THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXIlI, No. 64-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, August 17, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Watergate panel blasts Nixon plea on scandal Ervin again asks for release of tapes WASHINGTON (MP - The Senate Watergate committee gave no indi- cation yesterday it will yield to President Nixon's plea to turn the scandal investigation over to the courts, while the administration ad- dresses other issues. Committee chairman Sam Ervin (D-N.C.) repeated his urgent re- quests that Nixon release tape re- cordings of relevant presidential conversations and said it was unfor- tunate Nixon had taken the attitude the committee is "out to get him." ONLY ONE of the seven senators on the committee, Edward Gurney (R-Fla.) sup- ported the President's position. Reporting responses running from 5 to 1 to 6 to 1 in overwhelming support of the President's views, the White House said Nixon is determined to get on with the pending national business of foreign policy, s ! the economy, inflation, the energy crisis and legislative proposals. Ervin's office reported a flood of tele- grams received after Nixon's speech ran 441 in favor of the committee's investiga- tion with 88 supporting the President's po- sition. Offices of other committee mem- hers reported a similar response. WHITE HOUSE Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren said Nixon will face the Watergate issue at least one more time, at a news conference - his first in five months - to be held at San Clemente just prior to Labor Day. AP Photo Before that, Warren said Nixon will be- gin a series of policy statements on na- tional issues in a speech Monday to the Thanks to the omnipresent beef shortage, horsemeat returned to area supermarkets national convention of the Veterans of for the first time since World War II. Shoppers crowd around a Detroit meat Foreign Wars in New Orleans. counter yesterday as the inexpensive horseflesh went on sale. Complacent racing The Watergate committee, now in a one- steeds take note. See WATERGATE, Page 20 Agnew probe continues amid indications indictments near Magruder Magruder conspiracy WASHINGTON {/P) - Jeb Magruder, former deputy director of President Nix- on's re-election committee, pleaded guilty in federal court yesterday to a single con- spiracy charge in connection with the Watergate case. Magruder was the second former Nixon campaign aide to agree to cooperate with federal prosecutors in exchange for be- ing allowed to plead guilty to a single charge. FREDERICK LaRUE pleaded guilty on June 27 to a single count of conspiracy to obstruct justice. U. S. District Court Judge John Sirica deferred sentencing of Magruder until after any future Watergate trials. The judge read a letter from Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox to Ma- gruder's attorneys which gave the terms under which the former administration aide agreed to cooperate._ In exchange, the prosecutor agreed not to pursue any other potential charges against Magruder aris- ing out of the Watergate affair. MAGRUDER WAIVED his right to have his case considered by the grand jury and pleaded to a charge filed by the°prosecu- tors. He was charged with conspiracy to un- lawfully intercept wire and oral communi- cations, to obstruct justice, and to defraud the United States. The prosecutors charged that Magruder and unnamed co-conspirators carried out "a strategy to unlawfully break into the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee . . . and unlawfully intercept various wire and oral communications taking place in said offices." BALTIMORE, Md. (P) - The Justice Department's top prosecutor met here yesterday with U. S. attorneys and lawyers for two Maryland businessmen who re- portedly implicated Vice President Spiro Agnew in an alleged bribery and kickback scheme, amid reports that indictments may be returned shortly.' Asst. Atty. Gen. Henry Peterson, head of the Justice Department's criminal di- vision, and his special assistant, Philip White spent several hours with U.S. Atty. George Beall. Also present in Beal's of- fices was Lester Matz, a Baltimore en- gineering consultant, and his lawyers Ar- nold Weiner and Joseph Kaplan. MATZ, WHO has been granted limited immunity in exchange for his testimony, is said in published reports to have told pro- secutors that he turned illegal kickbacks from contractors over to Agnew, a former Maryland governor. Beall spoke briefly with newsmen follow- ing the meeting but refused to say what was discussed. Asked if indictments were coming soon, Beall replied: "I know where we are; I don't know where we're going." HOWEVER, sources close to the investi- gation indicated indictments may be hand- ed down shortly. A special grand jury hearing testimony in the case met for two hours yesterday and then adjourned. The only witness seen entering the hearing room was an uniden- tified tax agent who has been working with the prosecutors on the case. Beall said the jury probably would not come back into session until next Thursday. The probe began last -December as an investigation of Baltimore County offic- ials and of engineering firms doing busi- ness with the county and state, but did not involve Agnew until this spring. The Vice President was notified Aug. 2 that he is under investigation for possible vio- lations of bribery, extortion, conspiracy and tax laws. ATTY. GEN. Elliot Richardson met with Agnew privately Aug. 6 to discuss the sta- See PROSECUTOR, Page 10