TH Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIV, No. 55-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, August 3, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Dean receives sentence of I to 4 years More Water A White House aide carrying a suitca White House tapes arrives at the U.S. I The tapes are destined for District Jud; before turning them over to Special Wa student By JEFF SORENSEN The University would be forced to grant students access to their own aca- demic records, according to a bill re- cently passed by Congress. At. present, all University counseling offices collect files on students which the subjects are forbidden to see. THE MEASURE, a section of the fed- eral omnibus education bill, was passed Wednesday by a 323-83 vote in the House and last week by a 83-12 count in the Senate. The bill that opens student records is detailed in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act and was propos- ed by Senator James Buckley (R-New York) and strongly backed by the Anerican Civil Liberties Union. The bill, now awaiting the President's signature, provides that "no federal funds shall be made available to any ed- ucational institution or agency that "de- By AP and UPI WASHINGTON -John Dean, the man who "broke the case for the govern- ment" on the Watergate scandals, re- ceived a one to four year sentence yesterday for his part in the affair. Dean, who served as the President's chief legal advisor and, by his own ad- mission, played a central role in the Watergate cover-up, has emerged as the key witness in the prosecution of Richard Nixon. "I REALIZE I have done wrong," Dean said when he appeared before U.S. District Court Judge John Sirica for sentencing. "What bothers me most is that I was involved in corruption of government and misuse of high office," he con- tinued. "I realize to say I am sorry is really not enough. "I have tried for 18 months to do everything I can to right the wrongs, and regardless of what the court judges me I will continue on the same course." FOR THE 35-year-old attorney, the jail sentence he fought so long and hard to avoid came on a guilty plea he N. entered last Oct. 19 to a single count of obstruction of justice. He was given AP Photo until Sept. 3 to put his affairs in order before entering prison. 'gate tapes Dean, who is widely reported to have ase containing the much sought after a desperate fear of prison, sought in District Court in Washington yesterday. vain in the spring of 1973 to obtain a ge John Sirica who will examine them grant of total immunity in return for tergate Prosecutor Leon Jaworski. his testimony. have to grant access to files nies students the right to inspect and yet reached majority age, the same review any and all official records, files rights accorded adult students would be and other information, including all the granted instead to the pupils' parents. material in the pupil's cumulative re- cord." STEIGER contended that the act The measure also gives students the "represents the first step toward pro- opportunity for a hearing to "correct or viding much needed protection of the remove inaccurate, misleading or inap- right of privacy to students and their propriate data." parents." REP. William Steigler (R-Wisconsin) SHe further argued that "there is a told The Daily yesterday that the portion whole series of cases where records were y h ysetsrdayetbaeport on used to abuse the rights of individuals." of the students' file to be made open Steigler also said he expects that many would include letters of recommenda- schoolerwalonstheexeasurhathy tion for admissions, test scores, high schools will contest the measure in the school , counselor's comments, original courts. application forms and "backer cards," University officials admitted that they which provide accounts of college coun- were surprised that the rules received selor's comments. Congressional approval. The bill affects all educational insti- General Counsel Roderick Daane de- tutions, on the elementary, secondary clined comment on whether the Univer- and University level, and will go into ef- sity would challenge the measure in fect 90 days after signed into law. court if approved by the President, say- In cases where the students haven't See BILL, Page 10 Just before passing sentence, Sirica rejected a last minute appeal by Dean's attorneys that sentencing be delayed un- til a recently released White House tape became available. They said the tape would show that Dean attempted to halt the Watergate cover-up. DEAN'S SENTENCE was comparative- ly light-his White House cohort John Ehrlichman got 20 months to five years for his role in the Ellsberg case. And Dean could have received a minimum sentence as high as five years. A contributing factor was that mem- bers of the prosecution team joined Dean's lawyers in pleading for leniency, telling Sirica Dean had cooperated "fully and unhesitatingly" with the government. After S i r i c a imposed the sentence, lean-his face grim and pursing his mouth-picked up a brief case and hur- ried out a sidedoor of Courtroom No. 2 with a marshal at his side. Ninety minutes later, he ducked down a back hallway, took a private elevator to a basement garage and was sped out of the courthouse by marshals. He sat alone, reading a newspaper in the back seat of the car and did not look up. Watergate box score WASHINGTON (UPI)-Fourteen of President Nixon's former ad- ministration or campaign aides and 21 other men have been convicted or have pleaded guilty so far for crimes related to Watergate. The list of one-time Nixon men, their offense and their current status includes: -Dwight Chopin; perjury about campaign dirty tricks; sentenced to 10 to 30 months in prison; free on appeal, -Charles Colson; obstruction of justice in relation to Daniel Ell*- berg's trial; serving 1 to 3 years. --John Dean; conspiracy to ob- struct justice in the Watergate cover-up; sentenced to 1 to 4 years; imprisonment to start Sept. 3. -John Ehrlichmon; conspiracy and perjury in the "plumbers" burglary of Ellsberg's psychia- trist's office; sentenced to 20 months to 5 years; free on appeal. -E. Howard Hunt; conspiracy, burglary, bugging and wiretapping in the Watergate break-in; sen- tenced to 30 months to 8 years; served one year; free on appeal. -Herbert Kalmbach; corrupt practices in campaign finance; serving 6 to 18 months. See WATERGATE, Page 10