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October 09, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 29) • Page Image 2

… jungle? Or are you just looking for something fun, even ful- filling to do between classes? Mideast O1: A potential ace up the Arabs' sleeve war STUDENT COUNSELING OFFICE, a student-run, student

…Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 9, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday1 October 9, 197 SAFARI LEADERS WANTED Are you interested in helping fellow students, lost in the academic…

… Penny. OR come to pur Counselor orien- tation meeting WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11, 7:30 p.m.- 1018 ANGELL HALL. 763-1552. i By FRED COLEMAN said they thought unified Arab use co n tin u es An AP News Analysis…

…. weapon in the Arab arsenal. experts believe the situation is now "THERE WAS no word on the Experts in London agree that if fundamentally different than it was Soviet leader's response, but Mos- the weapon…

… is used the result would during the June 1967 Arab-Israeli cow has so far issued no call for likely be oil shortages in Western conflict when the oil weapon was a ceasefire. Europe, Japan and to some…

… degree used to little effect. At the start of the 1967 war, the United States. Higher fuel The Arabs then accused the West M o s c o w immediately branded prices and perhaps rationing could of aiding…

… occupied Arab lands. This on the Arabs to tread carefully they realized they needed the oil time, however, Soviet leaders have before unleashing the oil weapon. income more than the West needed simply warned…

… Jordan remain- some Arab states may yet decide die East oil boycott by saying of ed quiet with no indication that to cut back oil supplies in an at- the Arabs, "Let them drink oil." King Hussein would take…

… world oil producing AS A RESULT of the 1967 can- such a cutback in Arab capitals capacity and current demand is flict, Jordan lost the West Bank even before the outbreak of hos- between two and three per…

… that the new war probably means that if only one radical commandos. would change the politics of oil. Arab oil producer, like Libya, were -- - MOST E X P ER T S here w h o to cut off its supplies there…

October 17, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 36) • Page Image 3

… being rushed to Israel is in itself wor- thy of particular note. It might even cause eyebrow - raising New govt. forms in Thailand as troops battle with students By AP and Reuter BANGKOK - Sanya Tham…

…- masak, appointed Thailand's Prime Minister in the midst of violent clashes between troops, police and students, yesterday formed a new government as peace returned to Bangkok. While jubiliant students re…

student leaders and were widely hailed among the thousands of youths w h o took to the streets to confront police and troops at height of the revolt. The overthrow of Thailand's three military strongmen n o…

…-Marshal Thanoms Son, was the students' last demand as they demonstrated, for a return to democratic rule. Thanom, Prime Minister since 1969, led the military in intro- ducing rule by decree in 1971. The new cabinet…

… under the former premier. The new government was an- nounced soon after student lead- ers called off the demonstrations, in which troops and police back- ed by tanks opened fire on the, students and…

… be in Taipei, but the where- abouts of the marshal remained a mystery. among ardent Arab nationalists. The question is whether there is a takeoff point in what Sadat had to say. Possibly the very…

…-fire on the princi- ple of Israeli withdrawal "from all occupied territories" to posi- tions held before the 1967 war, whereupon he would be prepared to urge other Arabs, including Palestinians, to join him…

… control of such points as Syria's strategic G o 1 a n Heights, or the former Arab sec- tor of Jerusalem. Thus, Sadat's proposal might, at first look, seem hard-line. Cairo ever since Resolution 242 has been…

… demanding Israeli with- drawal from all occupied areas. The statemate lay in the fact that Israel refused to makefany move at all without prior face- to-face negotiation with the Arabs and the Arabs refused…

October 30, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 47) • Page Image 7

ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT keynote speeaker: ABDEEN JABARA Arab attorney, activist & author TUES., OCT. 30, 7:30 p.m. Assembly Hall, Mich. Union Sponsored by: Organization of Arab Students, Young Socialist…

… does not withdraw completely from all oc- cupied Arab territories and fails to restore the rights of the Pales- Rezoning attacked <Continued from Page 1) "TO ME IT sounds like ICC is property became…

… alterrna- ACCORDING TO Frederick, two tives possible for the structures- buildings in the R2B zoning area especially since 1960 when the are presently being operated illeg- number of students living in room…

October 31, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 48) • Page Image 2

… yesterday morning and continued their discussions through lunch. They plan to see Nixon at the White House today. THE TWO KEY ISSUES are be- coming entwined in the quickened diplomacy. The first is Arab in…

… Soviet Union would press the Arabs to exchange prisoners. The Egyptians provided Israel with the names of 82 prisoners, in- cluding a pilot held since 1969, and would exchange the men once Is- rael agreed…

… fears that the Arab oil blockade could seriously damage chances t( ;meet this winter's heating of needs. TOP OFFICIALS of 21 interna tional oil firms met with govern ment officials at the Interior De…

… r the high-level secret session to d - stress the urgency of the situation I created by the Arab states' pro- duction cutbacks and embargo of shipments to western nations in t retaliation for support…

… of Israel. Saudi Arabia, the main Arab oil s producer in the Middle East, will reduce production by another five per cent starting today, the Middle East News Agency (MENA) re- - ported yesterday…

…. - THE AGENCY QUOTED Taher i Radwan, permanent Saudi delegate to the Arab League, as saying the cut would bring the total reduction 1 of Saudi output to 15 per cent. The cuts began nearly two weeks , ago…

… under an agreement between Arab oil producers at a meeting in Kuwait. They were aimed at coun- tries considered friendly to Israel. Meanwhile, Prime Minister, Ed- ward Heath and opposition leader Harold…

… Hitchcock The Perfect Halloween Nght Thriller WED., OCT. 31 7, 9, 11 P.M. Hutchins Hall, Rm.100 NON LAW-'75c sponsored by Law School Student Senate ou can choose howmuch money you Wan o save. Regular…

October 06, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 27) • Page Image 4

… paragraphics Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6…

…. The student w h o feels very much alone has few al- ternatives. Reading the D a i I y Personal column usually uncovers pleas for friendship but with an underlying hint of perversion. One can take…

… creative hold of a Flair and release his or her anguish on a bathroom wall, or scrawl his or her phone number somewhere in Basis for Arab apprehension By AHMAD BESHAREH THE RECENT events in Vienna…

… dramatize another facet of the Arab-Zionist feud. The Arab guer- rillas principal demand , was the termination of Austria's official collaboration with the Israeli Zion- ists in channelling Soviet Jews to…

… turn of this century the Arab Middle East has been the host of Jews from around the world. This is especially true of Euro- pean Jews escaping persecution or seeking a greater freedom of ex- pression…

…. The early commers were welcomed ' by the Arabs of the area. However, as soon as the political significance of immigration became evident the Arabs of Palestine vio- lently revolted against this…

… three years, 30,000 of which in 1972 alone). In view of these events, t h e Arabs cannot help being appre- hensive. And the resultant image, magnified by Israeli statements and actions, can only be bleak…

…. Moshe Dayan has recently stated that the Soviet immigrants w i lI make Sinai (captured from Egypt in 1967) Jewish. And the multitude of Israeli settlements in A r a b lands confirms the Arabs' worst fears…

…, i.e., that continued Jewish immigration from the Soviet Un- ion will realize Israeli's implicit policy of annexation and expan- sion. Annexation leads to displace- ment of Arabs and the sequence of…

… the pre-1948 events is repeated. The Arabs uphold the humaniter, ian principle of choosing one's land of residency. But they also uphold and defend the equally important right to one's land. The…

October 19, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 38) • Page Image 4

… Mf rtigan uaitu Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Madison Avenue: The biggest pusher 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104…

… dilemma. can com Proposal By DIANA MILLER with her (TATED SIMPLY, and it would of course not be simple to im- QUITE plement, this plan would require for Arab the Russians and the Americans tensions to bring…

… er. to the crisis area. The on Israel and the Arabic countries tion with would be brought to a status quo againstI as far as their supplies of arma- ians wh( ments are concerned. The actual ments fo…

… fighting instead that the of allowing it to go on until one obtaining side (the Israelies) temporarily so that t finishes the other is that it would bargainin be better for Arab pride if both ten days it and…

… its adversary were told to ister Mos quit instead of being badly beat- would be en once again. back atI AND IT IS ARAB PRIDE, or so Sinai ifT they have informed us, that has conducte moved them to…

… energy embarrass- ing ten y ment. If the Russians do not need igtny Arab oil now, that does not rule ture synth out their use of it in the future: the west and, as the Arabs have shown, that has b they can…

… play games with the Rus- attention sians as well as with the U.S. Before t I HAVE BEEN told b7 "ex- of Good perts" that the Russians are inter- Arabs ha ested in the Arab states not at all attentionI for…

Arabs have shown It would in the past, as mentioned above, if they c that they are not interested in good uset bearing the weight of more im- now, but perialists on their backs. In 1956, from us, Nasser…

… sheeri conquest and rule by foreig 1 pow- will be fo ers and the Arab nationalist move- truly defe ment feels it is time for Acabs to themselves Impossible. After all, most adult minds are unable to…

… and possibly losing pow- ly ones in the whole sita- any right to complain Israel are the Palestin- o, used by Arab goven- r political purposes, were e temporary UN shelters granted citizenship…

October 23, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 41) • Page Image 10

… with a number of Arab capitals directly! involved in the' battle. Ur Clinic in Mich.-1 to 24 week pregnancies terminated by li- censed obstetrician gynecolo- gist. Quick services will be or- ranged. Low…

… Egyptians said they had 'litical support in the rest of the:;sice BIGGEST IIhab eea n 1j Arab world. Their dispute, held since World War II had been DIPLOMATIC SOURCES h e r e shown down 12 Israeli planes and…

… available during most gynecology clinic hours. They will see students by appointments or on a walk-in basis. The counselor will be able to talk with you individually and confidentially to help provide: 0…

October 25, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 43) • Page Image 3

…Thursday, October 25, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY . Page Three Nixon seeks emergency power in face of Arab oil embargo s WASHINGTON (Reuter) -Pre- sident Nixon is seeking emer- gency powers to…

… prevent a fuel shortage in the face of an Arab embargo of oil deliveries -here, Sen. Henry Jackson said yescer- day. Jackson, a Washington Demo- crat who strongly supports Israel, told reporters that his…

…'Dell, a 21-year-old student at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in T r o y , N.Y., said yesterday he's in- vented a UFO detector. "You could put it under- your bed, or wherever you feel safest,' said O…

…'Dell., "When the detector buzzes, go look for the UFO." O'Dell, an environmental en- gineering student from Bethesda, Md., said his gadget is design- ed to pick up electromagnetc waves he thinks a UFO gives off…

October 10, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 30) • Page Image 1

… silently during the demonstration, began to chant slogans supporting their position in the Middle East. President of the Arab Student Organization, Ahmed Beshareh, stated that the Arabs were there to show…

… . . . the Student Counseling Office is holding an orientation meeting for anyone in- terested in peer counseling at 7:30 p.m. in 1018 Angell.. Medical ethics? The American Journal of Psychiatry says more than…

Arab position was held simultaneously. 700 show By STEPHEN SE A crowd of about7 gathered peacefully on yesterday to express sol Israel on the occasion o outbreak of war in the M Behind the Israel der a…

… aware of Arab mobili first move or risk bein were counselled not to ;BTsolidaritI LBST aggressors in the court of world was fa 700 persons opinion. Israel had been betrayed, regrett n the Diag he…

… concluded, attacked in a weak- taking idarity with ened state on their holiest day,. del emr f the latest Yom Kippur. said, ." Jiddle East. destru monstration A BREAK in the speeches was a fund Arabs and…

… are behind schedule," one official said. "The Arabs are doing better this time than they have in the past." The key to swift Israeli victory in the 1967 war was its mastery of the air, gained in a…

… surprise pre- emptive strike catching much of the Arab air force on the ground. This air dominance permitted co- ordinated warplane and armor as- saults that decimated Egyptian tank and infantry units. But…

…. The gathering was sponsored by the Coalition of Concerned Students and Faculty. The groups behind the name are the local Hillel or- ganization and the Israeli Student Organization. A spokesperson for…

… Hillel' added that in a larger sense the demon- stration was really sponsored by the people of the community rather than any formal organizations. AS THE CROWD dispersed, the Arabs, who had been marching…

October 07, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 28) • Page Image 2

… said. McIntyre was in touch by tele-. phone with representatives of the countries involved in the fighting,' a member of the Australian mis- sion said. Neither Israel nor the Arab side asked for a…

… and ambassa- warfare in that part of the world.; dors of Arab nations met and au- The department spokesman, Rob-: thorized Saudi Arabian Miniister ert McCloskey, made the remark of State Omar Sakkaf to…

… from Page 1) have an all-out war with Israel. He saw the attack as an attempt to ob- tain partial gains in the hope that the United Nations would stop the fighting when the Arabs had gain- ed a foothold…

… on the Israeli-held Eastern Bank and made consider- able gains on the Golan Heights. Herzog, a former military intel- ligence chief, said the Arabs were not prepared for the Israeli reac- tion which…

… the fact that the Middle East was still in a state of war. He said they also assumed that on the Day of Atonement Israel would be the least prepared to go to war. Herzog said the Arab decision had…

students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard…

…, Linguistics & Humanities: T. van Dijk, Univ. of Amsterdam, "For- mal Foundations of Narratives," Rack- ham Amph., 4 pm. Music School: Doctoral Students in Organ Performance, R. Luther, R. An- derson, A: Cook…

October 12, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 32) • Page Image 4

… A t srian tdg Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Electronics intrude into the courtroom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104…

Arab factions, the Israelis and the rest of the world community to make an earnest attempt to begin mean- ingful negotiations on the Middle East- situation. It should be apparent by now that war will not…

… for more than six years has been the land Israel occupied after the 1967 war. The Arabs have justifiably demanded that the land' be returned, and they found a continua- tion of the status quo highly…

… unsatisfac- tory. With no negotiated settlement even remotely in sight, Arab frustration is un- derstandable. NEVERTHELESS, WE. abhor the attack Initiatedby Syria and Egypt. Not only is such action morally…

… reprehensible, but the danger that the U. S. and the Soviet Union will be drawn into an un- wanted confrontation is great. The Arab forces seemingly have not launched a full-scale war bent on the de- struction of…

… in their present positions and negotia- tions to begin immediately. When the fighting finally ends, both the Arabs and the Israelis will have to realize, or be forced to realize, that con- cessions…

… have contributed to the Arab decision to attack before the areas were permanent- ly settled by Israelis. Israeli settlement and development of the areas only substantiates Arab claims that Israel is an…

…. The ideology of "driving Israel into the sea" is unacceptable. A concession by Arab governments that Israel has a right to maintain its political identity will be necessary to the production of any ne…

…- gotiated settlement of Arab-Israeli dif- ferences. The road to any negotiations will be difficult. The fact that the various Arab factions are not totally united will com- plicate problems tremendously. The…

… decryinig campus radicals and black rioters alike. Yet, the findings of the grand jury probing Agnew's gubernatorial years show that even while he was denouncing student protesters, the future Vice Presi…

October 31, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 48) • Page Image 7

…. noon. the Organization of Arab Students Great Lakes Research Inst.: Slide show, "Pictorial Review of Recent Ac- on campuS, also spoke at the meet- tivities," 1070 N. Univ. Bldg., 12:30 pm. ing. Anatomy…

…: Student Seminar, 4804 Med. Sci. II, 1:10 pm. "AN ARMED, popular struggle Ethics, Religion: E. Bantell, Oakland is the only way to liberation for Univ., "Power & Innocence in Human the Arabs," he said…

…Wednesdoy, October 31, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wednesday, October 31, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DALY Page seven Former POW, now a student, speaks on wartime experiences DAILY OFFICIAL…

… degree. I'm thinking perhaps of graduate school, or perhaps law school though." Some of the adjustments to aca- demic life haven't been easy, either. He feels a number of gaps from his fellow students. "I…

…, either. While he has gotten to know some of the fellow students in his classes he admits being uneasy' at first., "I saw guys with long hair and I didn't know what to think. I was afraid to presume." Some…

… sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of theday preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not…

…. Behavior," Aud. A, Angell Hall, 3 pm. Industrial, Operations: R. Merrell, When the Arab nations win, ac- Burroughs Corp., "Managing the De- cording to Beshareh, Jews and sign & Construction of Computer Soft…

…-Arb ca lietghraann ware." 229 W. Engin., 4 pm. Arabs can live together again. in Atmospheric, Oceanic Engineering: L. harmony. Bengtsson, Swedish Meterological & David Herreshoff, another speak…

… also said that he an- BARATIN: French House, 613 Oxford ticipates a mass anti-war move- Rd., s pm. from jment to begin in this country in Musical Society: "Music from Iran, which the Arabs will take a…

October 10, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 30) • Page Image 2

Arab terrorism. clared. " strength.' HE TOLD reporters that Israel Yariv a was greatly outnumbered in tanks in the Sin and troops but had managed rian effor to the heroism of our sol- o build a firm…

….S. officials have proposed that - a ceasefire be arranged along the boundaries that existed before the present hostilities began. The Arab states as well as the Soviet Union and China on the other hand, would…

… like to see the Israelis pullback to the pre-1967 borders. A EUROPEAN diplomat predict- ed that if Israel threatens tne Arabs with loss of even more ter- ritory, nonaligned Security Council members will…

… come up with a sim- ple resolution for "ceasefire and nothing more." On the other hand, if the Arabs advance toward the Israeli heart- land, "there would be growing pressure on the United States to save…

… Israel and that would be a dangerous situation," he added. Student Book Service Meanwhile, a U.N. spokesman. said the U.N. watch along the Suez Canal and the Israeli-Syrian border had been virtually…

… request.I The observers on Saturday had reported crossings of the ceasefire lines from the Arab sides but none from the Israeli side.1 PANAMA CITY (UPI) - Traf- fic authorities have authorized 1 the…

STUDENTS ORGANIZATION I I ALL YOU CAN EAT ;c Join The Daily Staff _ _ .... ....---- _ 9 ---_ Mounds of Spaghetti, Coleslaw, Garlic Bread EVERY WEDNESDAY 4:30-10 P.M. HURON HOTEL & LOUNGE 124 Pearl-483…

…. NAME (Please Print) COMPLETE ADDRESS Reservations are essential Please phone 662-5529 NOW All foreign students are guests American Students 50c to reserve your place SPONSORED BY THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS…

October 28, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 46) • Page Image 2

…, 7:30 p.m. ASSEMBLY HALL, MICHIGAN UNION Sponsored by: Organization of Arab Students, Young Socialist Alliance, Black Inc., Afro-American Studies Dept. A little calculator will get you through times…

… institutions vigilant to compete for students" by mov- tain op( ing the flow of monetary aid to- M "A ward students rather than colleges. support Newman said the report differed other w here from this summer s…

… that the re- isisted of "suggestions rath- statements of new federal THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vol. LXXXIV, No. 46 Sunday, October 28, 1973 d and managed by students at versity of Michigan. News phone Second…

… ea. (enclose check or money order) NAME .STREET- CITY 5- TATE - ZIP I aI !I system I $499- amp- eL r F-7 COME TO A TEACH-IN: Behind the Arab-Israeli Conflict featuring. ABDEEN JABARA…

October 23, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 41) • Page Image 1

… yesterday. The uneasy truce came on the 17th day of the latest Arab-Israeli war, the fourth in three decades. A NEWS ANALYSIS: War brings Arab states together; peace threatens to destroy unity By HOLGER…

… JENSEN Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon-War brought the Arabs together. Peace might pull them apart. The Arab unity which emerged in the first 16 days of the Middle East war seemed to be coming…

… super- powers might force an Israeli withdrawal from Arab lands occu- pied since 1967. Palestinian refugees and their guerrilla fighting arm, who have been a main cause of Arab-Israeli friction for the…

…- cupied land without any condition." A CEASE-FIRE in place appar- ently leaves Egypt in the most favorable position of all the Arab fighting states. Although Israel re- portedly captured 475 square miles of…

… yesterday. Regent investigation splits SGC By CINDY HILL SGC is facing another volatile issue that may wreak havoc on an. already chaotic Council: the Re- gents recently approved a student- faculty…

… committee that is to in- vestigate SGC and propose alter- native student government system by December. While it is said that pohtics makes strange bedfellows, perhaps the strangest pair in recent SGC history…

… running things," said Gill. Gill called the entire plan an "attempt to control student gov- ernment." "It reeks of something," said Gill, "and I don't know what it is." "WE HAVE to see tis efor what Not…

…-fire. WITH NO TERRITORY to gain or lose, Iraq can afford to take its usual militant stand. Baghdad's Socialist Baath party regime meas- ures its prestige in the Arab world by the virulence of its anti…

… their former policy of ignor- ing student government and talk …

October 18, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 37) • Page Image 7

… time. Now they've found out they're too committed to programs that were developed a year ago." MEANWHILE, students are still calling the Future Worlds' office, trying to enroll in a course that doesn…

… dull so 1 h,200,000barrels of oil imported I had to use a log." She said Atlanta's first black mayor, May daily from Arab nations. i Cochran's sacrifice was "supposed incumbent Sam Massell. In Tues to…

…. viding for current needs. Arab testncatvte eeeclt nations have virtually the only ing and "we're going to end up Doctors said Casals had not re- availablehreserves for future U.S. with a human sacrifice…

… Nixon Palmer said at that time, they complications developed. administration officials all de- must have hated this kid like hell,_ _ _ _ _ clined comment on the Arab move.1 because they really tortured…

…'Ms. Ronda Tyler BEST 100 Summers St.I PHOTO Coolville, Ohio I 45723 Yes, send me the information: f Name Address t it~ State Zip COrage or Univ S C H 0 0 L Superintendent Dr.! Charles Wolfe said students

October 20, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 39) • Page Image 1

…- pare a report on federal policy alternatives toward grad- uate education. The study will focus on three areas of specific concern - graduate student support, research and institutional support. Money for…

… the study will come from the Ford Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation. SGC denials Former Student Government Council members Sandy Green and Dave Hornstein both vigorously denied yester- lay ever…

… resignation of Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith from administrative service. Smith, 62, has often been at the center of conflict between adminis- trators and students. However, University…

… Nixon April 30, See DEAN, Page 3 By STEPHEN SELBST University Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson announced plans for a committee to investigate Student Government Council during yesterday…

… University history. "WE WANT a student govern- ment, but we want a good, strong student government here at the University," said Johnson. "This is the feeling of both the Univer- sity executive officers and…

… the Re- gents." The sentiment was echoed by University President Robben Flem- ing. "I hope the student govern- ment will receive thisin the spirit in which it's offered," Fleming said. "If the Regents…

… wanted to destroy student government, the easy way to do it would be to abolish the fees and let student government exist on a voluntary funding ba- sis," he added. THE REGENTS were concern- ed with what…

… Johnson called the "rock bottom level" of student in- terest in SGC. Johnson emphasized that their concern was not simply with the current Gill administration. He said that the Regents had been concern- ed…

… should SGC be getting involved in," said Johnson. "PERHAPS WE might also be concerned with the philosophical as- pectsdof student government, he added. "What forms should it as- sume, how should it seek to…

… be more informed of student opinion? How can the student government be more responsive?" Johnson, however, was uncertain about the details of the plan. "I don't know what form the committee will take…

October 17, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 36) • Page Image 1

…-Wednesday, October 1.7, 1973 Ten Cents ScI YOU SE NM ~n C .ALtY Gill accused Former Student Government Council Treasurer David Schaper filed a complaint of assault yesterday against SGC President Lee Gill. Schaper…

… refused comment on the matter, Gill said "There was no assault. He didn't want to leave, and I simply walked him to the door:" SGC veep quits Student Government Council, already in the throes of the…

… Middle East conflict indicates that 47 per cent of all Americans support Israel and 6 per cent favor the Arab cause. Another 22 per cent back neither side while 25 per cent expressed no opin- ion, the poll…

…-a Israel Arab, Mideast states up oilprice KUWAIT (Reuter)-Persian Gulf Oil states early this morning uni- laterally set new posted prices for their crude oil which effectively mean a two-thirds increase…

… sources conceded that the Israelis had indeed launched a major offensive on the Suez front, but insisted that Arab forces had repelled three Israeli. tanks, and were holding them at bay short of the west…

… bank. Washington observers believed the U. S. decision to supply Israel with arms and equipment to offset a "massive" Soviet airlift to the Arabs had heightened the risk of an Arab oil boycott of the…

… United States. The foreign ministers of four Arab states - Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Morocco and Algeria -- were waiting in Washington to see President Nixon to express concern over the U. S. supplies decision…

…. See ISRAELI, Page 7 ..is :'i s. . . . .:. : By STEPHEN SELBST figure to 1308 - 3.7 per cent of the Student Government Council last student body - and said last night night announced the results of an…

… d t 5 ballot, and students' inability to understand the 10-10-10 representa- tion plan. The elections director said the blame for lack of enthusiasm fell on both the candidates and SGC, saying…

… "neither side fulfilled its obligation. STRAUSS EXPRESSED frustra- tion with the new constitution, un- der which students vote for repre- sentatives in residential, divisional (underclass - upperclass…

October 18, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 37) • Page Image 1

… from what Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan three days See MASSIVE, Page 2 Arab nation S to I1 1 curtailolo-utput AP Photo WALKING THE PICKET LINES for the last time yesterday, members of the D e t r…

… Motoer city teachers sign pact, end strike DETROIT (UPI)-The 44-day-old school strike here which has idled 270,000 students came to an end yesterday when both the school board and teacher's union agreed to…

Arab oil producing countries announced yesterday they would cut oil production by a min- imum ;of five per cent immediately and an additional five per cent each succeeding month until Israel withdraws…

… from occupied Arab territory and restores Palestinian refugees' rights. Oil production c u t b a c k s also were an underlying concern as President Nixon met in Washing- ton with the foreign, ministers…

… of Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Morocco. NIXON SAID afterward that while there were differences be- tween the Arabs and the United States he believes ''a fair and just and peaceful settlement" can…

… with the secretary of state. SAUDI ARABIA, Iraq, Kuwait, Abu Dhabi, Qatar and Iran,, the only non-Arab state on the Persian Gulf, announced Tuesday that they were raising the market price for their crude…

… oil by 17 per cent. Although the United States im- Pres. Nixon ports only -about 6 per cent of its oil from the Arab countries, ad- ministration planners are count- ing on imports of refined heating…

… that the planners anticipate importing. ANY ARAB cutoff in crude oil production would create serious problems for the major interna- tional oil companies such as Texaco, Exxon, M o b i 1, Royal Dutch…

… 500 students, is suffering the campus-wide financial pinch that has been terminal for some programs and organizations this year. cash, the program has little to keep it going beyond wholehearted…

student support. FUTURE WORLDS operated on an $18,000 budget last year, and Grimes says they'll need at least $15,000 this year. "I wouldn't be surprised if that figure reaches $25,000, says Grimes. Last…

October 09, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 29) • Page Image 1

…-Tuesday, October 9, 1973 Ten Cents h1 Ten Pages x I UW SEE NEStAPPEN CALL DAILY Rally planned In the,wake of the eruption of war in the Middle East, a group known as the Coalition of Concerned Students and Faculty…

…, the Institute for Studies in the History of Discovery, will provide funds beginning next fall for graduate students in the field of history, geography and English literature to re-examine the period of…

…, library curator of maps_ and program co- ordinator. 0 Oops! In a story about the Student Rights Party in Satur- day's Daily, we neglected to mention one of SRP's candi- dates - Phil Cushway. Cushway is…

Arab territory they occupied." Chinese Ambassador Huang Hua branded as "preposterous" Scali' s proposal that Egypt and Syria re- turn to their positions before the outbreak of fighting on Saturday. THE…

… demanding Is- rael's withdrawal from Arab terri- tory taken in the 1967 Middle East War. "But the collective will of the council was paralyzed and render- ed inoperative" by an American veto last July 26…

…-pronged Arab attack and Egypt reporting its capture of the provincial capital of Kantara in the Israeli-led Sinai Peninsula. Egypt said its forces were penetrating into Sinai and Syria claimed to be pressing its…

… committee to investigate possible conflicts of interest arising from professors as- signing their own textbooks, tapes, and other classroom materials to their students. The formation of the committee was…

… prompted by an article in The Daily, Aug. 8, that revealed "a vast number" of University facul- ty members were assigning 'their own books to students in their classes. SACUA has appointed a three- man…

… in such a way that the student is suffering, and if so, to what degree? Council pa: boundaries SI By GORDON ATCHESON Republican City Council members members last night approved an amended ward…

October 16, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 35) • Page Image 1

… faculty member sug- gested that student aid be doled out on the basis of achievement, with no consideration of need. Poetic justice The Daily learned yesterday that former Vice Presi- dent Agnew's address…

… States could get along without Arab oil for the time being in the event of a cutoff because oftthe Arab- Israeli war. The figures show that the United States imports about 1.1 million barrels of oil daily…

… direct from the Arab countries, or about 6 per cent of the total daily average U. S. consumption of 17 million barrels a day. On the inside .. . ...an interview with Bonnie Raitt is featured on the Arts…

… recent weeks a campaign of rumors and accusations has been waged against Student Government Council President Lee Gill charg- ing him with an attempt to em- bezzle some $8500 in council funds. A two week…

…. SGC CANDIDATES in the re- cent all-campus election charged Gill with attempting to embezzle Gill, bank official giveconflicti ng accounts $8500 in student government funds, although they say they…

October 17, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 36) • Page Image 2

… called? Israeli soldiers in the field are fond of firing this question at news- men, especially TV crews, visit- ing their units. The 1948 war with the Arabs be- came known as "The War of Inde-' pendence…

…- bar called the new outbreak of fighting the "War of the Day of Judgment," a bilingual play on words combining the Yom Kippur holiday, when the war started, with a warning of impending doom for the Arabs

… way. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 36 Wednesday, October 17, 1973 is edited and managed by students at teUniversity of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor…

… and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other jstates and foreign). II I j I C -- I OPDI LY 12. II 2330.1*:WSNNGON YS1A I I -- t POSITIONS NOW OPEN FOR 1 CENTRAL STUDENT JUDICIARY ALL…

…-CAMPUS SUPREME COURT . I THE MA ' :> . r f MI ILT A IS COME Gd WHO CAN APPLY? Any student of the university. WHERE TO APPLY? Room 3-X Michigan Union WHEN TO APPLY? Before Monday, Oct. 22, 1973, 3 p…

October 11, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 31) • Page Image 3

… thing is pretty would accept the vacant posi common among politicians - but should it be offered by Presid he got caught at it." Nixon. Many students, Democrats and Gov. Marvin Mandel, a De Human Rights…

… he regretted that the re students was best summarized bynain"snesarad Jerry de Grieck (HRP - First ed: "It isanow clearly in the 1 Ward): a. interest of the country to q'iic One down, a million more…

… $5.50, will go on sale today at the Union. SA slates meeting The Student Action Committee, organizers of much of the activity surrounding the tuition strike, has called for a public meeting at 7:30 p…

… also be a meeting of the Ba'hai Student Group tonight from 7:30 to 11:30 at the International Center . . . and there will be a meeting of the Ann Arbor Mental Pa- tient Project at 1420 Hill St. tonight…

… relief, Barbara Kahn passes the bucket in a campus-wide campaign fqr funds initiated by concerned students and faculty. Jewish students seek. aid funds for Israel By CHARLES COLEMAN Blood can be donated…

… for Israel In the wake of the Mideast war, at Hillel, 663-4129. an ad hoc group of students and O faculty members supporting Israel Other activities organized by the has been conducting a vigorous…

… nearly 250 the total of Israeli air- craft that the two Arab countries claim to have bagged since the war began last Saturday. In the two-front ground war, Sy- ria Ignored Israeli claims of re- capturing…

… Congressional leaders yester- day that the new Arab-Israeli war was likely to be a long hard struggle with no decisive turning point yet in sight. NIXON GAVE this somber as- sessment at a White House meeting at…

…- cerned Students and Faculty in Support of Israel, said that blood donated will be sent to Detroit, from where it will be sent directly to Israel. AN INFORMATION booth will also be set up on the Diag to…

… bring current radio and wire service re- ports to students. Anyone interesting in working on the information booth, vigil, and other issues, is urged to contact Hill l. NEW WORLD FILMt MART with GLENDA…

October 31, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 48) • Page Image 1

… of the Middle East. Jabara was the main speaker last night at a teach-in entitled "Be- hind the Arab-Israeli Conflict." Ja- bara spoke to a group of about 100 students at the Union Assembly Hall. The…

… meeting was sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students, the Young Socialist Alliance, a group called Black Inc., and the Center for Afro-Amnerican and Af- rican Studies. Discussion centered on…

… the Daniel Yankelovich Corp. The study, done for the National Movement for the Student Vote, concludes that blue col- lar workers and minority group citizens are most often discouraged by the…

… ANDREA LILLY "War is an extension of politics," and, according to 'Abdeen Jabara, an Arab attorney, activist and au- thor from Detroit,twar ism"an ex- tension of the politics of manipula- tion" in the case…

… Palestinian Arabs and what most speakers considered the un- fair way they have been treated. JABARA TOOK a negative view of the UnitedbStates and its poli- cies with the both the Middle East and the Soviet…

… Union. After the last war, said Jabara the Egyptian government carried out a program to get a withdrawal of all Israeli forces from Arab lands in an exchange for a peace settlement-a move that was made…

… alternative. Jabara claims that the United States plan for Egypt is a "peace with honor," similar to that of Nix- on's policies with the Vietnam situ- See MIDEAST, Page 7 Former POW, now a student, speaKS on…

October 19, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 38) • Page Image 1

… . *. Pharmacy student Larry Glever discusses the abuse of legal drugs on the Editorial Page . . . on the Arts Page, Cinema Weekend is featured . . . and on the Sports Page, Brian Deming tackles the Wisconsin…

… Confusion By CINDY HILL "It's insane," said former Student Government Council Vice- President Sandy Green; describing the exorbitant cost and bureau- cratic confusion of last week's all-campus election. Oi…

… particular section of the ballot was tabulated by computer, said Strauss, students were able to vote for as many of the district seats as they liked, and the computer tallied all votes. BUT PERHAPS the most…

… met. They demanded release of Palestinian guerrillas in Leba- nese jails, $10-million to aid the Arab war effort and an air- liner to take them to Yemen or Algeria, THE RAID CAME on a day of continued…

… the wards provided the first meeting bank staff. All the American em- place for the Ann Arbor chapter ployes were believed to have es- of the Students for a Democratic caped. Society (SDS) in the early…

… sixties Algerias Ambassador, Mhamed and, as students on campus turned Yazid, who negotiated with the against the war, counseled thous- group through the afternoon, left ands of them about the draft. the…

… inside were observed his close friend Peter Di- going. Lorenzi, not only at the "numer- Meanwhile, a spokesman for the ous marriages he performed that See ARABS, Page 7 See SERVICE, Page 7 Doily Photo by…

… elected 42 member Student Government Council last night considered for the. second time' a resolution calling for the re- call of SGC President Lee Gill, but tabled the motion on the grounds that more…

… to council at the next meeting, according to com- mittee member Carl Sandburg. IN DISCUSSING the recall pro- posal Student Rights Party mem- ber Marcia Fishman said, "I view the resolution, in rather…

October 23, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 41) • Page Image 7

… SAID the new lines, now secured by Israel, were better than those held by Israel before the latest war - the fourth between Is- rael and the Arabs. We can now pose a very serious threat to Egypt," he…

… MBA program.. Students interested in discussing a career in administration should contact the Place- ment Office to arrange a time. The Israeli general said Israel yesterday held 1,200 square kilo…

Arabs have sought a total withdrawal as a precondition to talks. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409…

… E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not. accepted for publication. For…

October 19, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 38) • Page Image 7

… backed a student group which forced the University to end assigning rooms to students in University housing on the basis of race. Arabs seize U.S. bank (Continued from Page 1) Palestinian commandos…

… University representative will be on campus 24 October 1973 to' discuss the Harvard MBA program. Students interested in discussing a career in administration should contact the Place- ment Office to arrange a…

October 07, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 28) • Page Image 1

… struggle. In the Sinai, the Israelis admit- ted Egyptian forces had crossed the Suez Canal at several points but said the Arab forces had not been able to extend their bridge- heads. Reports from Cairo, on…

… military observ- ers on the scene confirmed that Egyptian troops had crossed the canal at five points. The observers were not, however, able to confirm Arab charges that Israeli forces had tried to cross the…

… for The Daily some two years ago. BEEFED-UP SECURITY SGC: In search of clean By CHARLES COLEMAN In an effort to head off the fraud and confusion that have character- ized past Student Government…

October 14, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 34) • Page Image 1

… swoop. The Spartans spent much of the game on the ground as they were routed by the Wolverines to the tune of 31-0. Jordan Israel N By The AP and Reitter Jordon said it entered the Arab Israeli warbon…

… military spokesman said only that the supreme com- mand has moved "an elite com- bination of its military forces into the dear Syrian Arab land to carry out its military duty in the current battle" against…

…- dents, law school Dean Theodore St. Antoine opened yesterday's con- ference for women interested in going into law. Co-sponsored by the law school and the Women Law Students' As- sociation, the program…

… featured presentations on law education and practice by University officials, the law student senate are also both women. In addition, St. Antoine said, fe- male enrollment reached a peak of 22 per cent…

October 16, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 35) • Page Image 4

… 0 3wle iryzgn BIIZ:I Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Ih AHE HA -THAT I WtOK4 6l0tL~Lk&)- AKX2 ' ' 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor…

… level." The basic stance of the administration seems to be that teaching fellows are first and foremost graduate students, and that our paychecks represent "student aid" ra- ther than wages for a job done…

…. We reject this notion. We feel that as employes, we are entitled to be paid on the basis of our work in the classroom, our status as graduate students being irrelevant to this issue. UNTIL SEPTEMBER of…

… difficult to isolate, a feel- ing rather than a statistic. But a Japanese-American housewife, a professor, a longshoreman, an edi- tor, a student, a lawyer, and a shopkeeper all told this reporter they feel…

… wasting our energy in useless struggle. Up until the last 50 years, the Jew and Arab dwelt together in peace. Both Jews and Arabs par- ticipated in the Golden Age of Is- lam. The Islamic Empire served as a…

… tolerant refuge for Jews flee- ing from their less-tolerant neigh- bors in Christian Europe of the Middle Ages. The Arab world is today wasting its energy by uselessly trying to drive away another wave of…

October 18, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 37) • Page Image 2

…'d make my own," she explained. "Now I could neverI go back. This is too great." The coinmune's philosophy also' appealed to Gail Bourke, 23, a3 part-time student at Washtenaw Community College who joined…

… Mental rwuwel ~ - . Tr .. Iwu. - I Health Clinic, is available ar counseling at Trotter House on Thursday from 2:00-4:00 p.m. She will see students. by appoint- ment or on a walk-in basis. Students are…

Arabs, provided its security was guaranteed. HE SAID Israel's position con- cerning a way out of the present war "is cease-fire, negotiation, peace." He stressed that there must be a separation between…

October 30, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 47) • Page Image 1

… several organiza- tions including the Arab Students and Young Socialist Alliance . . . "Career Opportunities for Women" will hold a second in a series of lunch hour disussions today at noon in the League…

…." The nomination is only the first step in a selection process that will ultimately be resolved by the Regents. Tuition payment Those students petitioning for in-state residency status who have not yet…

… be held at 8:00 pm. in Lecture Room 2 of the MLB . . . there will be a teach-in entitled, "Behind the Arab-Israeli Conflict" in the Union Assembly Hall at 7:30 pm. The teach-in will be sponsored by…

… Israel offered to swap 7,- 000 Arab POWs for 450 Israelis held by Syria and Egypt. Egypt denied claims that Israel ever held Suez city at the southern end of the Suez Canal. MEANWHILE, Israel's 75-year…

October 06, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 27) • Page Image 1

…. This figure includes all three campuses with the largest jump coming at U-M Dearborn. Our own campus currently has 35,14 students, which is 529 more than we had a year ago. Commenting on the growth Vice…

… the tuition strike that's been causing the late delivery of tuition bills and the setback of the first payment deadline. According to Student Accounts Supervisor William Randall, you can blame the…

… the office, kept student accounts a full two days behind all month with their assessments: With the last working day falling on Sept. 28, the University decided to move the deadline to Oct. 2. As for…

… any late bill arrivals, the Student Accounts Office claims all bills were in the mail by Sept. 21. Chalk an- other one up to the postal system, and, in terms of the tuition strike, hang in there folks…

…, for the house is constructed in such a way as to allow the sun and wind to do all the heating and cooling necessary. According to Edward Kelly, the student director of the project, the system represents…

… with an appetizing piece of meat. *.*O Ont the rinside . the Arts Page features Cinema Weekend . . . Ah- mad Beshareh writes about Arab resistance to Jewish emigration on the Editorial Page . . an…

… would lose S2.5 million in fee rev- enue due to students obtaining in- state status under the new rules was based on an expected reclassi- fication of approximately 1,000 graduate studen:s and 400 under…

…, he suggested, would be to finance a campus recreational pro- gram recently approved by the Re- gents to be funded by a fee as ment of S10 per student. However, the excess "may b2 a considerably bigger…

… from audience members and panel representatives of The Daily, Student Government Coun- cil, and the Student Action Com- mittee (SAC), AS WELL AS declining to me a concrete statement on the pus sibility…

… reporter Dan 3id challenged Fleming with regard to the tuition hike's effect on tow- middle and low-income students. "If the University is really truly not involved in pushing for those same interests, then…

October 10, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 30) • Page Image 3

… & 140 The Department of Speech Communication and Theatre Student Laboratory Theatre PRESENTS COP-OUT j p.m. investigates Howard Hughes by JOHN GUARE licensed qualified physicians ZOO STORY by EDWARD…

…, October 10, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning…

…. Henry Diamond, chairman of the Advisory committee and a New York environmentalist, said the measures recommended "may help to reduce dependence on Arab oil." Diamond was referring to hints that Saudi…

October 14, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 34) • Page Image 5

…- est voter turnout of any in SGC history. Less than 3000 students, a paltry ten per cent of the stu- dent population, bothered to go to the polls at all. Non-voters and voters alike complained about the…

… complicat- ed voting procedure (three form and twenty minutes to fill out), the lack of information pro- vided'about candidates and the general ineffectiveness of student government. "It's like high school…

student government," one non-voter said. But the problems transcended the voters. Due, in part, to the vastly expanded size of the coun- cil, not enough candidates were on the ballot to fill the seats…

… and other heinous crimes by Robert Matthews, an SGC candidate. Matthews branded Gill as "the most corrupt president in t h e history of student government." He also admitted he couldn't prove his…

… told the crowd. A peaceful counter-demonstra- tion organized by the Arab Stu- dent Organization circled silently around the Israel demonstrtion carrying signs. Ahmad Beharer, president of the…

… ideology or program, the fall of the Veep made no real differ- ence. But for the students and re- porters and anti-war activists, it was a moment of truth. After all of Agnew's righteous ravings about law…

October 27, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 45) • Page Image 1

… abandon its military and diplo-, matic support of Israel despite possible loss of Arab oil. Tanter, a visiting professor from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and former military analyst for the Rand Corp…

… Women's Organizations, says the Soviet supply of weapons to the Arabs "pro- vides convenient justification for the U.S. military assistance program to Israel." " " UAW-Ford pact The United Auto Workers…

…; Mideast peace Doily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI STUDENTS FALL in behind a Nixon-faced figure yesterday as they begin their march from the Diag to Republican Congressman Marvin Esch's office. The crowd of…

… about 600 demanded Esch support impeachment proceedings against the President. students rally against Nix0 3O 00march-'to Eseli'S office In, near President criticizes newsmen By The A, UPI and Reuter…

… About six hundred students arched to the office of Congress- an Marvin Esch (R-Mich.) yes- day and demanded the imme- ate impeachment of President' xon after listening to anti-Nixon eechs at a noon Diag…

… Nixon die because if does the whole society will die." Esch has the power to im- ach," he finished. "Let's make e he uses it." STUDENT wearing a Nixon e mask held a mock Presiden- J press conference in…

…, about 4300 vasectomy operations have been performed. THE CLINIC is currently per- forming between 12 and 16 opera- tions per week, very few of them on students. "WPnn utndmnt n mnip int of cro 'I But log…

October 25, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 43) • Page Image 1

…. " Happenings.*.. ... include a mass gathering of all students interested in the Washington Summer Intern's Program, in the UGLI Multipurpose Rm. tonight at 7:30 . . . the Hun- garian Language Society meets…

… Communists have criticized both the So- viet Union and the United States for trying to end the Middle East war, which they see as a just fight on the part of the Arabs. The official news agency charged that…

… Moscow and Washington were involved in big-power politics centering around a grab for Middle East oil. A no-war, no-peace truce suits both big powers more than a resolution recognizing Arab claims, the…

… speaks before University journalism students. Sander's cartoons also appear in The Daily. Cartoonist warn'U' students about Nixon-N0 COPS CLAMP DOWN Drivers hassled by meters By J. FRALEY, JR. "Nixon is…

… signpost to dicta- By BOB SEIDENSTEIN Grad student Ron Beck was late for his 9:30 a.m. class the other morning, so rather put his car in his allotted spot in the parking structure on Thayer, he left it in a…

October 12, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 32) • Page Image 1

… full-time student and a U.S. citizen to qualify. Further, your 1972 family income must be $11,000 or less (unless your family is larger than four), more than one member is currently attending college…

… statement yesterday, Rev.. Erwin Gaede said the staff at Guild House was "shocked and deeply grieved" at the death of Edwards. "His counseling with thousands of students on personal, marital and conscientious…

… Church on William and State at 4 p.m. ! Oops! In yesterday's Daily we reported that a bucket drive being conducted by the Coalition of Concerned Students and Faculty in Support of Israel was aimed at…

… those who wish to donate blood to victims of the Arab- Israeli conflict. The clinic will be open from 1:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m. at the local chapter's operations center at 2729 Packard Rd. Donald Peak…

…, officials in Wash- ington reported that the Soviet Un- ion was continuing to airlift wea- pons to its Arab allies, with the bulk of the arms going to Syria, - but they would not say whether this was on a…

… claims Gill embezzled funds By JACK KROST A candidate for Student Govern- ment Council (SGC) last night in- troduced a resolution claiming SGC President Lee Gill embezzled $2800 of council money and…

October 11, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 31) • Page Image 1

…. "It couldn't happen to a nicer guy,' beamed Gary Koloff '76. "ONE DOWN, one to go," added Bruce Trock '74. When the initial ecstasy faded a bit, a number of students expressed the sentiment that Agnew…

… of for the first time in the fourth Arab-Israeli war and attacked Egyptian convoys, the Israeli mili- tary command reported. In addition, The Israeli navy shelled Syrian oil installations on , the…

October 04, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 25) • Page Image 3

… DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 25 Thursday, October 4, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106…

… decision. Kreisky, acceding to demands by Arab terrorists, announced last week that Schonau Castle, the Jewish Agency's transit fa- cility, would be closed although individual Russian Jews could still pass…

October 28, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 46) • Page Image 3

… President would not give a speech as planned, but would hold a press conference Thursday in- stead, because the Arab-Israeli crisis was taking up too much of his time. Warren was "pleased to report that…

… financial. If five dollars could be added to each student's tuition for Daystar's benefit, it would be possible to put on those unprofitable but tasty shows, and ticket prices for students could be held to a…

… maximum of two dollars. That would take a student referendum, though, and it doesn't seem likely considering the sorry state of SGC. The possibility of summer stadium concerts is still open also, IT'S ALSO…

October 25, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 43) • Page Image 5

… TICKETS ON SALE AT DOOR Adult tickets:$4.00--High School Students: $2.75 on Bob Seagren's try d Medal, Penn eschews o allow the pole vault- eak for themselves in xcruciating moments are suspended in that…

… to get any footage of the Arab terrorists, and captured somewhat that air of desolation that hung over the competition like a stench. Talking with mara- thon-runner Ron Hill, he provok- ed Hill…

… liberal college professor's confrontation with student protesters. -THIS WEEKEND- Woody Allen X 2 r if T he incredible 'journey' The New Phoenix Repertory Company rehearses for its premiere Sat. at 8…

October 24, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 42) • Page Image 1

… of Representatives to k prepare impeachment proceedings d against the President. e See NIXON, Page 3 des p it4 By AP and Reuter The Arab - Israeli war raged on yesterday as if the United Nations cease…

…, whose programs in recent years have broadened tremendous- ly in scope and, expense, is tem- porarily under the wing of the Office of Student Services (OSS) while a committee is being formed Student

October 06, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 27) • Page Image 3

… told a news confer- ence, pounding a table. Kreisky said hetand his minister sat around the same table last Sat- urday when he decided to close the transit camp in return for agreement by two Arab gunmen…

… at my throat, and the up- per left arm. Although I was going, in the direction he de- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. -27 Saturday, October 6, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the…

… publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are notaccepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Saturday, October 6 CAREER…

October 18, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 37) • Page Image 6

… (International' Assoc. for the Exchange of Students for Technical Experience). Informa- tion Meeting, Thursday, October N18, 7*30 p.m. International Center. Na- tional Director and Former partici- pants will…

… discuss this program for students in Engineering. Architecture, and the Sciences. 50F36 "'f we did not live i-t-o-rnnt FOR RENT TENANTS UNION-M-F, 9:00-5:00, 41101 Michigan Union, 761-1225. cCtc4 MODERN…

… Emergency Fund. Israel can ends 10-6, 410 N. 4th Ave, cC38fl 6081 after 3:00 pm.p 49Y40 MICH.-OHIO STATE tickets wanted. each semester with only a few hours only make a just peace with its Arab David, 663…

… together, Ohio St Call and house work. Payment for hours grad students, faculty, staff & TF's Management alarm. 761-1689. 56N40 Dave, 662-8183. 69Q37 over contract. Transportation requir- come meet in a…

October 19, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 38) • Page Image 10

… Studies A private liberal arts college granting BA, MA, Teaching Cre- dentials, Certificate in Translation and Interpretation. Aftention Grad Students Take a more active role in your student government…

… Rackham Student Government is announc- ing the formation of Committees for Grad- uate Affairs. THESE COMMITTEES INCLUDE: Education History International Economics and Management Political Science World…

… Area Studies Translation and Interpretation ,v! Iv Languages and Civilizations Arabic' Chinese French German Italian Japanese Portuguese* Russian Spanish *Summer Only Elections Finance Teaching…

… & Teaching Fellows Communications Women Foreign Students -Univi Program Planning n in the versity Ski Steamboat, Colorado! Accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, California State…

… Board of Education. Veterans Approved. GEORGE WILLIAMS, Dean of Admissions, will be visiting the University of Michigan Campus, 9:00-4:30, Oct. 23. Interested students check with the Career Planning…

October 25, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 43) • Page Image 6

…, ------- investigation, study and practical ap-: Walk to University. Driving ability ALL LAW STUDENTS invited - Get plication of natural and spiritual' (not car) helpful. Steve Cooper, 764- Acquainted Party. Legal Aid…

…. P 1400. it mu 1-720 41 S d a sand .Gib STUDENT WANTED to perform heavy --------- --- -- housekeeping chores two half-days or WEEKEND WORKSHOP FOR COU cX48 1 full day each week. Write Ted Diel…

…- -Toward deeper relationships. man, 4005 ISR, U-M. No calls please. vember 9-11. Call Bob Blood, 769- sets, Include 2 references, $3/hr. 41H46 onar, -- ---U TvG--------- ~~ riced ALL LAW STUDENTS invited…

… pod. 5 Conductor 5 Fausto. 6 Flycatcher. 6 Fabric. 6 Comes beween. Once again. Formed. 6 Fish eggs. 6 2 Annoy. 2 Port of Israel. 7 Italian island. 8 Wits' forte. 9 Suffix used with Arab and Roman. 0…

October 23, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 41) • Page Image 8

… International Economics and Management Political Science World Area Studies Translation and Interpretation * -lama .............- Languages and Civilizations Arabic* Chinese French, German Italian* Japanese…

… Approved. GEORGE WILLIAMS, Dean of Admissions, will be visiting the University of Michigan Campus, 9:00-4:30, Oct. 23. Interested students check with the Career Planning & Placement Office. HALLOWEEN is…

… activities to keep the athletic-minded student busy in the coming months. . In the popular softball leagues, "men's winners in the various di- visions were: Residence Hall - Van Duren; Independent - Mooners…

… Thursday from 2:00-4:00 p.m. She will see students by appoint- ment or on a walk-in basis. Students are also encouraged to sign up on the bulletin board in the lobby of Trotter House for a discussion series…

October 21, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 40) • Page Image 2

… Cox: The crewcut crusader crumbled Education History International Economics and Management Pflitical Science World Area Studies Translation and Interpretation Languages and Civilizations Arabic

… State Board of Education. Veterans Approved. GEORGE WILLIAMS, Dean of Admissions, will be visiting the Uiversity of Michigan Campus, 9:00-4:30, Oct. 23. Interested students check with the Career Planning…

students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard…

…- jects of repeated frustration." ed with student protesters in 1969 HE WAS COX the Gracious. and 1970. i 3 -,, The oil moves follow decisions by, Libya Friday and by Abu Dhabi earlier in the week to…

… ISRAEL? Let's get away for a few days-release some frus- trations and tension--and put our heads together. i , r E I U of M and EMU NITE MONDAY Bring Student I.D. and get in FREE DISCOUNTS ON PITCHERS…

… Light bon L 1411 Hill TRET - I Ned's Bookstore & Student Book Service (formerly of Ann Arbor) ANNOUNCE GIGANTIC WAREHOUSE SALE OCT. 1-OCT. 23 75,000 TITLES All Books 50% OFF (or more) THOUSANDS OF…

October 11, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 31) • Page Image 7

…- tic scandals with surprising can- dor. But in war, nothing is filmed or aired without approval f r o m high authorities. Israeli television, which usually broadcasts six hours a day in Hebrew and Arabic

… served. SPONSORED, BY WOMEN LAW STUDENTS ORGANIZATION " Campus News " Entertainment ads an " The world of national * The Crossword Puzzl "interesting" pers * Big Ten Sports and ti national sports sc…

Student Appeal After a brutal surprise attack on YOM KIPPUR-The Day of Atonement AM YISRAEL CHAI - The People Israel Lives But the cost has been high. ISRAEL NOW NEEDS OUR HELP. Let us respond that "YES, WE…

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