Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 25, 1976 t UM STUDENT BLOOD BANK JII Jan. 26, 27, 28, 29, 30 UNION BALLROOM UNIVERSITY SHOWCASE PRODUCTION QQOT JOE ORTON JAN 28-31 8:00p.m. ARENA THEATRE $2.00 Gen.Adm. Advance sales through PTP Ticket Office located in lobby of Mendelssohn Theatre Building. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 2.5 p.m. Professional Theatre Program Ticket Office (313) 764-0450 in Mississippi race (Continued from Page 1) committed vote to avoid dam- Cox yesterday endorsed Con- aging the unity movement. gressman M o r r i s Udall (D- accord for military bases i , . ,. a.i - -___ -___--____ Wallace takes lead United States, Spain okay u*P 1 m. 4:30 p.m. Ariz.) for the Democratic presi- dential nomination.r COX TOLD reporters that; only a man of openness, integ-j rity and courage can bring us: together. I believe Mo Udall is' slch a man." Udall, who was present at the press conference, termed theI endorsement "a s o u r c e of pride." The Mississippi caucused were the first joint effort by the two factions of the state party-the traditional Regulars and the civil rights-oriented Loyalists-i in a unity movement spurred by1 new Gov. Cliff Finch. The gov-1 ernor reportedly had sent word{ to his supporters to back an un- THE LOYALISTS have repre- sented Mississippi at the last two national conventions. Mississippi, with only 24 of the 3,008 votes to the national convention, drew national at- tention because it is only the second state to begin the dele- gate selection process. Wallace, w h o carried the state's electoral votes as a third party candidate in 1968, bought television time to urge his sup-, porters to go to the caucuses. With no major issues develop- ing, most candidates concen- trated on organizing, and Car- ter put together what was re- garded as the best statewide organization. ._. HOM-EWORK NOT' KEEPING -YOU I -BUSY ENOUGH?'1i (Continued from Page 1) KISSINGER told a news con- ference in the Santa Cruz palace that Spain had entered a new era under King Juan Carlos but that it faced a challenge of striking a balance "between evo- lution and stability." At a -dinner given by Areilza, Kissinger toasted the treaty as "a milestone in the relationship of both of our countries." For the use of the bases for five more years, the United States will give Spain $1.22 bil- lion in military and economic aid and meet Spanish demands for withdrawal of the nuclear submarines from Rota, a naval base near Cadiz in southern Spain. U.S. OFFICIALS said t h e y could meet that demand because the Polaris submarines in the American fleet will be replaced by longer-range Tridents begii- ning in 1979. The 10 Polaris sab- marines are to be withdrawn be- tween January and June of that year. "Spain, which has contributed so much to the West- rn civ:'i- zation," Kissinger said, "must in our view be an integral part of all Western relationships." The United States has back- ine taste ed Spain for NATO member- ship, but most of the W-stern Euronean democracies opp.xee> the drive during the authoritar- ian era of the late Gen. Fran- cisco Franco. The agreement, signed with tht new govern- ment of King Juan Cnr'os. "brings Spain closer to NATO. certainly in a psycn lagical sense," said a key U S. official. HOWEVER, he erinhasized that unlike U.S. agreements with NATO, the United States w a s not committed to- Spin', d e - fense. This official also said t b e "treaty of friendsnin and co- I operation" does not guarantee U.S. use of the bases for ship- ping equipment to Israel in event of another Middle E a s t war. The issue did not come up in negotiations, he said. Besides Rota, the U n i t £e d States operates air base) at, Torrejon, outside Madrid, Zara- goza and an inactive base at Mo- ron. Kissinger was scheduled to fly home today, ending a trip that has included strategic arms lim- itations talks in the Soviet Un- ion, a meeting with NATO fore- ign ministers in Brussels and a stop in Denmark. - 1 3"1 (l1 .B L1W i ii AICTRAVEL MICH. UNION 763-214 IkIACAION FLIGHTSI SKI PARK CITY, UTAH SPRING BREAK MARCH 6-13, 1976 $285 DEADLINE: FEB. 4 AIRFARE AVAILABLE SEPARATELY SUNDAY, JANUARY 25 at H I LLEL--7:30 p.m. Kissinger lilg: "lg It's still not too late to come down to the Daily and help us out. The Business De- partment NEEDS PEOPLE who want to: * work preparing ads and learning the operations of a daily paper k t. ' I _ a I' i i 1 "1 Speaker-MOSHE KEREM TOPIC-A Socialist * meet other good, frustrated people f * party down once in a while " drink 5cCokes " after the first month, make a LITTLE bit of money You don't need any special skills, just show Utopian Community in War and Peace Mr. Kerem was born in the U.S. in 1924 and arrived in Israel during the War of Independ- ence in 1948. He has been a member of Kib- butz Gesher Hasiv since its founding in 1949. He is currently a member of the National Secretariet of the Kibbutz Movement. Mr. Kerem is a former Secretary of his Kib- butz, involved in the training of African edu- cators in Israel and Africa, active in the Kib- butz Movement and the Israel and Africa Labor Movement on a national level. He is the author of a book entitled "Life in a Kibbutz" and many articles on the Kibbutz and on education and youth in Israel in general. hit at Martha Cook (continued from page 1) the area on wines and cheeses:! As the guests loitered be-one inAnn Arbor and one at tween three "statons," each Oakland University near Pon- with different wines to compli- tiac. He also hosts many stately ment an imported cheese from dinners and parties in the De- Denmark or Switzerland and troit-area. crackers from C a n a d a and "There's such a joy and love England, Rosenberg interjected in wine. Wine has taught me a comments about each station. way of life. My contribution to After describing Wente Broth- society is the joy and warmthl ers' Blanc de Blanc as a "guz- of wine," said Rosenberg. zling wine," he received a A graduate of the University chuckle after accusing Cella in 1949, and the one person in Lambrusco as being a "lovely the country that teaches a wine to roll around on the rug course in cheeses, Rosenberg with." Rose, he said, "is the has been in the wine business current vogue." for some 15 years. ROSENBERG, a dramatic "Nothing has the taste, char-i and enthusiastic man, said that acter and flavor that wine and "people always tell me how cheese does, and the beauty of they love my course and my it all is that anybody can afford presentations. It feeds my ego it," the wine fancier concluded. like crazy." He teaches several courses in DEADLY FUEL LINCOLN, , Neb. (UPI) - TREUNIVERSITY oMICHIGAN R Coal, charcoal and styrofoam PROFESSIONAZ THEATRE PROGRAM packaging can kill if they- are THIS, AN ACTOR'S TRUNK burned in a fireplace, says has gone in and out of 92 cities across Janet Wilson, Extension con- the U.S. Now, it returns to Ann Arbor! sumer education specialist at the University of Nebraska- Lincoln. All produce deadly lohnHsn '1Sema '"' quantities of carbon monoxide The Acting when they are burned. company 5 Ms. Wilson also warns against stacking artificial logs of saw- dust and wax on top of each other, as they can explode. atPM Cook apackage of frozen Pr- SUN MAT at 3PMr tichoke hearts, drain and chill. POWER CENTER Cut up the hearts and add to mixed greens and French $3.37dressing to serve six. Nice for IrPTI' P Tiet \f ficcompany! Traying: Funand games in the Arb (Continued from Page 1) exchange for their meal cards or some other form of identifi- cation-eliminating the need to smuggle them out of the lunch- room. AT EAST QUAD, however, students have to go to the cafe- teria to check' out trays. "They used to give trays out at thefront desk, but the ad- ministration was afraid of peo- ple getting hurt. So now they are checked out in the cafeter- ia," said a residence hall em- ploye. And often the screams of the travers belie minor pain or serious injury. ALTHOUGH no figures exist on the number of students bent and bruised while sliding around' the Arb, nurses at Health Service report the bat- tered trayers check in with great regularity. "They'll come in here after traying with a variety of in- juries, says one nurse. "They can hurt just about any part of their bodies." She. adds "Traying isn't a safe practice unless you're careful and know the hill you're going down." But if that wre the case, the screams just wouldn't be so loud. up and we'll train you! Pleeease. for udso, StrooG .- lpI rome hear he neares ~XC~ C~~ (Z~ssiat rlcas& S~e e~yAN a~ &1~s 6~a -~ c/i ?J~~id fl9 ~Cn6tt'X + a Ca heaf ther a'/es as. rtn$ the I u P oal leases 6zror e C~brc d cn 1'k1 ~v s ~/~sedcc yensze. 1 B~t S s???4* , czafa Qf 1 ~ ~'p zomtheJc~r c ec 'n~uc #P a1 '. f hHNrPHLIP SUSA 'ed ~em J C ~4 cAunC - , ~ a ~&vrJ~b It's Another INCREDIBLE LOGOSSL Many Paperbacks 5c to 50c Many Hardbacks under $1.00 ALL BOOKS 10% to 80% OFF! 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