a Page 4 EDITORIAL Setting An Example The town of New Milford has decided that it will not turn on its decorative, Christmas street-lighting this year. This is a small contribution toward the conservation of energy and an example, which townspeople hope will be followed by many other communities and cities. Their decision to forego the attractive, yet waste- ful use of energy should serve as an example, not only to communities, but to individuals. This country uses massive amounts of energy each day. For the most part, these massive amounts are the sum of small amounts consumed by millions of users. Energy, therefore, will best be We have to think conservation, turning off un- needed lights, turning down the heat three to five degrees and wearing a sweater, driving the car slower and less, walking to the corner store, etc. We all have to do what little we can, as New Mil- ford is doing, to get us through this period of burn- ing up part of the world to keep the rest of the world running, using up as little as possible, until we de- vise a better, safer and wiser source of energy...the sun, the oceans, the atom, or whatever. Needed :A Compromise Hardly a conversation begins anymore without some mention of the President’s troubles. Where the weather was once the password for pleasantries And almost daily another event comes to light surrounding the President that rocks the American public back on its heels in disbelief. The nation’s opinion-makers are hard pressed to come up with workable solutions to Mr. Nixon's Watergate dilemma. Acting Atty. Gen. Robert Berk says'he has not been told by the President that the new Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski will not be fired like his predecessor, or that he carries the independence from the White House he needs. Mr. Jaworski, meanwhile, is being investigated re- garding his involvement with laundered money going through a Texas foundation and into former Secretary of the Treasury John Connolly's Democrats for Nixon, while Congress isn’t even sure yet whether it will permit Nixon appointee Jaworski to head the Watergate investigation. And the public is far from believing that the White House has turned over a new leaf and is candidly attempting to get to the bottom of Watergate and related scandals. In the background lurks: the President’s involve- ment in the ITT antitrust settlement; the mini- White Houses with their $8 million price tag; and the President’s payment of only $1,672.84 in income taxes on a salary of $400,000. In the House, impeachment proceedings are gathering steam. In the Senate, the GOP is beginning to pull away from Mr. Nixon while considering a bill to authorize a federal court ap- pointed Watergate prosecutor. Sen. Barry Gold- water is calling for a period of constraint, while Republican Sen. Peter Donimick is urging collea- gues to burn their White House bridges behind them. Republican Sen. Edward Brook, and scores of news organizations across the country, are advocating that the President resign. ~ The American people do not see Vice President designate Gerald Ford as a dynamic leader. But he offers a fresh face to carry the nation through a crucial three years until election time. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, backed by respect from the people, can handle the nation’s foreign and diplo- matic policies. As leaders of the Republican party begin to pull away from the embittered President, so likewise do the people. Next will come the President’s own cabinet, if things don’t change, leaving Mr. Nixon standing alone. This would surely bring about a compromise—one where Mr. Nixon might be per- mitted to lock away his tapes and papers in the Na- tional Archives until well after the turn of the cen- tury in return for his resignation. - Capitol Notes by William Ecenbarger Because conventional housing has soared beyond the financial grasp of many low- and middle-income families, nearly a million Pennsylvanians now live in mobile homes. Contrary to folklore, studies by Pennsyl- vania State University show that these resi- dents of houses-on-wheels are no more noma- dic than the owners of stationary homes. The principal motivation of mobile home buyers is that they can get a fairly elaborate dwelling for less that $15,000—a difficult feat these days in the conventional home market. In Pennsylvania as elsewhere, mobile home sales have spurted in recent years—and with the lightning growth have developed un- foreseen and serious problems for the owners. Although landlord-tenant relationships are carefully regulated by state law in con- ventional housing, mobile home owners have few legal guarantees that their homes will be their castles. of mobile home living. Local zoning laws are so restrictive in most areas of Pennsylvania that mobile homes can only be placed in de- signated mobile home parks. And the proprie- tors of these parks—landlords, if you will— are free to evict their tenants virtually at will. A current set of rules and regulations for a mobile home park near Harrisburg is in- structive: —““The management reserves the right to refuse admittance and accomodations to any- one, without stating the cause, and to decline to accept further rental from any person or persons not desired.” —*‘‘We reserve the right to authorize or reject any milkman, baker, etc.” —“The management reserves the right to change, without notice, the assigned spaces allotted to tenants.” Other parks charge stiff entrance fees and require residents to purchase additional equipment and plant shrubbery at their own expense. A more serious hardship is that most TRB from Washington He was a small man, slight of stature, ‘no bigger,” someone said, ‘‘than half a piece of soap’’ and his friends called him Jemmy. In June, 1789, Rep. James Madison of Virginia rose on the floor of the House of Representa- fles at breast and wrist, and made certain ob- servations about impeachment. The legislative body listened to him in- tently, because the Constitution wasn’t a year old' yet and this blue-eyed, quiet-voiced man with the springy 'step knew more about it than anybody else. They were days of magnifi- cence fora bold little country, but at the same time, everything was so new. Let’s listen to Jemmy, who became the fourth President of the United States: Suppose in days to come, he said, ‘an un- worthy president’ maintains in office an un- worthy cabinet member. “Then the House of Representatives can at any time impeach him, and the Senate can remove him, whether the President choses or not.” Yes, he continued, but ‘‘the President can displace from office a man whose merits re- quire that he should be continued in it. That was the other side of the coin, he explained, and the modern reader will, of course, think of President Nixon and Special Watergate Prosecutor Archibald Cox. And what, Mr. Madison asked, ‘‘will be the motives which the President can feel for such abuse cf his power, and the restraints that operate to pre- vent it? In the first place he will be impeached by this House, before the Senate, for such an act of maladministration: for I contend that the wanton removal of meritorious officers would subject him to impeachment and remo- parks require tenants to remove their mobile homes from the park before they can sell them. This, in effect, discourages sales and only adds to Pennsylvania's already serious housing shortage. An important part of the overall problem is that demand for sites is out-running supply. Because of the difficulty in relocating, most mobile home tenants swallow the despotic rules of their landlords. There is no state agency they can turn to, and no law to support them. This has led. Sen. Edward Howard (R—Bucks County) to intro- duce legislation extending basic rights to mo- bile home owners. Sen. Howard’s bill prohibits require- ments that materials be purchased from park owners, allows tenants to sell their homes without removing them from the park, sets a maximum entrance fee of $125 and forbids park owners to levy additional charges for utility services. In drafting his bill, Sen. Ho- ward drew on information compiled from around the state by the Bucks County Legal Aid Society. The legislation has attracted little atten- tion from ruling Democrats in the Senate, but it has received a bipartisan boost from a Shapp Administration cabinet official, Com- “munity Affairs Secretary William H. Wilcox. “With an ever increasing nymber of people having to resort to mobile re living for financial reasons, it has becomé“apparent to this department that basic rights and stan- dards must be established and maintained,” Mr. Wilcox said. pn / val from his own high trust.” Rep. Madison’s voice was low and friends often called to him to speak louder. Whether his wife Dolly was in the audience I don’t know; after all, he was merely giving a little lecture on what the Constitution meant. He had helped draft it. ‘But what can be the mo- tives for displacing a worthy man?’’ he asked. “It must be that he (the President) may fill _the place with an unworthy character of his own.. Can’ le accomplish’ this end? 'No,” he’ said. BI RIG0CER CIO ; ‘ Mr. Madison was talking about the office of a possible “Secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs’’ (Secretary of State), requir- ing Senate confirmation. But confirmation or not, Mr. Madison’s words had equal rele- vancy: “If he could fill the vacancy with the man he might choose, I am sure that he would have little inducement to make an improper removal. Let us consider the consequences. The injured man will be supported by the pop- ular opinion: the community will take sides with him against the President....To displace aman of high merit, and who from his station may be supposed a man of extensive in- fluence, are considerations which will excite serious reflections beforehand in the mind of any man who may fill the Presidential chair. The friends of those individuals and the public sympathy will be against him.” Mr. Madison went on with his methodical logic: “If this should not produce impeach- ment before the Senate, it will amount to an impeachment before the country, who will have the power of punishment, by refusing to re-elect him.” ; The 22nd Amendment has, of course, The student government of Marshall Uni- versity sponsored a debate the other night, as part of a week-long study of ‘“The Presidency in Crisis.”’ The question for debate was blunt and to the point: Resolved, that President Richard M. Nixon should be impeached. Congressman Paul N. McCloskey, one of the ablest and most articulate young Republi- cans in the House, took the affirmative side. Since early June, when his resentful collea- - gues prevented him from making a formal speech on the proposition, Rep. McCloskey has been urging the House to begin at least an inquiry into the impeachment issue. That Sunday night, he went all the way and argued flat-out that President Nixon should be re- moved from office. I had the negative side. To judge from the applause, Rep. McCloskey won, but the reac- tion of a largely student audience, even in an area that went two-to-one for Mr. Nixon last year, may not reflect sentiment in the House or in the country as a whole; In answer to a student’s question, Rep. McCloskey himself acknowledged that impeachment is not a ser- ious or realistic possibility yet. Nevertheless, he argued the proposition in dead earnest. Rep. McCloskey’s case rests largely on two events: the President’s approval in July, 1970, of a secret plan for gathering intelli- gence, and the burglary of the office of Daniel Ellsburg’s psychiatrist in September, 1971. He sees both events as clear violations of Mr. Nixon's oath to ‘preserve, protect, and de- fend the Constitution,” and he accuses the President of three specific unlawful acts: accessory after the fact, misprision of felony, and obstruction of justice. He made a persua- sive case. But not a convincing case, in my opinion. In considering impeachment, it ought to be kept constantly in mind that impeachment of a President is a criminal process. Every rele- vant constitutional provision makes this clear. A President can be removed only on “impeachment for, and conviction of, trea- son, bribery, or other high crimes and misde- meanors.”’ The President is to be ‘“‘tried” by the Senate, with the chief justice *‘presiding.” In Article III, impeachment is specifically tied to ‘‘the trial of all crimes.” Neither of the two events cited by Mr. McCloskey, in my own view, qualifies as a criminal act on Mr. Nixon’s part. It is a mat-- ter of pure opinion, on which observers will always be divided, whether a President is “faithfully’’ executing the laws or is ‘‘pre- serving, protecting and defending’ the Con- stitution. The 1970 intelligence plan was res- cinded five days after it was authorized. Mr. Nixon has said—and no one privy to the inci- dent has contradicted him— that while he or- dered an investigation of Mr. Ellsberg, he had no prior knowledge of the burglary commit- ted by his own ‘‘plumbers.”” When he learned of the break-in, he has said, hé promptly directed that it be reported to the trial judge in the Ellsberg case. made Mr. Nixon ineligible for another elec- tion, but his party is up for election one year from now and it may want to disassociate it- self from Watergate. Anyway, that’s the guide James Madison gave us some 180 years ago, as set down dutifully in the Annals of Congress, Vol. 1, June 17, 1789. They hadn’t coined the phrase Founding Father then, but no better witness could be found of how mat- ter-offactly people then approached the pro- ceds of impeachment, which daunts us so much today. > A couple of months ago this fallible col- umn reported that there wasn’t a chance of impeachment. Things have changed. It has been an agonizing process of watching Mr. Nixon knock himself out. Always he makes concessions and always too late. People who didn’t mind ‘“‘the plumbers’ gasped to find that a man with a salary of $200,000 was ap- parently paying less tax money than they; that a man who criticized welfare handouts was getting $10 million in federal funds for his Florida and California estates. Then came the firing of Archibald Cox and the resignations of Mr. Richardson and Mr. Ruckelshaus, and the White House, too late, realized the awful mistake it had made. Then came the Cox tele- vised press conference on that sunny Satur- day in October. I have seen what I regard as three sup- reme one-man political performances in my life-time. First was FDR's ‘little dog Fala’ speech to the Teamsters here in Washington in 1944. It was so funny and devastating that Mr. Dewey, who had run his candidate’s spe- cial train into a quiet siding to hear it, chang- ed his whole campaign plan. It was the only The case for Mr. Nixon's impeachment fails on practical grounds as well. Public opinion polls, I suspect, do not fully reflect the depth and the passion of pro-Nixon sentiment in this whole affair. Millions of Americans see the assault on the President as a conspiracy between partisan Democrats and a liberal press. An effort at outright impeachment would create political convulsions that would polarize the electorate and tear our country asunder. If a majority of the House were to support a resolution of impeachment, thus forcing a trial by the Senate, both the legislative and executive branches would be paralyzed for a time. Every action of the President would be time in my life where I saw men, exuberant union leaders who had been fortifying them- selves for the occasion, literally rolling in the aisles. Nixon’s ‘‘Checkers’’ speech in 1952. Ike was ready toditch him at the revelation of his sec- ret fund. (Secret fund!—it seems third grade stuff today). The speech was maudlin and politically superb. ‘Pat doesn’t have a mink coat. But she does have a respectablggepub- lican cloth coat.” It brought ty tele- grams. I put number three, Jack Kennedgat the Rice Hotel in Houston at 8:30 p.m., 1960, when he faced the sullen Greater Hous- ton Ministerial Association. The Rev. Nor- man Vincent Peale was on the loose, giving respectable leadership to the ancient fears that beat Al Smith. In a speech cooked up with - Ted Sorenson (Unitarian) and followed by believe in an America where the separation of Church and State is absolute.” Before he finished the audience cheered. He had opened an era. And now, I have to put down number four—that press conference of Archy Cox on a sunny Saturday last month. Maybe I exagger- ate. But it seemed to me he suddenly trigger- weeks. Here is a man of honor, theublic said. Mr. Nixon had fired him, and hard- + son and Ruckelshaus had quit, too. What was it Jemmy Madison said, ‘the injured man will be supported by the popular opinion’? read in terms of its effect upon his jurors. The most delicate decisions in domestic and for- eign affairs would be thrust into a whirlpool of bitterly partisan emotions. And throughout the agonizing experience, the prospect of a presidential successor would becloud judge- ment. ¥ All this is not to condone or to excuse Mr. Nixon’s blunders in office, especially his wretched handling of the Watergate affair. His blunders are monumental, but they are not, in the constitutional sense, ‘‘highig@#imes and misdemeanors.” A judgement on this President must be left not to the Senate in a tumultuous hour, but to history, and to the ages. scripfion, $6. per year. Call 675-5211 for subscriptions. | Sylvia Cutler, Advertising Sales ee RS ep