THE Sununer Daily 2-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, May 10, 1973 Ten Cents Vol LXXXIL, Na. Twelve Pages I , " V/ r t ~ E 'v Nixon man responsible for burglary resigns President: 'Get to bottom of this' ily The AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Another top level ex- ecutive quit the Nixon administration yes- terday after accepting full responsibility for dispatching a team of burglars to rifle Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatric files. Meanwhile, President Nixon told Repub- lican campaign contributors last night he will get to the bottom of the Watergate scand-l and not let it keep him from mak- ing "the next four years better than the last four years." NIXON WAS ADDRESSING a $1,000 a plate fund-raising dinner for the 1974 con- gressional campaign. Planners said the turnout was lower than expected. Egil Krogh wrote Nixon, "With public confidence in our government already shaken by the Watergate affair, and with the complete affirmation of your personal integrity so imperative at this time, I cannot remain in the administration." Krogh was undersecretary of trans- portation, a $42,500 a year job he took mast January after leaving a White House post as assistant to John Ehrlichman. Mis resignation brought the number of hi-ig echelon 'people leaving or being fired ir i the administration to at least 10, K3iOGI HAD SAID earlier he agreed to thi -urgirs imission hatched by Water- , .- ciinsjiratars G. Gordon kiddy and : i-)vrd Iint, whom he hid hired as Lihers' t itsnvestigate teiks of the 1'' ncc Paipers. f i_ ' I ist ndItt tis a(''shans broke into t Dfice of tr. Lewis Fielding and rs h i Cih' files iIfElsberg, now on trial S I ie tteii aitPapers. lri 4 Si rsi sdtan came a' the White s- nted to recoser triginal doc- "lsthotsteI presidentisI counset is Its-in secreted in a bank safe de- i))si' bos, before lie was fired by Nixon. "THESE ARE White 1Itotse papers -. clissified documents taken frota the White Htise and we want them back," said press secretary Ronald Ziegler. See EGIL, Page 9 Egil Krogh Forged Daily circulated --See Story, Page 3 RESIGNED WHITE HOUSE AIDES John .Ehrlichman, right, It. R. Haldeman, left, and their attorneys arrive at U.S. District Court yesterday where a federal grand jury is taking testimony relating to the Watergate affair. REBATE POSSIBLE: Ul residency rule .axed M~y DAVID BURHENN A key University residency requirement that prevented almost all non-resident- students from becoming eligible for lower in--state tuition rates was struck dowrn yesterday by Circuit Court. Judge William Ager. The ruling will not take immediate ef- fect, as Ager is expected to grant a stay, on the decision while appeals are underway. THE PROVISION that was struck down prevented students desiring resident status from taking more than three credit hours during a six month period. Ager r'led that students could not be denied the right to establish residence for in-state tuition purposes simply because they were in attendance at the University. The net effect of the decision makes it possible for thousands of persons to re- apply for residence status, with the ac- companying lower tuition rates. In addi- tion, out-of-state students who were en- rolled on or after March 1, 1972, would be eligible for rebates on the higher rates they paid during that time if given resi- dent status. IN HIS OPINION, Ager wrote, "A stu- dent or any other person who becomes of age has a right to change his residence. The denial of this right or its lawful existence, in a situation such as we have in this rule (the residency requirement) which prevents a student from becoming a resident of the State of Michigan, is a denial of the United States and, perhaps, Michigan constitutional equal protection guarantees." The opinion, whoch was handed down in the form of a permanent injunction, came as a result of a lawsuit filed in March 1972 by local attorney Arthur Car- penter and six out-of-state students. Carpenter was jubilant when he heard of the judge's ruling. "I think it is a tribute," he said, "to the willingness of the court to follow judicial decisions and to do what is proper . . " Carpenter lauded Ager, saying that the decision was made despite what the attorney called "deep pressures on the judge." CARPENTER CLAIMED that the Re- See RESIDENCY, Page 9