Thursday, March 1, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Thusda, arc 'I 173 HEMICIGN- DIL FINSH YOIJRDEGREE IN BRADFORD Lonbon. Major in [)rban Studies beginning in unJ uor year. Complete your bachelor's in only one year including study in London with trips to the Continent. Apply now for June '73 - August '74 program. COMING SOON "Outrage- uail raunchy, buL oddlY moving." - Look Magazine, Limnited enrollmlent Coeducational. Write Urban Studies Admission, Bradford College, Bradford. Mass. 01830 (near Boston) I WANTED: MARRIED COUPLES IN UNIVERSITY HOUSING: I'd like to interview you for a thesis on American life styles. If you are 21+, married 2 years+, call Susan B r am, 764-6337 (Day) or 662-9407 (Eve.) You will be paid. G~et g4 ,f e &'oove V fl A(9Ro Uy ~~ ~ Mich. an Union0 Groov i9diard Room (Continued from Page 1} the Watergate investigation. He did not say who on his staff prepared the letter which came to him two days after the June 17 bugging was discovered. The FBIs activities in the Water- gate case arose during the first day of Gray's appearance before thei Judiciary Committee which is examining his credentials to be the permanent director of the FBI. Gray, who has been acting direc- tor for the past 10 months, was nominated by Nixon for the per- manent post on Feb. 16. Gray gave assurances to they committee that, if confirmed, the V' m m;gryr speeches for President Nixon dur- ing last fall's election campaign. Despite his statements, Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W. Va.), a Demo- cratic leader and committee mem- ber, again said he would not vote for Gray because he still believes the acting director is too political for the job. "The politicalization of the FBI is tantamount to setting up an American Gestapo," said Byrd. Gray said he first learned of the Watergate bugging at mid-day June 17 while on the West Coast for a speaking engagement. "I was first told it was a robbery, FBI Watergate files opened to Senate; Director Gray denies political inference agency would remain nonpolitical then a bombing, and then that as he said it had been during the listening device was found," he 48-year tenure of his predecessor, said. "I told him (Mark Felt, the the late J. Edgar Hoover. No. 2 man in the FBI) to go to the He also denied he made political hilt and spare no horses in the inuciantin" investigation., He said later in the day, he learned that James McCord, a former FBI agent and security co- ordinator for the Republican Na- tional committee, was involved in the Watergate break-in and bug- ging. "I knew that we were in a situa- tion that could have all kinds of possibilities," he said. "I was not a naive jackass that I didn't know the integrity of the FBI was going to be on the line." He said he gave the Watergate investigation the highest priority, with no restrictions or limitations. W I We Don' Just, ubish a Newspaper * We meet new people " We laugh a lot * We find consolation Paltrick (Gray' rM w ..._ v _____ N. Vietnam assures Sec. Rogers POW release to be resumed soon GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe FRIDAY, MARCH 2 NOON LUNCHEON JEAN KING, Attorney, Active Political Leader: "FEMINISM AND POLITICAL VITALITY NOW" (No dinner Friday due to beginning of Spring Break) " We make money (maybe) * We solve problems " We play football * We debate vital issues " We drink 5c Cokes * We have T.G.'s JOIN the DAILY staff (Continued from Page 1) on Vietnam. In holding up the release, the Communists claimed the other side was not abiding by the cease-fire and was failing to provide for the safety of the Com- munist peacekeepers. By North Vietnamese reckon- ing, 422 American prisoners re- main to be released. Although a pattern of compro- mise appeared to have emerged on the prisoner issue, Robert Mc- Closkey, spokesman for the U.S. delegation, emphasized that Rog- ers himself had made no bargain with North Vietnam. Rogers was given the North Vietnamese as- surances on prisoner releases dur- ing a 30-minute session with For- eign Minister Nguyen Duy Trinh, McCloskey said. As the two were meeting, an- other conference was taking place -between the foreign ministers of the two rival South Vietnamese re- gimes, Tran Van Lam of Saigon and Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh of the Viet Cong's Provisional Revolu- tionary Government. McCloskey said he did not know what was discussed between them. Rogers, Trinh, Lam and Mrs. Binh came together at the Inter- national Conference Center in downtown Paris and discussed the dispute that had led Hanoi and the Viet Cong to suspend prisoner re- leases. Rogers was under President Nix- on's orders to sort out the prisoner issue before transacting any new business in a 12nation conference that is expected by the weekend to endorse the Vietnam peace agree- ment. The endorsement is to be em- bodied in an international declara- tion being drafted by U. S. and Hanoi diplomats. A committee of the whole con- ference will meet today to look at the document they have pre- pared. NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP I 7 .~....................... DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN . .~ ~.... THURSDAY, MARCH 1 DAY CALENDAR Maternal & Child Health Film Series: "Lisa's World," 1170 SPH II, noon. Swimming: Big Ten swimmning & diving championships; preliminaries, 1 pm.: finals, 7:30 pm., Matt Mann pool. Student Lab Theatre: Improv. fig- ures; "We Can't All Be Heroes," Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 4 pm. Nuclear Seminar: L. Chua, Yale, "One Neutron Transfer in C12-C13 Scatter- ing," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. Ctr. for Early Childhood Dev. & Educ.: W. Hartup, U of Minn. "A De- velopmental Study of Instigators to Aggression," Aud. B, Angell, 4 pm. Extension Serv.-English : Poetry read- NEW WORLD MEDIA presents a NEW FILM RELEASE..., I- -- - 11 PLEASE STAND ** BY ** Starring DAVID PEEL as FREEMONT ZAPATA "The Robin fHood of Guerrilla Television" with WENDY APPEL (as Marion) appeared in Bob Downey's PUTNEY SWOPE and POUND. ALEX BENNETT (Narrator) a well known, highly controversial radio personality, hosts a variety of counter-cul- ture heroes on his all night show on WPLJ-FM. A.J. WEBERMAN (as A.J.) most famous for his analyses of the Garbage of Rock Stars and Politicos. A.J.'s ex- ploits have appeared in ESQUIRE, THE VILLAGE VOICE, etc. ROBERTS BLOSSOM (as Judge Nott) poet, playwright and theatrical innovator. Has appeared in several films i.nclud- ing the recent SLAUGHTERHOUSE-5. DAVID PEEL (as Freemont Zapata) a living legend in N.Y.C., street singer, zippie, New Album on Apple: "The Pope Smokes Dope" produced by John Lennon and Yoko Ono. MUSIC BY: DAVID PEEL and the LOWER EAST SIDE JOHN LENNON and YOKO ONO TEENAGE LUST 1984 AND OTHERS-... "In the very near future a bond of radical freaks will take over control of a communications satellite and begin to broadcast messages to a captive world T.V. audience " Followed by discussion with directors Jack & Joanna Milton of- the MEDIA LIBERA- TION FRONT LAST SHOWING "T E I I I"r% wM A I ' GEOLOGICAL TOUR OF THE WEST GEOL. 333, 4 hrs. credit OPEN TO ALL WITH AN INTRODUCTORY COURSE IN GEOLOGY July 23-Aug. 20, 1973 Application form available at office of Department of Geology and Mineralogy Rm. 1006, C. C. Little Bldg. ings: U-M grad students, UGLI Multi- purpose Rm., 4:10 pm. Zoology & Comm. on Tropical Stu- dies: J. H. Connell, U of Cal.-Santa Barbara, "Community Interactions on Rocky Marine Shores," Aud. 4, MLB, 4:10 p.m. Chemistrk: J. Stelman, Oil, Chem. & Atomic Wkrs. Union, "Toxic Chem- icals, Workers & the Environment," 1300 Chem., 8 pm. Ctr. for Res. on Learning & Teach- ings: "Computer Based Education & the PLATO IV System," lecture-dem- onstration, W. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 8 pm. Music School: U Phiiharmonia, T. Alcantara, conductor, Hill, 8 pm. GENERAL NOTICES SPRING COMMENCEMENT EXER- CISES: May 5, Graduates assemble at 9:30 am., exercises at 10:30 a.m.n t Crisier Arena. All graduates as of May 1973 eligible to participate. Tickets: Maximum of four ~to each graduate, distributed April 23, to 5 p.m. May 4. at Diploma Office, 1518 LSA. Academic Costume: May be rented at Moe Sport Shop, 711 N. University. Orders must be placed between Mar. 14 and April 14. Assembly for Graduates: At 9:30 a. m. in area east of Stadium. Graduate Announcements, Invitations, etc.: In- quire at desk in first floor lobby of LSA after April 1. Commencement pro- grams: will be distributed at exer- cises. Diplomas: will be mailed about June 14, except those being returned to the engrosser for addition of honors or distinction. These will be mailed about July 14. SIRACUSA, Sicily (A') - A boxer had 14 puppies, which the attend- ing veterinarian said was six more than the usual maximum. 11 Q I DEADLI INE FOR APPLICATION: MARCH 16 SHOP TONIGHT AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. oe T- I i1 __ __ Ir 3"ox 4"x5" mirror. $9. 6"x6" mirror, $10 i _ t , _____.__...___ 1 11 I NEW WORLD MEDIA Presents PROGRAM No. 2: INTERNATIONAL FILM I A I IV This Week I and DISCUSSION SERIES i i "The HOUR OF THE 5112"x8" mirror, $12.50 FUR CES" 2%"x10%" mirror. 12.50 mini-mirrors and Old Masters' prints. ..beautiful answer to that hard-to-fill wall grouping. Unique in design, with antiqued gold-finish frames, they add an interesting touch to a creative arrangement of prints, photos and paintings. Or, use them sinclv or in multinles to dramatize a wall. U of M Professor DAN LEVINE will speak on CONTEMPORARY ARGENTINA and discussion will follow. PART This is a 3 part film about the revolution in Argentina. PART I is entitled: "Neocolonial- ism and Violence" !" FRIDAY-MARCH 2 Undergraduate Library, Multi-purpose Rm. 8 P.M. NO ADMISSION CHARGE SPONSORED BY NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP I I ___ i