MISSING THE POINT ON VETO See Editorial Page t i au Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom 4Ia i1li WISHY-WASHY High-0 Low-37 See Today for details Vol. LXXXIV, No. 48 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 31, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages IF)U SEE NEWS HAMPECALL rNLtY Transit scheme advances The city transit authority's "people mover" is one step closer to winning the state's mass transit sweestakes. Under the terms of the "sweepstakes" a number of cities around the state are competing for big state money to finance their own projects. The city's "people mover" plan calls for an elevated transit system, at first con- necting downtown and the campus business district, and eventually reaching out to North Campus running past St. Joe's, 'U' Hospital, Vet's Hospital and the AMTRAK station. The plan - developed by Ford Motor Company - now advances to the semifinal round of the state-wide competition. " Inmates publish mag Inmates at the Washtenaw County Jail are publishing their own magazine as part of a creative writing class. It's called "Immaform"-a wierd contraction for Inmates for Reform. The second issue has just come out and can be obtained by writing the Inmate Rehabilitation Program, 208 N. 4th Ave. or calling 6625661. e Happenings ... . . range from flying saucers to Watergate . . . the UFO Club meets at 8:30 p.m. in Anderson Rm. 'A' of the Union . . . volunteers to help Detroit mayoral candidate Coleman Young are meeting at East Quad's South Lounge at 8 p.m. . . . Attica Brigade is, sponsoring a picket line starting at noon in front of Fiegel's, 318 S. Main, in support of the Farah slacks boycott... . Law Prof. Robert Burt will talk about Jessica Mitford's con- troversial'new book Kind and Unusual Punishment: The Prison Business at the Public Library's "Booked for Lunch" series, 12:10 p.m. at the library - 343 S. Fifth ... Mosher-Jordan is sponsoring a Symposium on Water- gate and Impeachment in the Jordan Lounge at 6:30 p.m. Vince Blasi, professor of constitutional law, will speak . . . and the executive board of Rackham Stu- dent Government will meet at 9:30 p.m. in Rm. 3526 Rackham. Kohn pleads no contest Howard Kohn, former investigative reporter for the Detroit Free Press and one-time Daily editor, has pleaded no contest to charges that he filed a false police report involving his alleged kidnaping last spring. Kohn told police May 19 that he was kidnaped and held at gunpoint in connection with a Free Press investigation of the De- troit drug traffic. The Free Press ran the story, which later turned out to be false, with an 8-column banner headline. Kohn faces a maximum penalty of 90 days in jail and a $100 fine. e Hassles, not apathy Registration hassles and not apathy are the main rea- sons for the low voter turnout in the 1972 election, ac- cording to a study released yesterday by the Daniel Yankelovich Corp. The study, done for the National Movement for the Student Vote, concludes that blue col- lar workers and minority group citizens are most often discouraged by the registration system. The Census Bu- reau says that the largest portion of eligible citizens who failed to vote were unregistered. The survey says that only 26 per cent of those who did not register failed to do so because of lack of interest. Big wedding The Nov. 14 marriage of Princess Anne and Capt. Mark Phillips must have the largest "guest list" in hitory. According to the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), live coverage of the event will be fed to the United States, Canada, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, France, Germany, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland, Norway, Fin- land, Austria, Luxembourg and Ireland. BBC estimates the total audience at over 500 million. Wrong Burtons Reporters besieged a luxury hotel in Santo Domingo yesterday after a local paper reported that Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton were staying there awaiting a "quickie" divorce. They had the wrong Burtons. The only Burtons registered at the hotel turned out to be Elizabeth and Harry Burton. Ms. Burton was irked but not surprised. "The same thing has happened in almost all the countries we hav~e visited," she told reporters. " Coffee's OK You no longer have to feel guilty about that second or third cup of coffee you drink to get yourself started in the morning. There is no significant relationship be- tween coffee drinking and heart trouble, according to a study recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The authors of the report say that earlier studies which appeared to link the two were marred by "discrepancies in findings (which) may be related either to cigarette smoking or to selection of control subjects." The study defined coffee drinkers as those who consume six cups each day. On the inside . .. ... HRP's Nancy Wechsler answers critics of the party on the Editorial Page . . . Sports Page features a story concerning Cy Young award winner Tom Seaver . . and Tom Kippert reviews the new Who album on the Arts Page. WHITE HOUSE ANGRY AT LEAK Nixon stopped WVASHINGTON - The White House acknowledged yesterday that President Nixon in 1971 or- dered then Attorney Gen. Richard Kleindienst to drop an anti-trust case against International Tele- phone and Telegraph. The original disclosure came in, a story in yesterday's New York Times, which reported that Klein- dienst had told the Watergate pro- secutors that Nixon personally telephoned him. after Kleindienst had refused to follow a directive from John Ehrlichman, then a White House 'advisor, to drop the case. THE, STORY SAID Nixon called Rodino receives power to subpoena WASHINGTON U0) - The House Judiciary Committee armed its chairman with broad new subpoena powers yesterday as a first step in its investigation of possible grounds for impeaching President Nixon. Over solid Republican opposition, the committee authorized Chair- man Peter Rodino (D-N.J.) to issue subpoenas for evidence and wit- nesses needed in the inquiry. RODINO PROMISED to use the new power sparingly and to con- sult with the ranking committee Republican, Rep. Edward Hutchin- son of Michigan before invoking it. But that didanot satisfy the Re- pwblica"s. who wanted Rodina to share the power with Hutchinson. Anramendment to grantthe dal power was defeated 21-17 on a straight narty-line vote, and the same lineup then awarded it to Rodino. lie was also authorized to use the subpoena power in the committee's investigation for the confirmation of House Reublican Leader Gerald Ford of Michigan as vice president. Rodino convened the meeting on a somber note, saying he viewed the nrosoect of ineachment "with a deen sense of sadness and abid- ing conce'n for the future of or democratic system of government." BUT HE said since Nixon's dis- missal of Archibald Cox as special Watergate nrosecutor and the re- solting resignations of Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson and Deputy Atty. Gen. William Riickelshaus he has received 27,634 letters and wires urging action on impeachment. The Judiciary Committee has be- fore it 13 imeachment resolutions sponsored by 59 members, and 16 resolutions, sponsored by 111 mem- bers, calling for an impeachment investigation, Rodino said. "Impeachment has reached us on a high level of intensity and urgency," he said. IN OTHER Watergate-related de- velopments yesterday: * The Senate Watergate 'com- mittee decided to attempt to renew by which the panel would have had a White-House-cancelled agreement access to transcripts of Watergate- See RODINO, Page 7 Kleindienst "Don't you language" trust action a "vulgar name," said, understand the English and ordered all anti- against ITT stopped. In a statement yesterday the White House admitted the order but said there was nothing improper in it. And- a presidential spokes- man vehemently criticized former Watergate Prosecutor Archibald Cox for disclosing the order. Cox, who was axed by Nixon 10 days ago, admitted that he was probably the original source of the Times story. PRESIDENTIAL spokesman Ger: ald Warren said Cox's disclosure of this information "makes clear Israel Meir1 to us his partisan attitude that has characterized his activities in re- cent months." Cox, appointed by Nixon to in- vestigate the Watergate bugging scandal, was fired on Oct. 20 for refusing to abandon a court fight to obtain tape recordings of the President's conversations about Watergate. It was also learned yesterday that in a memo issued before he re- signed, former Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson reported that Cox had in his possession copies of five sec- ret memoranda that would "direct- ly involve the President'' in the ITT scandal. THE CONTROVERSIAL ITT claims- NiXOn 1971 case involved White House inter- vention to halt the Justice Depart- ment's a n t it r u s t proceedings against the giant conglomerate, which had pledged $400,000 to help underwrite the Republican Na- tional Convention. The documents reportedly prove the existence of a reciprocal "ar- rangement" or "understanding" between ITT and the White House. Cox would not comment yesterday on whether he indeed possessed the documents, but would say that at his firing his investigation of the ITT affair was "75 per cent" com- pleted. While White House spokesman Warren accused Cox of conducting Pofw ITT a partisan investigation, he main- tained that the sole reason for the prosecutor's dismissal was his de- fiance of the President's order to end his court fight on the tapes. THE WHITE HOUSE spokesman said Cox's disclosure was improper and unethical. He noted that Cox had discussed the call to Klein- dienst with Democratic Senators Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Philip Hart (D-Mich.), both out- spoken critics of the Administra- tion. , Cox learned of the President's order to Kleindienst, who has since left the Justice Department, dur- ing his investigation of last year's )robe bugging of Democratic party head- quarters and other alleged political scandals. Cox yesterday acknowledged that he had discussed the case with Kennedy and Hart and two of their aides. But he denied that he him- helf had leaked the story. "I FEEL very badly this morn- ing," Cox told members of the Sen- ate Judiciary Committee. "It was not something I did deliberately." Senate Republican. leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania suggested that subpoenaes be issued to mem- bers of the Watergate staff, which Cox headed until he was fired, to See NIXON, Page 2 settlement; to meet tomOrrow By AP and Reuter Israel yesterday announced agreement with Egypt on the exchange of wounded prisoners of war and, disclosed that Prime Minister Golda Meir will meet with President Nixon in Washington tomorrow. Meir's hastily arranged visit wa§ announced by the White House yesterday as Secretary of State Henry Kissinger began a second round of exploratory talks with Ismail Fahmy, Egypt's acting foreign minister. At the same time, Nixon invited Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin to his Camp David retreat. Also, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger plans to visit Cairo and Jerusalem this weekend after talks here with Meir AP Photo POWs CAPTURED FROM Egypt's trapped Third 'Army sit behind barbed wire about five miles west of the Suez canal. Israeli officials said yesterday that a settlement had been'made with Egypt for the mu-. tual release of POWs, and claimed that the first captured Israeli soldiers had already been released. and Fahmy, CBS News reported The State Department and ment on the report. However, of- ficials indicated an announcement might be made today. ISRAELI DEFENSE MINISTER Moshe Dayan said in the Knesset (parliament) that Israel and Egypt had agreed on the exchange of wounded and that the first Israeli to be freed was released yesterday. : But in Cairo there was no im- mediate conformation of such a release and a government spokes- person said the exchange of pri- soners and wounded would take place only when Israeli forces re- turned to the Oct. 22 ceasefire lines. Simultaneous announcements in Washington and Tel Aviv said Pres- ident Nixon would confer with Meir as part of his efforts to achieve a lasting Middle East peace. THERE WAS SOME speculation of possible contacts with Fahmy, already in Washington for talks with the Nixon administration. U. S. officials said Fahmy's first session with Kissinger at the State Department Monday was "a con- siderable step forward" that may accelerate thedpeacemaking pro- cess. Fahmy delivered a message from Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, said a knowledgeable in- formant, and is reported to have stressed that a number of states, including Egypt and Syria, arepre-' See MEIR, Page 2 last night. White House refused to corn- W. House interviews SaXbe for atty.,gen. WASHINGTON RP)-Sen. William Saxbe (R-Ohio) was reported last night to have been chosen by Presi- dent Nixonto lie nominated for the post of attorney general, but the senator- said he had not yet been offered the job. Saxbe said that during a White House interivew he "got the im- pression they were interested and consider me a likely candidate." IF ASKED to accept the job, he added, he would take the offer seriously because "I considerit a challenge to serve my country." Key senators said last night they had been notified of Saxbe's pend- ing appointment to fill the post left vacant by the resignation of Elliot Richardson. See SAXBE, Page 7 Local U.S. Ir teach-in criticizes olicy on Mideast By ANDREA LILLY "War is an extension of politics," and, according to 'Abdeen Jabara, an Arab attorney, activist and au- thor from Detroit,twar ism"an ex- tension of the politics of manipula- tion" in the case of the Middle East. Jabara was the main speaker last night at a teach-in entitled "Be- hind the Arab-Israeli Conflict." Ja- bara spoke to a group of about 100 students at the Union Assembly Hall. The meeting was sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students, the Young Socialist Alliance, a group called Black Inc., and the Center for Afro-Amnerican and Af- rican Studies. Discussion centered on Palestinian Arabs and what most speakers considered the un- fair way they have been treated. JABARA TOOK a negative view of the UnitedbStates and its poli- cies with the both the Middle East and the Soviet Union. After the last war, said Jabara the Egyptian government carried out a program to get a withdrawal of all Israeli forces from Arab lands in an exchange for a peace settlement-a move that was made with pressure from the U. S. He claimed Nixon met with So- viet leaders in Moscow and at- tempted to place the Middle East situation on "the back burner." "TO PUT THE Middle East on the back burner was exactly what Egypt wanted to avoid," said Ja- bara. He said Egypt then changed, stra- tegy and tried to secure United States intervention by expelling all Soviet advisers. He claimed Sa- dat had not other alternative. Jabara claims that the United States plan for Egypt is a "peace with honor," similar to that of Nix- on's policies with the Vietnam situ- See MIDEAST, Page 7 Former POW, now a student, speaKS on wartime eXperiences By STEPHEN SELBST James Warner is far from a typi- cal sophomore at the University. For one thing, he's thirty-two years old. For another, he spent six years in a North Vietnamese prison camp after being shot down in October, 1967, and was released last March. Warner is also a self-styled lec- turer. When he started at the Uni- versity in the fall he noticed the signs that the College Republi- cans had put up on campus. He became interested, and got in touch with the head of that or- ganization, Al Harris. WHEN HARRIS suggested that he speak, Warner consented. Warner spoke last night to a small crowd at the Modern Lan- guage Bldg. on the relationship be- tween partisan excesses and politi- cal intolerance, concentrating on political prisoners - a category in which he places himself. He opened his remarks with a staunch defense of classical demo- cluded that political prisoners were the ultimate extension of this. "Political prisoners means that a government hassstotally lost its ability to allow dissent. It's wrong wherever it is," he said. "To ignore the errors of our al- lies and to make excuses for them leads to more excuses and finally to weakening our own moral po- sition," he added. WARNER ALSO RECOUNTED some of the horror stories that had happened to him and those he knew of while he was in the custody of the North Vietnamese. He said that the treatment he re- ceived was worse than the con- ditions in the "tiger cages" in South Vietnam. He told of small children being tortured, and of harsh treatment at the hands of his captors. Warner stressed throughout his remarks that any injustice must not be ignored, and he concluded his remarks on this note, saying, "We must oppose every transgres- sion on human liberty.", James Warner