Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 1, 1974 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DMI~Y Saturday, June 1, 1974 Supreme expediite (Conrinm Id frn Page 1) and hi. idinitr ti n" [ hotlty after Ntxon ttiok office in 1969. The report rlso said the cam- paign pledge was reaffirmed and restated at the time of the federal price support increase in March 1971 and a method was worked out by which three dairy-farmer cooperatives were to donate monthtv nstltlments Women picket local bank, protest bias NATIONAL BANK o W Trcst President F. . owtler e'plarn- ed this prIctice has been adopt- ed because loansH arc e dOnl the person's ability to pir back the loan aitd we must tAke mto account the possibility of the person becoming uneai t'loye for one reason or another' However, Fowter wos t a Io critical of NOW's prite corn- msenting, "They have e everV right to express their nonnIns. Courtagrees to hearing on Nixon of $90,000 through dummy com ' staff, H. R. Haldeman, may mittees to conceatl the source of have discussed it with then-Atty. the money Gen. John Mitchell, who later The money was to come from turned down repeated requests Associated Milk Producers, Inc. by antitrust lawyers to convene (AMPI), the nation's largest a grand jury investigation of d a i r y cooperative; Dairymen, the milk producers. Mitchell Inc., and Mid-American Dairy- told his subordinates to file a men, Inc. Together they. control civil suit rather than seek crimi- uboit one-fourth of the nation's nal prosecution. milk. TIlE REPORTI soid the dat y- TTIESE CAMPAIGN pledges men also supported Democratic were "apparently directly link- presidential candidates in 1972, ed to a favorable mitk price and said this was sometimes support decision by the Presi- done through secret use of the dent worth hundreds of millions cooperative's corporatio'n iunds of dollars to the industry-and "in part to avoid the enmity of costing the same amount to the the Nixon administration," "overnment a n d consuiers," These candidates are known the report said. to include Rep. Wilbur Mills of Although the dairymen gave Arkansas and Sen. Hubert Ilum- less than half the promised $2 phrey of Minnesota. Parties ask amendments (Continuee fromPage 3) have their second choices for mayor tallied. The remaining candidates' vote totals would be adjusted to reflect those second choices. The process-dropping candi- dates and redistributing the sec- ond choice votes - would con- tinue until one contender re- ceived over 50 per cent of the first and second choice votes being counted. Both parties plan to put their charter amendment proposals on the November ballot by cir- culating petitions. The petitions must be signed by five per cent of the city's registered voters and be subimtted 90 days before the election date. THIS GIVES HRP and the Democrats until Aug. 5 to ob- tain the required 3,600 signa- tures. Local Democrats p 1 a n on launching their petition drive "immediately." HRP will "go any place where there are large numbers of seo- ple," according to Councilwo- man Kathy Kozachenko (HRP- Second Ward). Another HRdP5 spokesperson a a i d yesterday that the party hopes to get 6,01)0 signatures but anticipated some difficulty because most students are not in town now. BOTH CITY Charter amend- tnent proposals attempt to solve a recurring "problem" when more than two parties run in an election: candidates may win with less than 50 per cent o~f the vote. The HRP spokesman stressed that Mayor James Stevenson, a Republican, was elected with 47 per cent of the vote. Kozachenko added that the HRP proposal was "the best way to prevent a mayor beiing elected with less than 50 per cent" of the vote. Democrats stressed the "de- sirability ..- of attaining the consensus of a majority of vot- ers in electing governing offi- cials" saying that run-off elec- tions were the best way to en- sure this. IRP HAS charged that the Democratic attempt at run-off elections is "a selfish power- grab that this city can ill- afford" and an attempt to "kill off" HRP. An HRP spokesperson said the party's proposal would "tend to elect the person in the mid- die" with HRP conceding. "This will probably insure a Democratic victory." Though this may be the case, there seems to be little chance Democrats will help with the IIIP proposal. Party Chairwo- taun Marjorie Brazer stated, "I doubt very much we Will be working with HRP." Claiming that to extend pre- ferential balloting to council elections as well as the may- oral race would elect 10 Demo- cratic council members, IIRP has been unable to negotiate with the Democrats, who want to include council in any pro- posal. million, the report said that the donations continued t h r o u g h 1972 "partly to honor the earlier commitment and partly to seek a favorable resolution of a Jus- tice Department antitrust suit' against AMPI. The report cited evidence of possible White Mouse influence on the course of that lawsuit, including a document indicating that Nixon's former chief of Daily OFFICE HOURS [irculation Dept. ..10 a.m.-4 pamil 764-0558 (lassified Dept, , . 11 a.m.-4p.M., 764-0557 Diplay Dept. . N 12 noon-3 p.m., 764-0554 Please try to coil our offices during these; hours, Film benefit called illegal (CntinuedifromPage1) Consequently, "prior to the spending of any of the money" Eckstein will meet with his staff and legal advisors to determine the implications of the statute. If they decide that the Milhouse revenues can legally be used for on-campus campaign activities, "that's what we'll do with the money," Eckstein stated. Otherwise, the funds would be donated to some cause close- ly associated with Eckstein's political philosophy, such as po- licing of polluters. Exactly where the money went "would be a decision we'd have to face later on," Eckstein said. CLOSED MONDAYS June, July, Aug. SAMS STORE 201 . Liberty ARMY STUPLUS 2 Lb. Down SLEEPING BAG $50.98 Dunham HIKING BOOTS $22.98 and up 2-Man NYLON TENT $28.98 PRIMUS MINI STOVE $11.98 TWO ANN ARBOR LOCATIONS 201 E. Washington at 4th) 994-3572 1166 Broadway (noth of eroodwv bide 769-9247 OPEN MON.-SAT. 9-6 - Peace accord signed (Continued from Pge 3) is a "step toward just and dur- able peace." A KEY provision of the ac- cord, spelled out in an accom- panying protocol, was the sta- tioning of a 1,250-man United Nations Disengagement Observ- er Force in a buffer zone sepa- rating the two forces, with an area of reduced troops and ar- maments on each side. At United Nations headquar- ters in New York the Soviet Union joined the United States in sponsoring a resolution set- ting up the observer force for an initial period of six nionths. U. N. Emergency Force com- mander Gen. Ensio Siilasvuo of Finland, who chaired the sign- ing ceremony in Geneva, de- scribed the pact as a "giant and courageous step" toward peace in the Middle East. WITHOUT naming Secretary of State Kissinger, he praised the "enormous energy" which produced "an exceptiongl feat of diplomacy, unparalled in the annals of international rela- tions." Kissinger returned to Wash- ington early yesterday and re- ceived congratuations from President Nixon, Vice President Gerald Ford and congressional leaders. On the flight home senior American officials told accom- panying reporters that Kissin- ger had been on the verge of go- ing home three times during the 33 days of negotiations. An of- ficial, who asked not to be nam- ed, said all three crises came in Damascus and were followed by break-throughs which led to the final accord. NIXON WAS scheduled to fol- low up Kissinger's Middle East diplomacy with a visit in June to Egypt, Israel and Saudi Ara- bia. Washington sources said he would probably also visit Jordan and perhaps Syria. Ditplomatic relations between Syria and the United States were broken off during the 1967 Mideast war, but the Beirut newspaper An Nahar reported yesterday that the two countries have now agreed to resume re- lations. After his Middle East tour Nixon is scheduled to visit the- Soviet Union on June 27 for a week. THE TRICKY road still ahead to a final peace settlement was illustrated by strict separation of the Israeli and Arab mili- tary representatives in a pen- tagonal arrangement of five ta- bles at the signing ceremony. The U. N. organizers initially planned to bathe the ceremony in publicity to draw attention to their Mideast peace - seeking role and 200 reporters watched Siilasvuo make his opening statement. The Israelis immediately aft- erwards started signing their copies of the accord, but the Syrians, unwilling to focus pub- licity on their presence in the same chamber with the Israelis, sat unmovingly until Siilasvua called a t5-minute recess and cleared out the reporters. REASSEMBLING later behind closed doors, both sides com- pleted the task of initialing each page of the four-page accord and its accompanying, two-page protocol. Palestinian guerrilla leaders and politicians tackle another obstacle on the way to peace at a meeting in Cairo today. There the Palestinian National Coun- cil, a parliament in exile, will try to resolve the dispute be- tween moderates and radicals on whether Palestinians should take part in the future Arab- Israeli peace talks. The moderates favor partici- pation, while radicals see any deal with the Israelis as a sell out. REGARDS TO BROADWAY a revue of american musical theater benefit fo rthe John Reid Klein Scholarship Fund POWER CENTER BOX OFFICE JUNE 2-5......... . 10 A.M.-5 P. JUNE 6-8 .... ........ 10 A.M.-8 P.M FOR INFORMATION-763-3333 Makram Joubron, Director/Choreographer Bradley Bloom, Musical Di rector/Jerrold Vander Schaaf/Constance Avsharian Robert Chapel/Irene Connors/Jerry DePuit Judy Manos/Willis Patterson/Don Giflis June 6, 7, 8/POWER CENTER/8 p.m. All tickets tax deductible/$5-4-3/$25 Patron Seat Tickets ovenbe/Grinnell's/Liberty Music DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BRING QUICK RESULTS