Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday; October 12, 1'976I Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fuesdoy, October 12, 1976 0 0 Tapes may reveal Ford lied-Conyers NEW YORK (UPI) - Rep. probe because he felt it set a John Conyers (D-Mich.) yester-, bad precedent for investigations day said unreleased White ; into presidential affairs, and House tapes from the Nixon not because Nixon told him to. Administration may show that Gerald Ford perjured himself CONYERS said he read pas-j before two congressional com- sages in a soon - to - be - pub-' mittees when he said Richard I lished book written by Dean Nixon did not order him to which described Nixon's orders block the Watergate investiga- to Haldeman to "head off" the tion. Patman investigation. Conyers said he has asked ' Conyers said the book de- Special Watergate Prosecutor scribes how "in the Sept. 15, Charles Ruff to investigate 1972, tape, there were instruc- the possibility that Ford was tions that Nixon wanted it (the! instructed by Nixon to block an Patman investigation) headed early investigation by the House off, and he instructed John Committee on Banking and Ehrlichman to tell Ford and Currency into the source of . Gerry Brown, a Michigan con-: money found on the Watergate gressman who served on the burglars when they were ar- House Banking Committee, to rested inside Democratic Na-'head it off."' tional Headquarters in 1972. "If it turns out Congressman: THAT COMMITTEE, headed Ford was acting on White by the late Rep. Wright Pat, House orders, it is quite man, voted shortly after the possible that he may be sub-! break-in not to subpoena top I ject to a charge of obstructing White House aides, including justice. He certainly would John Dean and H. R. "Bob"|have committed perjury before; Haldeman, for questioning two congressional committees," about the burglars' money. Conyers said. "Many questions that later s Fighting increases as Palestinians storm Rhodesian talks near qvrn nawi 1 ! 1 i i"ll SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) - An upsurge in fighting even as blacks and whites prepare for talks on Rhodesia's future has killed 10 black guerrillas and 10 civilians, the government re- ported yesterday. Government security chiefs also said guerrillas had shot three black civilians whose bod- ies were found roped together. The initial report gave no furth- er detail and it was unclear im- mediately whether the victims were three black nationalists missing since last week. THOSE MEN WERE members of a nationalist faction led by Bishop Abel Muzorewa and may have fallen victim to an out- break of violence between na- tionalist groups. The government communique said guerrillas over the week- end blew up part of a road bridge straddling the Inyan- gombe River in the Rhodes- Inyanga National Park, a popu- lar tourist resort about 2 miles Robert Mugabe, said Monday he was pessimistic about the chances of success for the Brit- ish-sponsored Geneva confer- ence, which is scheduled to be- gin Oct. 21 and is designed to produce a biracial interim gov- ernment for Rhodesia. MUGABE, a factional leader with close ties to black Rhodes- ian guerrillas operating from nearby Mozambique, said Rho- desian Prime Minister Ian Smith's insistence on white con- trol of the army and police in an interim government means there is "obviously no starting point for talks." Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo, another factional leader, have formed a united front and de- manded a delay in the Geneva conference and an immediate transfer to black rule, without an interim -regime. There were reports in London yesterday that Foreign Ministf Anthony Crosland was consider- ing postponing the conference. SMITH'S WHITE minority government here has consistent- ly rejected the idea of an im- mediate transfer of power, and sugagests iealliaids go barefoot at least a few hours each day. MOST PROBLEMS seen in orthopedic foot clinics in the United States -- corns, bunions, deformed toes, flat feet, ath- letes foot, ingrown toenail - a government spokesman r erated that stand yesterd saying, "There is no suggest that any constitutional matt will be discussed." The security chiefs said white construction worker, R ert Bruce Scott, 29, was am the 10 civilian victims of latest wave of violence. T said Scott was shot as he p ed up a work gang from black hotel in an area wh guerrillas are active. They s a black bystander wasa killed. FIVE OTHER civilians w killed by security forces-f black women accompanying band of guerrillas and a bl civilian who died of wou after being shot in a cur. area. The government officials not list any casualties am security forces.. Scott was the 47th whitec iliin to lose his life in the gu rilla war, according to gove ment accounts. More than black civilians have been ported killed. Skilled workers balk on contraci (Continued from Page 1) y By The Associated Press Rome had in their possession a the Palestinians into a small Lion Palestinian gunmen raided Sy-:list of the 100 to be freed and area of western Lebanon. The ers rian embassies in Italy and!handed over to the Palestine Palestinians, the stronger ele- Pakistan yesterday, apparently Liberation Organization (PLD) ment in the Lebanese lPftist- a hoping to avenge Syria's inter as well as writings about over- Palestinian alliance fighting Lob- vention against the Palestinian throwing the Syrian government, right-wing Lebanese Christians, ong guerrillas in Lebanon and to the Italian sources said. contend that Damascus is trying the seize hostages and force con- IN BEIRUT, a PLO spokes- to take control of their move- hey cessions from Syria. man said the guerrilla organiza- ment. ick- In Rome, three men with sub- tion had no connection with In Rome the lead f ih a machine guns and grenades either the attack in Rome or the attackers identified er oNabi ere strode into the embassy in the one in Pakistan. Hasnen. 25, of Lebanon, said aid fashionable Parioli district, shot At Islamabad, unconfirmed they were members of the also and seriously wounded a diplo- reports said one of the raiders "Black June" mover ent, named mat and held five hostages for was killed and the other two for the month when Syria first ere two hours before surrendering were wounded in a gun battle temotwnSyafrs to police. with police. Sources there said r a IN ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, the Palestinians also lobbed a "WE DID NOT want to harm ack three Palestinians attacked the grenade into the Syrian am- anyone," he told a radio inter- nds Syrian embassy and ambas sa- bassador's house but no one viywer, He sad the antet few dor's residence but were inter- was injured when it went off. call attention "to the betrayal did cepted by police, informed The incident further compli- of the Syrian government and ong sources said. cated continuing peace talks the plot of Arab states against Italian police sources said the among Lebanese, Palestinian the Palestinian people." civ- attackers in Rome had hoped to and Syrian representatives in Hunen Hatem, 45, first secre- ler- take the Syrian ambassador Lebanon. in the Rome embassy, was Ir hostage and then present de- taryinteRmebaszS ern-hstg an e prsn e shot in the leg when one f the 550 mands such as the withdrawal THE SYRIANS have thrown guhoen s le en oe of e re- of Syrian troops from Lebanon an estimated 21,000 troops into ginmen sprayed an embassy or their surrender to Palestin- the civil war-torn nation since Hatem had stopped gun re. - ians and the release of 100 Pal- June in an attempt to impose a farewell befoe ppen yoday estinians jailed in Syria. The political settlement in the 18-;oreleavingM ay ambassador was not present. month-old conflict. for a new assignment in West The Palestinians captured in The Syrian troops have oushed Germany. 'eit- came out in the House Jidic- IN A LETTER to Ruff dated from the Mozambique border. iary committee would have October 8, Conyers said, "I In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, come out 7 or 8 days after the have reason to believe that the' a key black nationalist leader, break-in" if the White House tapes covering the period of - __---_ aides had been forced to testify ' Sept. 15, 1972, through May before Patman's committee, 11973, when the Senate Water- Conyers said. . gate hearings commenced, con- O During House and Senate Ju- tain the information that would diciary ICommittee investiga-' clarify Mr. Ford's role in this, tions on his nomination to be- matter," and asked that the u nu su al come vice president, Ford said taped conversations between he tried to block the Patman Nixon and Ford be examined. _-- - The tapes are being held by VEGETARIANS the General Services Adminis- CHICAGO (A) - For healthier SOUTH HADLEY, Mass. (A') tration until the U. S. Supreme feet and a happier state of - The vegetarian diet is "in" Co'irt decides if they belong to mind, a Louisiana surgeon pre- at Mount Holyoke College. Nixon or the American people. scribes going barefoot, for at Some 300 students eat their Convers also said he would least part of each day. meals regularly at the newly ask Fen. Peter Rodino, (D-N. Along with this he recom- opened vegetarian lunch center J.), chairman of the House Ju- mends sitting on the floor for; at the college. diciarv Committee, to investi- a while to prevent arthritis in Dishes ranging from eggplant, gate the charges. the hip joint. parmesan and corn custard to:r In Washington, a White House Caribbean bean casserole are spokesman who was asked toI THESE prescriptions werej prepared from recipes submit- comment on Conyers' remarks; given by Dr. Paul Brand of the ted by students, or obtained said only, "That is a matter U. S. Public Health Service, from books and restaurants. for the courts to decide." Carville, La., at the clinical, __.--_ __.__ _-_congress of the American Col- _____..-----_lege of Surgeons.I Tuesday Luncheon Discussion Brand, a native of Great 12 noon-October 12th Britain who spent much of his TOPIC: life working and teaching in In- VIETNAMA AFTER T HE WA R "c and Africa, told a news con- GI ~IV erence yesterday that he takes SPEAKER: off his shoes every day when BARBARA F UI ' .E R he gets home and gets "tre-! mendous mental refreshment" Director of Interface Council for Peace and form walking around barefoot. recent visitor to Vietnam "The average person who Ecumenical Campus Center walks barefoot has healthier 921 CHURCH ST. feet than the average person 75c RESERVATIONS REQUESTED 662-5529 who wears shoes," Brand said in suggesting that Americans I i i r I i result trom wearing shoes, he up from $8.15 to $9.34. reported. HOWEVER, many tradesmen In, shoes, Brand said, the foot have complained their wage loses sensitivity and mobility incae is n sfier The and intrinsic muscle strength. also have griped about not "The barefoot walker," he not- getting adequate representa- ed, "receives a continuous tion within the union, and bar- stream of information about the gainers' failure to protect them ground and about his own rela- from losing their jobs to outside; tionship to it, while the shod contractors. foot sleeps inside an unchang- UAW President Leonard "genvironment.sa a Voodcock has saidhthe strike "There is a sense of alive- will continue 'if the national ness and joy which I experi- pact, put together late last, ence walking barefoot that I Tuesday, is rejected by the never get in shoes," he added. tradesmen. However, he has ex- Sensitive feet protect the an- pressed confidence the accord, kle and other parts of the body will be ratified. as well, Brand said, because In the last round of talks in they warn barefoot persons of 1973, Ford tradesmen rejected what is underfoot so they do not the settlement and forced bar- trip or fall. gainers to renegotiate provi-! sions concerning a newly ac- quired right to refuse overtime; work. The union then declared the pact ratified without sub- , ' jmitting it to a second vote. "u. That provoked threats from tradesmen who said they would bolt from the UAW and set up their own union. The leadership placated them by promising them a clear veto in the next contract. GOP, (Continued from Page ' lutely deny that they had any-I thing to do with the story, nor would they. If anyone around here were found doing such a thing, he would be fired on the: spot," Greener said. GREENER SAID orders had. been given by James Baker III, chairman of the committee, to get rid of the volunteer in Geor- gia who sent the memo, but heI wasn't certain the actual dis-I missal had taken place yet. Each candidate used a special Columbus Day event to attempt to gain favor among predomi- nantly Catholic ethnic blocs of voters, viewed by some observ- ers as a key to winning some populous industrial states from the Northwest to the Midwest. At a wreath-laying'ceremony at a statue of Christopher Co- lumbus outside Washington's Visitors' Center, Ford declared that "the people of the Old1 World still look to the New World as the champion of hu- man rights. America has been their hope and their help and we will never let them down." HE MADE NO mention in his brief speech of the Eastern Eu- ropean nations which have occu- pied a central place in recent campaign oratory, following Ford's remark in the debate with Carter last week that they were not dominated by the So- viet Union. Carter went to a Columbus Day Mass in Chicago with May- or Richard Daley and various: Italian-American political lead- ers, and was a feature attrac- tion of the city's Columbus, Day parade. Daley gave Carter another ringing . endorsement, praisingi him as a president who would1 eliminate . "leadership without direction" and heard Carter de-. clare that a joint commitment by himself 'and Democratic lead- ers could "restore our people's confidence in their own goverl-' ment." FORD'S ATTACK on Carter appeared in the San FranciscoE Examiner, whose editor, Regt Murphy, interviewed the Presi- dent in Texas over the week- end. Ford accused the Demo- cratic nominee of inpugning his integrity by raising questions about his past campaign financ- es and relationship with lobby- ists. Carter has demanded that Ford hold a formal news con- ference to answer questions about a 1973 audit by the In- ternal Revenue Service which said that in 1972, Ford used money from a home town bank account in Michigan whichcon- tained some political contribu- tions to pay for some clothing and a family ski vacation. The audit report said Ford agreed to count the clothing ex- penditures as personal income and pay tax on the amount. The audit indicated Ford reim- bursed the account for the va- cation.I He also said Ford should ex- plain the IRS finding that he got along on $5 or less per week in pocket money during 1972. The IRS accepted Ford's explanation, which many expenses were by others. was that picked up hides Carter U CARTER, WHILE not accus- ing Ford of any wrongdoing, has criticized long-term federal officials who develop close friendships with lobbyists, as Ford acknowledges having dune. "I personally resent this at- tack on my integrity," Ford was quoted as saying in the interview. "He knows the charges are not true. They are pure demagoguery." In a statement issued yester- day, Carter also assailed Ford for trying to take credit dur- ing the foreign policy debate for signing a bill that imposed tax penalties on U.S. firms that cooperate with an Arab trade boycott against Israel. "He fought tooth and nail against such a bill," said the Carter statement, which includ- ed a copy of a letter from Treasury Secretary William Si- mon to^Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., a member of the Sen- ate Finance Committee, criticiz- ing such legislation. "It is time that Mr. Ford told the American people the truth - that he has done noth- ing meaningful to break the back of the boycott - that he has opposed every effort to de- clare the boycott illegal . ." Carter said. Have a flair for artistic writinq? 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