November 03, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 51) • Page Image 3
… negotiated in Moscow with U. S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, and a White House re- fusal to join the Soviet Union in policing an Arab-Israeli cease- fire seems to have stimulated a reconsideration of…
…- tions in the Golan Heights. Des- pite their criticisms they said Israel still scored a great vic- tory over its Arab foes. "LET IT HURT whomever it will hurt," said Commerce Min- ister Haim Bar-Lev, once…
… release of prisoners of war. Critics have argued that Is- rael had accepted the cease- fire too soon and could have dealt the Arabs a crushing blow if it had not agreed to -stop the fighting. THE CALL for a…
… sacrifice than in past wars. WHEN ISRAEL unle-1hed its unorthodox tactics, however, the Arabs reacted slowly and lacked imagination or resourc.fulness, he said. Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians were used…
… as "dispos- able or throwaway soldiers," he brainwashed for suzh human said. The Arab troons had been wave tactics, and .Egyptian planes and helicopters were also wasted in badly planned actions, he…
… contended. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 51 Saturday, November 3, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor…

