Friday, January 17, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, January 17, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three BLAMES'RADICALISM': .e. 11 r Y - U I Helms defends domestic spying WASHINGTON (UPI) - For- mer CIA Director Richard Helms said yesterday the coun- try's "dramatic upsurge of ex- treme radicalism" during the late 1950s and early 1960s was the reason the agency became involved in domestic intelli- gence activities. In a prepared four-page statement, his first ext public comment since the over CIA domestic esp activities erupted last r Helms said he was "ind at the irresponsible att that have been mad intelligence gathering. HE SAID if the attack ensive furor ionage month, ignant tacks" e on ks are ig I More saber ratt i give Israelis new By The Associated Press ern Lebananese village of Kfar Egyptian President Anwar Chouba. The Lebanese Defense Sadat was quoted yesterday as Ministry said the 20-minute saying that unless Israel with- pounding in Metulla was in re- draws within three months from taliation for attacks on Kfar some of the Egyptian, Syrian Chouba, now in the sixth and Jordanian territory it oc- straight day; cupies he will abandon Secre- -A bomb exploded under a tary of State Henry Kissinger's car near the Damascus hotel step-by-step peace efforts. where a delegation of Saudi "I will accept nothing less Arabians accompanying King than an Israeli move on all Faisal on his state visit to Sy- three fronts within t h r e e ria were staying. The bomb months," Sadat said in an inter- damaged the car, which belong- view in the Beirut newspaper ed to a Syrian businessman, An Nahar. He added if there and startled hotel guests, but was no progress toward a settle- caused no injuries. Faisal was ment along Kissinger's lines he staying in a guest mansion sev- would seek resumption of theerlbokawyan stalled Geneva peace talks, the# paper said. -Egypt announced that Sa- K I S S I N G E R ' S step-by- dat and his wife would visit step approach is an effort to France Jan. 27-29 at the invi- work gradually toward peace tation of French President Val- before a resumption of the ery Giscard d'Estaing. It will Geneva talks, held !nder U.N. he Sadat's first visit to a auspices and co-chaired by the Western country since he be- United States and the Soviet came president in 1970. Union. Kissinger opposes a Sadat's interview with An quick return to Geneva because Nahar clearly was a signal to the divisive Palestinian issue is Tsrael that any agreement on sure to surface and dissolve the further troon separation in Si- talks in bitter wrangling. nai would have to be tied to In other Middle East develop- movement on other Arab fronts ments: and could not take place in a -Lebanese artillery pounded vacuum. the Israeli border village of Me- tulla for the first time in a HOWEVER, a Foreign Minis- year and Palestinian guerrillas try source in Cairo, comment- claimed they beat back two Is- ing on Sadat's statement, raeli tank assaults on the south- I said: "This is not an iron-clad allowed "to pass unchallenged, they could seriously damage the interests of the United States." Earlier, the current CIA di- rector, William Colby, outlined to Congress for the second con- secutive day a series of activi- ties conducted by the agency, but he asked for an understand- ing that some crucial operations Sadat arning position. Think of it as the at- mosphere in which we want to proceed. We are committed to the step-by-step approach to peace but here in Cairo the ac- cent is on movement." Western diplomats in Cairo said Sadat, a master at using newspaper interviews to send out signals, used the An Nahar statement to keep pressure on Israel and to back away from previous statements that could be interpreted as too moderate. But Israeli Foreign Minister Yigal Allon indicated he was not inhibited by the three. month deadline talk. "If you take what they say literally, it's not too good," Allon told newsmen in Washington. "But]1 hope it's not the last word." THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 89 Friday, January 17, 1975 is edited and managed by stuldents at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106 Published d a i I y Tuesday througt Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscriptior rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio) $12 non-local mail (other states ant foreign). Summer session published Tues. day through Saturday morning Subscriptionrates: $5.50 by carries (campus area); $6.00 local mal (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non. require continuing secrecy. Helms, who headed the CIA during the period that it began domestic activities, staunchly defended himself: "I WAS and remain proud of my work there, culminating in my 6 years as director. I believed in the importance to the nation of the function that the agency served. I still do: without regrets, w i t h o u t qualms, without apology." Helms said that in normal times few Americans would- never "come within the purview of our foreign intelligence oper- ations. "Until the recent past, such involvements were rare occur- rences. Then in the late 1950s, and early 1960s came the sudden and quite dramatic upsurge of extreme radicalism in this country and abroad, an uprush of violence against authority and institution, and the advocacy of violent change in our system of government. I "BY and in itself, this vio- l lence, this dissent, this radical- ism were of no direct concern to the Central Intelligence Ag- ency. It became so only in the degree that the trouble was in- spired by, or coordinated with, or funded by, anti-American Isu bv e rsion mechanisms, Iabroad." Senate Armed Services Com- mittee sources said Colby pre- sented the same 45-page report which he delivered Wednesday. to the intelligence subcommittee, of the Senate Appropriations Committee but with a new intro- duction. In the report Colby acknowl- edged that the Central Intelli- gence Agency did maintain files on 10,000 American dissidents z and said it also used American business as cover for agents abroad. UNIVERSITY THEATRE SHOWCASE r INSPECTO A PLAY BY TOM STOPPARD . ~. ANUARY 19-21.1975 -ARENA THEATRE TICKET INFORMATION CALL :764- 0450 $2.50 8:30 FRI.-SAT. the voice of "Bert & I" Marshall Jazz Funk Band Mime Stunts Comedy Dancing Acrobatics SPECIAL: Underwear Olympics! DON'T MISS w MULTI-MEDIA VAUDEVILLE REVUE Thurs., Fri., Sat., Jan. 16, 17, 18 314 South Fourth For info call: 761-3548 Friends Roadshow af the cgOt~zrt fa0rb j I ;- iU DOWNEAST HUMOR 14t11 Hill STREET I "..Z:'f^:ffyfi ii:}?;;?}:q{:":::e}}s"": :' sv::X:+:::"7ii::: i : :+R:???ig i:: : sm g g w g ::i:: DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .........;Ct:?T:;::;'r{?:"""::VS"-1;;X;:}:::S{4::.^. . . . . . ..s. . . ..Y.:' "{ii":Fiv}?4::?:. Friday, January 17 Notice for refund purposes, exclud- Day Calendar ing $50 disenrollment fee; allow re- WUOM: Ayn Rand, author, The fund for student who reduces Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged, & course credit hours; Feb. 21, 1975, Anthem, on "Egalitarianism and 5 p.m. is last date for winter term Inflation," 9:30 am. whenthe registrar's office will al- Educational Media Ctr.: Ancient low refund for 50 per cent with- Egypt: The Sun and the River, drawal. Schorling Aud., SEB, noon. Summer Placement Philosophy: Hilary Putnam, Har-' 3200 SAB, 763-4117 vard, "The Meaning of 'Meaning'." Absolute appl deadline for Sum- Aud. D, Angell, 4 pm. mer Fed. Serv. Exac today; Jan. 17; Astronomy Colloquium: Richard if applying thru grade point meth- Teske, "Recent Observations of od deadline Feb. 25; exam given in Photospheric Oscillations," P&A Feb. Grand Canyon Nat. Park Coiloq. Rin., 4 pm. Lodges: Interview Fri. Jan 24 9-5; Int'l. Div. I. M. Sports: Badmin- openings nci. waiters/ess, bus' ton, volleyball, tennis, jogging, Bar- drivers, mechanics, security, maids, bour, Waterman Gym, 7:30-10:30 clerks; register by phone or in per- pm. son. PTP: "Oh, Coward," Power, 8 pm. Youth Vacation Camps, Ibadan, African Film Series: The Ivory Nigeria: counselors needed to teach Coast; U. S. Foreign Policy, Aud. physical exercise, swimming, lan- D, Angell, 8 pm. guages, practical sciences, martial Music School: Midwestern Confer- & body arts; appl. deadline Jan. ence Concert, UM Choirs & Cham- 31. ber Choir, Maynard Klein, Thos. Hilbish, conductors, Hill Aud., 8 pm. Int'l Folk Dance: Barbour Gym, 8:15 pm. 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HARJU FALK Also Weekend Ski Trips Call 761-6207 _________________- 11____i f ,' P- _ q Ri :4ij: : .'J' .5 : . ?; . ' .r X? }. !':? F:v' ' Yf ' {': ' " ;. . i i r I 201h1 CENTURIY-FOX ad SWARNER BROS preent STEVE McQUEEN IRWIN ALLEN otoductio oflf P AUL NEWMAN WILLIAM HOLDEN FAYE pfvuuut+uiT DUNAW WS W Cvn FED SUS N PCHRD ASTAIRE BLAKEIY CHAMBERLAIN JENPNFER O.J. UERT ROBErT JONES SIMPSON VAUGHN WAGM AY Last winter Wes Wolverine got stuck out in the cold. This winter Wes moved into University Towers Apart- ments and is only 2. blocks to campus. 4 month winter term single P'roduedby R NALLEN"* Ureced by JOHN G L M < Sceeny by ST3LG U wH4AT- N u c wOHW WiUMAMS Ara! on t tls ees"The Towf' by RICHARD 0MARTIN V4 MWa0 'Tb GSltMomw" by TIIOOMASUN. SCORIIai MAD 14K ONW we may Never Love Like This AgaiT' Song i rAARUN MCWRN0on20th CnIury RecarIs ii lI f. ;l;f Ioco 1i I l .... /1// Y IN V a I I