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January 23, 1974 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1974-01-23

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

_.

I

ISRAELI LITERATURE
at War and at Peace
a lecture by
DR. WARREN BARGAD
Prof. Hebrew Language and Literature
Hebrew Union College
T H U RSDAY, Jan. 24-8:00 p.m.
at HILLEL, 1429 Hill St.

DOLLAR DIPLOMACY:
Japan gives cash to big 'U'

Wednesday, January 23, 1974
Probe has no evidence

(Continued fromPage 1)
million from the Tokyo govern-
ment.
DURING a news conference held
before the presentation, Suzuki ex-
plained that the colleges were chos-
en on the basis of "past academic
I records, and the scope of the Japa-
I nese studies programs at the pros-
pective universities."
He added that another reason,
the University was chosen was be-
cause it is "outstanding in aca-
demic achievement.

Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Stan-
ford, the University of Hawaii,
the University of Washington, the
University of Chicago, and the1
University of California.

brary purchase as the main pri-
orities for the money.
Beardsley also hones to increase

against Dean

testimony

1

GT1IRU ThE
e D

Suzuki declared that the Japa-
nese and American governments
"have enjoyed full confidence in
each ,other" over the last few
years. He explained that the gifts
to American universities are offer-
ed as "humble assistance to the
study of Japanese language and
culture at the universities of the
United States."
The nine other universities re-
ceiving the grants are Harvard,
i-

PROF. Richard Beardsley, direc-
tor of the Center for Japanese
studies, commented happily, "With
the current financial pinch at the
University, the Japanese gift
comes at just the right time."
The Japanese Studies program,
established in 1947, is the coun-
try's oldest in its field. There are
now over 60 graduate students and
several thousand undergraduates
currently taking courses in Japa-
nese Studies.
"We intend to carry on a pro-
gram of the same nature as the
program we've carried on for the
last quarter century," Beardsley
said. He listed research fellow-
ships, for Japanese studies, finan-
cial assistance to students in Japa-
nese Studies, and increased li-

the size of the faculty teaching the WASHINGTON (P) - The special' tamed he learned of the cover-up continued to cooperate closely with
Japanese Studies courses. There Watergate prosecutor's office has on March 21, 1973. " the prosecutors and he was seen
are already twenty Japanese spe- uncovered no evidence contradict- In a television interview on Sun- entering their offices during the
cialists teaching in fifteen different ing John Dean's testimony before day, the Pennsylvania Republican . last few days.
departments of theUniversity. said Nixon's advisers "would help A source quoted on.Monday said
grand juries or the Senate Water- themselves if they told the public Scott based his stateients on de-
BEARDSLEY concluded the pre- gate committee, it was learned some of the things I know. I have tailed White House transcripts that
sentation ceremony by announcing last night. the . . . information available to appeared to show that conversa-
his plans "to pass along what we An informed source said Senate me which would indicate that on tions Dean said took p e on dif-
lear no onl toour tudntsbutferent' dates between Sept. is,
learn not only to our students, but Republican leader Hugh Scott may specific items the President would 1972, and March 21, 1973, all occur-
to all Americans and the world have been mistaken when he said be exculpated entirely." red on the latter date.
at large.'.I
A handful of spectators and the White House had information It also was learned the prose- THE PROSECUTORS pro-
newspeople were present for the that could prove Dean, former cutor's have no plans to file per- hibited by secrecy rules frm mak-
ceremony, which lasted only fifteen presidential counsel, was wrong jury charges against Dean who ing public any of the evidence-
minutei. Afterwards the Japanese when he said the President knew pleaded guilty last October to a even that which might ,clear some-
members of the Center for Japa- of the Watergate cover-up before single charge of conspiracy to ob- one "already presented to the
nese Studies, and see the current March 21, 1973. struct justice. He agreed to co- ogrand juries.
However, the gr'and jury rules
exhibition of Japanese scrolls at The source, who said he believes operate with the prosecutors in would not prevent the White House
the University Art Museum. he is'familiar with the same mate- exchange for their agreement not' from releasing information in its
ganization through which the Ja- rial Scott has seen, contradictedto file additional charges. possession.
panese government is handling the the senator's claim that transcripts The tapes of the, meetings re-
IBUT PERJURY specifically was ferred to by Dean in his testimony
grants, is also currently planning of White House tapes disprove BUd frJUtY aee nt. bfre the Wea te ttee
government grants to European Dean's testimony. excluded from that agreement.' before.the Watergate committee
universities, similar to funds of- The prosecutor's office declined were turned over to the prosecu-
fered to U. S. colleges. PRESIDENT NIXON has main- to comment on the reports. But it IS yca Uat iereceivedghem fron

rI

ll l

IF IT'S A
REALLY GOOD

thru
Clas~ified

Order
Your
Subscription
Today
764-0558

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

also was learned that Dean has the White House:

L'

Wednesday, January 23
DAY CALENDAR
Commission for Women: Secretarial
subcommittee, Wolverine R., Union
station, noon.
Computing Ctr.: J. Gersch, "Design
Automation: Tools for the Logic De-
signer", 120 P-A, noon.
Great Lakes Research: J. Porter,
"Ecology and Composition of Deep Reef
Communities", 1061 NU Bldg., 12:30 pm.
Anatomy: D. Hoyt, Univ. W. Indies,
"Growth of the Skull Base", 4804 Med
Sci II, 1:10 pm.
Engineering: D. Severance, Cornel
Univ., "Identifier Search Mechanism:
ASurvey & Generalized Model", 229 W.
Eng., 4 pm.
Engineering: S. Carmi, Wayne State,
"Optimum Stability of Thermo-convec-

!I

I

NASSAU

People! Music! Food!
BACH CLUB.

i

SPRING BREAK
MARCH 1-MARCH 9

PRESENTS

Center for Russia and East European.
Studies takes great pleasure in ;

$239

+ 10.50
Based on double occupancy

CLASSICAL
GUITAR!
Matt MISCHAKOFF
Bob REBERGER
play works of
Komter, Johnson, Favre,
daReggio, Lowes & Scheidler
EVERYONE INVITED
No musical knowledge necessary!

It

0

I

Regency Travel
611 Church St.
Ann Arbor, Michigan

announcing an exhibition of under-
groun d material from the SAMIZ-
DATA collection. Exhibition d a t e s
now through Feb. 17. North lobby of
the H a r I a n Hatcher Graduate Li-
brary, during regular library hours.

ii

tive Hydromagnetic Flows, -214 W. Eng.,
4 pm.
Mathematics: T. Nagylak, "Geograph-
Ic Structure of Populations", 3201 AH,
4 pm.
Botany: Seminar, R. Watling, Royal
Botanic Garden, Edinburgh, "Armilaria
Mellea - Honey Fungus, Food for Stom-
ach and Mind", 1139 Nat. SeL, 4 pm.
Physics, Astronomy: W. Kerr, "Reac-
tor Safety Considerations", P&A Col-
loq. Rm., 4 pm. I
Statistics: Seminar, R. Schafer, Ford
Motor Co., "Can We Call it Threshold
Regression?", Rm. 1007 AH, 4 pml.
Journalism. NEH: Film, "I.F. Stone's
Weekly", Aud. 4; MLB,, 4:15 pm.
Music School: Faculty .Chamber Con-
cert, Rackham- Aud., 8 pm.
BARATIN - French House, 613 Oxford
Rd.. 8-12 pm.
Rackham Student Government: exec.
board meeting, W. Lecture Rm., Rack-
ham, 8 pm.
Career Planning & Placement
3200 SAB
Master's Degree for Counselors in
Schools, Social Service & Community
Agencies - at Bank, Street College, 610
W. 112 St., N.Y.C.
Program for liberal arks graduates to
earn teaching certificate as part of M.
A. T. degree in History, Social Sciences,
Physical Se., Biological Sci., Math,
Language & Lit. - at Reed College,
Portland, Oregon, Paid Internship.
Westminster College offers program
for teacher preparation in physics,
chem., biology & bath plus study of
German. After completion the 'student
will be recommended for employment
contract for 2 yrs. (option for 2nd 2
yr. contract) in city schools of Ham-
burg. Germany.
Federal Highway Admin., Washington,
D.C. is recruiting for BBA's, Econ. &
LS&A majors with high FSEE score at
CP&P on Jan. 31, 1974. U. S. DEPT. OF
RANSPORTATION, Cabmrgdie
TRANSPORTATION, Cambridge, Mass.
recruiting for M's or PhD Economist,
statistician, Mathematids & CCS on
Jan. 31 at CP&P.
Attention Women Students: You're
invited to lunch hour discussion on
Women in Banking, 112:00 noon, 'Conf.
Rms. 3 & 4 Mich. League, Friday, Jan.
25. First in series of informal discus-
sions on career opportunities. for wo-
men. All women welcome'
Summer Placement Servi ce
3200 SAB 763-4117
Interview: Abraham & Straus, N.Y.
Will interview Mon., Tues., Feb. 4, 5
from 9 to 5. Must have completed Jun-
for yr., show interest in retail career.
Announcement: Deadline for applying
for summer Fed. Civil Service Exam
is Friday, Jan. 25. Next exams Feb. 9,
23.

i

'11

Ii

I

665-6122 Days
662-8458 Evenings
LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE

Thurs., Jan. 24, 8 p.m.
E. Quad Greene Lounge
for your oral appreciation
English apple pnd cheese pie
Further Info 761-9578

--- _-;

-4

2836 Wuhtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile

I

x

I

PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT

Rent

Control

&

the

$5

Fne:

THETA XI
come see
The Famous COED

Frat!

1345 Washtenaw

761-6133

The

Crucial

Test

"I

We know it's a bit early for electoral politics.: But this year
the stakes are high. The people of Ann Arbor will directly
decide the fate-of rent control and the five dollar mari-
juana fine. Landlords have already organized to defeat
rent control and retain their profits.
So, if you're concerned about rent control, HRP, and/or
the $5 fine, your committment is needed now. That means
as little as 2 or 3 hours work a week. And it means lots of
people kicking in $5 or $10. Last year a real estate lawyer
dnd a construction executive bankrolled the Democrats
nearly $5000-matching HRP's entire campaign budget.
If you're not quite sure about HRP, ask yourself: who
would've put the sweat into placing these issues on the
ballot, and who would've fought the past two years at City
Hall for things like community control of the police and
city funds for a Community Women's Clinic. What have
the other parties done?

Consider rent control. For 4 years a Democratic mayor did
nothing. Finally, with Republican support he appointed a
"study commission" dominated by landlords and techno-
crats. Just as HRP predicted, they recently told Ann Arbor
tenants (who pay the 2nd highest rents in the nation) that
rent control is "unwarranted."
Now Democratic leaders sit silent as the struggle to pass
rent control and the $5 fine goes on. Come election time
they'll spout much rhetoric designed to seduce you. Rhet-
oric doesn't lower rents.
For those of you who vote in the 2nd Ward; take note that
the Democratic candidate refused to even sign petitions
to put rent control and the $5 fine on the ballot. It's no
coincidence the Republicans aren't running in the 2nd
Ward. The Democratic candidate is no threat to their in-1
terests-the existence of HRP is.
Much information has to get out about the ballot pro-
posals. Your help is needed-as much or as little as you
can give.

I

SPAIN

Salamanca
* Barcelona

FRANCE .

* ALL INVITED * CFS Coffe Hour Today!
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 4-6 p.m.
CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY
EARN UP TO 8 HOURS CREDIT Under grads/Grads Complete Lang. Requirement
1974 SUMMER PROGRAM OfFERINGS-APPLY NOW!

Paris
Paris + Art
Dijon
Nice,
Aix/Avignon

Spanish Language, Civilization,
History, Lit, Art, Guitar & Dance
CU/CFS Theatre Workshop
French Language & Culture, Art
History, Literature, Theatre,
French Cuisine
Italian Language & Civilization
Drawing, Painting, Sculpture,
Ceramics, Art History
German Language & Civilization

I

ITALY

Perugia r
Perugia + Art
Florence

GERMAN."
language

Heidelberg
Vienna

4.

New Volunteers Meeting - Thurs.,

7:30

f
0
0

NEW 1974 SUMMER PROGRAMS.
Russian Language & Culture-Leningrad, Moscow
African Civilization, Anthro, Ecology-Nairobi
Scandinavian Studies, Danish Art and Architecture-Copenhagen
International Studies, Political Science, Economics-Geneva
Portuguese Language & Culture-Coimbra
Spanish Language, Latin American Studies-Bogota, Columbia
English Literature, History, Drama-London, Canterbury
Ancient/Modern Greek Civilization-Athens, Greece

I

I

516 E. WILLIAM

All programs include special excursions & tours, round-trip jet transpor-
tation, ALL European connections, room & board, tuition, f e e s, U-M
D n D-rnnrnm A Al.A

1.1

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