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January 12, 1978 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1978-01-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

I

Page 12-Thursday, January 12,1978-The Michigan Daily

Park to
take part
in bribery
inquiry
(Continued from Page 1)
FEDERAL prosecutors Paul Mi-
chel and John Kottelly, aided by
three FBI agents and a lie detector,
plan to question Park. Michel said he
expects the Seoul investigation to last
about 10 days.
Park will be assisted by his lawyer
William Hundley from Washington.
Rep. Bruce Caputo, (R-N.Y.,) of
the House Ethics Committee, which
also is investigating the scandal, and
Daniel Swillinger, a Senate Ethics
Committee staff employe, will sit as
observers.
TWO Korean prosecutors also will
attend. No site for the questioning
has been selected.
Under an agreement signed Tues-
day, questioning will be limited to
normal business hours and will be
closed to the public.
A basic U.S.-Korea accord an-
nounced Dec. 31 plus Tuesday's
agreement and the agreement signed
yesterday cover only Park's testi-
mony in Justice Department pro-
ceedings. This has upset the Huse
Ethics Committee, particularly its
special counsel, Leon Jaworski.
THE COMMITTEE reportedly
plans to subpoena Park if he refuses
to appear before it. Hundley is trying
to arrange private testimony by Park
before the committee.
Egyptians,
Israelis
confer on
Sinai
(Continued from Page ;)
comment on the flap.
THE JOINT military committee con-
vened at the Tahra (Purity) palace in a
Cairo suburb, a four-story brick struc-
ture once the residence of the family of
Egyptian King Farouk.
Discussions were held in a second-
floor room with the two eight-member
delegations seated opposite each other
at a rectangular table.
Weizman entered the palm-lined
palace compound after a 55-minute
meeting earlier yesterday with Egyp-
tian President Anwar Sadat. The
meeting took place at the Nile city of
Aswan, about 600 miles south of Cairo,
where the president has been mapping
his Mideast strategy in the wake of his
historic journey to Jerusalem that
brought Arab and Jew together after
three decades of war.
NEGOTIATIONS between Weizman
and Egyptian War Minister Moham-
med Abdel Ghany Gamassy will focus
on the future of a score of Israeli Sinai
settlements in a peace agreement.
The controversial issue became the
target of awar of words, with Sadat
vowing that no Israeli, soldier or
civilian, would remain in a Sinai retur-
ned to Egyptian control. Israel's Prime
Minister Menahem Begin, speaking
with equal passion~ declared: "'The

Israelis do not burn settlements. They
build them and keep them."
Before leaving Tel Aviv, Weizman
defined the settlement controversy as
"a criticial one" and said Israel's
overall aim was "to achieve security
measures."
EYPTIAN officials say they will be
watching Israel's response as a test of
the Begin government's willingness to
replyto Sadat's, solo peace initiative.
The Sadat drive is anathema in much of
the Arab world where critics accuse
him of seeking a separate peace with
Israel.
Israeli sources close to Weizman
reported the ex-fighter pilot in good
spirits and quoted him as saying he ex-
pects the negotiations to be "long but
not long-winded."
"I hope the last battle with Egypt will
be the battle for peace," Weizman told
reporters in Israel.
HE ALSO underlined the Israeli
bargaining position stipulating with-
drawal from Sinai must be phased over
three to five years. Egypt is demanding
a one-year withdrawal timetable.
The negotiators also planned to
discuss demilitarized zones, inter-
national peacekeeping guarantees and
the balance of forces on respective
sides of the agreed frontier.
As the talks opened here, the overall
Egyptian-Israeli dialogue appeared

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