Thursday, October 30, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY News Briefs From Wire Service Reports Page Three . 5/:k 1v; :: 1''y"j~1 '0, }}:::4::g:F";" +iv. ' C.-?t}- LJ -'-N..",J.g} " v1.. .DAILYOFFICIAL BULLETIN:1 .4::.."""4411.:::"':' ...... ...:.":.4" "..N::1. : > '" :. 1 .. Sadat at U.N. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat made a formal request be- fore the U. N. General Assembly yesterday for an early resump- tion of the Mideast peace conference with the participation of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). Israel immediately re- sponded that it "would be ludricrous to imagine that we would sit down with the PLO." Israeli Ambassador Chaim Herzog, after sitting through Sadat's 32-minute speech, repeated to newsmen his government's position that the PLO "stands for the destruction of Israel." NEW YORK Mayor Abraham Beame refused to give Sadat an official welcome to the city, but the reception was friendly from Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim and from Third World diplomats, who recently pushed a resolution through a U. N. committee labeling Zionism as a form of racism. Beame cited New York's large Jewish population and Egypt's vote in favor of the Zionism resolution in refusing the Ford ad- ministration's request to greet Sadat. Zionism is the advocacy of a Jewish national homeland. In his speech, Sadat asked Waldheim and the cochairmen of the past Geneva conferences - the United States and the Soviet Union - to "begin immediately their consultations with all the interested parties - including the Palestine Liberaton Organza- tion - so that the Geneva conference could be resumed in the very near future . . . " He said its meetings "should continue uninterruptedly to deal with the whole problem in all its aspects in order to reach a just and lasting peace." 0 Constitutional amendment A House Judiciary subcommittee yesterday approved a pro- posed constitutional amendment that would allow District of Co- lumbia voters to elect senators and congressmen just like citizens of the So states. The civil rights and constitutional rights subcommittee voted 3 to 2 to send the proposal to the full Judiciary Committee, which is expected to act on it next month. The constitutional amendment would permit District of Co- lumbia voters to elect two senators and as many representatives in Congress as it would be entitled to if it were a state. THE DISTRICT now may only elect a single delegate to Con- gress and he is not allowed to vote. District voters have no U.S. senators. A constitutional amendment requires two-thirds approv- al of both the House and Senate and ratification by three-fourths of the state legislatures within seven years from passage by Con- gress. The District's nonvoting delegate, Walter Fauntroy said after, the subcommittee vote that "We have now passed the first hurdle on a long and difficult path toward voting representation in the Congress" for the District of Columbia. " Bank robbery Seven hostages were seized yesterday during an apparent bank robbery in Cleveland by a man identified by police as hav- ing once been on the FBI's list of ten most wanted criminals. According to police reports, a man identified as Edward Watkins, 56, entered a branch of the Society National Bank just before closing time and demanded money. He claimed to be armed with sticks of dynamite. MONEY WAS PLACED in a valise for him, but then a teller1 triggered an alarm that sen police to the scene and the robber seized the hostages. ie was demanding a van and money. First, he permitted one woman teller, with a heart condition, to leave along with one other person. Then, police said, he moved the remaining seven - six bank employees and one customer - into the basement of the bank. Police said his dynamite was connected to a triggering device. THE ANN ARBOR TEACH-IN presents: HENRYK SKOLIMOWSKI PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY Dept. of Humanities, EnqneerinqSchool "THE HIDDEN ROOTS OF OUR TECHNOLOGICAL PROBLEM" Thursday, October 30 ; tion," Aud. A, Angell, 4 pm. Day Calendar Bus. Ad.: Kenneth Dayton, Day- Ctr. Coord. Ancient, Modern Stu-I ton Hudson Corp., "Fashion is dies: "Classical Traditions in Early Change," Hale Aud., Bus. Ad., 4 America," Kuenzel Rm., Union, 9 pm. am-S:30 pm. Near Eastern Studies: Mendel WUOM: Richard Strout, Christian j Kohnasky, Jerusalem Post, "The. Science Monitor reporter, receivesk Subject of Warand Peace in Pres- Fourth Estate Award at NPR, 10 ent Day Israeli Drama," 3050 Frieze, am. 4 pm. Ctr. Japanese Studies: Ginaa Theoretical Seminar: J. William- Barnes, "The Preservation Move- sen, MIT, "Non-Abelian Gauge Te-j ment in Okayama: Its Effects on hory of Quark Confinement on Lat- Local Government," Commons Rm., Lce," 2038 Randall Lab, 4 pm. Lane Hall, noon. snMedieval, Renaissance Collegium: Medical Ctr. Commission for WO Marvin Feiheim, "Medieval Inspira- men: 4558 Kresge I, noon. tion of Modern Films" Rackham Pendleton Arts Information Ctr.: Amph., 4:10 pm. Open Hearth," Nicholas Pennell, Studio Theatre: Cocteau's The In- PTP artist in residence, UnionIfernal Machine, Arena Theatre, noon. Frieze, 4:10 pm. MHRI: Edward Goldsmith, editor, Int' 1Ctr.: USSR menu, League The Ecologist, "Problems of Creat-I ing a More Stable Society," 1057 era, 5-7:1 pm. MHRI, 3:45 pm. Women of the University Faculty: LSA, Bicentennial Committee: Angus Cambell, "Studies in the Gordon Wodd, Brown U., "Social Quality of Life," Assembly Hall, Radicalism of the American Revolu- CHARING CROSS Longest field goal in modern BOOKSHOP NCAA history was 63 yards, kicked last season by Joe Du- Used, Fine and Scholarly Books ren of Arkansas State. Later in 316 S. STATE-994-4041 the same game, his 56-yarder Open Mon.-Fri. 10-8, beat McNeese State. Sat. 10-6 Rackham, 7 pm. Ann Arbor Teach In: Henryk aSkolim'owski, "The Hidden Roots of 4our Technological Problem," 170 P&A, 7:30 pm. Art, Architecture: Robert Na- deau "Centering and Energy Aware- ness," Aud., Art, Arch., N. Campus, 8 pmn. Guild House: Ellen Zweig, poetry reading, 802 Monroe, 7:30 pm. jMusic School: Phillarmonia Or- chestra, Hill Aud., 8 pm. Alliance Francaise d'Ann Arbor/ Romance Languages: Le Treteau Company de Parrs - Racine's Phi. dre (in French), Power, 8 pm. Women's Studies: Gertrude Stein: When This You See Remember Me; Virginia Woolf, Lee. Rm., 1, 9 pm. 1 DEC. RA To attend Commence- ment, you must order a cap and gown, by Nov.14 at univesity ellar I t 0 tt 4Sf./j- __ _ I AP Pnoto Killing time Mamie Eisenhower, wife of the late president, plays solitaire and watches television as she poses on the enclosed sun porch of her Gettysburg, Pa. home Tuesday for a pre-birthday picture. Mamie will celebrate her 79th birthday on November 14. ATHENS(UPI) - Tourists THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ivisiting Greece brought $290.1 STOP Volume LXXXVI, No. 49 million of foreign exchange into Thursday, October 30, 1975 ; the country drn the first sev- P O E T is edited and managed by students. emonths of 97 the Bank of at the University of Michigan. News en 1975, phone 764-0562. Second class postage Greece reported. TAX ES paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. The revenue marked an in- Published d a iIIy Tuesday through crease of $35.4 million, 13.9 per SEND A SELF ADDRESSED Sunday morning during the Univer-I STAMPED ENVELOPE TO: sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann cent over the January-July per- ! TAJOEITENVELE TS : Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription iod of 1974 and an increase of PORITY RULPE TITION ors ASept3t3ru.Asemes 6 million, 13.1 per cent over. tes); $13 by mail outside Ann r 1973 figures. P.O. BOX 23162 bor . .DETROIT, MI. 48223 Summer session published Tues- The bank said tourism in TOETROITITI48223 day through Saturday morning. Greece during the month of July STOP PROPERTY TAXES Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann brought in $81.8 million in for- IN MICHIGA Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann eign exchange.IN MICHIGAN "___ o r P ,a, Q~5t %L4 ___ -o °z. 9-i -f~a~ ~ 7~e j~S**ie4. ~e ~so. A _ _ _e- w AD'4i O 2J,2ZQ gee ti 2g Lw&tuv'* [ I i 1, ........- .-. - .. Ir !' SHORT or LONG HAIRSTYLES TO PLEASE DASCOLA STYLISTS ARBORLAND-971-9975 MAPLE VILLAGE-761-2733, E. LIBERTY-668-9329 E. UNIVERSITY-662-0354 I i I NOON LUNCHEON HOMEMADE SOUP -50c Friday, October 31 Vice President Henry Johnson Student Special Services } i Canada's shoreline stretches 15,000 miles. "LIBERATION, - FOR WHOM?" GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe - v 1 TONIGHT -,Oct. 30 P. & A., Aud. 1701 1975 FESTIVAL OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC Commemorating the 10th Anniversary of the ELECTRONIC MUSIC STUDIO UNIV. OF MICHIGAN THE SAL-MAR CONSTRUCTION A musical instrument, multi-channeled, controlled by touch, combining the composing process with performance in real-time - improvisation Salvatore Martirano, guest composer-performer Saturday, November 1, 1975-8 p.m. Rackham Auditorium Presented by the University of Michigan School of Music OPEN TO 'THE PUBLIC WITHOUT CHARGE For a free booklet onmixology write:GIROUX, P.O. Box 2186G, Astoria Station,New York, N.Y.11102. Giroux is a product of A-W BRANDS, INC. a subsidiary of IROQUOIS BRANDS LTD. 7:30 FREE! WHAT'S HAPPENING? Run for Student Government Council and Find Out 7 SGC Seats Available FILE BY 10/31 16 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION DELEGATES FILE BY 11/7 ELECTIONS ON NOVEMBER 18 TO 20 Room 3909-Mich. Union 763-3241 I I Sr TAPE RECORDER SPECIALISTS, INC. "Except the BEST from TRS." Complete Audio/C.B./VTR Service Warranty Repair for 104 Brands Styli: ADC; Audio-Technica; Empire; Pickering; Shure; Stanton Amplifiers-Receivers-Turntables Dn -A.an(;f;nrn Qmtra 1r mnl;,..r. l G WOULD SERIES PRESENTS THE AWARD WINNING National Marionette Theatre 8!0.. R .CIE PA M (T R 1 1 .CAf P AT -..NE 1 11 i i I