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November 23, 1975 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-11-23

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Sunday, November 23, 1975

I ol

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

page Nine,

Page Nin

Warfare

Juan Carlos ascends throne

I

(Continued from Page 1)
1V SAS SPANISH and foreign dig-
nitaries-among them King Hus-
-seiri of Jordan, Prince Rainier
of Monaco and Vice President
ead Nelson Rockefeller - listened,
j Juan Carlos opened his inaugu-
ral speech by paying homage to
Franco.
B e L t IRockefeller was the only high
delegate representing a major
power at the short ceremony.
(Continued from Page 1) He flew to Madrid overnight,
ents. . and in a brief airport speech
THE ITALIAN embassy said expressed "unfailing friendship"
that a first secretary, Piero for Spain.
Cortone, and the consul, Santo Spain and the United States'
Rustico, were kidnaped by left- are negotiating to c o n t i n u e
wing gunmen on their way into American use of Spanish mili-1
Beirut from the airport on tary bases. The agreement ex-
Thursday evening. pired in September, but bothj
They were released unharm- sides agreed to continue talking.
ed one hour later when the left-

U.S. OFFICIALS said talksc
were suspended during Franco's
fatal illness.
U.S. officials said the meeting1
between Juan Carlos and thel
vice president lasted approxi-
mately 30 minutes and was be-
lieved to have come at the sug-
gestion of Spain.
U.S. officials said they had no
indication what the vice presi-
dent and the king discussed.
SPAIN REPORTEDLY is seek-
ing something stronger than an;
executive agreement to continue1
the American presence here,I
perhaps a joint resolution of!

chance of approval with Juan;
Carlos than with Franco.
The monarch pledged to sup-
port the principles of the Franco
regime, but he clearly indicated
change was in sight.
APPEALING for unity, he
said, "A free and modern so-
ciety requires the participation
of everyone," a contrast to
Franco's rule restricting politi-
cal action.
.On the king's right, a crown
and scepter lay symbolically on
a velvet-covered stool-a tradi-
tion of Spanish coronations since
the 15th century reign of;

GAY ACADEMIC UNION
Because of the holiday schedule the next meet-
ing of the GAU will be Sunday, December 7, at
7:30 p.m. at 1113 Nielsen Court, Apt. 3 (for
directions call 763-4186, 761 -2044, or 995-
8642).
TOPIC: A proposed Gay Studies course on the Politics of
Lesbian and Gay Liberation. Future topics: GAU and Gay
Women; Aqeism and Gov Society; Transvestism and
Transsexualism.
All interested persons are welcome
ELECTIONS
For Eight (8) Full Year Positions on the
Executive Council of the
LSA Student Government
will be held on Dec. 8 and 9, 1975.
In order to run for a seat you must sign
up at the LSA Goverment office at:
Room 4001 Michigan Union
DEADLINE for Applying Is-
Tues., Nov. 25, 1975 at 5:00 p.m.

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OPEN 10 to 6
MONDAY-SATURDAY
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i
S

Congress.,
U.S. officials are said
lieve such a resolution,
quested by the Spanish!
ment, would have a

to be-
if re-C
govern-A
bettera
~0

ists received news that some
of their men had been set free
by the Falangists.
John Richardson, a British
flight engineer working for Mid-
dle East Airlines was also seiz-
ed by leftists near the airport
yesterday and released a fewE
hours later after the Falangists
freed a 16-year-old Moslem boy.
JEEPS OF the right-wing
Phalange militia patrolled the 1
Christian stronghold of Ashre-
fiyeh with loudspeakers warn-
ing residents to stay locked in
their apartments because more
fighting was expected.
It cast a tragic pall on this;
tiny nation's independence day
commemorating the 34th anni-
versary of freedom f r o m
French mandate rule. President
Suleiman Franjieh canceled a
national address scheduled for'
the occasion.
About 7,000 persons - some
estimates say 10,000 - have
been killed out of a population
of million. The fighting,, rag-
ing in recurrent bursts since
April, has caused $4.5 billion in
damage and the government
says 100,000 workers face unem-
ployment.
THE' TURMOIL stems from
bitter religious and political dif-
ferences pushing well armed
.militia youths into bloody com-
bat and paralyzing Karami's
government.
Moslem leftists aided by Pal-
estinian guerrillas are demand-
ing reform of the religion-based
political system that concen-
trates power in the hands of the
40 per cent Christian minority.
They are backed by Karami, a
moderate Moslem.

City council voe
on CDRS proposal
(Continued from Page 1) Democrats (Elizabeth Keogh,
THE GOP met Thursday D-First Ward) isn't going to be
night, and Friday asked t h e there Monday, it will have to
Mayor for '$10,000 for a new get support from me and one
fire truck, $11,000 more f o r of the Republicans before it's"
winter recreation, and $34,500 going to fly," she said.
for the Chamber of Commerce Wheeler's proposal will need
from the CDRS budget. 6 votes from the 11-member;
Wheeler indicated he w a s council before it can pass.
willing to consider the propos-
als for the fire truck and re-
creation, but added that he was
"less inclined" to offer funding
to the Chamber of Commerce.
"There will be some money
from the county for them, and I
think we should just wait a year
and see how that program H O
works. Therefore, I'm not ter- SATURDAY
ribly sympathetic to that re- NOV 22
quest right now," he said. 5pm$&7pm
- r SUNDAY
KATHY Kozachenko (SHRP- NOV23
Second Ward) said she will seek 2pm &
more money for housing rehab- --4pm
ilitation before she will give her
approval to the proposal.
and since one of the
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4 S

Isabel I.
"I swear by God and the Holy
Gospel to comply with the fun-
damental laws of the kingdom "
said the new king, with his hand
on a Bible, "and to loyally
guard the principles that formed
the national Movement." This
referred to Spain's only political
organization
-

Junior Year in GERMANY
at FREIBURG
FIRST INFORMATIONAL MEETING
Wednesday-Dec. 3, 1975-8:00 p.m.
Modern Language Building
Lecture Room No. 2
t. (FIRST FLOOR)
All undergraduates interested in attending the University of
Freiburg should attend this meeting.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _f,

1~~

ii

AND NOW

0 0 9

The First Ever and Greatest of All'

First Prize:
Dinner for 2 at one of Ann Arbor's
Finest Restaurants,
PLUS the chance to emblazon the chest
every right-thinking Michigan football f
with your prize winning Bowl design.

of
Fan const

Second and Third Prizes:
WILL BE ACKNOWLEDGED IN PRINT AND
HAVE THEIR DESIGNS APPEAR IN THE
DAILY. (Only the winning entry will be re-
produced so that it can be ironed- off the
page directly onto your T-Shirt.)

_. . . _ -- ...__ _ ____ __ .663-3692

Your chance to achieve artistic immortality-or, at tie
very least-to be remembered fondly on laundry day!

Design an emblem, cartoon or drawing incorporating
in its theme the Michigan Football Wolverines and
their upcoming Bowl appearance.
Begin forming your ideas now-when the Bowl bids
are announced, finalize your design and submit the
finished drawing to The Michigan Daily before 5:00
p.m. December 2.
Rules. and Regulations:

Judging will take place that night. The winning design
will be reproduced in the pages of The Michigan Daily
using a special ink so that students and all team sup-
porters can IRON-ON your artistic talents to the front
of their t-shirts.
Then, before we leave for Pasadena, make your own
"Bowl" t-shirt. Show our Bowl opponent we support
a great team.

i

ON
TONIGHT at 8:

i
i
t

Who Is Eligible?
ANYONE-student, academcian,
grad, alumnus, staff member,-
ANYONE who reads The Daily-
ANYONE who supports University
of Michigan Football.

Judges:
TED RAMSAY
Professor, School of Art
BO SCHEMBECHLER
UM football coach
BOB UFER
WPAG UM football announcer

Artwork:
Design should be no larger than
6 /2" wide by 9" deep or 9" by 61/2"
and should be in black ink on white
paper. It should be a simple layout,
free of tiny details that do not eas-

P
r
r

ily transfer to fabric.

Include your name, address and phone no. on the back and bring or mail to The Michigan
Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 by 5 p.m., December 2. Enter as many designs as
your talents produce.
The winning Iron-On Design will be printed in either Michigan Blue or "Rose" Red in an
appropriate Michigan Daily sometime before the term's last publication December 13.
START PREPARING YOUR ENTRY NOW-

35 p.m.

be ready

as soon as bowl bids are announced

I

III

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