4HE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXI I, No. 27-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, June 15, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Downtown Ann Arbor to get splash of green By DAN BIDDLE In a few weeks, the ugly vacant lot at the corner of Main and Huron will be magically transformed into a park. With real trees, and green grass, and a sandbox for the little ones. Right in the middle of downtown Ann Arbor. IT WILL BE a long time before you can say "beautiful downtown Ann Arbor" without provoking laughter. But with a little help from their friends, the people at the Ecology Center plan to put-together a small space of beauty amid the bars and the office buildings. Ann Arbor's newest park will fill the space on Huron St. once occupied by the old courthouse building, which burned last December. The park does have a drawback: it isn't permanent. "INSTANT PARK," as some of the center's staffers have dubbed it, will stand on property that is still for sale. The contract says John Dames, the property's owner, can terminate the park on 24-hour notice, but according to Dames, there's virtually no chance of that happening for 18 months or more. So the Ecology Center people have gone to work with transferability in mind. The park's trees will be 12 to 15 feet tall with roots wrapped in burlap to facilitate transport if and when Dames gives the 75-by-145 foot patch of green its eviction notice. A row of high shrubs will block off the site from the adjacent bus terminal; several 3/-4% foot earth mounds, re- plete with grass, trees, benches, and shrubs, will rise from what is now lifeless rubble. SEVERAL GARDEN clubs will provide the creative impetus for flower patches. The Ecology Center, working in cooperation with the Com- munity Development Center (CDC), received approval for the project from City Council in early spring and signed a con- tract on March 1 with Dames for use of the site at a nominal fee of $1 per year. The Center's appeal for financial and physical help with the park plan brought some nice results. City Planning Director Mike Prochaska teamed up with several other architects and ironed' out a design which would be both pleasing and environ- mentally sound. THE DOWNTOWN Kiwanis chapter kicked in $500; Jack Nielsen, a co-owner of the Briarwood shopping center develop- ment, donated several tons of topsoil from the Briarwood site and Calvert Bros. agreed to ship the dirt at cost. But Ecology Center staffer Paul Schrodt says a large part of the effort depends on volunteer manpower. He hopes to kick off construction of the park Saturday with a full day of work. "We could complete this thing in a week or two, but that's tentative until we find out how many people want to help us with the actual digging and planting," he adds. The vacant lot as it looks today. 40 Magruder: Mitchell Od bugging plans THE PLAN FOR ANN ARBOR'S NEWEST PARK is care- fully outlined by the delicate touch of Paul Schrodt, a staffer at the Ecology Center. The Center, with a little help from its friends, plans to turn the vacant lot at Huron and Main into a haven for hassled downtowners. IIC Connally unhappy as. Nixon aide? Story on Page 3 WASHINGTON (N) - Jeb Stuart Magruder testified yesterday that John Mitchell and other former officials participated with him in plan- ning the Watergate wiretapping, then joined in the cover-up attempt fearing disclosure would cost President Nixon the 1972 election. And, Magruder said, although he assumed H. R. (Bob) Haldeman knew who was involved, the former White House chief of staff told him last January that was not so. HOWEVER, an informed source reported yesterday that Haldeman's former aide, Gordon Strachan, has sent word to the Senate Watergate Committee that he will testify, if granted immunity, that his boss knew of the Watergate cover-up "from the beginning." All through his testimony to the Senate Watergate committee, Magruder insisted he had no knowledge the President knew of what he called "our errors in this matter.' He said that when he told Mitchell of his decision to tell the truth, the former attorney general "indicated to me that he would not go that way, that he would go the other way. He indicated he understood my posi- tion. He wished me luck, and I wished him luck." MITCHELL, who ran the re-election campaign until two weeks after the Democratic headquarters break- in, has said bugging plans were discussed in his pre- sence, but that he disapproved them. The former at- torney general is under indictment in New York in a case related to a campaign contribution. Magruder, Mitchell's chief deputy in the campaign, said the Jutne 17 break-in was first discussed at two meetings with Mitchell and White House counsel John Dean III in Mitchell's Justice Department office. The final approval by Mitchell came March 30 of last year at Key Biscayne where Mitchell was vacationing, he testified. Magruder said: 1 The espionage program was presented by Gordon Liddy, who received authorization to spend $250,000 after more grandiose plans costing $1 million and in- volving kidnappings and prostitutes had been rejected. " He told the whole story to Haldeman in January, while Liddy andJames McCord Jr.were on trial, and that Haldeman thus knew that perjury would be com- mitted at the trial. He added Haldeman didn't know until after the trial that it had been. * All discussions about the espionage plans and documents went to Gordon Strachan, Haldeman's chief assistant. But Magruder said he did not know whether these went to Haldeman later. * He did not ask treasurer Hugh Sloan to perjure himself about $199,000 that Sloan said had been given See MAGRUDER, Page 10