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We will visit your campus on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19 The Institute for Paralegal Training 235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103 (215) 732-6600 greet new (Continued from Page 1) s ter owned by a Milwaukee in-1 surance company and leased byt a Cleveland firm, sank in about 520 feet of water while carrying * a cargo of 26,216 tons of tacon- AustralZa ite ore pellets. ONE SHIP reported seeing an oil slick in the area and others CANBERRA (Reuter) - An- spotted debris, including two gryCdemAnB sratio a (stris A capsized lifeboats. gry demonstrations and strikes At the Fitzgerald's helm, com- erupted throughout Australia pany officials said, was veter- yesterday after the unprecedent- an skipper Ernest McSorley of ed dismissal of Labor Prime Toledo, Ohio. The crew number- Minister Gough Whitlam by ed 27 plus an apprentice cadet. the Governor General, John Oglebay-Norton Co. of Cleve-' Kerr. land, which leased the Fitzger- Opposition Leader Malcolm ald,. said the vessel was en route Fraser- named as caretaker from Superior, Wis., to Detroit prime minister by Kerr worked when it vanished just after 7:10 on plans for a general election, p.m., EDT. expected ns rDeener e13tas THE LAST Great Lakes disas- expected on December 13, as ter involving as many men oc- allabor supporters held protest curred Nov. 18, 1958, when a rallies in Sydney, Melbourne and U.S. Steel Corp. freighter, the other major cities. Carl D. Bradley, broke in two and sank in Lake Michigan with T H OU SAND bS oifwork- a loss of 33 men. ers in the shipping and building Officers on board the "Fitz" industries went on strike. radioed a message to the near- Bob Hawke, president of both by steamer Arthur M. Ander- the Labor Party and the pow- son, saying that the Fitzgerald erful Australian Council of was taking on water and h a d Trade Unions, called for re- lost two hatch covers. straint and warned the workers At the time, theiNational _not to allow their feelings to Weather Service office said, lead to violence, winds touching 80 miles an hour lashed the area and kicked up mountainous waves. Masschusetts became the sixth CAPT. JESSIE Cooper, skip- state in the union on Feb. 6, per of the Anderson, w h i c h 1788. was about 10 mles away at the time, said the Fitzgerald sud- The magnolia is the state denly disappeared from his ra- flower of Mississippi. dar screen. ship in Ford, Senate blast Burns missing UN vote on Zionism maY back The sinking apparently hap- NYC aid pened so fast there was no time (Continued from Page 1) Asked if the President still to send an SOS. wise" decisions sometimes sought passage of his request (Continued from Page 1) If this happened a a s t adopted by the world body. for $750 million in economic aid n N m nrP- Guard spokesperson said in Cleveland, it was unlikely many crewmen could have escaped from below-deck cabins and bunks. The Fitzgerald was built in 1958, named for Edmund Fitz- gerald, then president of North- western Mutual, and launched at River Rouge, Mich. At t h e time, she was the largest ship ever launched broadside a n d cost $8 million. The "Fitz's" home port of- ficially was Milwaukee. if you President Ford called the re- solution a "wholly unjustified action" but said there were no plans for the United States to withdraw from the world forum. Several members of Congress began an effort to withdraw from the United Nations in light of Monday night's vote. REP.dLESTER Wolff (D-N.Y.) said he would introduce a' bill to cut off funding and all U.S. participation in the U. N. General Assembly until Con- gress is satisfied the United Nations has returned ,to "its proper role . . . as a forum for debate." "T h e President reaffirmed that the United States deplores the characterization of Zioniem as a form of racism and be- lieves that adoption of this re- solution undermines the princi- ples on which the United Na- tions is based," White House spokesman William Greener said. for Eg y pt, Greener s a id "Yes." H O U S E Republican Lead-, er John Rhodes told reporters today, "The United States should restudy its whole tela- tionship with the U.N. The ma- jority of the General Assembly does not seem to be in tune with public opinion in the Unit- ed States or in the western world for that matter." Rhodes said he did not favor a suggestion by Sen. Henry Jackson, (D-Wash.), among others, to retaliate through f o r e i g n aid appropriations against countries which voted for the resolution. The vote was a "new low" for the world organization,, Jack-; son said. He promised: "When we call the roll in the Senate on the foreign aid program, we will not forget how, those coun- tries receiving our aid voted last night." ems spreau uuycnpe dict with great confidence what will happen, he said. Burns said he was pleased to learn of New York Gov. Hugh Carey's proposal Monday to in- crease taxes to help the city and state out of their financial difficulties. Carey should have done it sooner, he added. "Every fair - minded person believes New York has done a great deal. I, for one, think they haven't done enough, but they have done a great deal," Burns said. IN ANSWER to a question, he said he still feels that New York City can solve its problems with- out federal help. He also said that New York City's problems have "served to dramatize" government finan- cial problems throughout the nation. "Fiscal conservatives have gained and gained enormously because of New York's experi- ence," he said. E see news happen call Large crowd fills Diag for noon hour anti CIA rally I t Pays to Advertise in The Michigan Daily (Continued from Page 1) "This clandestine mentality is a historical phenomenon - it didn't develop in a vacuum, it didn't develop overnight," Tho- mas added, while a red smoke flare set of during his speech floated over the Diag crowd. JEFF LARK, SGC representa- tive and member of the Student Organizing Committee (SOC) focused on the University's re- lations with the CIA, criticizing that alliance and the Univer- sity's order of priorities. "I'd say we reorder our prior- ities to put education at the top of the list, not research," he said. Lark said University officials with whom he has spoken have answered his policy questions by terming. them necessary to maintain the University's pres- tige. "PRESTIGE?" Lark asked, after heciting a long list of his own definitions, "That's having the balls to tell the CIA and the NSA we don't want you on our campus". Diana Autin of the Coalition to Stop S-1 spoke after Lark and called the Senate bill "anti-par- ole, anti-probation and pro-im- prisonment." The proposed act, which she said greatly increases the scope of law enforcement practices, is particularly dangerous since "the CIA and the FBI always go about ten legal steps beyond the law." WINSLOW PECK, a former employe of the NSA, followed Autin and elaborated on S-1 say- ing, "If this law is passed, ev- eryone here could be put in jail." Peck clasified the CIA and the NSA as "part and parcel of an organization that is waging an imperialist war against the people of the world . . against you." Peck said the University has a long history of co-operation with the U.S. intelligence com- munity. Last on the list of speakers was Dave Riddle, of the Citi- zens Committee to End Political Surveillance, who discussed lo- cal police surveillance, particu- larly in Detroit. STEREO SYSTEM r M -- - ;1 SALE LR 1100 STEREO RECEIVER Pick out sharp clear signals from even distant FM stations. 1.75 microvolt tuner sensitivity. 22 watts per channel (x2) into 8 ohms from 20-20,000 Hz with less than .5% total harmonic dis- tortion. Wood cabinet. Reg. 299.95 TURNTABLE Completely assem- bled in Unipivot base and dust - I cover. Adjust- 440M Includes magnetic cartridge. List price 114.85 NIEMEYER COMMITTEE REPORT The Committee expresses its appreciation to the many persons who have responded to our appeal for funds to assist Professor Niemeyer durinq this difficult period when, despite her claim to tenure, she is not receivinq her University salary. Proceedinqs in her law suit are under way. We invite all those who have not contributed to do so. Checks should be made out to Committee for Professor Niemeyer and mailed to Professr Dennis Mitchell, Enqlish Dept., 7609 Haven Hall. For a full account of the case write Prof. Mitchell or leave word at telephone number 764-8586. COMMITTEE FOR PROFESSOR NIEMEYER -_ I oS " 0 J ) .. . 0@ t) 2015 STEREO RECEIVER There's a total of 30 watts power. That's 15 watts RMS per channel at 8 ohms from 20-20,000 Hz. with less than .9% total harmon- ic distortion. 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