Page Six THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, August 1, 1973 Page Six THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, August 1, 1973 Ervin terms Haldeman s tape testimony 'counterfeit evidence (Cotinued from Page 1) White House aide disclosed their existence earlier this month. Sen. Howard Baker (R-Tenn.) who has sought a compromise to the battle rather than have it end in a massive constitutional con- frontation, asked Haldeman if he would be "agreeable to bringing these tapes up here and play them." HALDEMAN SAID: "You're asking me to take a legal posi- tion different from the Presi- dent's." "Would Bob Haldeman as an individual be a'greeable to bring- ing those tapes if we could other- wise procure them," said Baker. "I would welcome that oppor- tunity because they would con- firm what I told you," Haldeman answered. QUESTIONED BY Senator Ed- ward Gurney (R-Fla.) Haldeman said he could recall nothing from the tape of the Sept. 15 meeting to support Dean's assertion that he told Nixon the Watergate mat- ter could not be forever "con- tained." Bernie's beef nixes Nixon Dean has said he used that word and that when Nixon didn't question it, that meant to Dean that Nixon knew a cover-up was under way. Sen. Daniel Inouye, (D-Hawaii) questioned Haldeman closely on security over the Sept. 15 tape while Haldeman had it out of the White House. IN DETAILING his handling of it, Haldeman disclosed he had held it at his home for two nights rather than overnight as he origi- nally testified. He said he was alone in his house, saw no evi- dence of any break-in and did not helieve the tape had been al- tered. Haldeman will resume testi- mony today, with six more wit- nesses to follow as the committee tries to wind up this first phase of its hearings as soon after the Aug. 3 Congressional adjourn- ment as possible. White House spokesman Gerald Warren said yesterday that Nix- on decides who can listen to the tapes "based on the President's judgment of who could best as- sist him in determining the facts on the Watergate matter without jeopardizing the confidentiality of the tapes." . THE WHITE HOUSE sought executive privilege for Haldeman concerning a portion of one meet- ing Haldeman had not attended, but the committee denied this Monday. Haldeman said Monday the tapes contained no evidence that Nixon knew of the cover-up, con- trary to Dean's testimony ahout the two meetings. "I think this is a little planned action," said Ervin, "in which the White House allowed Mr. Hal- deman the use of the tapes which the White House denies to this committee and lets Mr. Halde- man makes the interpretation be- fore this committee. IN OTHER Watergate - related developments: 0 The House Armed Services Committee voted 33 to 0 to start contempt of Congress proceedings against Watergate conspirator Gordon Liddy, who refused even to take the swearing-in oath when he appeared before a subcommit- tee July 20. The subcommittee is investigating CIA aspects of the Watergate affair. Liddy is serv- ing a contempt sentence for re- fusing to testify before a federal grand jury, and is under sentence for the Watergate break-in. (Contined fromi Page 1) uled to end Sept. 12. Mrs. Nixon's press secretary, Helen Smith, said White House chef Henry Haller reported no problems in his orders. She said the request turned down by Gold- stein must have been for the White House mess, where presi- dential aides eat. The menu for Tuesday night's state dinner for Japanese prime minister Kakuei Tanaka did not include beef. It featured duck- ling, which Miss Smith says is' served often "because the Presi- dent happens to like duckling." GOLDSTEIN is not the only one with a beef about food prices these days, however. Housewives around the country are having cows about the skyrocketing costs of meat. Cattle industry people on the other hand accuse the admin- istration of trying to horn in on their profits hy imposing t h e freeze. And not a word the administra- tion can utter seems able to ap- pease either group. Pa a:.: . tj 3 0 a x 3 n a: A .a~ I Morel W . .... Concentrated < breath drops. 1/3 FL. OZ. Our Reg.. PHARMACY This is Newsprint. 491 c H n Harmless looking, isn't it? KRAF FROZ OltCHA ORANI BREA DRIN All by itself, this innocuous square of paper hardly seems important. But every week about 170,000 pounds of newsprint comes into Ann Arbor as news- papers or to be made into newspapers. Well-packed, that would make a square pile 20 feet on a side and 10 feet tall, solid newsprint. After the news is read, the paper is buried and both are forgotten. But the pile of old newsprint will grow until it no longer can be ignored. Fortunately, there is a solution. Old newsprint can be recycled and made into paper products, thus sparing the landscape and trees that would other- wise have been cut. In Ann Arbor the Ecology Center has a recycling station on South Industrial Highway, off Stadium, just south of the Coca-Cola bottlers. It's open from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednes- day thru Saturday. FULL 0 VINE R1 ® GRADE Halt Gallon Car Good thru Sot. PRICES I Advertising contributed by The Michigan Daily