computer, nrogrammer at the University Day Calendar of Oregon, recalled the man WUOM: -om the Midway - taling in vague. Biblical terms "Isolation or Independence: Politi- w-d avoiding direct questions. cal & Strategic Factors," 10 am. Rugby: UM vs. Toronto U., Wines THE MICHIGAN DAILY Field, 10:30 am. Volume LXXXVI, No. 33 Football: UMW vs. MSU, broadcast, Saturday, October 11, 1975 WUOM, 91.7 MHz, 12:45,4'3:45 pm. is edited and managed by students PTP: Guest Artist series, Miller's at the University of Michigan. News Death of a Salesman, Power, 8 pm. pihone 764-0562. Second class postageI General Notices paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. CEW: 2 5-session "Refreshing Stu- Published d a i ly Tuesday through dent Skills" series: "Speeded Read- Sunday morning during the Univer- ing and Study Efficiency", begin- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann nling Mon., Oct. 27, 7:30-9:30 pm; & Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription "Written Communication," Tues., rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- Oct. 28, 7:30-9 pm. tars); $13 by mai oujtside Ann Ar- bor summer session published Tues- Career Planning & Placement day through Saturday Morning.. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann 3200 SAB, 764-7456 Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Aror. Recruiting on campus: ___________________________ Oct. 13-Bell System of reinforcements managed to fight its way into the encircled offices. The rioting raged for more than three hours. Then a de- tachment of S0 soldiers in four armored cars arrived to take up positions around the UDP's be- sieged headquarters. Shooting continued as the de- fenders traded potshots with 3,000 besiegers huddled behind barricades and as leftist rein- forcements tried to reach their allies inside the building. bcrwd of esiegers gene grou crwdofbeieers. Oegroup ases two to Egypt fields onto the Liberian tanker Sirius. Another 52 tons were pumped-into an overland tanker truck. Egyptian officialdom in Cairo reacted with caution yesterday to the Israeli moves. Although senior officials were privately relieved, one of them noted: "This should only be considered as a step toward an overall final settlement of the Mideast situa- II I HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL STUDENTS TEACHERS SCIENTISTS ENGI NEERS LAWYERS WHAT DO ALL THESE PEOPLE HAVE IN COMMON? All are interested in managerial careers and presently enrolled in the MBA Pro- gram at Harvard Business School. Should you be here? tion. We hope the United States will continue its momentum for peace in the region." TAT. BULLETIN Oct. 14-Battelle N.W./Research Ctr. Oct. IS--Rike's ; Oct. 17-Harvard Bus. School, J. L. Hudson Co., & Princeton U/Wood- row Wilson Sch. of Intern'l Affairs Oct.22-Procter & Gamble, Union Oil Co. of Calif.. & Inst. for Para- legal Trng. Oct. 23-Conn. Mutual Life Ins. Co.. Inst. for Paralegal Trng., Pur- due U./Krannert Grad. Sch. of In- dustrial Mgt., & Lewis & Clark/Law Oct. 24-Eastman Kodak Co. Advertising Women of New York will. hold thei rannuai conference for seniors and grad students in- terested' in communications fields. Learn practical facts about career opportunities. Sat. Nov. 1. $5.00 fee. Register by Oct. 22 with this organ- ization at 153 E. 57th St., NYC 10022. Come meet with WILLIAM HBS here on campus OCT. 1975 at the 3200 STUDENT BLDG. to find out. D. SHEA of 16 and 17, ACTIVITIES Burke Marketing Research, Inc. offers full tuition for graduate i study in marketing at the U of Cincinnati plus on-the-job training in all facets of marketing research at Burke. Write: Dir, of Personnel, Burke Marketing Research, Inc., i506maaison Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 145206. I 1I1 FEATURING: SUPERMAN (1956) Streak! Streak! Falling for the oldest trick in the books, Lois is caught on the ropes. But what's a little twine to the man of steel? GROUCHO MARX IN YOU BET YOUR LIFE (1955) Groucho's insane contestants tonite include the zoo keeper from San Francisco who sleeps with the ani- mals! Don't miss the Mad Duck who pops in when the Secret Word is said! RICHARD NIXON'S CHECKERS SPEECH (1953) Accused of accepting bribes, the former President responds with the most transparently fraudulent and hysterically funny'speech in the history of Amer- ican politics. This one will bring the house down! ELVIS PRESLEY ON ED SULLIVAN (19551 Pure magical nostalgia as Elvis pounds out Love Me Tender & Don't Be Cruel. And he was censored from, the waist down! OZZIE AND HARRIETT (1957) Don't miss it. Called Father's Night At The Frater- nity, this one features R i c k y pounding out some Golden Oldies. Also stars the absurd Wally! THE LONE RANGER (1952) The very first episode! In which we learn why the Ranger dons his mask and how he meets Tonto! A howl from start to finish. PLUS: Burns & Allen, Ted Mack Amateur Hour, C) w_ 0 o Caf %no University of Michigan AND Eastern Michigan University TWO 50-Yard Line Football Tickets being given away at Ci 0 0 Professional Theatre Program* DEATH SF A SALESMAN OBER 8A-12P inte PowerCenter located in lobby of Mendelssohn Theatre Mo.Fri. 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 25 p.m. T performance 68 p.m (313) 763-33333y ;There IS a'0 difference!! 0 0PREA4RE FOR: 0 e MCATR -iirs 0 ATnd success " LSATVouioshm" 0 in th udowemCeteral ATGSB ouht-ef lof e n"ob fMedlsh 0 MOn ri10 a pe faci Cimi.sfopm PoerCet r BxOfc nev ens ofs CPATrr es6o8pm and1fo763 se33 FLEXm a ECFMGOe ke yars AT mndsessons *AT L~I lMDnosm GREstuy fateial B Curestha ae" 0 " All you do is fill out coupon and return it to any of our 37 stores. " This week's TICKETS for NORTHWESTERN-Oct. 18 Drawing held October 13 " Winners will also receive an autographed copy of Will Perry's book, "The Wolverines," A History of Michigan Football. Q_ 0- .. . Nom ARBORLAND FOOTBALL TICKET GIVEAWAY MNome~ I U - -E - 1