Wednesday, May 8, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Roving reporter looks at tapes Editor's note: Daily reporter Jeff Day would have to be released, not to the spoke to the people on the seet yesterday. to determine how Ann Arbor residents general public, to the officials in charge view the trecntly released transcripts of so they can determine if the inaudibles Pesident Nixon's private conversations. and the blurbs really are inaudibles and Question: What is your reaction to blurbs. The sooner they can get it over President Nixon's release of the Water- the better-if he's guilty he should be gate tape transcripts? impeached-but I would vote not guilty." "I have the feeling Nixon has made C. J. Johnson, visiting in Ann Arbor. some very serious errors, I'm not sure that somebody else in the same position would at make the satne errors. But if "I think the tapes are outrageous. My I were sitting in the Senate, I would vote optnton hasn't been changed, it's been tilty."-Ron Yapp, ex-Peace Corps. verified. The man is morally bankrupt, out of touch. I think he's mad, mentally Yapp Johnson de Vaux Aenis 0 "My general impression is the tapes SEE ANN ARBORITES, Page 11 Nixon r II WASHINGTON (P) - President Nixon decided to turn over no more Watergate tapes, thus risking a constitutional show- down with Congress on one hand and in- viting a Supreme Court test on the other. White House lawyer James St. Clair said the President had reviewed Special Watergate Prosecutor Leon Jaworski's subpoena for 64 t a p e recordings and ordered St. Clair to fight the demand to the Supreme Court if necessary. And St. Clair said, the President will Wallace renominated in landslide BIRMINGHAM, Ala. 0P)-Gov. George Wallace swept past four opponents to an unprecedented third - term nomination yesterday in a Democratic primary in which he appealed openly for the first time for black votes. The runnerup, State Sen. Gene McLain, conceded defeat four hours after the polls closed. He had predicted victory in what he said would be the greatest political upset in Alabama in years. At the time McLao conceded, Wallace was leading in every county which had reported. WITH 1,410 boxes tabulated out of 4,564, Wallace had 153,726 votes, or 65 per cent; McLain had 67,543, or 28 per cent; former Gov. James "Big Jim" Fol- som, 10,085, or 4 per cent; Ralph "Shorty" Price, 3,141, or 1 per cent, and Thomas Wesley Robinson 3,427, or 1 per cent. Wallace told a victory rally in Mont- gomery after his nomination became evident. "With God's help I'll try to make. you a good governor," and he added, "a governor of all the people." In another primary contest former astronaut John Glenn, showing surpris- ing strength in his opponent's home town, took a substantial lead yesterday over appointed U.S. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum in their race for the Ohio Democratic Senate nomination. Metzenbaum was having trouble keep- ing even with Glenn in Cleveland, his hometown stronghold where his aides said he needed a 50,000 plurality to win. WITH 4,286, or 38 per cent, of Ohio's 12,895 polling places tabulated, Glenn had 181,273 votes, or 56 per cent, to 145,101, or 44 per cent, for Metzenbaum. Glenn was leading in the Dayton, War- ren and Columbus areas, which went to Metzenbaum in the 1970 primary con- test. not give more tapes to the House Judic- iary Committee for its impeachment in- quiry. "I do not believe it will be an im- peachable offense," St. Clair said. A spokesman for Jaworski declined comment other than to say "we plan to continue with our litigation." There was no immediate reaction from Judiciary Committee leaders. A committee member, Rep. Tom Rails- back (R - Ill.) called the announcement "most unfortunate" and added: "This decision is certain to provide a confrontation with the Judiciary Com- mittee, the end result of which will cer- tainly be bad for the country as well as for the Republican party." Before the latest refusal, Senate Re- publican Leader Hugh Scott-in a signifi- cant shift from his past support of the President-said transcripts of key Water- gate conversations reveal "a shabby, dis- gusting, immoral performance" by all involved. And presidential lawyer Fred Buzhardt, summoned before the Senate Watergate Committee, answered most questions but also invoked executive privilege, national security and the attorney-client privilege to avoid some. In the House Judiciary Committee, it was learned, the staff dropped plans to summarize its entire case against Presi- dent Nixon when it begins tomorrow with its presentation of evidence to the full committee. A CBS spokeswoman said in New York the three commercial television networks will rotate live coverage of the public portions of the committee's investigation -in the same manner as they covered last year's Senate inquiry. Scott declined to criticize Nixon di- rectly but made plain, in talking to reporters and in a floor speech, "I am nut going to take any position supporting any action which involved any form of immorality or criminality as the tran- scripts indicate." The House GOP Leader, Rep. John Rhodes of Arizona said at a news con- ference, "I won't q u a r r e 1 with his (Scott's) description." Rhodes also said Republicans he had talked to around Congress haxe expressed similar senti- ments. He said he had not seen anything in the transcripts "definitely impeachable" but felt portions of them did raise some serious questions. "There are areas that might possibly be brought up as impeachable offenses, having to do with obstruction of justice," Rhodes said. He said there were conversations be- tween the President -and three White House aides, John Ehrlichman, H. R. Haldeman and John Dean, "which indi- cated to me some rather high level plans were being made as to what this person would say and what that person would do,",$ See NIXON, Page it JAMES ST. CLAIR, President Nixon's lawyer, tells newsmen yesterday that Nixon has decided not to turn over any more Watergate tapes to the house Judiciary Committee or special Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski. Fil groups hit -yRegents' move By GORDON ATCHESON Currently a majority of motion picture A Board of Regents resolution man- classes utilize films shown by the campus dating the administration to demand that organizations as an integral portion of on-campus film groups adopt self-regula- their curricula. tory guidelines or forfeit the use of "It would be disastrous to our program University auditorium facilities threatens if the independent film societies were the survival not only of those organiza- eliminated," Felheim said yesterday. tions but also of specific film courses "The arbitrary stoppage of film bookings offered here. is anti-educational." Facing the loss of the auditoriums on FELHEIM WILL meet with Fleming May 31 unless regulations governing the this afternoon in an effort to make some showing of films which allegedly "over- headway in resolving the present con- step the bounds of obscenity and por- troversy, but it remains to be seen nography" are established, four film whether the discussion will focus on organizations met yesterday with the specifics or relatively general policy Film Resources Committee to discuss areas. proposals that might be presented to the A long-smoldering controversy over administration. films on campus burst into flames last THE F I L M Resources Committee, month when the Regents expressed dis- (FRC), a faculty body chaired by Prof. tress over the screening of Deep Throat Marvin Felheim and designed to over- -a pornographic movie-in the Nat. Sdi, see University film courses, fears that Building under the auspices of State Rep. if the motion picture groups now on cam- Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor). pus are curtailed or eliminated, certain Because of the involvement of a stu- film classes will be proportionally dam- dent group known as the Bullard Action aged. See FUTURE, Page 11