Tuesday, December 11, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine F THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Senate passes bill requiring better mileage for automnobiles WASHINGTON (UPI) - Voting against "gas guzzling monsters," the Senate yesterday passed a sweeping energy conservation bill that would require auto makers to give more miles to the gallon by 1978. h The bill, the first comprehen- sive effort by Congress to control America's growing appetite for en- ergy, would put into effect a gov- ernment-wide program to curtail energy use in both the public and private segments. IT PASSED 75 to 15. A key provision would require Jaworski receives new Watergate tapes (Continued from Page 1) Woods on the question of the gapl in the tape.1 TODAY, THE PRESIDENT andr a group of advisors will sit downr to discuss the Watergate scan- dal's impact on the upcoming 1974 Congressional elections.l Attending the meeting will bei George Bush, chairman of the Re-t publican National Committee, Sen.: William Brock of Tennessee, head of the Republican National Sena- torial Committee, and Rep. Rob- ert Michael of Illinois, who holds a similar position in the House of Representatives. In recent weeks, numerous Re- 'i publican members of Congress have both publicly and privately related their fears that the Water- El Capitan, a massive rock twice as large as Gibralter, soars almost vertically more than 3,500 feet above the floor of California's Yosemite Valley. AMERICA Seen Through the Eyes of Her Beloved GRANDMA MOSES $32.50 'till Dec. 31 $40.00 thereafter Centicore Bookshops 1229 S. University 336 Maynard gate affair would destroy Repub- lican chances next year. Some-' including Sen. Edward Brooke (D- Mass.) have asked the President to resign to prevent such an occur- rence. POLLS TAKEN by other Repub- licans indicate a significant erod- ing of GOP strength among blue collar workers who enthusiastical- lv backed the President in 1972. Thursday- Fri DECEMBE car manifacturers to boost auto- mobile gas mileage to at least 20 milhs per gallon by 1984. Under its terms, the Transpor- tation Department would begin en- forcing unspecified minimum stan- dards by 1978 on the number of miles motor vehicles can get for a gallon of gas. THE STANDARDS would also require that the industry-wide av- erage fuel economy for new cars be increased by at least 50 per cent over the next 10 years. Thus, the present average of 13.5 miles per gallon would have to be raised to more than 20 miles per gallon. The rules would go into effect forj the 1978 model year and new cars not meeting those standards could not be bought or sold. THE BILL DECLARES that the government shall "foster and pro- mote comprehensive national fuels a n d energy conservation pro- grams." day -Saturday ;R 13,14915 New b WASHINGTON (') - The Senate Watergate committee is pursuing a theory that former Democratic National Committee C h a i r m a n Lawrence O'Brien may have had embarrassing information on the activities of President Nixon's brother, Donald, when his Water- gate office was broken into. According to the theory, O'Brien, at the time of the Watergate break- in in 1972, may have had infor- mation regarding an alleged re- lationship between Donald Nixon and the Hughes Tool Co., owned by billionaire Howard Hughes. SAMUEL DASH, the Watergate Committee's chief counsel, con- firmed that the theory exists and is based on" evidence made avail- able to us.' But he said it has not been proved and is only one of several theories actively being n- vestigated. The new information was con- reak-in t tained in the transcript of an ex- ecutive session of the committee held last week and came to light woen it was placed in the public record of a U.S. District Court hearing here. The transcript had been ec to one of the principal witnesses in that closed-door hearing, Chester Davis, an attorney for the Simma Corp., which is solely ownea by Hughes. THE TRANSCRIPT had been provided to Davis by Watergate Chairman Sam Ervin (D-N.C.) as an aid in Davis' suit seeking to prevent the committee from ques- tioning him and more than a dozen other Hughes employes in wier than open and public hearings. Dash said the question arose cr- ing the executive session when Davis challenged a comimittee re- quest to be provided with cor:;s- pondence and other documents be- heory ex tween O'Brien and llughes offi- cials. At the time of the Watergate break-in on June 17, 1972 (VF;rien was also serving as unpaid con- sultant for the Hughes interests. An attorney, O'Brien previolusly had been paid for his work and it is not clear how much he was ac- tually doing for Hughes while DNC chairman. IN RESPONSE to Davis' chal- lenge, Dash said he and Ervin told the Hughes attorney that one of the reasons that may have leti to the Watergate breaK-in and to the attempted wiretapping of O'Brien's telephone was the belief that O'Brien had information concern- ing a $100,000 contribution made by a Hughes representative to C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo, a close friend and business associate of the President. plored The investigative theory also stated the possibility that O'Brien may have had knowledge of the activities of the President's brother Donald in relation to the H.:ghes Tool Co., and one of its princi;jal officers, John Meier. Dash said the theory "is based on reliable evidence we have re- ceived." 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