1 .. "- ru r ," 1 1 ,4 V, ";• • , NM_ _ Ila IN r - = Ar .40 me .3a: lat IMIE INS Be it ever so humble... Home for this IBM 1130 Computing System is the Computer Assisted Instruction CAI) Lab in Chambers Building. As for the flowers, well ... some computers are almost human. See story page 5. Crowds, UN. we/ Makanos it wanted them pulled out. Waldheim and Makarios conferred for an hour. No details on the session were available. Turkish Premier Bulent Ecevit said in London that Greek military planes had landed armed forces on the Medi terranean island during the coup. "This amounts to a Greek invasion of ;Cyprus," declared Ecevit, who had i come to London to enlist British and United States help in trying to restore Makarios to power. B) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Archbishop Makarios arrived yes terday at the United Nations in New York to plead for his political life in Cyprus and was greeted with all the ceremony of a head of state. Minutes after the ousted Cyprus president met with Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, a U.N. spokesman announced that the new military regime in Nicosia had asked for a delay in a Security Council meeting scheduled for today so its representatives also could be Kissinger tied to WASHINGTON (AP) The late FBI Security Council staff, advised that Dr. Director J. Edgar Hoover on three oc- Henry A. Kissinger.,.had requested that casions cited Henry A. Kissinger as • as soon as possible a telephone sur directly authorizing wiretaps on veillance be instituted ..." government officials and newsmen, according to evidence released yesterday by the House Judiciary Committee In separate memos dated May 13, 1970, concerning two different National Security Council staff employes, Hoover wrote to then. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell: '*On May 12, 1970, Brig. Gen. Alexander M. Haig of the National Ehrlichman implicates WASHINGTON (AP) Former presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman says President Nixon "indicatel his atter-the-fact approval" of the brk-in at the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist, according to evidence released yesterday by the House Judiciary Committee. Ehrlichr*an's sworn statement, given on April 26, contradicted the President's view expressed at an Aug. 22, 1973, news conference -that the break-in was "illegal, unauthorized as far as I was concerned, and completely deplorable." Ehrlichman quoted the President as telling him on April 18, 1973, that "in substance, that the break-in was in furtherance of national security and fully justified by the circumstances." The Ehrlichman affidavit was filed in Tenant unions t• provide protection present In Brussels, a North Atlantic Treaty Organization spokesman said Greece had promised a start within a few days replacing the 650 Greek officers who led the Cyprus national guard that over threw Makarios on Monday. Makarios had demanded withdrawal of the officers before the coup and NATO concerned about - a flareup between Greece and Turkey that could weaken it in the eastern Mediterranean had made it clear to the Athens government Nearly a year earlier, on June 4, 1969, Hoover told Mitchell that in the interests of tracing leaks of classified national security material "Kissinger has requested that a telephone surveillance be placed on" a newsman. The names of the wiretap targets were deleted from the five volumes of evi dence released as part of the commit tee's record of hearings into the possible impeachment of President Nixon. the White House Plumbers case, in which the former Nixon aide was con victed last Friday on charges of con spiracy and perjury; It was included in five volumes of evidence released by the Judiciary Committee. Other highlights included: —A top-secret letter in which the late J. Edgar Hoover informed tho President that the FBI had learned ` 'from ex tremely sensitive sources," apparently wiretaps, that former Defense Secretary Clarkl Clifford planned to write an article for Life Magazine critical of the ad ministration policy in Vietnam. The Hoover letter triggered a series of White House memoranda discussing how to counter such an article. They culminated with a hand-written note to H. R. Haldeman from Ehrlichman in which he noted, "This is the kind of early Undergraduate Student Government President George Cernusca's campaign promise to organize tenant unions in town apartments may become a reality Fall Term. Cernuspa said USG plans to "have a pilot program in three or four of the bigger apartment buildings." He said the larger apartments were picked because "the chance of tenant solidarity is better." Some goals of a tenant union would be rent stabilization, a legitimate return of security deposits and an increase lin apartment safety, he said. After six months, Cemusca said USG could "reflect on the differences between union and non-union apartments" in evaluating the union's effectiveness. "It could be that every single benefit we negotiate on comes up negative and we would still support it," Cernusca said. Cernusda and Cliff Weingus, director of USG's Bureau of Town Affairs, attended meetings on June 22 In New York with the Metropolitan Council on Housing. Weingua said they received a "wealth, of information abotit unionizing" from people who are familiar with the State College aitartment situation and have run tenant unions in New York. To get the unions started, workshops will be held at the beginning Of the term, Weingus said. The Nev{ York council members emphasized having floor captains wbo would take care of tenants' complaints, Weingus said. The floor captains would be part of a hierarchy which would run the union democraticly, Weingus said. There is the possibility of an entry fee, maybe $3 or $4, but it will be set according to the union's need, Cernusca said. The comicil members also said •it was important to tell tenants' the real financial aspects of the landlords so they would not tie fooled into sympathizing with the landlord, Cer nusca said. McClory predicting ouster WASHINGTON (AP) The House Judiciary committee's second-ranking Republican predicted yesterday that the committee will recommend im peachment of President Nixon and that the full House will vote to impeach the President. Rep. Robert P. McClory of Illinois said that yesterday's meeting between House Republican leaders and most bf the 17 committee Republicans shovied that about four of the GOP committee members would vote against recom mending impeachment, four or five would vote for such a recommendation and that eight or nine, including himself, are currently undecided hods they will vote when the committee begins formal consideration of articles of im peachment next week. However, Rep. Charles Wiggins, R. Photo by Anna Ross Calif., Nixon's leading defender on the committee, . said he disagrees with McClory's assessment on the outcome of the impeachment inquiry. Wiggins predicted that the House will vote early wiretaps Kissinger denied under oath during Senate hearings on his nomination for secretary of state that he' ever directly authorized any wiretaps placed on 13 officials and four newsmen in 1969 and 1970. Some of the Flgover memoranda was previously published and further questioning of his role prompted Kissinger's threat to resign unless he was cleared in a new investigation by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Both former Atty. Gen. , Elliot L. Richardson and William Ruckeishaus, acting FBI director in 1973, have backed Nixon warning we need more of your game planners are now in an excellent position to map anticipatory action." ; —An FBI interview with former Asst. Atty. Gen. Hobert C. Mardian dated May 10,1973, in which Mardian described how William C. ',Sullivan, former assistant FBI *rector, sent him records in July 1971, of national security wiretaps in stituted at - White House request, in an effort to trace news leaks. The interview quoted Mardian as saying Sullivan told him "Mr. Hoover could not be entrusted with this wiretap information. Mr. Sullivan continued in conversation saying that Mr. Hoover had used wiretap information to black mail other presidents of the United States and was afraid that he could blackmail Mr. Nixon with this (in formation." By JOE NAPSHA Collegian Staff Writer Ciro- 20 2 o [ 4 legl lain" Frlday. July 19, 1971 Vol. 75, No. 18 8 moos -- Park, '" dranl, the daily against impeachment by a 40. to 50-vote margin. He' earlier had predicted all committee Republicans would oppose recommending impeachment. Nixon yesterday sent the Judiciary Committee a new tape transcript his lawyer said proved Nixon was "not aware of and in fact disapproved" of hush-money ' payments to Watergate break-in defendants. But the eleventh-hour move prompted some Democrats to denounce the partial transcript as insulting. too limited and late. Nixon's lawyer James D. St. Clair produced the tape transcript during his final arguments before the committee. St. Clair gave the committee a 2 1 / 2 - page transcript of a portion of a con versation between President Nixon and former White House aide H. R. Haldeman on March 22, 1973. The committee subpoenaed a tape recording of the conversation but Nixon refused to provide the tape to the In Nicosia, Nikos Sampson, whom the military installed as the. new Cyprus president, confirmed that Greek planes had landed, but said they carried only medical supplies. Although accusing the Athens junta of committing "an act of , aggression" Ecevit did not say that Turkish troops would intervene unilaterally. Hundreds of demonstrators greeted Makarios at Kennedy Airport and chanted _support, with some carrying signs reading, "Save the Republic" up Kissinger, and President Nixon has taken reponsibility for authorizing the taps. Among the documents released by the committee was the transcript of the Senate committee's private questioning of Richardson on Sept. 10, 1973, including this exchange with Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark: Fulbright: "To the best of your knowledge did Dr. Kissinger initiate, I repeat, initiate, any request for taps?" Richardson: "As a whole no...even though for purposes of the form sub mitted to the attorney general he is in some cases identified as the originator." Ruckelshaus said last month that news reports about the Hoover "'Memos were misleading, and that documents were interpreted "for purposes for which they never were prepared ... It wasn't his idea to,tap, he simply complained about the leaks." Kissinger has explained his role this way: In the spring of 1969 several - leaks of classified material to newsmen en dangered crucial diplomatic efforts. This worried both Nixon and Kissinger and prompted a meeting in May of that year in which the President authorized phone taps. Kissinger said he provided the names of persons who in 1969 and 1970 had access to the material. No accusations were leveled nor any actions taken against any of the persons under surveillance. According to the Judiciary Committee evidence, Haig directly requested most of the wiretaps connected with national security matters. However, in the memos by Hoover and other FBI officials Kissinger was linked to wiretap requests from the outset. For the union to succeed,'it is important to have a strong commitment from the members, Cernusca said. "Once the union falls, it is five times as hard to get it together again," he added. Cernusca said his successful USG presidential campaign, which included pledges to form tenant unions, was proof of student support. H6wever, he said he expects many students to be unresponsive to the union at first. "There's no fast for mula for organizing," he said. Weingus added that New York council members told them a union doesn't need a large amount of people to succeed. Cernusca predicted the apartment owners will resist any attempts to unionize. It is possible the union will find a lot of owner pressure in the form of extra legal tactics, he added. He said tenant union members have been harassed in other cities by being locked out and electricity cut from apartments. Cernusca said he expects landlords to join together in stopping an organizing effort. The manager of I&A Corporation, which owns Beaver Hill, Penn Tower, Cedarbrook and Park Hill Apartments, predicted USG will find tremendous problems in forming a --union. Mangger Bruce Kelly, former Organization of Town In dependent Students president, said the transient student population makes it hard to get stability, which a tenant union needs. Different apartments have varying problems and that does not help solidarity, he added. Student apathy will•be a big obstacle, Kelly said. He said he doubts if there is enough support for a union and found many town students who differ with USG on the issue. - To keep the union alive, Kelly said, there would have to be a " crisis situation concerning an aspect like health or safety. However, he said it doesn't exist in State College. "If you want to mobilize a tenant union, it's almost like a war," Kelly said Kelly also doubted if USG has the right type of leadership to run a union. A crucial factor will be the personalities in SINDERT linMarshy Park, Pen risylvanla Published by Students of The Pennsylvania sun. Unkter•lty Ten corns Pet COOT committee. The subpoena was issued May 30. St. Clair did not provide any tape to authenticate the transcript and gave no indication of what preceded or followed the excerpted portion of the con versation covered by the transcript. The conversation between Nixon and Haldeman lasted nearly 1 1 / 2 hours. St. Clair said the partial transcript showed that Nixon told Haldeman the day after $75,000 was paid to Watergate conspir E. Howard Hunt Jr. that blac "would not be paid" to Watergate defendants. St. Clair quoted Nixon as saying legal payments to support the defendants' families would be proper but that payment of hush money would be im proper. In San Clemente, Calif., Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said the transcript `•destroys the theory that the President was involved in a conspiracy to obstruct justice by the payment of hush money or blackmail money to Mr. Hunt. Rep. Jerome R. Waldie, D-Calif, declared, however, "it is the most arrogant act of contempt toward Congress and the committee that has occurred in the entire proceedings. The hearings which began with edited transcripts end with the worst edited Insurance plan still a possibility By BILL HUMPHREYS Collegian Staff Writer A favorable court decision for Frank B. Hall and Co., Inc., could permit the firm to implement the undergraduate student health insurance on schedule this fall, Hall and Co. Vice President Bryan Hondru said yesterday. Hall and Co., a I Philadelphia-based insurance brokerage firm, is suing the Undergraduate StUdent Government, which sponsors the insurance program, USG President George Cernusca and the Philadelphia-area insurance brokerage firm of Higham, Nielson, Whitridge and Reid (HNW&R). The suit charges that Cernusca awarded the contract for the health insurance plan to HNW&R several weeks after he had signed a binding agreement promising Hall & Co. (for merly Parker and Co.) the right to implement the program. HNW&R, acting as agent for the Guarantee Life and Trust Co., im plemefited the plan last year. Hall & Co. is acting as- agent for the Mutual of Omaha insurance company. Copies of the complete testimony will be given to the attorneys for both sides, after which final arguments on the testimony will be heard by Centre County Judge R. Paul Campbell. After Campbell makes an initial decision on the case, the losing side will be permitted to take exception to the opinion. Campbell must then write an opinion to dispose *of these objections. The loser then has 30 days to appeal to a higher court. However, Hondru said his firm is ready to take immediate action to im plement the plan if the court decides in its favor. He said that while all contracts must be filed with and approved by the Pennsylvania State Department of in surance in Harrisburg, 'it can be done in one day. vowed and the tactics they use. "Confrontation tactics may not be the best," he added. The manager also questioned if USG had done enough studying on the problem. "If George thinks running USG is hard, let him run a union," Kelly said. Kelly said unions are hurt because of Pennsylvania's laws. The ultimate weapon for the union wotkld be 'the rent strike, but this is illegal, he noted. The apartment owners can fight a union by asking any members who cause trouble to leave the apartment, Kelly A landlord's biggest fear would be whether the union is established on a viable base and what its goals are, Kelly said. If the union is out to destroy an owner, then it is not a group to deal with, he said. - - "A lot of people are afraid of the unknowns in this situation," he said. If a union were to apiroach him with demands, Kelly said, he would have to see proof it speaks for a ; majority of the tenants. If the union is reasonable, it can provide an orderly meeting place to solve problems, he said. If a union bankrupts an owner, it solves nothing because students would not have a place to stay, Kelly said. The new management would probably be harder to deal with, he added. Kelly also said living conditions would be hurt if the union failed. Kelly said there is a need for something which can solve problems between landlords and tenants. He suggested a landlord-tenant commission which would give arbitrary decisions after hearing arguments from both sides. This would give a quicker response than a union and eliminate legal fees, he added. Instead of forming a union, Kelly said it would be good to move back into a group like OTIS. • "I am interested to see the outcome of the union movement," the manager said. 3 COPIES transcript of all. It shows the cover-up continues.", He said he thought the effect of St. Clair's action was "to turn off an - awful lot of members of the committee." Rep. George Danielson, D-Calif., said St. Clair also deliveted to the committee what appeared to be an altered version of notes by former White House aide John D. Ehrlichman. The handwritten lines by Ehrlichrnan on sessions with Nixon about the special White House investigation unit known as the Plumbers covered only about 600 lines, Danielsoa said, while similar notes delivered to the special prosecutor ran about 1,380 handwritten lines. The committee is to begin public --- debate next week on proposed articles of impeachment against Nixon and is scheduled to vote its final recom mendations by a week from Friday. The House Rules Committee apprOyed 10 to three a measure that would opewup the impeachment debate and other 'Rouse committee meetings to live radio television coverage. The full House is to vote on the measure Monday. If it passes, the final decision would e up to the Judiciary Committee whkh is expected to approve radio-television coverage if the resolution is approvedby the House. Hondru said that if the matter is decided soon, students could receive information on the plan by the second week in August and be able to apply for the plan by September 1, the annual date for the program to take effect. He had testified in the first hearing on July 3, that the company could not have gotten the program going by Septem ber 1 unless the issue was solved on that date (July 3). "We didn't know then that we could get the filing through Harrisburg in one day," Hondru said yesterday. • Hondru said he does not think HNW&R will appeal if ft loses the case in the county court. He claimed that the firm would be opening itself to lawsuits "by a lot of people" if it did. Also, he said HNW&R's reputation "would be nil in the state of Penn sylvania" if it appeals the case. Hondru does not feel Cernusca will be able to put an alternative insurance plan into action, as Cernusca has claimed he is trying to do. He quoted from a preliminary in junction issued June 28 by Campbell which prevented the defendants from putting any plan into action other Than the one put forward by Hall and Co. However, Campbell dissolved that injunction at the conclusion of the second and final hearing July 9. John Miller, attorney for the plaintiff firm, said he could not say whether Cernusca could find an alternative plan because of the "ramifications" of making such a statement. Weather Today variable cloudiness, scattered showers clearing by evening, high 80. Tonight clearing and cool, low 60. Tomorrow partly cloudy and mild, high in the mid 70s. U.S. PO STATE C PA- /t PIERIITT
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers