THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 45-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, July 21, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Senate okays measure curtailing war powers Another presidential veto Downp"our f. 5 in Un les f Ir n ,trO S One family improvises their own rainwear by poking holes in laundry bags yesterday as the rain came pouring down, on the art fair. These three, hardier than most, continuer to exarmine the plastic-cover- ed merrh ndise. A few other. brave s o a u s - artists, mer- chants and customers - alsoN remained outside. But mostr people huddled under cover or i just gave u7 for the day and : went home. *> Daily Photo by KEN FINK Nixon will not release tapes Strachan accuses Haldeman expected WASHINGTON (') - In a historic move, the Senate yesterday passed a bill limiting the President's power to commit Amer- ican troops to war without congressional approval. Attoogh the House passed similar legis- lation earlier this week. the measure's final fate is uncertain, since President Nixon has stated he will veto any such bill. THE SENATE passed the bill by a 71-18 tally which would provide an 11 vote mar- gin over the two-thirds needed to over- ride a presidential veto. The House, however, fell 32 votes short of two-third. Earlier, with an eye towards the ex- pected veto, the Senate defeated an amendment which would have curtailed presidential power in dispatching civilian advisers, Central Intelligence Agency per- sonnel, and foreig "proxy" troops as well as U.S. armed forces. The move, initiated by Sen. Thomas Eagleton (D-Mo.) fell by a 53-34 vote, AMENDMENTS ALSO were defeated that would extend the measure to cover peacetime deployment of troops abroad and limit the circumstances under which a president could commit troops. The bill finally passed by the Senate sets a 30-day limit on a president's power to commit troops, giving only Congress the power to extend the period. The House version passed 244 to 170 on Wednesday would set a 120-day limit instead. Another major difference is the snelling out in the Senate bill of circumstances un- der which a president could commit troops for a limited period. SEN. JAMES ABOUREZK (D-S.D.) said yesterday that this provision is "a dan- gerous practice which expands rather than contracts presidential authority to wage war without the approval of Congress." The power to use troops to "forestall" imminent attack, he noted, could have been used in 1970 to justify legally the U.S. invasion of Cambodia and might be construed in the future as license for a tactical nuclear attack. President Nixon's threat of a veto drew opposition Thursday from Repuolican Sen- ate Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, who usually supports the President. ASKED IF he thought it would be wrong for Nixon to veto the bill, Scott replied "Yes," and added that he would probably have to vote to override a Nixon veto. However, Sen. Edmund Muskie (D- Maine) floor-managing the measure, and Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.) the hospitaliz- ed chairman of the Armed Services Com- mittee, warned the Eagleton amendment might make it difficult to muster the lvo- thirds vote that will be needed to over- ride the expected veto. "If we clutter the war powers bill with other matters," Stennis said in a letter to Muskie, "we would probably kill what is otherwise a good chance to override a possible veto." See SENATE, Page 9 WASHINGTON - The White House made it clear yesterday that President Nixon has decided not to furnish the Sen- ate Watergate committee with tapes of his conversations with aides which would probably prove whether he knew about the Watergate coverup. Meanwhile on Capital Hill, Gordon Strachan testified that he gave his boss- H. R. Haldeman - a three-line report of a "sophisticated political intelligence gathering system with a budget of $300,- 000," more than two months before the Watergate break-in. liaison between President Nixon's re-elec- tion committee and the White House chief of staff on political matters, John Dean was the White House contact on political intelligence. "Neither Mr. Haldeman nor Mr. Dean advised me of the series of meetings with Mr. Mitchell, Dean, Liddy and Magruder," Strachan told the Senate Watergate com- mittee in prepared testimony. It was at meetings in January, Febru- ary and March, involving those men, where apparently the Democratic Party headquarters break-in plan was hatched. paign to former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, had testified that after the last meeting, March 30, "I called Mr. Strachan and in- dicated to him that the project had been approved . . . I discussed it in detail." Hut Strachan said "had anyone ever heard the details of prostitution, goon squads, kidnaping and wiretaps, he would be unlikely to forget it. "I certainly would not forget it. Mr. Magruder never gave me that informa- tion . . . "he said. See NIXON, Page 9 BUT HE SAID even though he was the JEB MAGRUDER, deputy in the cam-