,, The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 5, 1979-Page 3 U.S. OFFICIALS RELUCTANT TODISCUSSCONCESSIONS: C-ina FYOUSEE PN M CALL-- DAWlY Non-citizens, take note Foreign students, faculty members, and other non-U.S. citizens who were in the United States on January 1 are required to report their addresses and certain other information to the federal Immigration and Naturalization Service. Alien address report cards are available at any U.S. Post Office and should be filled out and mailed to the Immigration and Naturalization Service before the end of the month. According to the Department of Justice, failure to turn in the card could result in deportation and/or fine and imprisonment. Only diplomatic officials and members of certain international organizations are exempt from the law. Course Mart If that Econ. or English course is filled up and you need another course before too many classes slip by, you may want to try one of three LSA Course Mart choices for the term. Registration for Talmud Law 335, Major Developments in Christianity to the 12th Century 349, and Legal Concepts of Property 367, began last Tuesday. Go the the Counseling offices or call Checkpoint, 764-6810, for more Course Mart info. Japanese studies Of 18 students from midwest colleges who have been recommended to the Ministry of Education of Japan for scholarships by the Japan Information Service, eight are currently attending or have recently graduated from the University. This is more than any other university or college in the area. The Ministry will make its final selection of approximately 30 students from across the country by this summer. The Center for Japanese Studies here reported that most of the applicants are graduate students and that they would study at any university of their choosing in Japan if ac- cepted. WASHINGTON (AP) -China made several major concessions regarding Taiwan during talks on nor- malizing diplomatic relations, but U S. officials have been reluctant to discuss them publicly for fear of of- fending Peking, sources say. For example, Peking initially demanded can- cellation of all 59 treaties the United States has in ef- fect with Taiwan but eventually retreated from this position, the sources said. THE TREATIES COVER a wide variety of relations between the United States and Taiwan, in- cluding mail deliveries and aircraft landing rights. The U.S. officials, who asked not to be identified, also said the Chinese negotiators indicated a willingness to demonstrate their peaceful intentions toward Taiwan, but only if they were not pressed on this point by the United States. Peking kept its word last week when it called off its long-time bombardment of Taiwanese-held islands off the Chinese mainland and explicity stated that it will respect the status quo of Taiwan, the sources said. THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION has remained silent about these concessions, officials said, fearing public disclosure would embarrass the Chinese and make them less likely to abide by them. The administration's unwillingness to reveal this aspect of the negotiations enabled congressional con- servatives friendly to Taiwan to score points in the early debate over the wisdom of Carter's decision to establish normal relations with China. Some administration critics said the United States "gave all and got nothing" in the negotiations with Peking. ONE EARLY POLL found substantial opposition to Carter's move and a feeling that China may benefit more than the United States. A New York Times-CBS survey conducted the weekend after Carter's Dec. 15 announcement found that Americans opposed closer ties with China at the expense of Taiwan by a 45 per cent to 27 per cent margin. The U.S. officials said they believe the recent con- ciliatory moves by Peking toward the Taiwanese have helped defuse much of the congressional and public opposition to Carter's decision. One concession by the Chinese, which the ad- ministration has acknowledged, was their decision not to let U.S. insistence on providing defensive equipment to Taiwan block the normalization process. Vietnam- Cambodia conflicts intensify BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Cam- bodian defenses are apparently folding under Vietnamese ground attacks and widespread air strikes, political analysts said yesterday, although Phnom Penh claimed it had blunted a major offensive. Analysts here said Cambodian rebels, who are also striking against government forces, seemed to be plan- ning a military attack on the capital, but added it was difficult to evaluate the conflict without first-hand infor- mation. The rebels were last reported besieging Kompang Chain, 45 miles northeast of the capital on the Mekong River. IN NEW YORK, U.N. Secretary- General Kurt Waldheim called on "all concerned to exercise restraint and to refrain from moves that may further escalate the fighting" between Vietnam and Cambodia. The Security Council scheduled private consultations to discuss the issue late this afternoon and was expec- ted to meet at the request of Cambodia next week, after a delegation arrives from Phnom Penh. The border conflict increasingly mirrored the political struggle between the Soviet Union and China, with Viet- nam responding to Cambodian charges of aggression at the United Nations. THE OFFICIAL Cambodian media said Soviet-built Vietnamese jets in the past few days bombed and strafed the provincial seat of Kampong Chain and Neak Luong, 35 miles southeast of Phnom Penh, and four other areas of eastern Cambodia. The Cambodian government called the Vietnamese "savage arch- slaughterers" and described air at- tacks on urban centers that it said caused loss of lives and property. The Cambodian government earlier had said most of the urban population had been sent to rural areas as part of a radical cultural revolution. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIX, No. 79 FridayJanuary 5, 1979 is edited and managed bynstudents at the Uni ersity of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday moiring during the University year at 4'30 May nardJStreet, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48103. Subscripionrates:$12 September through April 2 sernestersi; $13 by mail, outside Ann Arbor. Summer sessionspublished Tusday thirough Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. The Office of Major Events is pleased to announce THE SECOND Ann Arbor Folk Festival Saturday, January 6, Power Center, 1978 Two performances 2:00 pm and 7:30 pm David Bromberg * Norman Blake At Mike Seeger and Alice Gerrard Gamble Rogers us Utah Phillip's Norman Kennedy Byan 5owers John Robed: atnd Tony Rarrand *Appearing in both shows. Five performers per show. Reserved tickets $6.00 per show, $10.00 both performances. Tickets at the Michigan the Power Center Box available for afternoon mation call 763-2071. Union Box Office Friday 11:30 am-5:30 pm. Tickets only at Office Saturday beginning at 1:00 pm. Good seats still performances. Sorry, no personal checks. For more infor- AP Photo Farewell The rotunda of the historic Blenheim Hotel in Atlantic City underwent a rather drastic remodelling yesterday. The hotel, located along the city's Boardwalk, is making way for a $113 million gambling casino. Happenings FILMS Alternative Action Series - Yellow Submarine, 7 and 9 p.m., Naturl Science Auditorium. MEETINGS Project Outreach - Mass meeting concerning an experimental psychology course where students have an opporunity to work in community settings, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Hill Auditorium. SPORTS Hockey - Michigan,meets Minnesota, 7:30 p.m., Yost Ice Arena. Subterranean voice "I was wrong. I'm sorry and I want to come home." America's most famous fugitive has confessed! Abbie Hoffman writing in Feature Magazine condemns the use of drugs saying "I only used it (drugs) to lure young virgins into bed. "Cocaine," Hoffman says, "makes you sex crazy and gets uneducated people all worked up. More people should listen to their noses instead of rock and roll singers. I was wrong to tell children to kill their parents," he continues. "It was the children's fault. Spoiled selfish brats made the '60s. "It's mind boggling, but being a fugitive I've seen the way other people live and it's made me realize how wrong I was." Hoffman wants to return to school, become a CPA and work with Indians, he says. He adds, "If Keith Richards is willing to sing for the blind, I'm willing to sing for the deaf. I realize i can't repair the damage but I'll give it a try." Now can I come back?" Oh, Abbie, won't you please come home? Blooper Due to confusion between the translator and a Daily interviewer, a story in the Dec.7 paper inaccurately quoted Tibetian Monk Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche as claiming that he has lived 16 separate times. ALL ARTISTS WILL BE DONATING THEIR FEES TO THE ARK COFFEEHOUSE. 11 II. m CD GERRY ULTRA GOOSE DOWN $50.99 (reg. $77.00) JANSPORT WINTER EAGLE $69.95 (reg. $105.00) rii 1111 II IIriii1tii