Encampment '73 begins By STEVE OSTROSKY Collegian Staff Writer -- The Encampment reitre.ent a turtling point in Autlent-faeult relation:, a return to reamin instead i f phyAral eon- Iron tation This is hou Raymond O. Murphy. sire pre-ident for student affair,. described the upcoming Encampment 1973. being held today and kmiorrou at the Elks' Country Club ,nikide State College. The Encampment i, an informal gathering of - student leaders. faculty mem ber-. administration representatives. torn leaders and members :of the state ' and national legi-lature, to (limit.... topie-, con cerning them. Murphy said. Thi- In. the 19th eneampment but the firs -hire 1969. At the 1969 Encampment, black leader- from the• link r;r,..ity threatened to calk out if the scheduled agenda %%a , not replaced b 5 black-oriented topic. 4 majorit of the participants agreed to go along Kith this "prowl...al and a con frontation era• asoided. Since then no encampment:- have been held. Nturritt% ...aid the main rea.on Iztek of -indent and rommunit% intereA -Inee then The Student Athisr, Board Jun. N% I'd to reereate the Encanyrtru•rit. Murphy said. Student leader. aim) have intere-t in returning, to format. Morph -aid the Encampment pre% ion* Is a• held at the Mont Alto ram pu• before the beginning of Fall Term and la-ted tho or three day.. hit began-e of lire-.ore from the nel% linhersity calendar. change, were made in location and time. There will be three major pre:entation at ear'-. Encampment. Tonight the University% academic master plan hill be presented by Stanley (1. Ikenberry. senior %ice president for CIII% eNity development and relation,. Tomorron morning. William K. Clerich. "ire president of the University Board of Trustee,, Hill present "The Im plications of the State Higher Education Master Plan mi Penn State: Tnrnurro afternoon the Centre Region 11a-ter Plan %ill lie (16cus.ed by Centre Regional Planning Director Ron Short. University President John W. Oswald will deliver a' speech tomorrow marking the end of the encampment. Ketvveen presentations topical 11,Ek.hop. , NN ill be conducted on University bureaucrary. the implications of changing the majority age and student participation itt Unkersity decision-making. En (4l-mpment participants will select the workshops they want to attend. Murphy said there will be no social ac tiv dies except for a brief informal time before (limier tomorrow. This will give people a chance to meet each other, he About 200 people have been invited to the Encampment and about 150 are ex pected to attend. What's Inside? Film review University Council page 3 Student Leaders Forum page 5 Morning Song page 5 Book price comparison chart page 9 AP New Scope page 10 Sports scene : page 11 HUB construction page 18 Legal:rights of 18-year-olds page 19 the daily Student leaders %%ho %%ork Murphy in planning the Encampment %ere Bniee Organizat' of To‘sn In dependent Student president and En campment coordinator; Mark iinks. Un dergraduate Student Go% ern mewl president; Roger 'Richards.. Graduate Student Association president. and Patricia Stewart. editor of The . Daily Collegian. Richards said. — What I re4lly expected to get out of the Encampment it contact with the admini , tration. It's a chance for 4udents and the administratinn to meet in an informal atmosphere and' give us the chance to break the ice. It will give the chance to know each other as human beings rather than r01e5.... Richards added he does : not expect solutions to specific problems. "There are some reasonable - topics to get discussion going on." he said. "ff we are lurks.. we can isolate a few problems we can uork on (luring the year. - ' "I think it is a great idea, - Steuart said. She! added she is looking forward to the ork , hops and to meeting people. gther Encampment participants also presSed enthusiasm for the program. Short said it w ill be good for Univer sity-bran relationships. "I think it is a xer• posithe technique to get cooperation be tu een the Unix ersit‘ and the town.' he Ex-aide Kro• h pleads innocent LOS ANGELES (AP) FoCiller White House aide Egil Krogh Jr. pleaded • in nocent to the burglary of the office of Daniel Ellsberg . , psychiatrist ve.terday. lie said he believes the activities of the un dercover White House "plumbers squad" ik ere a mistake and that he regrets them. Krogh was one of four former R bite House aides named in the four-count in dictment. irshich was made public at the arraignment. Also named were Krogh's former boss, John I). Ehrlichman. David fling and convicted Watergate con spirator G. Gordon Liddy. Ehrlichman, who was President Nixon's chief adviser for domestic affairL has sent word he will surrender: Tuesday, the deadline set by the judge for volUntary ap pearances. The indictment named four other men as coconspirators in the California break in, but those four were not indicted. They were Watergate conspirators E. Howard Hunt and Bernard Barker, and two Cuban Teamsters local 8 accepts new contract Members of the Teamsters Union Local 8 (University employes) Tuesday, night ac cepted a contract with the University quelling rumors of a possible strike. A University press release Wednesday said University President John W. Oswald "expressed gratification to technical ser vice employes whu supported the recom mendation_ of their union leaders in ac cepting the proposed contract with the University." page 2 The release says the contract "covers the next three years with a proviso for reopening negotiations for wages in the second and third years." The release indicates the contract in cludes a number of changes related to work loads, especially as they relate to job security, requested by the Union. Coll ak ■ Battling it out RAYMOND 0. MURPHY, vice ; president for student affairs, defeated Marylyn Short.; of the Residential Life Programs Office in a watermelon eating contest , last night between Hartranft and ; Simmons. noted. "Hopefully we will find new direc tions in sOlving common problems." David Stormer, director of the Depart ment of University Safety, said, "l really don't know what to expect, never having attended an Encampment. But both the administration and the student. will benefit from this exchange." Stormer added he hopes to find out what student leaders expert from the law enforcement department. Stormier will lead a workshop on erinie in the University communitN. Otto E. Mueller, assistant vice president for housing and fund service operations, said he believes the idea of student leaders and rui nuunity residents getting together is good. "I hope to get the current point of vies front students and assoetates," he said. Mueller will head a workshop on housing at the University. State College Borough Councilman James McClure said. "I'm full of great ex pectations. I think it is very practical for u, to get together. I sill jump at any op portunitN to communicate with the Univer sity. Uni%ersity -community com munication, need to he improved." McClure. %Ito 'l% ill head a workshop on "The Transportation Trauma. - added. "I hope it goes-sell.'. national,. Eugenio Martinez and Felipe DeDiego. Krogh, who had previously refused to speak out, said he had decided to talk publicly on "my relation. or lack thereof, to the special unit that was formed in 1971 by the President. "I distinctly feel now that the decision il that was made in 971 to go forward with the covert open tion was a' mistake," Krogh told report( l'N outside the courtroom he entered his plea on charges of burglary, conspiracy and solicitation to commit burglary: : lie oas the first of four former White House aides to surrender on grand jury in dictments issued this week. "I felt it was a mistake immediately thereafter -when details of its execution were presented to me," Krogh said, ap parently referring to the Sept. 3. 1971 break-in in Beverly Hills, Calif. "I have some real regrets over what has taken place in terms of injuring innocent persons." A union official contacted by The Daily Collegian .refused to comment on the vote or the contract. "There • are still a few things that need straightened out," he said. He indicated the union may have a comment on the contract today. At a union meeting May 2*, 1,127 union members out of 1,136, attending voted (lawn a proposed University con tract. A union member said then that the vote was not a strike vote but a request for renegotiation. The union member said one 1 ob jectionable clause in the contract called for a 5.5 per cent increase in workers salaries only if the University obtained a $6.1 million appropriation increase. • Boyle charged, arrested for Yablonski slayings PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP) Fornier ,/ Magistrate Arthur Burnett. The govern- United Mine Wqrkers President W.A. menragreed to set bond at $50,000 and "Tony" Boyle was charged with murder ,postpone until Sept. 25 a hearing on and arrested yesterday in the Yablonski Boyle's removal to Pennsylvania. Boyle family slayings. posted bond and was released Almost simultaneously, the deposed union chieftain and hand-picked heir of the late John L. Lewis also was indicted on federal conspiracy charges stemming from the case, The developments climaxed three and one-half years of-arrests and. trials which followed the murders of .UMW insurgent Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski and Yablon ski's wife and daughter in nearby Clarksville, Pa., on New Year's Eve, 1969. The charges were handed up here and in Washington, Pa., on the basis of disclosures from William J. Turnblazer, 52, a middle-level UMW official 4'ho was quoted by investigators as say' rug Boyle in stigated the murder plot. Turnblazer was charged both with mur der at the state level and with conspiracy by a federal grand jury here. He pleaded guilty to the federal conspiracy charge at once, and publicly acknowledged his role in the case. Boyle was arrested in Washington. D.C.‘ shortly after the conspiracy indictment was returned. "1 don't know what it's all about," Boyle told newsmen as he was eseprted by FBI agents to a waiting car. He made no other statement, hut previously has denied any knowledge of the killings. Later, Boyle was taken hefare U S Nixon asks court to nullify order WASHINGTON (AP) President Nixon's lawyers asked a federal appeals court . yesterday to nullify U S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica's demand to hear tape, recordings sought In , the Watergate grandjury. The White House lawyers asked for an unusual hearing p hefore the entire nine menther U -S. Circuit Court, saving the matter involi'es "the para Mount question" of whether a President can he forced to gise idence in a criminal proceedings. The appeals court immediately granted the request. It .et noon Monday as a deadline for Judge Sirica and special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox to reply to the White House motion and scheduled arguments for 1 p.m. Tuesday. Meanwhile, Judge Sirica granted the White House until Sept. 24 reel to a separate lawsuit in 'l4 hieh the Senate Watergate committee seeks tape- and papers related to the 'Watergate 11 iretap ping. Siriea said he "is determined not to be rushed into a half-baked job — in deciding the committee's ease. But. he added. "At the time in 1971 • "throng of reporters awaited. Although when this job was presented to me a, declining to answer question,. he delivered something of extraordinary national im- his statement and Unheated that one of his portanee, • I understood it was fully legal defenses when he cam•• to trial will authorized and lawful " Then he walked into a hallway where a "urgent r•eeurity purpih.e: It won't fit the computer MAYBE MICHAEL TROBICH (7th-general arts and scien ces) needed a little more security than most people to cope with his giant size problems at registration yesterday. Friday, September 7,1973 University Park, Pennsylvania Vol. 74, No. 22 20 pages Published by Students of The Pennsylvania State University Boyle's attorney, Plato Cacheris, agreed to • the magistrate's condition that Boyle's passport he turned over, apparently to in sure that he does not leave the country. The passport was handed over. It had expired Aug. 23, 1970. Caeheris told newsmen Boyle would not fight the extradition but asked for the postponement because "this just happened today and it -will give him time to get his wits about him." . Cacheris said Boyle had no idea an arrest would be coming yesterday. "I think it was horrible the way he was arrested in the middle of a civil deposition when the government knew he would have been produced on a phone call," Cacheris said. Cacheris said Boyle called him from the law office where he • was giving the deposition and told him three FBI had walked in to arrest him. If convicted on either the state or federal charges, Boyle could be sentenced to life in prison. Joseph Yahlonski Jr., the slain Yabion ski's son, witnessed the arrest and told newsmen afterward: "We've waited a long time." The state murder charges were in two warrants filed in Washington County Court, the county in In hich the Yablonskis resided. In otherWaterp4te development. ye,ter dab: —An Associated Press poll showed the Senate committee undecided al t a plan that would discourage _live tele% kion coverage of upcoming. hearings into cam paign finances and .political dirty tricks. But 'sentiment appearirnarrowly in fat Or of continued television coverage. the poll showed. The plan would split the seen-man panel into subcommittees. which would he less likely to attract live coverage. —lt was disclosed that the Senate com mittee has asked more than 100 major cor porations whether they made illegal con tributions of company money tof any presidential candidates last year. Letter were mailed last week. but without fan public announcement, a committee of ficial confirmed. The corporations were gi% en 10 dais to respond' or face possible subpoenas for testitnon and records. White - House spokesmen ‘t . otild neither confirm nor•deen a report by the Washingum Post that President Niwn or dered che Secret Set-% ice to w iretap his he that he wa,. told the break-in Is a,. fur an The warrants were arrompanied b? an affidavit from a Pentisyl%ania state trooper who said Turnblazer fold him Boyle — instigated and initiated" the Yaldonski murder plot in mid-1969. Boyle called Tuniblazer and a third UMW official to a meeting in of fice in Washington, I) C.. June 23. 1969. six months before the killings. the af fidavit said. Boyle told Turnblazer anti .%lbert E. Pas N the other UMW official. - that Yablonski ought to be killed or d o ne with." the document said. The affida% it nent on to quote Torn blazer as saying that he. Bosh• and Pa.- joined together to embezzle 820M00 in maim, mime% to finance the ontrder.. In Philadelphia' Richard Sprague. special state prosecutor in the killing,. ,aid see related stories page 20 he hoped Roy le would he transferred to Penns‘hania within the next week. Ile Najd that if all went as anticipated. 110‘ le would he tried on the stale murder charges around Jan. 1. The killing , oreurred three %seek , after Boyle defeated YaldonAi in a hard fought electhm for the I,MW's pre , ideney. Boyle Na- un , eated a year later by %mold E. Miller. a Nablotn.ki all%. in a court ()Merril renin of that election. The go eminent id 1 ablonski printarib. In keep him from te-tihing in Was•hington. D.C.. before a federal grand jun probing alleged 1 NIV finan cial improprietie, brother Donald. Deput!, Pre-- Secretar ,Gerald L. Warren - I am cellain after cherking that am monitoring of the President'. immeiliate the Secret Set-% ice I%onhl hate related to the prutrr live function performed I the Secret Syr lee..' —Former White Douse aide•Egil Krogh Jr.. indirted for burglar and eonspirae in the 1971 break-in of Daniel Ell-berg . - I)::krhiairiA. lieu to Los iingeles surrendered %oluntaril eonnt authoring. for arraignment. Lal%!.er- for EhrHelium') appeared in court in Wa,hingion to complain that proswentor Cox being - unrea-onable and oppre,..i\e" in a-king another grand )urn appearance 1):% their client next Montla‘. ' latts:,er.. told the appeal- rottrt that tieei.itm dead, erroneou- and be‘intil the 'timer of the judirialloratieli iu that it purport• to mtbjeet the Pre-iilent of the United States to ronaptikor, prove , - fur art- performed in hi- official vapaeit‘.- Nixon ha• contended throughout the hi•turic debate thiit the cowl:. hate no jurisdiction to force dirclo•ure of twit ate cnnuuunication• Iletucen the President and hi:. adt Sirimi ruled, 11()%%Mer. that dm grand jury 1% a , entitled to information bearing on criminal in‘e•Aigation, He asked fur the nine tape% for Ilk !mil ate inveetion .) that he could deter mine if ,en,iti‘e material eonld he reinmed and unpri‘ileged information reles ant to the R atergate ea,e then turned veer to the grand jun.