i- - ( . ily 'il ' ...,..,i ...0,0• Mische claims USG veep offer By SHEILA McCAULEY Collegian Stafriter. Albert Mische, a 56-year -old adjunct student, last night said lk has accepted an offer to be vice president designate of the Undergraduate Student Govern ment. Mische said USG President George Cerntisca offered him the position last Thursday, the same day he accepted. He said at that time Cernusca'expressed his intention to call a press conference today to announce the choice. Cernusca denied he had decided on a designate. He said he still was con sidering three people for the position. He later said two of those people were Mische and Jim Maza (10th-pre-law). Cernusca did say Mische showed in terest in USG and was "capable and experienced." He also ; ;said he was confident Mische could assume the vice presidency. Maza, the second person Cernusca named, said he was awarr he was under consideration for the vice presidency, but would not comment .further: Mische, a former UniverSity employe in Mailing Services last year endorsed USG's audit efforts. He said an audit would reveal that some University department's were making a profit. Mische also appeared briefly at the USG Senate Select Insurance Com mittee's hearings. Mische testified that on May 1. he saw Cernasca talking to insurance representativekßryan Hondru of the Frank B. Hall and Co. Cernusca had claimed Hondru offered him ; a bribe at the time Mische saw them talking. • Cernusca would not name the third person he claimed,he is considering for his vice president. He said his choice would "raise eyebrows, especially in Old Main." Last night's S4nate action included two more resignations, those of Scitith Halls Senator Lynn Heibling and North Halls Senator Joanie Mccarthy. Heibling cited personak health and academic resons for her•_- resignation. Coal negoti WASHINGTON (UPI) Negotiators for coal producers and the _United Mine Workers agreed to resume bargaining yesterday after the White House urged that they try to avert what one union of ficial described as an "inevitable" coal strike Nov. 12. The two sides arranged to get together at 9 p.m. (EST) in a downtown hotel. The agreement to resume bargaining followed separate • meetings with President Ford's chief labor trouble shooter. William J. Usery Jr. Spokesmen for both sides indicated the industry, at last night's meeting, offered a counterproposal to the union's economic package presented Saturday. Usery told reporters earlier in the day that he did not think a strike was necessarily inevitable, and that "the holdup is trying to get an atmosphere and trying to get a meeting going." Apparently relying on Usery's efforts, White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen told reporters that FOrd believes "talk of a coal strike is premature." He Collegian the daily Acc%' : . Albert Mische McCarthy said she could not work any longer for USG because she no longer believed in it. Cernusca said those involved in USG who resigned for other than health reasons were "cowardly." He com mended those involved in USG who had "stayed and fought" .nd had resisted the pressures and criticisms which resulted from the USG impeachment matter. In other Senate action last night, the Senate defeated a motion to impeach -and remove Cernusca from his seat on the USG Executive Council. Several senators accused Cernusca of taping Council meetings without the knowledge of the other Council mem bers. The Senators also said Cernusca - had missed several Council meetings. Cernusca denied the first charge, and said he had missed only one meeting, last Sunday's. The Senate also set up a USG In surance Commission which will consist of a three-member Senate ad hoc committee, an insurance bureau and a group of advisers. The ad hoc committee will recom mend to the _full Senate an insurance plan on which different companies will bid. The committee alqo will recommend its three choices of bidders to the Senate, and will submit the lowest bidding company for discussion even if it is not one of the commission's three choices. The Senate also revised its agenda in order to overcome the problem of missing quorums whiCh have occurred in the last two weeks. The new agenda calls for old business immediately after opening roll call and Senate committee meetings before Opening roll call. Former USG Vice President Marian Mientus's resignation took effect at 8 last night. Mientus thanked the student body and everyong in USG for giving her the opportunity to serve as vice president. '.also said it was "much, much too premature" to discuss whether Ford might invoke the Taft-Hartley Act to postpone a strike. But UMW Secretary-Treasurer Harry Patrick disagreed with Nessen. Asked if 'he believed that a strike is inevitable, he replied "that's my judgment." A long strike could have "a very serious impact" on the nation's already shaky economy, said Albrt Rees, head of the President's Council on Wages and Stability. Even a brief shutdown could boost inflation by damaging industrial production. Usery first talked Monday to UMW President Arnold Miller, who led his negotiating team out of the talks Sunday night and accused the coal operators of refusing to discuss economic issues. Usery then met with Gut Fa4mer, chief negotiator for the operators. Later in the day„ Usery, Patrick and Farmer were seen entering the hotel where the suspended negotiations had been held. Miller, however, appeared to be absent. Collegian Phow ati ons Hunt's testimony supported with '.ombshell document' WASHINGTON (UPI) The chief Watergate cover-up trial prosecutor dramatically disclosed yesterday a long sought "bombshell document" accusing the Nixon administration of failing to provide promised money and pardons for the seven Watergate break-in defend ants. The document, while containing little new information, apparently served, to authenticate the testimony of its author, E. Howard Hunt Jr., a mastermind of the Watergate bugging and a key witnes in the cover-up trial of five former aides of President Richard M. Nixon. The memo also apparently spelled serious legal problems for William, 0. Bittman, Hunt's former lawyer andl an unindicted co-conspirator in the trial, who had testified repeatedly before in vestigators that he had never received it. , • James F. Neal's disclosure of the document, made before the jury of eight blacks and four whites entered the court room, highlighted the trial's 25th day, during which Jeb Stuart Magruder, Nixon re-election deputy director anti a key prosecution witness, finished his testimony after five days on the stand. Robert A. F. Reisner, Magruder's for mer ,administra4ve assistant and now director of pOlicY planning for the De partment of Housing and Urban Develop ment, also testified briefly. Neal said he would call three FBI a gents Tuesday to testify about false statements allegedly made by former At torney General and campaign director John N. Mitchell, and John D. Ehrlich man, Nixon's former No. 2 aide, both defendants in the cover-up trial. Other defendants on trial for con spiracy to cover up top-level involvement in the Watergate bugging are former Nixon chief of staff H. R. Haldeman, for mer Aisistant Attorney General Robert C. Mardian and-Kenneth W. Pirkinson, who did legal work for the Committee to Re-Elect the President. Thomas Green, lawyer for Mardian, questioned Magruder and Reisner in detail about the events around the time of the June 17, 1972, arrests at the Watergate. Magruder testified about telephone calls he received and made in California that morning to G. Gordon Liddy, also! a Watergate mastermind. Magruder said he believes that at Mitchell's suggestion, Mardian called Liddy in Washington to see if Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst could free the five members of the burglary team from jail. "There is a possibility that this call is a figment, of your imagination?" Green asked. "That is absolutely untrue," Magruder replied. S. Allen the approved lane will be used. Council tabled a proposal to put similar lanes along Calder Alley paralleling College Avenue. Police Chief Elwood Williams said delivery trucks unloading in the alley make bicycle movement im practical. The bicycle lanes stem from a bicycle study conducted last spring which recommended lanes on South Allen' and other streets in the borough. The original study by the Student Environmental Counciling Organization (SECO) recom mended a lane be built from College Avenue, along Easterly Parkway to Waupelani Drive. Council •members have been reludtant to remove parking from the first block of South Allen between College Avenue and Beaver Avenue. Local merchants have openly opposed the move. Council members last night referred to the approved bicycle lanes as an "ex periment" and the council hinted that p fu r t o ure se b_ik a e ne la ,s nesmay depend on the resum d success. Next month, the Council will recon sider the Calder Alley proposal. A group of Speech 200 students last night • an- Farmer later told reportersoKa was nounced their own findings that the route a possibility the two sides might get back is impractical. together :shortly 'and that negotiators A group spokesman suggested might reach agreement on a new con-, e, elimination of parking on one side of I tract before Nov. 12 too late to block College Avenue for a west-bound bike strike, bait soon enough to increase chances a walkout would be fairly sh9rt. The two 'Odes had appeared very close) By DAVE SHAFFER Collegian Staff Writer The parking lanes on • South Allen Street should soon be the official domain of the bicyclist. ' The State College Borough Councißast night approved the elimination of present parking on the street between Nittany Avenue and Easterly Parkway and the painting of a special lane restricted to bicycle use. The parking will be eliminated im mediatelY, but painting may be delayed until as late as next spring due to the cold temperatures, according to Donald Dor neman, director of public worki. The bitcle lanes will be five feet wide, running n both sides of the road. Councilman Dean Phillips requested an extension of the lane past Easterly Parkway Ito Solath Atherton Street, but Council decided to wait to see how much to agreement on a new contract before the breakdown Sunday night, according; to sources close to the talks, and Miller; said a walkout was not absolutely inevitable. There appeared little chance, however,! of preventing at least a short strike byl 120,000 miers in 25 states who supply 701 per cent of the nation's soft coal . I Weather Cloudy, cool, and rainy today. High 58, Rain ending late tonight, and becoming breezy. Low 41. Continued Mostly cloudy,) breezy, and cool tomorrow with. the) chance of a few lingering showers. Higlr 55. The memo said that the seven defend ants had not wanted to break into the Democratic headquarters in the Watergate either on Memorial Day weekend of 1972 or the following June 17 because-Democratic National Chairman Lawrence O'Brien was rarely in his of fice. "Ohlections were overridden and the attempt was loyally made," Hunt wrote. The memo said the defendants' spon sors "compounded the fiasco" by in decisiveness, failure to qdash the initial investigation, permitting an FBI in vestigation of "unprecedented scope and vigor," permitting defendants to fall into the hands of "a paranoid judge" a reference to presiding Judge John J. Sirica failure to provide promised sue: port funds, and "an apparent wash hands attitude now that the election has been won." "The administration, however, remains deficient in living up to its com mitments," the memo said. "These com mitments were and are: 1. finance sup port, 2. legal defense fees, 3. pardons, 4. rehabilitation." International food parley to hear . Kissinger speech ROME (UPI) Secretary of State Henry Kissinger flew to Rome yesterday to give the keynote speech at a conference called at his own urgent suggestion which will consider how to feed the world. Kissinger scheduled meetings with Pope Paul VI, Italian President Giovanni Leone and other Italian officials before his address today to the 1,000 delegates to the United Nations World Food Conference. The conference was convened at Kissinger's request to tackle the problem of how to better feed a world in which one out of four people is undernourished. Hundreds of police surrounded Rome's Ciampino airport for Kissinger's arrival. Leftists have accused Kissinger of med dling in Italian affairs. American-affiliated firms in Rome have been bombed for the past three nights, though nobody has been hurt. The secretary of state flew to Rome from talks in Yugoslavia with Prqsident Josip Broz Tito. Kissinger was spending only 24 hours in the Italian capital before starting a three-day tour of the Middle East in his continuing effort to bring about peace negotiations between the Arabs and Israelis. Kissinger announced in Yugoslavia that he would follow up his Middle East tour Tuesday through Thursday with a visit to Turkey on Friday and Saturday in search of a settlement of the Cyprus conflict. The Turks have a 40,000-man invasion army on Cyprus. Kissinger will try to persuade them to start cutting back on this garjson. Turkey is irked at the U.S. Congress for voting to cut off military aid, though President Ford so far has managed to block any such cutoff. St. bike Ford urges WASHINGTON (AP) As Republicans braced for major off-year Democratic gains, President Ford urged Americans to vote Cosshow confidence in the nation's political system —a system struggling with economic woes and shaken by scandal. "You will not . just be voting for Democrats or Republicans," Ford said See related stories page 5 ye,sterday. "You will be casting your vote of confidence in the United States of America." Ford's election-eve statement from the i i White House Rose Garden did not men tion Watergate. But it was implicit in the , Ten cents per copy . F Tuesday, November 5, 1974 Vol. 75, No. 76 10 pages University Park, Pennsylvania. Published by Students of The Pennsyliania State University The memo also pointed out that the lawyer for the Committee to Re-Elect the Watergate bugging was "only nne of a President. immediately asked for a number of highly illegal conspiracies mistrial. Judge Sirica denied the engaged in by one or more of the defend- Haldeman motion, and did not act on the ants at the behest of senior White House Parkinson motion pending his con officials." sideration of the circumstances of calling It also pointed out that."congressional Hunt back to the stand. elections will take place in less than two • Courtroom observers said the memo years." provided little new information. But it "Half measures will be unacceptable:" serves, they said, to "rehabilitate" Hunt. the memo said. who has admitted he has lied in the past, as a witness, and it poses new problems "The foregoing should not be misin- for Bittman, one of 20 unindicted co terpreted as a threat. It is among other conspirators in the case. things a reminder that loyalty has' Neal admitted he was upset and em always been a two-way street." barrassed by the disclosure, which he Hunt had said he made no copies and said caught the prosecutkin by as much did not know where the memo was. With surprise as it did defense lawyers. the jury of eight blacks and four whites Neal and Bittman are past colleagues out of the courtroom, Neal said Bittman in the prosecution of former Teamsters disclosed to him during the weekend that President James R. Hof fa. Bittman he had received the memo which he prosecuted him for mail fraud in Chicago characterized , as a "bombshell and Neal in Nashville for jury tam document" but had not divulged this to pering. the grand jury or the special prosecutor. Meanwhile, former White House aide Lawyers for defendants H. R. Jeb Stuart Magruder, who was deputy Haldeman, former White House chief of staff, and Kenneth W. Parkinson, former 1 lanes approved lane, with east-bound bicycle traffic routed on Calder Alley. The SECO report to Council last spring also suggested bike lanes along College and Beaver Avenues, but said alleys make poor routes because of the necessity for bicyclists to cross traffic at intersections. Councilman Edwin Frost, reluctant to approve the lane, said most bike ac cidents have occurred at intersections and not along South Allen Street. He later voted for the proposal. Councilman Dean Phillips said bicycling in present parking lanes can become a "fearsome experience" when the cyclist is caught between a passing car and a parked car. The borough still will allow cars to stop and unload on the bike routes, but other legal implications, such as restrictions on automobile crossing into the bike lanes, were left to the borough solicitor for consideration. Also at last night's meeting, the Coun cil postponed decision for the third time on the Planned Residential DevelopMent re-zoning of a tract of land next to the Centre Hills Country Club. The 33-acre tract is owned by the 322 Corporation. For the past three months owners have sought a rezoning from present single-family R-1 to the PRD. The development as. proposed would con . 'vote of confidence' prospect of a voter backlash facing his Republican party. The final Associated Press survey shows Democrats have a chance at two thirds control of both the House and Senate and a record number of gover norships in the first election to feel the" full brunt of the Watergate scandal and the natioii's economic problems. Some surveys, indicated a record low turnout of less than 40 per cent, a figure cited by Ford in his message. SENATE The Democrats have a good chance of holding all 20 of their own seats up for re-election, and to gain from five to seven of the 19 Republican seats at stake.. This could mean a new Senate director of Nixon's re-election com- 'mittee, was on the stand for his fifth day "I am here to express the American point of view" about the world food situation, Kissinger said at the airport. Kissinger was expected to make a new appeal to the oil ex porting countries to help pay for feeding the hungry of the world. In Brussels, Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz said not only the oil producers but also the Soviet Union should take part in a new world food organization. The latest developments in the Middle East gave Kissinger faint hope for a definitive settlement there. The Arab countries decided last month to recognize the Palestine Liberation Organization as sole spokesman for the Palestinian people. Israel has refused to negotiate with the PLO. On departing from Belgrade, Kissinger said, "The United States would like to do its best to prevent a stalemate in the Middle East from developing." A communique issued at the end of the Belgrade visit said Kissinger had presented Tito with a message from President Ford but did not disclose its contents. Anarchists and neo-Fascists staged rival demonstrations against and in support of Kissinger. Police allowed neither group-near the Excelsion Hotel where the secretary of state was staying with more than 100 special agents on guard. One anarchist group passed out leaflets saying Kissinger's visit "verifies the servile obedience of the Italian government to the interests of the U.S.A." Young neo-Fascists passed out other leaflets that said, "Throughout the world, beginning in Moscow, Kissinger's trip progressed without incident. Only here in Italy this visit became the pretext for a mobilization of red warriors! which the government tolerated and authorized." sist of about 130 single family homes in cluding two sections of row housing. Council officially closed the public hearings and is scheduled to make a final decision at next month's meeting. The postponement resulted from the owner's request that a report from the Centre Regional Planning Staff be con sidered before final decision. Borough Planning Commission Chair man Wallis Lloyd first appeared before Council to reiterate the Commission's recommendations concerning the development recommendations to which the 322 Corporation made written ''objections. Lloyd said the commission opposed the placement of the 14 proposgd row houses next to a single-family residential area. He also questionetl the off-street parking, which would require 'home owners to park a considerable distance from their homes. He did not hack down on any of the commission recommendations. 322 Corporation Attorney Padl Mazza asked Centre Region Planning Director Ron Short if his planning staff had'ap proved the PRD. Short said the staff report was foreworded to the planning commission and that it was not part of Proper channels to submit it to Council. f Council then agreed to put the, report on the record and consider it before final decision. with 63 to 65 Democrats, compared with the present 58-42 margin. HOUSE Democrats could gain as many as 50 seats and probably no less, than 30 if pre-election trends hold. nay now have a 248-187 edge, and a sweep of close races could mean a House majority rivalling the 295-140 edge they achieved in Lyndon B. Johnson's 1964 landslide. GOVERNORS Already holding 32 of the 50 governorships, Democrats ap peared likely to gain from six to as many its 10 state houses now controlled by Republicans. The record for the most governorships held by one party is 39 Dethocrats in 1939.