THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 59-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, August 10, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages panel sues President over tapes Asks court to force Nixon answer Three who survived Two wounded Cambodian children rest with an unidentified man at a Phnom Penh hospital yesterday. They were injured Monday when U. S. B-52s accidently bombed their village located just south of the capital. Nearly 150 people were killed in the mishap. (See related story Page 3) enalties for victimless cr1 e hitIby govtreport WASHINGTON (T) - The Senate Water- gate committee sued "defendant Richard M. Nixon" individually and in his capacity as President yesterday, asking a federal court to enforce its subpoena for White House tape recordings and documents re- 14ting to the Watergate investigation. The committee also asked the court to force a response from the President within 20 days, seeking to obtain the material before the vacationing panel resumes its hearings next month. "THE DEFENDANT President's refusal and failure to make available said elec- tronic tapes and other materials cannot be excused or justified by resort to any presi- dential power, prerogative or privilege," said the suit. "If there be any doctrine of presidential power, prerogative or privilege that pro- tects materials . . .such a doctrine does not extend to the protection of materials 'relating to alleged criminal acts ." The committee asked the court to rule: * Its subpoenas wre legally issued and lawfully served on the President "and must therefore be responded to and com- plied with . .." . Nixon may not refuse to comply "on the basis of any claim of separation of powers, executive privilege, presidential prerogative or otherwise." . That the President in revealing and permitting others to reveal the subject matters of some of the materials "has breached the confidentiality of those ma- terials and has waived any claim" to ap- plying separation of powers, executive privilege or presidential prerogative. IT ALSO ASKED, if necessary, that the court issue an injunction directing the President to make the materials available. Thse committee said Nixon's continuing refusal is "irreparably injuring the work of the select committee and the interests of the United States on whose behalf and in whose name the select committee sues." Nixon is preparing to speak out publicly on the Watergate scandal, perhaps by the middle of next week. THE SUIT is the second filed against Nixon over the tape recordings and docu- ments. Special Watergateprosecutor Ar- chihald Cox filed a similar action. The President's lawyer Tuesday replied in court that any attempt to enforce a sub- poena "would be an unsupportable viola- tion of the constitutional doctrine of sepa- ration of powers." Oral arguments are scheduled for Aug. 22. Nixon's lawyers argued in the Cox suit that "no court has ever attempted to en- force a subpoena directed against the President of the United States," nor has any department or agency head been held in contempt for refusing to produce infor- mation the President wanted withheld. The constitutional issue involved appears certain to reach the U. S. Supreme Court. SIX LAWYERS for the Watergate com- See SENATORS, Page 10 WASHINGTON (A) - A federal crime commission yesterday recommended an end to jail sentences for such victimless crimes as marijuana use, prostitution and pornography. Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson refused to endorse the proposals, but called the com- mission report a "document of uncommon importance." THE RECOMMENDATIONS were con- tained in a report prepared by the Na- tional Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, a 22-member group initiated by former Atty. Gen. Jphn Mitchell. The report developed from a two-year study financed by a $1.75 million federal grant. Discussing what the chairman, former Delaware Gov. Russell Peterson called the "victimless crimes"-marijuana use, gambling, pornography, prostitution and private sexual acts between consenting adults-the commission said: "These crimes place a heavy and unwelcome burden on law enforcement resources." Stressing that it is "not necessarily rec- ommending decriminalization," the com- mission urged all states to. review laws against those activities. "At a minimum," it said, "each state should remove incar- ceration as a penalty." AMONG OTHER key recommendations, the commission said: -All states should outlaw the private possession of handguns within 10 years and confiscate those now in civilian hands. Collectors should be allowed to keep in- operative guns. -Plea bargaining, the practice of allow- ing a suspect to plead guilty in exchange for a light sentence, should be abolished within five years. Richardson