THE Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIV, No. 12-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, May 23, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages White House defies 1 7 i 1 1 1 1 House tape subpoena tNiAVN Nixon claims sufficient compilance By The AP and UPS sion of demands for additional presiden- -:r...:.:...... .iit'tlttt . ' WASHINGTON-President Nixon tial conversations has become a never- yesterday refused to comply with ending process, and that to continue two House Judiciary Committee providing these conversations would con- subpoenas, claiming that "the com- stitute a massive invasion," to presi- mittee has the full story of Water- dential confidentiality, the President's gate." letter argued. Nixon refused to comply with the Nixon's reaction angered many com- court orders in a personal letter mittee members and Rep. William Hungate (D-Mo.) said, "We'll just file sent to Committee Chairman Peter it away and consider it another im- Rodino (D-N.J.) one hour after the peachable offense. 10 a.m. deadline for compliance with the subpoena. INDEED, adding the issue of Nixon's THE COMMITTEE had asked for 11 defiance to its list of potentially impeach- tapes and four sets of official diaries able offenses may be in only procedural relating to Watergate from extended per- recourse available to the panel, although iods of time in 1972 and 1973. several alternative actions are possible Nixon offered only a partial transcript in theory..r of one conversation to the committee. The committee could seek a court or- "It is clear that the continued succes- der, but that, in the opinion of many, would jeopardize the argument that the Constitution gives Congress exclusive SM powers over impeachment issues. lif No one seriously entertains the notion Pal Hearst with *V .s LOS ANGELES (A' - Kidnap victim Patricia Hearst became kidnap suspect Patricia Hearst yesterday, as authori- ties charged the newspaper heiress with joining her new-found c o m r a d e s in abduction, assault with a deadly weapon and robbery. "In our opinion, Miss Hearst was act- ing on her own free will," said Los An- geles Dist. Atty. Joseph Busch, who filed the state felony charges against Hearst and two Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) members. "She is a suspect in a kidnaping, not a victim.". THE 20-YEAR-OLD heiress was drag- ged from her home Feb. 4, and later said she was joining the SLA terrorists who claimed to have kidnaped her. Yes- terday, she was accused in a multi- count indictment along with William and Emily Harris. Federal firearms charges had been filed against the three earlier by the FBI. Hearst's father, newspaper executive Randolph Hearst, remained at the fam- ily home in Hillsborough, Calif. "There's nothing to say, really," he responded when told of the latest charges against his daughter. According to authorities, the Harrises and Hearst were involved in a shooting and bungled shoplifting attempt last Thursday that touched off a citywide search for SLA members in the Los An- geles area. A police raid on Friday left the terrorists' chief, Donald "Cinque" DeFreeze, and five otherSLA members dead. Authorities said they were the nucleus of the group. POLICE SAID Hearst sprayed the area of a suburban sporting goods store with bullets in the aftermath of the shoplift attempt, then joined the Harrises in See HEARST, Page 10 of sending the House sergeant-at-arms, whose job over the years has become purely administrative, to the White House for a show of force. And without enforce- ment power, the House would gain little by formally holding the President in contempt. In other Watergate developments yes- terday: * Vice President Gerald Ford said he hopes a comprise can be reached over Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski's de- mand for 64 White House tapes for use in the Watergate coverup trial. District Judge John Sirica ordered Monday that the tapes be surrendered, but White House attorneys say they will fight on appeal. Ford said in New York that if Jaworski "needs more relating to addi- tional evidence for the prosecutions I hope there will be some compromise with, the White House." . Saying "I don't recognize any ex- ecutive privilege," U.S. District Judge t Gerhard Gesell signed subpoenas direct- ing Nixon to turn over documents for the plumbers trial, including some top sec- ret papers. The judge said he is de- termined that all "relevant and mater- ial" evidence be made available to the five defendants charged in the break-in of the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychi- atrist. Gesell's order came at the specific request of attorneys for former Nixon aides John Ehrlichman and Charles Col- son and after receiving word from the special prosecution force that some of the materials in the case might be covered by executive privilege of the4 President or by national security se- crecy. . White House spokesman Gerald War- ren insisted today that President Nixon was not giving a direct order to John Dean to continue blackmail payments to a Watergate defendant when he was quoted as saying, "for Christ sakes get it." * Gordon Liddy, silent member of the original seven Watergate defendants, persuaded a judge to drop a year's pro- bationary sentence because he did not want a probation officer dictating how he lived. ASTROLOGER RONALD DAVISONU League. Davison claimed he has m four presidential elections by using involving mathematical formulas. Astrologer-c )oslt Phoutoty KARrN KASMAUSKI lectures last night at the Michigan ade correct predictions of the last a combination of 'art' and 'science' Utor readS even ts with 'cetific art' By BARBARA CORNELL It" dabbled in such topics as pre- In the days when the occult has dicting of presidential: election out- been dramatized by The Exorcist comes and medical astrology. and the host of films which followed Said Davison, "I've been looking at it, one would expect a lecturer on your elections for many years now astrology to look like the demon him- and I've simplified prediction to al- self. most a rule of thumb." His method Yet the noted English astrologer consists of examining the astrological Ronald Davison, who lectured at the situation which corresponds to the Michigan League last night, looked date, counting back from the date of and spoke more like a fatherly pro- birth of the candidate and accounting fessor than a possessed spirit. for the candidate's exact age on the day of the election. The contestant TO DAVISON, author of "The Tech- with the most favorable signs is the nique of Prediction," astrology is a one who will win. mathematical formula, although he Davison claims that he has pre- described it as both a "acience" and dicted the last four American prsi- an "art." dential elections correctly. "I'm doing it so often," he said of his current Along with giving many pointers to predictions, "I don't dare make a budding astrologers, Davison, in his mistake." lecture entitled "Astrology As I See See DAVISON, Page 10 ', ;p; ::t Z, rll WI