Contract but U.S ASIIINGTON t API Negotiations ticti contract for coal miners con tinued esterday as the nation prepared tor di icast a i o-week strike Representatives of the United Mine I‘orkers and Ihe coarindustky, met for two h9urs In the afterhoon, then had a -4 , -hour recess and met again in the e‘ening The present contract expires, at 12:01 .1 01 tomorrow, and ritificationlof a new pact %%ould require about 10 days. A trtke is assured because of the 1•N1W tradition of "no contract, no (Irk - In the coat mining country, few of the companies called miners to work !;esterday after a flurry of activity Saturday, apparently in an attempt to build up coal supplies. The companies are not expected to call creNks today, which is Veterans' Day holiday for the miners. Railroads winch carry coal are ex- Ford pleased with Kissinger trip WASHINGTON ( UP! President Ford said after a three-hour review of foreign policy developments with Secretary of State Henry Kissinger at Camp David, Md., yesterday that results at Kissing,ers 17-country trip were "basically very• encouraging." Ford made the statement in front of the diplomatic entrance of the White House atter stepping off the helicopter on the south lawn He was accompanied by Kissinger who said nothing but stood by the President striiling. I just want,4o announCe , that I had a yet' interegiag, helpful' and in-depth revie‘% with he Secretary of State," Ford told a chister of reporters who had ruched to the White House when told there tk uuld bea Presidential statement. Ford described Kissinger's 17-day 23.000 mile journey as a "backbreaker,' and said "The trip was basically very en couraging." Israel fights economic JERUSALEM (UPII Israel irn posed the severest austerity measures in its history yesterday to head off economic catastrophe, combining a 43 per cent devaluation of the pound with price increases that boosted the cost of living 17 per cent overnight. Pollee in a slum neighborhood of Tel A\ iv said they' arrested 13 persons demonstrating against the price hikes by ,mashing windows, overturning buses and throwing rocks at helmeted patrolmen. No serious injuries were reported. The drastic measures to curb con sumption by raising basic consumer prices were designed to save- money needed for vital defense expenditures and raw matgrials. "This is the most severe economic program in the history of the state," Ben-Ami Zuckerman, dputy director of Weather Considerably Cloudy and cool today, high 57. Allostll - cloudy and cool tonight ith a chance of showers, low 47. Cloudy with periods of rain likely tomorrow, high 55 NEIL HUTTON (n) changes his mind here as a hungry Wolf readies to pounce on him. Penn State Bigbad Wolf v..as rewarded for its 12-7 loss to N.C. State Saturday with a Cotton Bowl bid. For stories on the game. see page 7. C • Ilegian the daily negotiations continuing, preparing for coal •strike peeled to be hit early by a strike. The Penn Central Railroad has said it will probably lay off 1,500 workers now and more later if the strike goes beyond a week. Other industries that depend on coal, such as steel mills and electric power companies, are worried about;how long the strike would last. John D. Ridge, head of Pennsylvania State University's department of economic geology and mineral economics, said a six-week strike could result in a million people losing their jobs and energy production cut by about a third. Both sides in the contract negotiations indicated a settlement was within reach. . UMW President Arnold Miller said problems still remained in four or five areas but added, "we're making progress." His industry counterpart, Guy Farmer, who had been hopeful of a He also said Kissinger told him the meeting with Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev was "very helpful." Ford will meet Bzhnev for the first time as President at a Siberian-summit Nov. 23-24 at the windup of his Far Eastern tong beginning next Sunday. The President also will travel to Japan and South Korea before going on to Vladivostok for a two-day meeting with Brezhnev 7 Ford also said Kissinger brought back "encouraging news" from the Middle East and from the subcontinent where he helped reduce policy differences with In dian Prime Minister Indira Ghandi. Ford said he was "very grateful and appreciative" of what he called Kissinger's "almost superhuman ef fort."' We're looking forward to a con- state revenue in tly,. finance ministry, told newsmen. It thus cost an Israeli 65 per cent more to live than it did little more than a year ago. Government economists estimated it will cost an average family of four earning $350 a month an additional $B3. Moshe Mandelbaum, director-general of the commerce and industry ministry, said the price increases forced the cost of living up 17 per cent in one jump. Gasoline prices are now the highest in the world with high test going for $2.66 a gallon. The new prices on basic items, in cluding a 200. per cent jump for • 2.2 pounds of sugar becauSe of a withdrawal of a government subsidy exceeded by wide margins the percentage of the devaluation that dropped the pound from 4.20 to 6 to the dollar. The government banned imports for six months on 29 lu2cury items that ranged from automobiles and washing machines to beer and chewing gum. It hoped to keep $7OO million in the country because of the restriction. Finance Minister Yehoshua Rabinowitz in a radio address said the nation no longer could afford defense spending with the same level of con sumption. weekend settlement, said today was more likely. An industry source said the main hurdle was the union's insistence on the right to strike over grievances. "Everything else is negotiable," the source said. The industry says it has to have a guarantee to safeguard against strikes to permit high-level production. Wildcat strikes and absenteeism led to 2.4 million lost man-days in 1973, according to : the industry's figures. A UMW spokesman denied the grievance issue was the. stumbling block. "There's a whole host of issues," he said, adding that there hid been no movement by the industry in the economic area for the last three days. The spokesman also said some safety issues were still outstanding and the whole grievance procedure, not just' the right to strike. As the negotiations continued through structive trip to Japan, South Korea and the Soviet Union" said Ford. The Ford-Kissinger get-together at Camp David was the first in the series of sessions the two men will have for Kissinger to prepare the President for his first major foreign trip. They are expected to meet daily for at least two hours this week to lay the groundwork for the journey, which has caused tension in Japan and the possibility of anti-American demon strations. I . The politicall opposition to South Korean President Park Chung-}lee also is protesting Ford's trip. And the proximity to China of Vladivostok, where Ford and Brezhnev are to meet, has 'diplomatic ramifi cations. Kissinger will fly from the So viet Union to Peking "to keep a balance in the detente," Ford said. If was Ford's first opportunity to see disaster "We must not make the mistake of deluding ourselves that-we shall be able to keep up the scale of services of days of peace and' plenty when the economic reality is one of war and shortages," he said. Some supermarkets closed to avoid chaos yesterday. Those that stayed open were besieged by housewives loading carts with stock bought at the old prices. The price increases on some items ranked as the highest ever, including 64 per cent for high test gasoline, 78 per cent for kerosene, 100 per cent for heating oil, 112 per cent for margarine, 52 per cent for eggs, 60 per cent for milk, 136 per cent for cooking oil, and 72 per cent for white bread. "We have wars and we have no money," said Mrs. Din - a, Cohen, 50, of Jerusalem. "My brother had five children and has been trying to improve himself, and now with this I just don't know." It marked the sixth devaluation of the pound since the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948. The previous devaluation occurred in August, 1971, when the pound dropped from 3.50 to 4.20 in response to the floating of the dollar. the weekend with both sides presenting proposals and counter-proposals, other industries dependent on coal prepared for the — inevitable walkout by 120,000 UMW members who produce two-thirds of the nation's coal. 'Most miners cleaned out their lockers after working overtime Saturday and were not expected back today because it is Veteran's Day, a holiday under the UMW contract. In the tiny mining towns scattered up and down the hollows of the Appalachian coal fields, the men were preparing to live without their paychecks. "I'm ready," said Gerald Dulley, a minor from Grant Town, W. Va. "I've killed beef, I've save money, I'm stocked in groceries. No one is going back until we get what the union is asking fort A walkout lasting longer than two weeks is expected to disrupt the nation's economy severely by forcing production cutbacks in numerous industries• Kissinger since the Secretary of State left 19 days ago on a whirlwind diplo matic swing through Europe, the Middle East and Asia. Kissinger returned to Washington Saturday i and White House aides said he would brief Ford on results of the trip as well. Ford, who flew to the hideaway in the Cotoctin mountains early Friday evening for a weekend of rest and relaxation with his family, arranged to fly back to the White House after his meeting with Kissinger. Earlier Sunday, Ford swam in the heated outdoor pool outside his quarters, played tennis and watched part of the televised football game between the Washington Redskins and the Philadelphia Eagles. Mrs.' Ford, daughter Susan, 17, and Susan's date, Gardner Britt,, were also at Camp David. The Fords' son Steve, 184 and his girl friend, Dee Dee Jervis, left at mid morning to return to Washington. Steve was returning to his ranching job in Mon tana later. Ford plans to have similar meetings with Kissinger - throughout the week before departing next Sunday for Tokyo, where he will begin with two rounds of talks with Japanese Prime Minister Kakeui Tanaka. Ford spends three days in Japan before traveling to Seoul for meetings with South Korean President Chung Park Hee. He concludes the journey by meeting Brezhnev near the Siberian city of Vladivostok. Kissinger and other aides will ac- company the President most of the way on the trip, Ford's first extended tour abroad since he took office three months ago. White House aides said Ford also worked Sunday on proposals for cutting at least $5.4 billion from the current federal budget in an effort to hold the total to $3OO billion. The President plans to send his recom mendations to Congress shortlyafter the House and Senate reconvene Nov. 18. along with a list of about 40 pieces of legislation he wants given top priority. Student lobbyists set By SHEILA McCAULEY Collegian Staff Writer Michaels, also from Penn State, was Pennsylvania students are well on elected assistant Treasurer. their way to joining the lobbying ranks of At a board meeting to be held Dec. 13 ITT and the AFL-CIO. at Drexel University a permanent board Representatives from 34 schools in the chairman will be elected. Pennsylvania Student Lobby elected a The lobby named as its first priority board of directors and established lobby increasing state educational aid. The priorities at a convention here this lobby also will push for student con weekend. sumer protection, especially in landlord- By-laws for a lobby proposal will be tenant relations, and for individual and revised or approved by a special eel- minority rights, especially "political mittee. The committee then will submit participation and majority status of its recommendations to lobby young people." representatives for their final approval. Missing from the priority: list was The PSL Board of Directors consists of legalization of 18-year-old drinking in 15 members, five at-large from the PSL Pennsylvania. Board Chairman Muraca Assembly, and 10 from five categories of said educational issues should come first Pennsylvania post-secondary schools. for PSL. But he said PSL eventually will The categories, which include state-, work for such legislation as a lowered related, state-owned, independent, drinking age. community and technical schools, each - ' Muraca said PSL is considering form elected two members to the board. mg twn corporations lobbying and Frank Muraca, a Penn State student, research. Nixon-ruining tape to be played today WASHINGTON (AP) The tape that During that June 23 conversation, six broke Richard M. Nixon's grip on the days after the Watergate break-in, Nixon presidency leads off the fifth week of approved a suggestion that the Central testimony at the Watergate . cover-up Intelligence Agency be used to try to get Release of that transcript was the first 4 trial. the FBI to limit its investigation. public acknowledgement by Nixon that The prosecutors plan to begin playing a "They should call the FBI in and he had a role in the Watergate cover-up series of tapes this week starting with a - ( Unintelligible) don't go any further into long before March 21, 1973, when John W. June 23, 1972, conversation between this case, period," Nixon was h quoted on Dean 111, then White House counsel, Nixon and H. R. Haldeman, then White the transcript. ' I briefed Nixon on the involvement of House staff chief. White House and re-election committee Nixon released a transcript of the June In his statement put out with the tran- personnel in the break-in and cover-up. 23 tape last Aug. 5 and acknowledged it script, Nixon acknowledged that "I was "may further damage my case." Before aware of the advantages this. course of Dean testified as the first prosecution the week ended he had resigned. action would have with respect to witness at the trial. BINrERY W 2,112 1-ATITE Ten cents per copy Monday, November 11, 1974 Vol. 75, No. 80 10 pages University Park, Pennsylvania Published by Students of The Pennsylvania State University Maza named as new USG vice president By JIM KUHNHENN Collegian Staff Writer Undergraduate Student Government President George Cernusca last night announced his nomination of USG Senator Jim Maza as his new vice president. Maza will fill the office made vacant by former vice president Marian Mientus's resignation if his nomination Meets with the approval of the USG Senate and the Academic Assembly. Both bodies of the USG Congress will receive the nomination at their first meetings Winter Term. Vowing to maintain open com munication between students and ad ministrators, the tenth term pre-law student said he wants to "restore con fidence in USG to deal effectively with the issues that face it." Maza • also discussed the working relationship of the USG Senate and the Academic Assembly. Both bodies comprise the congress of USG. "All our goals seem to be unified, but our tactics seem to get &Infused," he said. He said individuals as well as struc ture make up government and added that, "we as people can examine our roles ... (so that they) would be, ad vantageous to the whole college corn munity."Maza, who voted against all the ar ticles for the impeachment of Cernusca, said the vice presidency had not been offered to him as a reward for his anti impeachment stand. Maza also has been involved in the .newly formed constitutional convention, but he said that as vice president a position in the convention might prove "taxing to my own time." Maza said the constitutional con- was elected temporary chairman of the board and acting PSL Treasurer. Pam Jim Maza vention should not act in haSte and said whatever proposal is examined should be "thought out." Cernusca said USG will exist for at least another five months and therefore the USG activities must be maintained throughout those five months. Cernusca also discussed the recent decisions handed down by the USG Supreme Court on two grievances concerning alleged discrepancies in the handling of the impeachment hearings. The court, whose decisions were revealed Friday, rejeded the first grievance and declined to rule on the second. In the text of the firsP,grievance, filed by Cernusca and USG - Senators Sharon Spitz and John Philips, Cernusca charged that former USG Senate President Pro Tempore Fred Stoner had unconstitutionally ruled that im peachment articles can pass with only a majority of senators present. Supreme Court Chief Justice Lou Martarano last night said the court had voted against the grievance in spite of a "gut feeling" to vote the other way. He said there was a question of justice in volved but legally Cernusca's charges had no base. Cernusca said last night that the court had been forced into such a position because of inadequacies within the USG Constitution. He added that as- a result he favored attempts of the constitution al convention to provide a solution to those inadequacies. The court decided not to rule on the second grievance which challenged the credentials of certain appointed senators. The court declined to rule on the grievance because of conflicting oral testimony which it termed "hearsay, at best." priorities The lobbying corpo'raTron would handle the actual business of PSL. The research corporation would be a non profit, tax exempt organization. The tax exempt status would permit private donations and corporation contributions to PSL. Fimding is the biggest problem PSI, faces right now. The board set up a special funding committee to study different methods of raising money. One suggestion was a "golden membership" for schools who contributed $5OO or more to PSL. PSL leaders are optimistic about the lobby's success. Gov. Shapp supported the lobby and asked for a post-November election meeting with lobby leaders, other Pennsylvania student leaders and Stat6'. Secretary of Education John C. Pit i4ger. , Pit anger and U.S. Senator Richard S: Schweiker also have voiced support for PSL. limiting possible public exposure of in volvement by persons connected with the re-election committee." 3 COPIES