100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 04, 1977 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1977-11-04

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

/

Tired of the Did ,tu routine?
Do your weekend plons seem bleak?;
WHY NOT TRY SOMETHING DIFFERENTI
HURON FARMS CIDER MILL
OffersYou, chance to get away,
i Fresh sweet cider'
" Hot donuts'
" Fresh fruit at prices you can afford s
o Lots of land to roam and relax
I I
U I
AND ITS ONLY MINUTES FROM YOUR DOOR
t U
I 4
W 3431Al. eeb Rd
a .
Dexter, Mich.'
S426-3919 '
tOpen 8-5--7 days a
i MP'tJS -
Iw.... ..... .w ..w .www ...... ..... ..... ...,. ..... ....I

Page 2-Friday, November 4, 1977-The Michigan Ddily
Ethics panel says no
reps were nfluenced

by S. Kor
WASHINGTON (AP) - The House
ethics committee reported yesterday
that its year-long investigation has+
not proved that a single congressman
was influenced by cash, gifts or!
favors received from South Korean
agents.
Rep. John Flynt (D-Ga.), chair-
man of the ethics panel, said in a
periodic report to the House that
public hearings two weeks ago
"removed any doubt" that South
Korean officials and businessmen
had tried to buy influence in Con-
gress.
BUT, FLYNT added, "The com-
mittee is unaple to say at this time
whether any members of Congress
succumbed to the efforts to influence
their official actions."
Flynt's report added: "The major
obstacle encountered by.the commit-
tee has been refusal of the govern-
ment of the Republic of South Korea
to cooperate in the investigation.
Instead of cooperation, the commit-
tee has thus far met with resist-
ance."
You Can Play Late
At the UNION
'til I a.m. tonight
BILLIARDS
PINBALL and
BOWLING

,ean gifts
He said investigators have only
"unsubstantiated testimony or evi-
dence" concerning congressmen who
received the South Korean cash or
gifts.
DESPITE South Korean dis-
patches indicating a willingness to
cooperate, he said, the conditions
Seoul has attached are unacceptable.
He said this was particularly true of
U.S. efforts to talk to former Wash-
ington society figure Tongsun Park;
a rice dealer indicted in absentia for
his part in the scandal. Park fled to
South Korea when the investigation
began.
"The limitations on questioning
Park would make a farces of the
responsibilities entrusted to this
committee," Flynt said.
Attorney General Griffin Bell said
this week that Justice Department
prosecutions are "about at the end of
the road" without Park's testimony.;
Some 20 congressmen have ac
knowledged publicly or to investiga-
tors that they accepted campaign
contributions and other money from
Park, but they say they did nothing
wrong.
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Volume LXXXVIII, No. 50
Friday, November 4, 1977
is edited and managed by students at the University
of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class
postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Pub-
lished daily Tuesday through Sunday morning dur-
ing the University year at 420 Maynard Street,
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates,:
$12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by
mail outside Ann Arbor.-
Summer session published Tuesday through satur
day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor;
$7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor.

1111111111111111NI11111111111111111i11111111111111111[1l11111111l111111l111IIII!II!I! flhlU

. ....
__..
._.
.....
_...
_....
..-..
.
._...
,.:_.
.._..
,.r..
,
._...
._.,
,
,,:
I

A

SERVING ANN ARBOR
AREA FOR 48 YEARS
IMPORTED and DOMESTIC
Beers & Wines

hils~
=s
=r
=Y

Cocktails
German and American Foods
HOURS: WED.-THURS.-FRI. 4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
SAT. 4 P.M. to 10 P.M,; SUN. 11:30 A.M. to 8 P.M.
CLOSED MON. & TUES.
NO 8-8987
203 E. WASHINGTON-ANN ARBOR
Between 41 and 5th Ave.

Tune in
an.d

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiiIIIIlIIIIINIIII IhIiillliilllll i I~lh~lhII hflhllhl flflhtlh~liE ~~lli

the unirm
and therifestyle
what haveyougot?

During MARATHON '77 you'll hear
29 hours of fund raising, music,
sports, news, and interviews. Tune
in and call (313) 763-5354 to make
your pledge.
Saturday Sunday
Nov. 5 /Nov. 6
6 p.m. 11p.m.
WU0

ii

The Job.
The Coast Guard's involved
in things like saving lives,
fighting pollution, enforc-
ing the law, and maintain-
ing navigational systems.
They're big jobs and they're
important jobs. To the
country and to the people
who do them. And you
could be involved in one of
them after just 18 weeks in
Officer Candidate School
in Yorktown, Va.
As an officer in the Coast
Guard you would be in a
position of responsibility
and leadership. It's a chal-
lenging job. One where
you'll prove to yourself
and others that the 4 years
you spent in college were
well worth it.
The Pay & Benefits.
As an Ensign in the Coast
Guard, your startin salary
will be over $10,000 a year.
During your first 3 years,
normal promotion and

get married, your family And you'll be able to
also receives medical travel. A Coast Guard ,
coverage. If you make the Officer doesn't stay put.
Coast Guard your career, Your assignment could be
you can apply for post- in any of a variety of loca-
graduate training. And if tions around the country
you're selected, we'll pay or overseas.
your tuition plus keep you The Future.
on full salary while you're As with any job you're
attending school. interested in now, the
There's also a generous future has got to be an
retirement plan if you stay important consideration.
with us for at least 20 Where's the job going to
years. That's something lead youIn the Coast
you won't find with many Guard your future is, to say
private companies. the least, expandable.
The Opportunities. Whether you make it a
The jobs the Coast Guard career or not, the experi-
does are anything but or- ence and skills you'll
dinary. Which means that develop will be hard to
doing those jobs will pay match anywhere else. The
off in training and experi- most important of which
ence that is anthing but will be the skill of handling
ordinary. You'll develop yourself in a management
skills in manage- situation. Because
men'r and l that's what you'll
leadership be involved in on
that will be the first day of your
invaluable to job as a Coast Guard
........,i.....,/ lfirar Ani~a ha

annfOuncig Q awty'
£Th d c nnuaQ
BALLOON SALE

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan