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December 04, 1981 - Image 3

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1981-12-04

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The Michigan Daily-Friday, December 4, 1981-Page:3

-HAPPENI NGS-
HIGHLIGHT
Drop by the Fishbowl today and enjoy a party for Columbia Pictures
newly released film, The Neighbors, starring John Belushi and Dan
Ackroyd. Contests will be running all day and prizes include passes to the
movie.
FILMS
Cinema Guild- Days of Heaven, 7, 9p.m., Lorch Hall.
AAFC- This Is Elvis, 4,7, 10:20 p.m., Jailhouse Rock, 8:30 p.m., MLB.
Cinema II- Kagemusha, 7, 9:45p.m., Angell, Aud. A.
Mediatrics- Star Trek, 7, 9:30 p.m., MLB.
Gargoyle- The Wanderers, 7, 9p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall.
AA FILM- Holiday, 7 p.m., Philadelphia Story, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci.
AAIA- Space Shuttle: A Remarkable Flying Machine, 7:30 p.m.,
Chrysler Center, North Campus.
Public Health- Noontime film fest, Mind Over Body, 12:05 p.m., School of
Public Health, Aud. II.
Michigan- MASH, 2:30, 7, 11:15 p.m., The Long Goodbye, 4:45, 915 p.m.,
Michigan Theater.
SPEAKERS
Women in Science- Evelyn Fox Keller, "Gender & Science," noon,
Rackham East Conference Room.
Wholistic Health Council- Robert Nara, "How to Become Dentally Self-
sufficient," 7:30p.m., 229 Angell.
South & South East Asian Studies- Rajam Ramamurti, "Kavignar Kan-
nadasan: Late Poet Laurete of Tamil Nadu," noon, Muhammed Salleh,
Modern and Tradition in Malay Literature," Lane Hall, Commons Rm., 4
p.m.
English Language Institute- Louis Trimble, applications of "English for
Science and Technology (EST)" research Rhetorical-Grammatical
relationships in EST, 10 a.m., 3003 North University Bldg.
Natural Resources- seminar, "The Energy Crisis in the Third World,"
noon, Dana Bldg., Rm. 1504.
Nursing- Lea Vaughn, Asst. Dean of University of Detroit School of Law,
"Law and How It Affects Health Care Professional," Rm. M3330, Med. Sci. I,
10 a.m.
PERFORMANCES
UAC- How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Lydia Men-
delssohn Theater, 8 p.m.
St. Mary's Newman Group- Carbaret '81, St. Mary's Student Chapel, 331
Thompson, 8 p.m.
School of Music- Contemporary Directions Ensemble, 8 p.m., Rackham,
Flute Recital, Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
Theater & Drama-- The House of Bernarda Alba, Trueblood Theater,
Frieze Bldg., 8 p.m.
PTP- Morning's at Seven, Power Center, 8p.m.
Musical Society- Handel's "Messiah," Hill Aud., 8p.m.
ARK- Electricity, 1421 Hill, 8 p.m.
Canterbury Loft- TV Dinner, 7, 9p.m., 332 South State.
12 Days of Christmas Series- The UMA Squares, 12:15 p.m., Union.
MEETINGS
History Concentrators- Student Faculty coffee hour, 3 p.m., Third Floor,
Faculty Lounge, Haven Hall.
Guild House- Poetry Series, beginning creative writing classes, 8 p.m.,
802 Monroe.
CEW- Single Mothers Support Group, second floor of the Huron Valley
National Bank Bldg., North University & South Thayer, 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class- 7:30 p.m., Reformed Church.
University Duplicate Bridge Club- 7:30 p.m., League.
Int'l Student Fell.- 7 p.m., 4100 Nixon Rd.
Hillel- Shabbat Services: 6:45 p m., Orth.; 5 p.m. Conserv.; 6 p.m., din-
ner.
Nuclear Eng.- Rudy Ong, White Aud., Cooley, 3:30 p.m.
'.MISCELLANEOUS
Alpha Phi Omega- Blood Drive, Union, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Recreational Sports- International Rec. Program, Intramural Bldg.,
open swim, 6-7 p.m. & slide show, 7-8 p.m.
Computing Center- Lab intro. to Ontel Terminal, Forrest Hartman, Ontel
-Rm., NUBS, 9 a.m., Lab, Advanced Ontel Terminal, 10:30 a.m.
To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of:
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109.

Allen failed to list firm's clients

WASHINGTON (AP)- Richard Allen failed to
disclose the identity of his consulting firm's clients
despite a legal requirement that any of them "direc-
tly involved" with him be listed if they paid at least
$5,000 during the two years before he joined the White
House.
White House spokesman David Gergen said
yesterday that he wasn't sure whether the national
security adviser should have listed his clients, and
other White House officials refused to discuss the
issue.
ALLEN HAS argued that the White House counsel's
office told him he did not have to list his clients
because, technically, he was an employee of the
company, Potomac International Corp., and the fees
were paid to the firm.
Federal law requires an incoming government of-

ficial to identify sources of "compensation in excess
of $5,000" in the past two years and to give "a brief
description of the nature of the duties performed or
services rendered."
The main exception to the filing requirement is if
the official was an employee of the firm that provided
the services and was not "directly involved" in work
for that client.
ALLEN HAS said he did have "several clients"
who paid more than $5,000 a year. Allen was Potomac
International's founder, owner, president and chief
consultant. His wife, Patricia, was the corporation's
vice president and treasurer, and his son, Michael,
was its secretary.
A source familiar with Allen's business said he had,
only five to seven clients, all of whom were Japanese

or affiliated with Japanese firms.
J. Jackson Walter, director of the Government
Ethics Office, declined to discuss specifics of Allen's
case yesterday but said the issue of listing clients is-a
"gray area" in the federal disclosure requirements.
There are differing opinions inside the ethics office
over precisely when an official must submit a client
list, he said.
For instance, the requirement would be much
clearer if the incoming public official had run his own
law practice and been involved with all the clients
than if he had been a member of a large law firm and
worked on only some of the firm's accounts.
Allen has said he does not recall who in the coun-
sel's office gave him the advice not to file a client list.
He refused to discuss the issue further yesterday.:

Voting Rights Act
extension abandoned

WASHINGTON (AP) - "One of the
shortest-lived trial balloons in history"
deflated yesterday as Majority Leader
Howard Baker dropped his effort to get
the Senate to approve this year an ex-
tension of the 1965 Voting Rights Abt.
The Tennessee Republican said
neither supporters nor opponents of a
tough voting rights renewal showed
much interest in the proposal he offered
less than 24 hours earlier for a simple
10-year extension of the civil rights law.
BAKER PROPOSED the simple ex-
tension Wednesday, saying he hoped it
would avoid a lengthy and bitter debate
on a House approved version that
Senate conservatives would likely
filibuster.
But yesterday he announced that his
proposal was resisted by both sides, in-
cluding Sen. Edward Kennedy, (D-

Mass.), the leading Senate supporter of
the voting rights renewal measure ap-
proved by the House Oct. 5.
With Sen. Strom Thurmond, (R-S.C.),
chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, at his side, Baker said he
floated the simple extension plan to test
the reaction.
"IT WAS ONE of the shortest-lived
trial balloons in history," Baker said.
"I'm disappointed but not surprised."
Both Kennedy and Thurmond set
conditions on accepting Bakers plan.
The 1965 law is considered the most
successful piece of civil rights
legislation in the 1960s. Under it, all or
parts of 22 states-mostly in the South-
with poor minority voting records are
now required to get Justice Department
approval for any changes in their elec-
tion laws.

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SCHOLARSHIP AND FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE
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The University of Maryland is an equal opportunity institution.
Minorities and women are encouraged to apply.

Taylor schools saved

TAYLOR (UPI) - A record number
of voters turned out yesterday to pass
two crucial millage measures which
had been rejected four times in the past
year, assuring the district would not be
forced to close schools for lack of funds.
"We didn't know how it was going to
go, . but we passed them both," said
Taylor' School board member Sibyl
Mazor, who said the renewal measure
passed 12,492-5,628 and the additional
tax levy was accepted 9,258-8,590.
"We worked real hard for it, Mazor
said. "We are very, very pleased. The
voters came through for our kids.
R en sOW
meeting
tomorrow
The University Regents will hold a
special meeting at noon tomorrow to
discuss University property aquisitions
and audit items. The meeting, which
will be held in the Regents room of the
Fleming Administration Building, will
be closed to the public because it per-
tains to matters of personal privacy.
All meetings dealing with matters of
a personal naturercan be closed to the
public under the provisions of the Open
Meeting Act.
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-A T -' -It )N
A4NN A RBM X

"We're having a victory party," she
said after returns were counted. "This
time it's a victory."
Mazor said a campaign blitz to per-
suade voters to approve the measure
may have turned the tide in the millage
controversy which split the community.
Officials had said the district's 31
schools would close as early as mid-
December if voters rejected the two tax
proposals.
The turnout of more than 18,000
voters outnumbered voter response at
any of the other elections, including the
record Oct. 19 election when 16,000 of
the district's 33,000 voters cast ballots.

THE DEPAIRTMENIT OF
ROMAINCE LANGUAG ES
presents
afilm version of
MACHIAVELLI'S
a ribald Carnival comedy of 1518
In Italian with English subtitles
Friday, December 4, 4:00 pm
M LB Lecture Room 2
Introduction by Prof. Oscar Budel

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