Thursday, June 6, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three U.N. peacekeepers occupy Golan Heights buffer zone SGC denies theater space to film groupn. By DAVID BLOMQUIST The Student Organizations Board of Student G avernment Council last night refused to approve Friends of Newsreel's request for auditorium space for July and August movie showings. Board chairman Elliot Chikofsky and member Chuck Meibeyer voted to table the student film group's applications for Modern Language Bldg. theaters pending the outcome of the board's investigation into alleged Newsreel fiscal "irrespon- sibility." THE BOARD did, however, approve space applications from all four other major campus film organizations-- Cinema It, Ann Arbor Film Co-op, New World Media, and Cinema Guild. Calvin Luker, director of student or- ganizations, disagreed with the Board's actions. "We work on the principle that everyone is innocent until proven guilty'" Luker said. "We have an obligation to treat Newsreel as any other film group." Luker serves as moderator of the board but has no vote in matters that cose before it. CHIKOFSKY announced that a check by the Registrar's Office of the mem- bership list Newsreel submitted at the board's last meeting revealed that 19 of the group's 37 members-or 51 per cent-were not University students. SGC regulations stipulate that at least 50 per cent of the membership of student organizations must be currently registered students. In other business, the board voted to postpone until'its next meeting a petition for recognition by Students' Con- temporary Arts Guild, a proposed stu- dent film group, because the organiza- tion's chairperson was not present. B The Associated Pre United Nations peacekeepers moved into the Golan heights buffer zone be- tween Syria and Israel yesterday to patrol the cease-fire and troop di- engagement agreements. The Canadian Iefense Minisiry said 150 Canadian soldiers had set ip camp in the destroyed Syrian city of Quneitra hours after Syrian and Israei negotiat- ing teams in Geneva signed a plan for withdrawal uo troops from the front where an artillery war rageJ tor t81 days this spring. THE ANNOUNCEMENT sd the Ca- adians, drawn from the U.N. force in the Sinai Desert, traveled in a 40-vehicle convoy the 440 miles to Quneitra with a seven-hour rest stop at Tibeus di GAi- lee. Under the cease-fire agreement signed last Friday, the United Na'ions se' up the 1,250-man peace force that includm the Canadian support unit, Perv an and Austrian battalions, a Polish trausporta- tion platoon and 11 other observers in the buffer zone. U.N. sources said the first 500 men reached Quneitra yesterday The force is to become operational today. AS THEY took ip their positions, th situation on the Syrian side was s' relax ed that Syrian gunners wheeled their ar- tillery pieces into a stream and could be seen splashing bucketfuls of water on them to wash out the grime of battle. Syrian farmers who ventured into their orchards and fields for the first time stopped their harvest to ap;plaud and cheer as the U.N. units rumbled by. On the Israeli side, soldiers dynamited military installations they had set ip in territory captured in last October's war that will be returned to Syria under the Geneva accords. Tank ':arriers hauled away damaged tanks, trucks aid person- nel carriers abandoned by the Syrians in the latter stages of the war. THE OPERATION was similar to one carried out early this year on evacuation from the Sinai front where no military equipment or fortifications were left in usable condition for the Egypians In Haifa, Israel's new female political star, Shulamit Aloni, made her first appearance as a government minister and urged that the new government of Premier Yitzhak Rabin give back cap- tured Arab territory. "Whoever does nt want Israel tic be- come another Northern Iretsnd, Cyprus or Soth Africa rust he prepaedIn give up Nablus and Hebron," on the west bank of the Jordan River, Aloni said. The contries she etcesred to are plagued with atise anigvsiem n er- ril activities. IN HIS last day of seven years as de- fense minister, Moshe Dayan predicted in Tel Aviv that no matter what the government does, Israel faces continued terrorist activities. He told a farewell party that Israel would have to find the "golden path" between insisting upon its needs and defying external pressures. U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Wald- him arrived in Jerusalem ansI discussed with Israeli and U.N. officials the steps toward peace in the Middle East. Is- reli officials said Waldheim sold go to Jordon today. Zzoom ... If television commercials can be believed, sooner or later we're all going to be riding motorcycles to work. In that case, this Florida window washer ap- pears to have already joined the future. He loaded his bucket, brushes, and ladder on the back of his bike, and headed off for work down Miami's Bis- cayne Boulevard yesterday. Discipline, tracking mark school bd. election focus By JEFF SORENSEN Over the past five years, racial tension and violence in the city's schools has led conservative community members to call for tighter discipline policies, Liberal and radical citizens, on the other ,and, attribute school disturbances .o the school's failure to provide the services required by individual students, THIS PHILOSOPHICAL division is the basis of a major controversy among 11 candidates seeking three Board of Edu- cation seats in next Monday's elections. Most conservative candidates call for stricter enforcement of the school disci- pline code, and in addition support the tracking system used at city junior highs and high schools, although they admit the system has some drawbacks. Liberal and radical candidates con- tend that the tracking system, which separates students on the basis of aca- demic performance, funnels blacks and low income students into the bottom track. REPUBLICAN-BACKED conservatives Wendy Barhydt, Stanley Bielby and Peter Wright all take hard lines on dis- cipline. "High ideals can only be achieved in schools providing a safe and healthy environment," Barhydt says. "Students cannot live, learn and excell in a hos- tile atmosphere." Last year, the conservative-dominated school board created Roberto Clemente School as an "alternative school for dis- ruptive youth." Designed to provide spe- cial education to students who cause disciplinary problems, the school now offers an alternative for drop-outs. ALL CANDIDATES supported continu- ation of Roberto Clemente, although most liberal candidates say they fear that the school could be used to dis- criminate against blacks and low income students. In line with their reservations about allegedly "separate but eq u a l" pro- grams, liberal and radical candidates call the tracking system a potentially discriminatory mechanism. student input into school policy has caused hostility and frustration. See BOARD, Page 10 Radicalism erupts at WSU, By JEFF DAY police officers were injured, several SANDEE SALLOWAY, one of the stu- The Wayne State University Campus students were beaten and six were ar- dents arrested in the confrontation, suf- TeWyeSaeUiestCaps rested, feted a mild concussion after being hit is generally quiet. Eighty per cent of Thedtwo arrests sparking the protest in the lace. the students work in addition to going to stemmed from a Chicago anti-racism "I was knocked out. When I woke up, school and what little social life exists demonstration during which the po - a en ikdi h is"sesi is mostly. confined to sororities and fra- dmntaindrn hc h pro- l was being kicked in the ribs." she said. isrmotly. ctesters prevented a former Nixon advisor Wendal Watkins, an 18-year-old who ternities. from speaking. will attend WSU in the fall, was arrested .However, last Wednesday radicalism WSU officials deny that excessive force along with Salloway. erupted for a brief period as 15 to 20 was used to quell the disturbance. "FOUR COPS were all over me, beat- students, infuriated by the arrest earlier "Things happened so fast," said public FOURt C Pth wev er e ,"be in the day of two other students, stormed information officer Mike Sibille. "Stu- iOg me with whatever they had," he WSU President George Gullen's office. dents were hitting police and police s IN THE MELEE that followed, four were hitting students," See WSU, Page 10