- Pge e'en THE SUJMMER DAILYX Friday, July t3, 19~73 -PgeTe TE UMERDAY rilo, ul 1, 97 Godley rejection hit icuitunue iifr 'im Pae e career service which is charged Technically action on Godley with carrying out policies under was "indefinitely postponed" by whatever party it serves." the committee. But the action White House Deputy Press Sec- was "tantamount to rejection of retary Gerald Warren, who read Godley as head of the State De- Nixon's statement, said he did partment's bureau dealing with not know whether the adminis- the Far East. tration would take the commit- Both Godley and Sullivan, who tee's advice and give Godley an- preceded him as ambassador to other assignment not dealing with Laos, headed an American oper- Southeast Asia. The spokesman ation that involved the use of said he did not think Nixon had Central Intelligence Agency talked to Godley since the com-, commanders with a clandestine mittee turned him down. army fighting against a mixture of Pathet Lao and North Viet- namese units. GODLEY and Sullivan also held y responsibility for determining - U. S. bombing targets in Laos, in effect deciding which Laotian vil- lages should be destroyed. They conducted the "secret war "in" Laos before the American public was informed of U. S. militaryin- volvement there. Senate Republican L e a d e r Hugh Scott (R-Penn.) joined in the attack on the committees move. And Secretary of State William Rogers said the rejection Fuibr1ght "raised profound questions for a Outlook bright for us festival Ervin Watergate panel grills Mitchell, continuedfrorn Page 1) wih be available at the gate for any single performance. Tickets have already gone on sale across the state. City resi- dents who want to attend should purchase their tickets soon, An- drews sacs, because "once they go on sate nationally , they may sell right out." MEANWHILE, preparation for the festival appear to be "well on their way towards comple- tion," Andretws says. The Rain- bow Corp is "four months ahead of where we were last year." at this date in its organizational ef- forts. All that remains to be done is publicity work and ticket sell- ing. The list of performers to be featured at the three day festival September 8, 9, and 10, has been pretty well finalized and includes John Lee Hooker, the Johnny Otis show, Luther Allison, Lucille Spann, Big Walter Horton, Roose- velt Sykes, J. B. Hutton and the Fiwks, Houston Stockhouse with Joe Will Wilkins and the King Biscuit Boys, Hound Dog Taylor and the Houserockers, Freddie King, Leon Thomas. Homesick sames, and the Mighty Joe Yoing Blues Band with Eddie Taylor, in the blues department; Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra and his Arkestra, Yusef Lateff, the Contemporary Jazz Quartet, the Revolutionary Ensemble, and In- finite Sound with Roland Young and Glen Howard, for jazz; and also Ray Charles and Count Basie and his Orchestra. Tickets are now on sale in Ann Arbor at Little Things on State Street, the World Headquarters Bookstore on Maynard, and the Michigan Union, and in Ypsilanti at Ned's Bookstore on Cross Street. They can also be pur- chased by mail by addressing checks or money orders to the "Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Fes- tival 1073," P. 0. Box 381, Ann Arbor, Michigan. WASHINGTON (' - John Mit- chell, defending himself against suggestions that he may have lied about some aspects of the Water- gate scandal, said yesterday it is up to Senate investigators to decide whether to believe him or others. "Anything else I could say would be self-serving," Mitchell told the committee as he wound up nearly three days of testi- mony. THE FORMER attorney gen- eral's belief that President Nixon knew nothing about the Water- gate cover-up until late March was echoed by Richard Moore- a special counsel to the President -who followed Mitchell to the stand. The last round of questions for Mitchell came from committee counsel Samuel Dash and focused on allegedly conflicting state ments the former attorney gen- eral made under oath in a civil suit deposition last Sept. 6, an FBt interview, and in testinony before the cotmmittee. "Since you may hoe given false testimony under oath on prior occasions is there any rea- son fr this committee to believe your testimony," Dash asked. HE SPECIFIED he was asking whether Mitchell did or did not give final approval at Key Bis- cayne, Fla., to the plan for bur- glarizing and wiretapping Demo- cratic Party headquarters in the Watergate o f f i c e building or whether he had knowledge or took part in the cover-up or the pay- offs of defendants. "I disagree of course with your interpretation of those matters," said Mitchell. "As far as the de- termination of this committee, I think they can judge the testi mony, my testimony, and make their conclusions after my ap pearance here. "Anything else I could say would be self-serving." Dash responded: "It order to believe your testimony we would have to disbelieve Mr. Magruder, Mr. Slten, Mr. McCord, Mr. Reis- ne, Mr. Stans and in some re- spects. Mr. ean." "I DISAGREE violently . Mitchell said. Jeb Stuart Magruder, Maurice Sloan, James McCord, Robert Reisner, Maurice tSans and Johnt Dean, all were previous witnesses who implicated Mitchell in the planning of the buglary and the cover-up in some form. Dash had asked Mitchell if he lied last year when he swore he hadn't been briefed about the Watergate involvement oft G. Gordon Liddy, when he swore he didn't know the circumstances of Liddy's hiring as the re-election committee's counsel; and when he told FBI agents that the only knowledge he had of the Water- gate break-in was what he had read in newspapers. MITCHELL INSISTED the an- swers were correct in the narrow frame in which the questions were asked. "At that particular time we weren't volunteering anything," he said. "Do you draw a distinction be- tween lying and not volunteer- ing?" Dash asked. MITCHELL SAID the distinc- tion depends on the "specifics of the subject matter." The refusal to volunteer ex- tended to the President, too, Mitchell said. If Nixon had asked about his RELIABLE ABORTION SERVICE Clinic in Mich- 1to 24 week pregnancies terminated, byl i- censed obstetrician gnecolo- gist. Quick services wilt be ar- ranged. Low rates. CALL COLLECT I (216) 2E1-60 24 HOUR SERVICE University figures approve Senate move (continieiifrtcom Pae3>) (THE N E W YORK TIMES claimed yesterday that Godley "enjoyed his frequent airplane and helicopter trips to combat zones.") Whiting asserted there are "a number of good men in the For- eign Service," qualified to fill Godley's proposed post. He add- ed; however, "The State Depart- ment has had so little responsi- bility in the past few years under Kissinger's administration of policy that it doesn't make very much difference." One University staff member, history Prof. Gerald Linderman, was able to comment on Godley from a personal perspective. Lin- derman worked as a U.S. politi- cal officer in the Congo (now Zaire) in 1964 and 1965, while Godley was ambassador. LINRERMAN SAID the Congo experience was "on a lower level" much like Godley's Indo- china adventure. "That's where he got his training, you might say, for Laos." But the Congo operation, he said, "had humani- arian aspects I'm not at all ashamedsto be associated with." Godley was sent to the Congo to co-ordinate an American mili- tary airlift of American and European hostages of Stanleyville in the East Congo, where Con- golese rebels were fighting gov- ernment forces and South Afri- can, Belgian, and French mer- cenaries. Linderman said the U.S. "tried to keep its skirts clean of those (mercenary) forces." OF GODLEY PERSONALLY, Linderman reimarked, "I know him, and ie's a very idiosyn- cratic man." "Bit that's eight years ago," inderian concltded. "I really wouldn't want to judge Godley at present on my Congo itemories of him." He added, however, that al- though he used to think Godley's decisions in Laos were complete- ly controlled by superiors in Washington, he is now "close to be persuaded that Godley wielded a lot of power in Laos, and per- haps event co-ordinated bombing strikes." INTER-CHANGE: Directed Analysis a n d Self- Treatment of Problems of Ad- iustment to Academic Life FOCUS Proqram, Counseling Services, Office of Student Saravices Inter-Change is for students who have problems relating to academic life, especially diff cutting in studving. IT IS NO COST The Inter-Change group will teach a self-change technology based on the principles of hu- man behavior modification. The group will meet 14 times on Mondays and Fridays, July 16 through Augusd 26. T e meeting time will be 1:00-3:00 P.m. Interested students s h a u I d call Terry Boothman, 764-8437 for an interview. and others' involvement in the Watergate affair, Mitchell said, he would have told the story "chapter and verse." THE WHITE-HAIRED Moore, the 22nd witness in the six weeks of hearings, only the second still on the presidential payroll, said it was "crystal clear" to him at a March 20 meeting that Nixon knew nothing about White House involvement in Wateragte. On March 20, he said, Mean told him that E. Howard Hunt- one of the seven convicted Water- gate conspirators-was asking a large sum of money. "I came to the conclision in my own mind that the President could not be aware of the things Dean told me, let alone Hunt's Moore blackmail scheme," Moore said. "IT SEEMED crystal clear to me that he (Nixon) knew noth- ing that was inconsistent with his previously stated position thtat the White House was not involved in the Watergate affair before or after the event." Moore said lie asked Det:i if he had told the Presideit and said Dean told him he had not "I asked if he knew whether anyone else had. He said he didn't think so," Moore added. HOWEVER, Moore's testimony was punctured by repeated fail- ures to offer clear recollections of numerous meetings and con- verations. On certain questions concerning the cover-up he ap- peared unable to recollect any- thing at all. Nixon, Ervin agree to discuss papers (Contanued trom Pate t avail himself of the promised op- portunity to confer with the Pres- ident in the hope that we might work out some reconciliation of these two divergent opinions." The committee had asked the White House to provide it with all papers relevant to the activi- ties of any White House employe involved in the 1972 campaign. NIXON REFUSED to supply the documents in a letter dated July 6 in which he cited "the indispensable principle of the confidentiality of presidential papers." Yesterday committee members endorced a letter from Ervin to the President asking for a meet- ing between "representatives of this comnittee and its staff" and "you and vour staff" to try to stave off "the very grave pos- sibility of a fmndamental con- stitutional confrontation between the Congress and the presi- dency." That letter went to the White House with a personal note from Ervin saying he would attempt to telephone the President around noon. WARREN said the President agreed to accept the call from Ervin "notwithstanding the differ- ences between the two branches of government." SENATE SOURCES said that among the specific documents committee members sought in their broad request were: * Daily news summaries pre- pared for the President and on which ousted White House coun- sel John Dean said that, Nixon often wrote marginal comments; * Notes taken by former White Hoose chief of staff H. R. Halde- man at meetings between the President and Dean; * Briefing papers and docu- ments used to prepare the Presi- dent for news conferences; * The files . of Dean, Halde- usan and former domestic affairs i-iser John Ehrlichman that pertain to the Watergate affair. Pressure for Nixon to meet with the committee as well as to sioly the documents increased after Dean's week-long testimony in which he alleged Nixon knew of and participated in the effort to covier ip the Watergate scan- dal. enticomg 1Bookshops, IncJ. 336 Maynard, 663-1812 1229 S. University, 665-2604 ANN ARBOR'S MOST COMPLETE BOOKSTORES is a Enjoy It. For a subscription call 764-0558