LAST CHANCE TONIGHT COME EARLY!! MICHAEL COONEY "IF PETE SEEGER retired tomorrow, with Michael around there would be no gap."-BROADS IDE "Two young men proved to be both natural show-stoppers and performers of rare skill. Bob Dylan and Michael Cooney." - SAN FRANCISCO EX- AMINER 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. 361-1451 second froit page T4C 5f47Mtuzgt NE11 S PHONE: 764.055 BSJNS ESS. PHOUNE: 764-0534 Saturday, May 24, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three r ,.:.; < . <> >' ;;rF ,? 'f} z . ?'. 2 .. rece By PAT MAHONEY During the next twelve months, 123 University students and four profes- sors will study foreign languages and cultures under fellowships in excess of $500,000 funded by the U.S. Office of Education. The fellowship were granted mainly to encourage the study of less-known languages. The University was also awarded fellowships for students to work on dissertations abroad. The University received 108 of 2;342 National Defense Foreign Language Fellowship (NDFL) awarded. Eighty- six are for the academic year 1969-1970 and 22 are for this summer. Of the 86 regular awards, thirty-one are for study of East Asian languages, fifteen for South and Southeast Asian languages, twenty-four for Middle East languages and sixteen for Slavic languages. During the 1969-1970 aca- demic year, each NDFL student will receive about $4,500. Summer fellowships are granted to undergraduate and graduate students 1 4TH WEEK NATIONAL *ENERAL CORPORATI FOX LOASTERN'THEATRES r Nrl FO VILLEGE 375 No. MAPLE PD. 769 1300 Feature Times Monday-Friday 7:00-9.30 Saturday-Sunday 1:00-3:40- 6 :30-9 :15 0 Cvs 127 for intensive study of non-Western languages. For this summer, the Uni- versity received a quota of 22 fellow- ships. However, due to a lack of quali- fied applicants, only sixteen of the 22 fellowships have been awarded. These were divided among four graduate and twelve undergraduate students who will study Slavic languages. The stipend for the summer program is $900 per student. Funds from the fellowships not awarded will be used for other summer programs. About $6.6 million will be made hvailable to 54 colleges and universities to finance NDFL fellowships. Of this amount, the University r e c e i v e d $377,700, ranking seventh in the coun- try behind Columbia, Harvard, the University of Wisc6nsin, the University of California at Berkeley and the Uni- versity of Indiana at Bloomington. Last year the University was initial- ly awarded 89 academic year fellow- ships, three more than it received this year. However, since the program was cut slightly this year, the University's oreign position in relation to other institutions is basically unchanged. NDFL fellowships are awarded to qualified students who plan either to teach at U.S. universities or colleges or to obtain government or private (nonprofit and nonsectarian) jobs that contribute to the nation's foreign re- lations and for which proficiency in a program-supported language is desir- able. Students seeking NDFL fellowships apply directly to any institution par- ticipating in the program. Each year universities and colleges offering ap- propriate language and area studies programs request fellowship allotments from the U.S. Commissioner of Edu- cation. After the federal government deter- mines the quota of awards for these institutions, each college and univer- sity decides which of its applicants will receive a fellowship. The University's Language and Area Centers were awarded 14 fellowships under .the Development Projects for Individuals Program of the Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange Act (Hays-Fulbright Act) Eleven fel- lowships will go to graduate students working on dissertations abroad. Of these three will be used in East Asia. three in Southeast Asia, two in the Middle East and one each in East Europe, South Asia and Latin America. Although the University does not have a Latin American center. Prof. Charles Gibson of the history depart- ment submitted a proposal for this area. The University received more graduate fellowships under this pro- gram than any institution in the coun- try. Three faculty fellowships for re- search will be granted to professors who will spend nine to twelve months abroad. Prof. Kenneth A. Luther of the Near Eastern languages and literature department will go to the Middle East. Prof. William Zimmerman IV of the political science department will go to Eastern Europe and Prof. Aram A. Yengoyan of the anthropology depart- ment will go to Southeast Asia. Two grants were awarded to the University under the Program Develop- ment Project of the Hays-Fulbright Act. One grant will bring Prof. Rama Subbiah of the University of Malaya to Ann Arbor to aid the University's Southeast Asian studies program. The other $37,000 grant will be used by one history and three political science graduate students, under the guidance of Prof. Gayl Ness of the sociology department, to conduct dis- sertation research in the Philippines for one year. The graduate students will investigate what and how secondary and profes- sional school students learn about the political world. They plan to work separately and periodically meet to discuss their progress. Prof. Ness, aided by a research as- sistant not supported by the govern- ment, will study the emergence of modern Filipino nationalism in the early nineteenth century. language grants MGMOVITS ASTANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION "An unprecedented psychedelic roller coaster of an, experience. -ife "SVNER BES VSUAl: EFFECTS', SUPER PANAVISOI'4'. MTROCQLOR FRAYNE BROS. EXHIBITION of Paintings and Objects MAY 25-JUNE 15, 1969 EDIT IONS GALLERY 213 E. Washington. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students of the University of Michigan. News phone: 864-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. Cycles sell in ClaSSifiedS in tller is nof for KEEP AMERICA BEAUTIFUL the news today, by The Associated Press and College Press Service AUTHORITIES ESTIMATE VIOLENCE in Malaysia has left 500 people dead, thousands injured and millions of dollars in property damage. Deputy Prime Minister Tun Abdul Razak of the new emergency government blamed opposition parties and the Chinese community for recent violence. Th emergency government has refused offers from opposition leaders to cooperate in the government. The government holds that-the need to restore law and order excludes any political solutions, at least for the time being. NORTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS yesterday sent rockets into A Shau Valley where an American artillery base is located. The North Vietnamese also skirmished with American para- troopers near, Ap Bia Mountain, west of the valley. A U.S. spokesman said paratroopers in A Shau Valley suffered no casualties. Eleven North Vietnamese and two Americans have been killed in the latest skirmish around Ap Bia Mountain. THE HOUSE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE said yester- day hungry people should be given more help although it dis- counted some reports of wide-spread hunger and malnutrition. The committee is considering the $6.? billion appropriation bill of the agriculture department. House action on the $651 milion earmarked to fight hunger and malnutrition is slated for next week. Of that allotment, $311 million was budgeted for children's food subsidy programs and $340 million to provide food stamps at reduced prices for low-income families. * * * * THE COST OF LIVING rose .6 per cent in April, continuing the sharpest price spiral in more than ten years, according to government officials. Economists say it may be six months, nine months or a year before inflation can be appreciably slowed. They contend consumers and corporations must share the blame with the slowness of government to act last year. * * * * COUNCILMAN TOM BRADLEY, who could become the first black mayor of Los Angeles, says municipal corruption is the biggest issue of the campaign. .Bradley said if he is elected on Tuesday he will set an example of ethical conduct. Mayor Sam Yorty, seeking a third term, says the issue is organ- ized militancy.- Yorty says Los Angeles is threatened by "a combination of bloc voting, black power, left-wing radicals, and, if you please, identified' Communists." SOVIET PRESIDENT NIKOLAI PODGORNY announced yesterday "any attempts by China to violate the. territorial in- tegrity of the U.S.S.R. or Mongolia will be met with a crushing rebuff." Podgorny made this remark in a visit to the Mongolian capital of Ulan Bator. He accused Mao Tse-tung and his followers of "trying in every possible way to undermine the friendly and brotherly relations existing between socialist countries." with JOHN SINGLETON COPLEY GALA OPENING-2-6 T HIS SUNDAY GALLERY HOURS - Saturday 10-4, Tuesday-Friday 10-6 Peru arms dispute cuts Rockefeller trip advertising contributed for the public good - :. ;k. T 2 1I A WVOMAN" Sat. & Sun. It is 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 Mon.-6:30, 9:30 possible to make. excitation ET away THEL of life,' ORIGINAL SATUR ANSI MATI only $ 4 4 until RADLEY H. METZGER PRESENTS with l ESSY PERSSON Star of "Therese and Isabelle" The Total Female Animal! "The is Uta "CARMEN,.r hiG BABY" mode Sot,-2, 5, $, 1hFor o Sun.-2, 5, 8 who Mon.-8:00 only g.. what -Associated Press Sgt. Miehael Sanders GI claims dissent won himn Viet tour, / LIMA - - Peru declared yesterday that Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller would ndt be wel- come, and that U.S. military advisers should leave t h e country. The decision c a m e after U.S. Ambassador John Wesley Jones formally notified the government that Washington had suspended arms sales to Peru because of the seizures of American fishing boats. Relations between t h e United States and Peru's military-con- trolledrregime have been at a low ebb for months because of the ex- propriation of an American-owned oil company and the fishing ves- sel seizures. Actually the arms sales had been suspendedin February, but neith- er side openly acknowledged the fact while negotiations were under way to settle their dispute. Wash- ington news reports broke the first word earlier this week Asked if the military govern- ment had set a time for departure of the U.S. Army, Navy and Air Force missions, an official spokes- man said, "They may leave from this moment, whenever they like." The communique was drawn up -at a cabinet meeting presided by President Juan. The statement said: "The revolutionary. govern- ment informs the people that to- day (Friday) the Embassy of the United States has officially con- firmed the decision of the gov- ernment of that country to sus- pend the sale pf military equip- ment to Peru. "Consequently, t he measures announced in t he official com- munique of Tuesday will be'exe- cuted." The Tuesday communique had stated that if the United States officially confirmed a termination of sale of military equipment then a visit by Rockefeller would be "inopportune." The statement continued that the presence in Peru of the army, navy and air force missions of the United States would have no fur- ther purpose. Washington's decision was con- tained in a note delivered to For- eign Minister Edgardo Mercado yesterday morning by Ambassador John Wesley Jones. 761-9001s $1.00 OFF| i One -large one iteN mor more) pizza. One coupon per pizza. Pick*Up Only S 211 E. Ann St.--Next to i ExpiresrAug. 1 * I : s.r THOMPwSON'S : .. WASHINGTON ) - A so- dier in the Tomb of the Un- known Soldier honor guard who says the Army is trying to si- lence his Vietnam war objections by sending him to the combat zone has won a temporary delay in the transfer. Sgt. Michael Sanders was given the seven-day delay Thursday night by secretary of the Army Stanley Resor after the two senators from Sanders' home state of Kentucky inter- vened. Sanders, who has only seven months to go before discharge, had been due to report today to Oakland, Calif., en route to Viet- nam. The young sergeant who also served in the White House color guard was a military escort to Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower. RDAY NEES X1.00 5:30 Chromosomes determine the way ve look... the way we love... the way v hate... the way we are. 46 Chromosomes make a man.47..may makea kiler eye-catcher a Leyka, the Zein n'e ern undress. pera lovers want to see they've been missing all these years." -N.Y. Times HAYLEY MILLS She said no, but he wouldn't Jet go. 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