6—The Daily Collegian Wednesday. July 18, 1973 Nixon okay, Watergate probe Nixon to leave hospital Friday WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon made final.decisions on Phase 4 economic controls, met with White House lawyers on Watergate matters and received word yesterday that he can leave the hospital Friday. On his fifth day -at Bethesda Naval Medical Center, Nixon was doing so well in his recovery from viral pneumonia that his chest therapy and medication were cut down. The White House said he would go to the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md„ when he leaves the hospital, for a long weekend of recuperation. He will be back in Washington in time for a state visit by the Shah of Iran next Tuesday. Nixon had a noontime session with Treasury Secretary George Shultz on the anti-inflation Phase 4 package that will be announced today. He also conferred during the morning with his two White House lawyers, Leonard Garment and J. Fred Buzhardt. The two had gone to the hospital Monday night to talk with presidential aides after testimony before the Senate Watergate hearings that presidential conversations Designed to alleviate shortage Senate approves WAHIINGTON (AP) In an effort to alleviate an energy shortage, the Senate yesterday passed a bill to permit a consortium of oil companies to begin immediate construction of the controversial Alaska oil pipeline. The bill, if approved by the-House, would remove all legal. barriers that have blocked construction of*the controversial pipeline more than three years. Sen., Mike Gravel, D-Alaska, co-sponsor of one of the bill’s most disputed amendments, said after the final 70-22 vote that ‘ ‘I would hope we could begin cons truetion this fall. ’ ’ The } bill declares the federal government gave adequate consideration to an alternative pipeline route through Canada in preparing its environmental impact statement. And .it grants the consortium right-of-way across federal lands. ’ Congress’ judgment for the court’s in declaring the pipeline impact study meets the requirements of- the National En vironmental Policy Act. It was narrowly approved by a 49-48 vote. A motion to reconsider the vote was killed after Vice President Spiro T. Agnew cast the deciding vote in the 50-49 decision. Within hours after the vote, the House public lands sub don't mouse around, use Collegian Classified ({band ads ran free ) TUNE IN . . . to nature TURN OFF .. . air, noise and emotional DROP OUT .. .of congestion and LOOK WHAT YOU CAN HAVE INSTEAD Now Renting for Summer and Fall ' 9 month lease available • Inexpensive, unusually large efficiencies • All unities 0 Paid ,hrce • Free Bus Services from All Classes and Town • Public Transportation • No Long Corridors or Stairwells '(Greatly Reducing Crime Risk) • Security Patrol System j • Well-Lighted, Covered Private from 6utside to Each Apartment • Each Apartment Has Balcony (Upstairs) or Patio (Downstairs) • Beautiful, Natural V/oodsy Surroundings • Separate Buildings.for Pet Owners „• Ten-Channel Centre Cable TV •Generous Closet Space Including Walk-in Closets for Storage of Belongings on Premises. Laurel Glen Community 237-5709 have been tape recorded since the spring of 1971. A 3 p.m. hospital report said the President continued his first day of “increased activity in staff work without difficulty.’’ Nixon was reported “feeling well and his general improved physical state remains stable." His lungs were reported to be clear for the first time since he was hospitalized last Thursday night. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew had an afternoon appointment at the hospital. So did Senate .leaders lof the two parties, Democrat Mike Mansfield of Montana and Republican Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania.; White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the senators had requested the visit, described like Agnew’s as a “courtesy call.” ; The White House physician, Dr. Walter R. Tkach, had recommended that Nixon go to his Florida or California homes, where he'would be assured of sunshine. But the doctor said, “I lost the fight." For a period of 7 to 10 days after the President leaves the hospital, his doc tors want him to rest for an hour in the morning and in the afternoon. Tkach said that Nixon will have to gauge his work, and if his fatigue is marked, longer rest periods will be recom mended. Tkach said the .President i lost ■ two pounds during his illness and now weighs 168. j Tkach said thati Camp David was “well equipped medically” for any presidential needs. It is some 65 miles from the White House and a helicopter ride of some 25 minutes. I approved a bill, that also calls for immediate [construction by granting a right-of-way and eliminating the "court challenge of the pipeline’s environmental impact. : Environmentalists opposed the pipeline on grounds that oil spills would destroy the Arctic tundra and cause havoc along the Northwest Coast. The 789-mile pipeline is designed to connect Prudhoe Bay on the North Slope with Valdez on the southern coast. From Valdez, the oil Would be shipped by tanker "to West Coast refineries. ■Sen. Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn., sought to bring oil in along the Mackenzie River of Canada, contending that route would deliver the oil to the midwest where it is vitally needed. , The Federal Trade Commission announced it is issuing a complaint against the nation’s eight largest petroleum companies alleging they have participated in anti-competitive practices. ; An American Automobile Association survey reported, that the most severe period of the gasoline shortage appears to be over. pollution crime-risk areas All These Features Under One Roof • Washer-Dryer Area • Pinball Machines • General Store • indoor Heated Swimming Pool • Basketball-Tennis Courts ■ • Maintenance Man Living on Premises • Individual Thermostatic Control for Heat and Air Conditioning • Ample Free Parking ~ Almost Two Car Spaces for Each Apartment • Large, Bright Airy Rooms Laid out for Maximum Livability • Efficient, Modern Kitchen • wall-to-wall Carpeting • Esthetically Landscaped into the Woods, Directions: Free bus from campus North on 322 (1 mi.), right on Suburban at Miller- McVeigh Ford, veer left at Y, continue to sample house APPLIANCEsS. • ELECTRIC * Kalmbach testifies top aides used him WASHINGTON (AP)—While the Senate [Watergate committee continued gentlemanly battle with President Nixon over presidential records and tapes, lawyer Herbert W. Kalmbach testified yesterday that he had been “used" by top White House aides. Kalmbach described as self-serving remarks made to him by John D. Ehrlichman last April in a telephone conversation' which Ehrlichman taped the day before Kalmbach went before a federal grand jury. In the conversation, which Kalmbach said with bitterness he did not know was being taped, Ehrlichman suggested that Kalmbach recite certain details of testimony to the grand jury. And Ehrlichman, the former domestic counsel to Nixon, told Kalmbach that a scheme in which Kalmbach solicited funds for Watergate defendants had been masterminded by ousted j White House Counsel John W. Dean 111. Kalmbach repeated again and again in his second day of testimony, however, that while he first accepted Dean’s assurance that the fund-raising pipeline In related energy developments Collegian Classified Ads FOR SALE INSURANCE FOR AUTO, motorcycle, personal possessions, hospitalization, accident, valuables, fire. Good rates, last service. 238-6633. KUSTOM PA SYSTEM, like new condition. S4OO. Also 1966 Chevelle Super Sport 349-5973. DRIED FRUtr NO sulphur, nuts macro-flaked grains ~ excellent for backpacking and quick meals.'Dandelion Market. ANTIQUE CLOCK. CALENDAR dial New Haven shelf clock. Dark Oak. Restored. 238-3369 before noon 3-SPEED ENGLISH BICYCLE with baskets and generator good for campus riding best offer 865- 3732 : GIRL'S DORM CONTRACT for sale. Fall-winter-spring call 237- 1647. THE CLASSIC TOURING bike. 1968 BMW (R 60-US): fairing, shield, bags, helmets. Recently tuned and inspected. Best offer over 5950.00. Call Craig: 1-667- 2016. Dwiek Shoo. <m r 238-9422 441 W. College Ave. Buy your bicycle from a specialist. Your Raleigh dealer knows bicycles from stem to stern He considers selling and servicing world famous Raleighs an art. Besides ' relying on his own experience and (raining, he evea uses special equipment like the Raleigh CustoijiSizer • it lets him measure you for a perfect cycling fit. Get sized up by the Raleigh expert soon RAIORSH f * operation was proper, he soon developed doubts, went to, Ehrlichman and was reassured by Ehrlichman that it was proper. • Kalmbach’s testimony dealt mostly with his gathering $220,000 which he passed on to Anthony T. Ulasewicz for distribution to [Watergate defendants and their lawyers. | Kalmbach said he thought the money was for humanitarian purposes. Dean earlier testified it was to keep the defendants quiet. I Ulasewicz, a former New York policeman and White House in vestigator, is due to testify as the leadoff witness today. j WASHINGTON (AP)-The Senate Watergate committee voted yesterday to ask President Nixon for tape recor dings) of presidential conversations bearing on the Watergate affair. By (unanimous vote, the committee also agreed to ask Nixon again for all presidential papers that may shed light on its investigation. “May we hear from you at your earliest convenience?” a letter to the President from the com- chairman said. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler indicated earlier in the day that the President regards the tapes in ■ the same category as presidential papers he already has refused to give the commiitee. But ranking committee members said they hoped that Nixon would arrange access to White House tape recordings' and documents! pertinent to the Watergate affair, i Nixon! has invoked the doctrine of executive privilege to prevent release of presidential papers and it was an nounced’yesterday that he had invoked it again, i Whenj the Watergate committee convened for its afternoon session, ‘ chairrrtapSam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., said the President had forbidden Secret Service officials to testify “concerning ! matters; observed or learned while performing protective functions for the President or in their duties at the White House.” j ] Hidden devices that ' record presidential conversations in his offices The tape of the Kalmbach con versation with Ehrlichman came into the committee’s possession! when it subpoenaed Ehrlicliman’s, relevant materials. j Kalmbach also told the committee he never told Nixon about his mounting suspicions of Watergate scandal because he thought it would be'presumptuous to go to the President with what he termed rumor and sixth-sense suspicions of wrongdoing which had nonetheless caused him to drop out of the fund raising operation'. The committee'; also sought yesterday to interview Secret Service officials in connection with the White House taping disclosures. But Nixon ordered Secretary of the Treasury George P.i Shultz that no Secret Servicemen be allowed to testify about White Hbuse j duties or ob servations. - ! - Through the morning session Kalm bach repeated details of the fund-raising which he had outlined when lie first took the witness chair Monday. Kalmbach, of Newport Beach, Calif., r has handled personal) legal work for Nixon since March 1969. He said Monday he is still Nixon’s attorney, though the White House said several weeks ago he was no longer retained. Meanwhile at another congressional hearing, former White House aide Egil Krogh Jr. refused to say what he knows about the 1971 burglary of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist l . A can fora gets funding aid for appeal battle . j§ The National Education He claims, as-a homosexual, his" & DuShane Emergency constitutional rights were violated! >§ igFund has voted to j support Joe Legal briefs for the appeal are due :¥Acanfora’s appeal to the Fourth August 15, ’after which a date will be S : % Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, set for the joral hearing. ii Acanfora, 1972 Penn State , ; , i . . , ❖: graduate, is appealing a Baltimore Acanfora s at- g Federal District Court judge’s May { °f an X § i§ ruling upholding hisj transfer from h^ arl ? g ’ 3 nlo^ on ./? r fif | teaching to an administrative post, consideration was denied July 6. g ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS, STEREO equipment: largest selection; all brands. Fantastic discount prices. Full factory warranty. 238-0645, evenings. ELECTRONIC ! 1 MINICALCULATORS Texas Inst. SR-10 List $l5O Ours $123 Texas Inst. 2500 List $l2O Ours SRA Bowmar MX-50 List $l3O Ours $79 Craig 4504 List $147 Ours $96 Lloyds 100 Ours $79 List $l5O BUY AT DEALER'S COST PRICE ALSO MANY OTHERS ‘ CALL: 237-9134 EVENINGS ONLY HANDLOOMED [INDIAN BEDSPREADS from 55.00! at Sunshine 220 S. Fraser Street (across from the post office.!) FARFISA ORGAN AND Leslie speaker. $250.00 each,or both for 5450.00. Negotiable. Call Dan 238- 0795 BUREAU, TOP NEEDS refinishing, $2O; 15 inch tires, fit SAAB, radials and regulars! call 237-1776 class ring '74, ba Degree, size 9'.j, hardly worn, pd. 55.00 sale $30.00 237-4021 after 5:00 . CHEAP! STUDENT BEDS for sale, call - 237-7212 1968 MOBILE HOME 2 bedroom, 12' x 60‘, unfurnished; shed and patio included: 82 Rud-Cor; Call 364-9475 after 5:30 p.ffi.! 1972 HONDA CL3SO excellent condition 2,500 miles, sissy bar, $770.00 call 237-8718 or 237-8864 '67 YAMAHA 305, '64 Chrysler 300, Table and 4 chairs. Cheap! Call 238-5421 after 6:00 | AUDIO STEREO EQUIPMENT: 20 50 percent discount. Brand new, full factory warranty. All brands; also T.v. 237-9134, even|ngs/ • Sound Off! Tell the world ! ; i in e classified. Committee demands STEREO - B.S.R. TURNTABLE, Panasonic AM, FM ('receiver stereo cassette player irecorder amplifier call 237-7621 ! ask for Charlie or Linda good buy. , l MARANTZ 1200 INTEGRATED AMPLIFIER 120 W Channel RMS 5500.00 Empire, turntable with 1000 Z cartridge $250.00 717- 748-2572 after 5 p..m. j AUTOMOTIVE 1967 CORVAIR REBUILT ENGINE good condition $250.00 237-0025 | HONDA 1971 450C8 includes helmet, windshield,! padded sissvbar, crash-bar and tools. Asking $BOO.OO Call 238-5526 1967 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE RED 1967 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE RED convertible 35,000 miles, AM FM radio, overdrive $7OO 238-6447 CARABELA 125; MOTOCROSS, 1971, J&R chamber, good condition, 5475.00 evenings 237- 1741 = | YAMAHA 360 cc ENDURO, 1972 Reed Valve, Luggage'carrier, 5200 miles great shape call John 238-4788 1 VOLKSWAGEN ENGINES, USED or rebuilt. New ind used VW • Porsche parts, competent repair Tim 238-2040 ‘ WANTED RIDE WANTED TO Florida - near Daytona Beach - at lend of August. Will pay and share ex penses Call Jeff at 237-1265 MALE ROOMMATE WANTED! Own bedroom SSO a month. Call 237-4602. Availabe Aug. p ROOMMATES TO SHARE 1 or 2 bedroom apartment at i Laurel Glen. Alan 113 Beaver 5-8483. APARTMENT. FALL TERM only. For two seniors. Call 237- 8984. Ask for Rich. ROOMMATE NEEDED TO share a two bedroom apartment. Call 237-1647. • j ELECTRIC BASS PLJAYER needed for serious, vyorking group 238-0708. . ) ARE YOU LOOKING ! for a friendly, roommate who un derstands that noise is not con dusive to studying or sleeping? I need a place to live beginning fall term and prefer my own bedroom in an apt. or house with other female students. Please call 238- 6160. 1 ROOMMATE WANTED FALL room unfurnished, air-con ditioned. $65 mo. call 238-0466 FEMALE ROOMMATE T(j> share 2 bedroom mobile home on North Atherton. Call 865-1467 8-5. continues Ervin \ tapes JUNIOR FEMALE NEEDS ef- TYPING ficiency or private room with PAPERS, etc. IBM selectric cooking facilities turn, or unforn. typewriter, reasonable rates, fast, Fall within walking distance dependable service, pickup campus call collect Clearfield 765- delivery if desired. 355 7351 3140 or write Lynne Kester P.O Box 992 Clearfield 16830 WILL BUY: DORM contract for Fall ■ Spring terms (female) call collect: 215-943-1886 Maureen FIVE FRIENDLY FEMALES 7 KEYS ON RING Outside Sch want to rent a large apt. or wab. To identify and claim house near campus, starting fall, come to 126 Carnegie Bldg. Call Cindy 865-2531 or 237-7278 ~ FOUND ON SUNDAY near FEMALE ROOMMATE TO share Creamery man's Class ring 1949 spacious one bedroom apart- call 237-0891 ment 1 j block from campus. Beginning fall term. Call 237-4123 RIDE TO PITTSBURGH needed Friday July 20 and back July 22. Call Cindy 865-2531 Or 237-7278 ATTENTION EPISCOPAL STUDENTS IN VITE anyone interested to 1 Sunday services at 9:00 a.m: Coffee Hour 10:00 a.m. at ; Eisenhower Chapel. __ . Dryer, air-conditioned. Set up THE SCOR PION, CALDER Alley. on 4 acre lot. On Meeks Lane off Lrve entertainment mghtiy at Scotia Road $4OOO 10. Subs • Beverages. Billiards Happy Hours 7:30 and 9:30. . or three bedroom unfurnishedi 'THE HELP CENTER, ,for in-. nouse with a stove unit and ! formation and real concern, washer connections within 15 mile Call 863-0306 or visit 126' Pollock. radius of State College on or about Summer hours: 10a.m. •11 p.m., August 10. Write Capt. T.J. Mon.-Fri. Noon - 8 p.m. "Sat.-Sun. Martranff, 5503 Sabina Or. Alexandria, Va. 71301 or Call 318- 445-6996 BEESE PHOTO STUDIO passports. ID'S, portraits, groups, weddings. 200 W College Ave (2nd floor) 237 6647. i Xerox Copies Lowest rates. Open evenings. Weekends. Kopease, Rm 100 444 E. College next to McDonalds. Phone 238-5485. WHY GO TO New York when you can get your Minolta cheaper at General Photographic?'222 South Allen Street 237-0011. HOMOSEXUALITY REFER RALS, INFORMATION, or just rap, call USG Gay Line 863-0296, Sunday even ings 7-11 p.m. SEE VINCENT PRICE' in the i Masque of' the Red Death Saturday and Sunday 7 and.» p.m. in the. air conditioned HUB Assembly Room. Still only 50 cents. FREE'TWO PUPPIES during day i call 865-5444 ask - for Tom Gilmore after 9:00 call 364-9446 South S«a Chlnaao Restaurant tot West Nrttany Ave \ (corner ot Alien St ) * “p' .Open dally from 4pm - ltpm lor summer term { —— Two blocks from campus | Orders to take-out * - and on his telephones were installed and are maintained by the Secret Service. The committee subpoenaed Alfred C. Wong, the Secret Service official responsible for the taping. Wong ap peared yesterday for a closed-door session with Ervin and Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn„ vice chairman. He was accompanied by the general counsel for the Treasury Department who said the President had directed him to invoke executive privilege to bar Wong’s testimony. The counsel then read a letter, dated Monday, from the President to Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz, directing Shultz to refuse to permit Secret Service personnel to testify before congressional committees on White House matters. The protective agency is part of the Treasury Department. The existence of the tape recordings was disclosed Monday by Alexander P. Butterfield, a former White House aide, who told the committee they had been installed to compile an historic record of the Nixon administration. He said other participants in conversations with the President were unaware they were being recorded. The flurry of activity yesterday moved the committee and the President closer to a constitutional confrontation over whether a congressional committee has the power to demand documents from the executive branch. On July 6, the President wrote Ervin that he could not testify before the committee or provide it documents from White House files because such actions would violate the constitutional doctrine of separation of powers. He called the doctrine “fundamental to our structure of government. In my view, as in the view of previous presidents, its preservation is vital.’’ Ervin has contended that the President has no power to withhold material pertaining to political or criminal activities.- Ervin and Nixon are scheduled to meet privately on the controversy after the President is discharged from Bethesda Naval Hospital where he is confined with pneumonia. Doctors said he should be well enough to leave the hospital Friday. On another front, it was learned yesterday that special prosecutor Ar chibald Cox also plans to ask for the presidential tapes. Separation of powers would not bar Cox from obtaining presidential files since the prosecutor is part of the executive branch. The tapes presumably could prove or disprove allegations made before the committee by ousted White House counsel John W. Dean 111. He testified the President knew of and participated in the attempted cover-up of the Watergate scandal. Dean based his allegations on his accounts of meetings he had with Nixon in his White House office. According to Butterfield, those meetings routinely would have been taped. FOUND LOST KEY RING WITH five keys on it' on Old Main Mall area Sun. night 237 8993. HOUSES m TRAILER 12 * 60, WASHER COUPLE DESIRPS TO r Pn t twn ROOMS SINGLE ROOMS BY the term or year two blocks from campus call 237-8960 after 8 p.m. APARTMENTS PH-237-8806 1 br. apt. in residential area, 5 min. drive from campus. Desire female grad student to sign 6 mo. or 1 yr. lease, $l3O-mo, includes all utilities. SUBLET SUMMER SUBLET NISHED, 2bdrm. apt. in house 2 blocks from campus. Asking $l3O per month. Call 237-9694. APARTMENT needed for Irish family visiting State College July 26-Mid-August call 238-4749. JAWBONE THE JAWBONE WELCOMES the great Bob Doyle. Also featuring Bruce Young and friends. Shows at 9 and 11.415 E. Foster. Join us! Food* Fun! Music! THESES, TERM HOUSE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers