Former aide denies selling WASHINGTON (UPI) Former Nixon aide Peter Flanigan yesterday denied he ever engaged in selling ambassadorships but acknowledged that the White House promised to sponsor large campaign contributors for specific jobs. Flanigan, whose nomination as am bassador to Spain was strongly opposed by Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., told the Senate'Foreign Relations Committee during his confirmation hearing that he urged Herbert Kalmbach to approach Ruth Farkas for a large contribution in• 1972, a presidential election year. Farkas, who gave the Nixon campaign $250,000, now is Ambassador to Luxem bourg: Kalmbach is in prison on charges of corrupt practices in campaign financ ing. "I deny the implication•that there was a commitment to exchange an am bassadorship for a large contribution by Mrs. Farkas," Flanigan said. But he acknowledged he was aware of campaign funding practices. "I do know of instances where people said we will make a contribution or a larger contribution if you will agree to a job," he testified. "And in each instance the answer was, that I know of, we will certainly put your name forward, we will EPA clean-up set WASHINGTON (UPI) The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) yesterday ordered a water pollution cleanup by most of the nation's power plants that will cost $4.1 billion and eventually raise everyone's electric bill a little more. The program is not as ambitious as originally proposed by the agency, but EPA Administrator Russell E Train said it was sufficient to "insure the cleanup and protection of our waters without requiring the con sumers of electric power to shoulder the cost of un necessary investments." The rules are designed to implement the 1972 Clean Water Act which requires By 1983 when the program" water polluters to install the is finished, Train said, it "best practicable" pollution might increase electric bills control equipment by 1977 by up to 1.5 per cent; but, he and the "best available" said, "in the perspective of technology by 1983. the overall amount it does not Yesterday's rules are seem too significant, in view designed to control both of the benefits you're get- thermal pollution heated ting." water discharged after use in Chairman Dixy'Lee Ray of generating . plants i and the Atomic Energy Com- chemical dumping from such mission criticized the EPA installations. move as it applies to nuclear EPA said , the industry is On Campus With Your Wes* Nittany Moll sponsor you for consideration, and no more than that." "It's Kalmbach who is in the peniten tiary for selling ambassadorships and it's Flanigan who presumably will go to a posh post in Europe," said Eagleton. "That Is not equal justice." Eagleton. urging the committee to kill Flanigan's carryover appointment, by Nixon, said Farkas had donated $250,000, then turned down an offer for an am bassadorship to Costa Rica. Mrs. Farkas told the Nixon ad ministration "she didn't want to pay $250,000 for a banana republic," Eagleton said. "She wanted something in Europe, she wanted something better." - Flanigan denied a series of accusations by Eagleton of improper actions, in cluding influencing government agencies on behalf of various corporations. He said all his actions were taken in the national interest. Flanigan was the key man in Washington. He was the man who, in several knovvg cases, paved the way with'the agencies b! government," Eagleton said. "I have never been a fund raiser," Flanigan said. "That doesn't mean that I did not solicit from particular friends of mine." generating plants, saying it would cost as much as $3 billion to comply and that environmental pollution from that source is already under adequate restraint by the AEC and state laws: "The environment will not be _further protected in a significant way. The thermal releases from these plants must meet state water quality standards. This is the wrong timeand the wrong reason to spend additional millions of dollars," she said in a state ment. • Steve is wearing . . . Peter's _fleeced lined aviator style jacket. Yes its corduroy and it comes in green and tan. Come try us on! $4OOO Lester's Formal Rentals 23 7-1477 Nixon jobs "The evidence is strong that Peter already building or planning to build plants with closed systems, which do not return their cooling water to the river or stream from which it is taken. In addition, it said, a number of older, smaller plants which were originally scheduled to be covered by the new regulations will be exempt because they will be gradually phqsed out during the coming years. It estimated that 75 per cent of the nation's generating capacity will ..,x , equipped with closed-cycle cooling systems by 1983. A provision also was made exempting those plants which can .prove that their discharge of heated water has no effect on local fishlife. Another exemption granted to industry involved the need to install water cooling towers. If a plant largely those in urban areas does npt •have enough land around it as determined by a for mula, it will not have to build such a tower. To be refu, ided in income tax return Sawhill proposes gasoline tax WASHINGTON (UPI) Federal energy chief John Sawhill disclosed yesterday he had proposed to the White House that gasoline consumption be reduced by imposing a tax that would later be refunded by the Internal Revenue Service. He said he suggested to President Ford's advisers that the "refundable fee" be set at 20 to 30 cents a gallon with the motorist filing for a refund through his income tax returns. "The refund would have to come through the withholding systerri although other mechanisms would have to be found to refund to people who are not part of the tax system; that is those who don't pay income tax," said the head of the Federal" Energy Administration. "In order to really be effective a fee would have to _ people," he „added. be somewhere in the 20 to 30 cents a gallon s range." He said a straight gasoline tax presents two As an example, Sawhill said that, if a motorist problems. drove 10,000 miles a year in a car that got 20 miles "In the first place, in order to really be effective it per gallon, he would pay a refundable fee of $lOO if has to be quite large," he said. "A small gasoline the rate was 20 cents a' gallon. 1 tax is really not going to cutback on gasoline con- He said he has discussed the fee plan, along with sumption by the amount we need to really have a several other energy' conservation Measures, with credible conservation program. Ford's "senior advisers." "And secondly, a gasoline tax would work a real • Sawhill, interviewed on the NBC Today program, hardship on some of the poorer people In our said he was opposed to a straight, non-refundable society. So any kind of gasoline tax would have to tax on gasoline.. somehow be coupled with a refunding provision. "I don't think that a straight taX would make And that's why we've talked about a refundable sense but Ido think that some kind of a refundable conservation fee, a fee that might be imposed on fee might make sense because it would help poorer gasdline but would then be refunded..." The Daily Collegian Thursday, October 3,1974-