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November 15, 1974 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1974-11-15

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MEM"

Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Fridoy, November 15, 197/-

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 15, 19K
U ml _____________________

EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY'S
OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE
PRESENTS
SEALS and CROFTS
NOVEMBER 22
8 p.m.
BOWEN
FIELDHO USE
$6.50 Reserved
$5.50 General
Admission
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT McKENNY UNION
Subscribe to The Daily

Rocky
WASHINGTON (1P) - W h il e
vigorously defending his prac-
tice of handing over large sumsj
to friends and associates, Nel-
son Rockefeller promised yes-
terday to reduce his private gift
giving if he is confirmed as
out before a national televisionf
vice president.
In an agreement hammered
out before a national television
audience, the former New York
governor promised that afterI
becoming vice president he will
make no gifts or loans to any
federal employe, except for "re-E
latively nominal" amounts on
special occasions and "in t h e
event of medical hardships of
a compelling human character."
"YOU'VE MADE me see how
some of my acts which were
undertaken out of generosity
have come to appear to the
public to be something t h e y
weren't," Rockefeller told the
Senate Rules Committee, whichl
is considering his nomination.I
He said giving more than $2

says gif
1million to friends and former
New York state officials was a
morally proper way for him to
help the recipients improve their,
financial position. He denied
any violation of state 1 a w s;
which bar gifts to state em-
ployes if it can be reasonably
inferred that the gifts were de-
signed to buy influence.
ROCKEFELLER put the
agreement in writing after Sen.'
Claiborne Pell (D-R.I.) expres-
sed fear that the former gover-I
nor's largesse was being mis-
understood. Pell sought to go a!
step beyond the agreement - to
allow Rockefeller to give fin-
ancial assistance in cases of;
medical hardship only if the gift'
was disclosed - prompting1
sharp comments from other
committee members.
"I hope the governor will not
agree to this. We would be set-
ting conditions under which hel
could serve. . . This is an ex-
treme violation of the right of
privacy on an individual w h o
' needs to be helped but doesn't
want to see it disclosed," said
Sen. Marlowe Cook (R-Ky.).
And Chairman Howard Can-
non (D-Nev.), said he would
be relu.ctant to see Rockefeller l
commit himself to such condi-
tions, noting they go far beyond
current disclosure laws.
AT THE midday break in the
hearings, Cannon told reporters
he has heard nothing so far
This week,
get Kenwoo
stereo systems
f for a song.

s legal
that would provide a reason for
voting against Rockefeller. "But
we aren't through yet," Can-
non added. He said the nom-
inee "has made a fairly good
presentation" and suggested the
dispute over Rockefeller fam-
ily financing of a book critical
of Arthur Goldberg "has been
pretty well laid to rest."
Discussion of the Goldberg
biography occupied the commit-
tee for most of the day on
Wednesday, with Rockefeller ad-
mitting he erred last month in
denying knowledge that he had
arranged financing for the book.
Rockefeller was to be follow-
ed on the stand by Goldberg,
the former Supreme Court jus-
tice who was swamped by
Rockefeller in the 1970 race for
governor of New York. The
book was published shortly be-
fore the election.
IN A statement prepared for
the hearings, Goldberg said the
concealed financing of the book
and Rockefeller's delay in ad-
mitting responsibility "relate to
the integrity of the political
process."
"Our government depends
unon thegconsent of the gov-
erned, and the consent of the
governed is in danger of being
lost if oublic officials engage in
concealment, deception or il-
legality," Goldberg said.
He earlier had described the
unflattering biography as porno-
graphic and scurrilous, but
Rockefeller said it was no dif-
ferent from the criticism t h a t
most politicians are subjected

1~~

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AP Photo
Nelson Rockefeller testifies before the Senate Rules Committee yesterday concerning his
nomination to be vice president.

Join The Daily-Staff

MEN REACT:

104

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Demonstration Day
Friday, Nov. 75
11 o.m. to 4 p.m.
H-P REPRESENTATIVE
Will Be at
FOLLETT'S
State Street End of the Diag
BANKAMERICARD 0 MASTER CHARGE

ROME tPj - A midiskirted
young woman waved a poster
that sneered: "Honor your
father and get your mother to1
do the dirty work."
Young girls in jeans shouted
"Communism! Feminism! Com-
munism! Feminism!" and walk-
ed side by side with elegantly
dressed ladies and elderly wo-
men in black.
A GRIM - LOOKING lady with
gray hair tied in a- bun shouted
to every businessman in her
path, "You need us to get you
out of your mess."
It was Rome on Wednesday
night, and the 10,000-strong
demonstration signaled the
spread of women's lib south;
through Europe and its explo-
sion in the male bastion of
Italy.
The demonstrators chanted
"enough with exploitation'' as
they marched through the
streets demanding urgent re-
forms of Italy's family laws.
THE REFORMS have won
S.E.I.
(Students for Educational
Innovation)
will be acceptinq nomina-
tions for office of President
at the:
MASS MEETING
Monday, Nov. 18
7 p.m.-Rm. 1234
School of Education BIdq.

the support of Italv's powerful
labor unions, and if approved
would give wives full equality
under the law and ensure legal
rights for illegitmate children.
"Italy's existing family law
is a 19th century creation," said
Lucia Saccucci, a factory work-
er who traveled 400 miles to
Rome for the protest.
"It demands that a girl fol-
lowv her husband wherever he
goes, even if he is an idle good-
for-nothing and she is the
breadwinner, bound by her
work to their home town."
T II E DEMONSTRATION,
swelled by hundred of men,
spanned both the social spec-
trum and the generation gap.
The protesters gathered to
criticize inaction over reform
proposals submitted to the
Chamber of Deputies in 1967.
The measures went to the Sen-
ate in 1972 and have languished
there.
Deploring parliament's slug-
gishness, a feminist magazine
recently published what it said
were photographs of senators
studying the proposals with the
caption:. "Sought as danger-
ous enemies of women's eman-
cipation.

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