Wednesday, July 13, 1977 A lawyer is a lawyer (continued from Page1) necessarily require a license. ened to seek an injunction to "As long as a person makes prevent Tiffany from practic- a full disclosure to his patients lng law without being a bar and to the medical establish- member. But he is confident mnt, he should be able to prac- abot winning the case. tire medicine," he said. He IE CLAIMED that prior to claimed that there is already the Bar's threat of an inie- one groun who is nracticing tion he even considered suing withot a license - those who the court administrator to al- ont flonride in our water. low him to file one of his cli- "Thev're giving medicine to ent's cases. the entire nnonlation." he said. Tiffany's car was vandaliz- Tiffany said that he has he- ed vesterdsv, and he asserted come increasinelv nolitical that the bar was probably re- since his davs of war protest at sponsible. the University. "They have maior connec- "I don't feel I'm doing any- tions with the underworld," he thing illegal," he said. "Prac- said. tice makes nerfect - and you TIFFANY ALSO said the can't have a law against per- practice of medicine shouldn't fection." THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page $even THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Carter OK's neutron bomb (Continued fromPage 1) the differences with this coun- try, but that he did not know what those reasons are. THE PRESIDENT also reaf- firmed his intention to continue ad-ocntine worldwide nuclear dienrmament. He called the use of nuclear weanons a "horrifying pros- pect"'that might quickly get ot of control. "The nation that 'uses atomic weanons first would be tinder heavy condemnation from the other people of the world un- less the circumstances were extremely gross, ssuch as an ,nuwarranted invasion from an- other contrv," Carter said. REFINTNG his nosition on the question of a Palestinian home- land in the Middle East, Carter said it must be tied in with Jordan and not be an indepen- dent state. At the news conference, Car- ter also said: * There is no administration - proposal on raising the mini- mum wage. But he added he does support a proposal about to be unveiled in Congress be- lieved to be higher than the 17.50 ceiling Carter had pre- vioisly favored. * U. S. and NATO forces in Europe are adequate to stop an invasion from the Warsaw Pact troops, even without the use of nuclear weapons. * Russian eavesdropping on telephone calls in this country is not "an act of aggression" by the Soviet Union. He refused to discuss the interception of American telephone calls in specifics, but said efforts are being made to insure that key telephone lines to the White House and Pentagon are se- cure. * Stood behind his administra- tion's estimate that his energy plan, would increase the cost of natural eas to consumers by $15 hillion, while deregulation would cost 170 billion. * Prior to the Washington visit of Israeli Prime Minister Men- ahem Begin later this month, Carter's position for the estab- lishment of a Palestinian home- land has not changed, but he emphasized the United States would not impose a settlement on the Middle East. . The federal government should not finance many abor- tions for noor women, while ad- mitting that the economic dis- crimination in the availability of abortions is not fair. umnmer Houri. Imon-fat,8pm-2am 1611JurdihA2995-5955 Liddy paroled; still silent on Watergate (Continued from Page 1) office Building. He and another former White House aide, E. Howard Hunt, recruited the five burglars who were arrested in- side Watergate on June 17, 1972, during their second entry. SUBSEQUENT White House efforts to hide administration links to the burglary, including the alleged approval of the plan by former Atty. Gen. John Mit- chell, were behind the cover-up that toppled Nixon and sent his top aides to prison. With Liddy's release, only Mitchell and former Nixon lieu- tenants H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman still will be serving Watergate sentences. Ironically, it was through the intervention of a Democratic President, Jimmy Carter, that Liddy's parole eligibility was ad- vanced from May 1981. Last April, Carter commuted Liddy's 20-year sentence to eight years, making him eligible for parole any time after July 9. "HE'S HAPPY to have a defi- nite date," Maroulis said after talking with Liddy, who is at the Allenwood, Pa., federal pris- on camp. "He's disappointed he won't be with his children this summer. By the time he gets out, they will be back in school." Liddy's wife, Frances, said, "I was a little disappointed that it was as long as September, but that's better than .October." With the exception of 99 days freedom, while one of his many appeals went through the courts, Liddy has been in prison since the jury convicted him on Janu- ary 30, 1973. HIS UNWAVERING refusal to talk about Watergate, even with a grant of immunity from prose- cution, caused U.S. District Judge John Sirica to tack an 18-month contempt sentence on- to Liddy's original sentence of six years and eight months to 20 years. Liddy also refused to give his name at a congressional hearing and got a suspended sentence for that. In addition, he was convicted of burglarizing the of- fice of Daniel Ellsberg's psy- chiatrist, but that one-to-three year term was made concur- rent with the main sentence. WhnLiddy applied for a re- duti sentence, Sirica turn ed him down, saying be "has no shown tecosurt teslightest remorse or regret for his at- ions and bas not given the court een a hint of cotrition oa so- IN HIS commutation order last April 12, Carter said "the ends of justice do not require that the aforesaid sentence be served in its entirety." The President acted after his )uns eRobert Lip hutz, grant- Lddy's. Liddy on interview, Liddy's petition for commutation had been filed in the waning days of Gerald Ford's presi- dency. Liddy had been characterized as "a nut" by Nixon, who also referred to the other burglars as "idiots." TRUE TO his pledge to Nix- on's counsel, John Dean, Liddy never broke his silence on Watergate and even five years after the burglary, the motives remain untold. Dean, however, was one -of the first to talk and Liddy com- mented, "I think in all fairness to the man you'd have to put him right up there with Judas Iscariot." Sirica cut Dean's sen- tence and he served only four months. Hunt was in prison 32 months -and that, too, was far longer than all the others. James Mc- Cord, the burglary team elec- tronics expert who cooperated with prosecutors, was in jail two months. The four Cuban-Ameri- cans recruited for the burglary by Liddy and Hunt served slight- ly more than one year each. Liddy is a former assistant attorney in New York's Dutch- ess County and was once an FBI man. He worked on the White House special investigations unit known as "the plumbers" be- fore going over to the Nixon re- election committee. BILLIARDS and BOWLING at Reduced Rates Weds. 1 1 a.m.-6 p.m. at the UNION f f f 1 f f ! f f ! ! f il +i Ib 1i L"i i"i 1 r SECCO-,P:'4D CHANCE STUDENT NIGHT 516 E; LIBERTY Lk STREET CORN ER BAND MORE INFO? 994-5350 f- i l+i +4."i is {.+i L+i +1 +i ~"> "i 4+i 4" " ~ , r Mr rr v r , ij A Public Service of this newspaper & The Advertising Council Today is, the first day of the rest of your life. 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