Page 14-Friday, July 14, 1978-The Michigan Daily Senator Sam and Co.: The Summer of '74. It tas a his and hersthanpionship for Jimmy Connors and Cris Evert at Wimbleton. Henry Kissinger labored for a Mideast peact, settlement. President Juan Peron of Argen. tine died.And PresidenatsRichardixon ant) An war Satlat of Egypt stood in the shadows off the ancient pyramids in what was to be the final round of summitry for Nixon.. In Washington, the Senate Watergate Committee quietly left renter stage after 14 years work. The House Judiciary Committee took over the spotlight. But who could forget Samt Errin,. the mra with the bus eebrowsw ho presided over the Senate Watergate Committee. And what of Baker, Reirker. Gurney. Mon- toya, Talmadge, and Inouva? The past Watergate years hare been ones of change for those who serred with Chairman Sam. In this story, Associated Press writer Harry Rosenthal remembers Sam Errin and takes a aook at what he is doing now and what has happened to the other members of the com- mittee. By HARRY ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - Chairman Sam is a sometime credit card huckster. Howard Baker and Lowell Weicker think of running for president. EDWARD GURNEY and Herman Talmadge have faced ethical questions about money. Daniel Inouye is as far from the limelight as his state is from the mainland. Joseph Montoya is dead. Five years ago, the members of the Senate Watergate Committee were delving into America's greatest political scandal. The years have brought changes, ironic in some cases. Sam Ervin Jr. of North Carolina, Everybody Topside The Sperry Topsider is a Genuine handcrafted moccasin, mounted on an onti-slip yachting sole, In Dark Brown Elk dyed cowhide. Narrow and Medium in Men's sizes 6 to 13 and Ladies' sizes 5 to 10. $36.00 Mast's TWO STORES CAMPUS 610 E. Uherty Open Friday'til7:00 Whe "retird" since 1974, hasn't changed much since he starred on daytime television - jiggling those eyebrows in time with his outrage, dispensing homilities like blue ribbons for peace preserves at the Burke County fair. WATERGATE, HE IS fond of saying, made him one of the most notorious characters in the United States - a renown that didn't escape the atten- tion of the firm that advertises those apple green credit cards. The five years since Watergate have brought changes not only to the nation but also to many of the key figures in the Senate's Watergate investigation in- cluding from top left: Sam Ervin (D-N.C.), Daniel Inouye (D- Hawaii), Herman Talmadge (D- Ga.), and Joseph Montoya (D- N.M.). Bottom row from left: Howard Baker (R-Tenn.), Ed- ward Gurney (R-Fla.), Lowell Weicker (R-Conn.), and John Dean. Ervin and Gurney are no longer in the Senate, and Mon- toya died June 5. "Do you know me?" asks Chairman Sam, the country lawyer, scrunching down in his airplane seat. Well, heck, American Express, almost everybody knows Ol' Sam. AT NEARLY 80, the aphorisms still trip wondrously from his ton- gue. Of Richard Nixon's memoirs: "I'd have to say that insofar the President discusses the things I know the best that he certainly did obey Mark Twain's in- junction, 'truth is very precious, use it sparingly.' " Of his life since he returned home to Morgantown, N.C.; "oh,Lord, I'm working as hard as I did when I was in the Senate, one way and another. I'm practicing just a little bit of law. I'm making a lot of speeches. I'm being called on to aid this, that and the other." THE SPEECHES and the rest keep re are they now? Ervin on the road much of the time. He were president and I had a national can command $2,000 for a speech, but security advised who singled out makes many for nothing. American Jews as an impediment to If Ervin was the best known my policies, I would have his Watergate senator, then surely that resignation before sundown and his other country lawyer, Sen. Howard reputation before breakfast." Baker, asked the most memorable A Weicker-for-president committee question: 'What did the president know has been formed, but the Connecticut and when did he know it?" , senator says it is there only in case he The post-Watergate spotlight has decided to run - it is not a commit- played longer over the Republican tment to run. senator from Tennessee than any of his FOR EDWARD GURNEY, service on enipa i- rvn ++iiAth nmitstotrr ia e ^ M m -- u om nano mNc o istn t nw I am introdued when I speak outside my home state," says Baker. "Watergate used to be the first thing they men- tioned. Then it sort of slipped down into the body of the introduction and now they sometimes don't mention it at all." Baker tried to parlay Watergate ex- posure into the 1976 Republican vice presidential nomination. When that failed, he vowed never to run for the second spot again, and now his name is high among Republicans considered 1980 presidential candidates. But he says his first concerns are his job of minority leader, and re-election in the fall. The other Watergate senator among early presidential prospects is Lowell Weicker, the maverick Republican on the committee. HE WAS DIVORCED and remarried, but in public life his ways haven't changed. In 1975, with Henry Kissinger holding out documents the House In- telligence Committee -subpoened, Weicker said Congress should carry its contempt to the final stage: Imprison- ment. And Weicker was no kinder to Zbigniew Brzezinski in declaring: "If I Reduced Rates for BOWLING- and BILLIARDS 1o6 P.M. Everyday ntThi. UNION S 1s running orougress srom Florida's 9th SDistrict, the House seat he vacated 10 years ago to run for the Senate. Gurney was the third Republican on the committee and the man in Richard Nixon's corner. As he prepared to run for re-election in 1974, he was indicted on charges that included bribery and perjury in an alleged scheme to shake down Floride builders. He was acquit- ted in two trials, and he was left $2% million in debt to his lawyers. He said the Justice Department "has destroyed a U.S. senator, blackened my name, besmirched my character and ruined me economically." For Sen. Herman Talmadge (D-Ga.), trouble began after his 1977 divorce and a property dispute that followed. The Senate Ethics Committee is looking into the Washington Star's allegations that he accepted tens of thousands of dollars from constituents. AND JOSEPH MONTOYA, 40 days before he died June 5, told a hearing he had not been influenced by $5,000 in campaign contributions and gifts he had received from Korean rice dealer Tongsun Park. The New Mexico Democrat, who lost the 1976 election, died at 62 of liver and kidney failure. Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), left the limelight with the end of the Senate Watergate committee's hearings. He served as chairman of the Senate in- telligence committee for one year, And the Senate Watergate Commit- tee, which in its infancy had riveted the nation's attention, left stage with little notice after 1% years work. By then, June 1974, another congressional com- mittee held the anotlight - the Hoas DOWNTOWN 217S. Main St. Open Mon& Fri Nites 'til 8:30 I