Thursday, May 22, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hathaway approved by Senate Interior Committee Paae Seven WASHINGTON (A - Stanley Hathaway, who has pledged not to disregard the environment while developing natural re- sources, was approved by the Senate Interior Committee yes- terday to be secretary of the interior. By a 9-4 vote, the committee approved the nomination and sent it to the full Senate, where a final vote could come this week but is more likely to oc- cur after the 10-day Memotial Day recess. SEVERAL e n v i r o n mental groups had urged the cam- mittee to reject the nomination, contending that Hathaway's eight-year record as governor of Wyoming indicaed he has no great desire to protect the en- vironment in any showdown with industrial or mining inter- ests. But the environmental issue was not raised yesterday in a final 2 -hour hearing on the nomination. The entire session was consumed by a report of an investigation into Hathaway's connection with a bank in his hometown of Torrington, Wyo., nn~r rho Fiar nr rncna nnr~ n' On April 21, in his first ap- pearance before the commit- tee, Hathaway, who is 50 and a Republican, said he had earned no outside income while ne was governor from 1967 through 1974. BUT ON May 14, pleading a bad memory, he informed the committee that he actually had received $13,000 in fees for serv- ing as a director of Citizens Na- tional Bank and Trust Co. in 1969, 1970 and 1971. In an effort to determine sshe- ther Hathaway had disclosed the whole story about his deal- ings with the bank, the csm- mittee sent an investigator, Owen Malone, to Torington. Ma - lone told the panel he foond nothing to dispute Hathaway's story. Some members of the com- mittee expressed concern that as governor, Hathaway was a member of the state Board of Deposit, whose duties included determining the eligibility of banks to receive-state deposits. However, Malone noted that the state treasurer nad th e final decision on whether to de- conflict, Hathaway said, the bank agreed that while he was governor it would accept no more state money for deposit than it did before his tenure. Sen. Richard Stone (D-Fla ), questioned whether Hathaway had violated the law in borrow- ing $8,000 from Citizens National to buy stock in the sank -stock that Hathaway said the bank may have held as security fr the loan. But a quick check by the committee indicated, first, that the stock was not used to secure the loan, and, second, that any violation would have been charged to the bank, not to Hathaway. "I FEEL I did nothing nor- ally wrong, legally wrong," Hathaway said of his .dealings with the hometown wank. Joining Stone in opposing the nomination were Sens. Floyd Haskell (D-Colo.) Joan Glenn, (D-Ohio) and James Absurezk, (D-S.D.). Hathaway was n-minated by President Ford to succeed Rog- ers C. B. Morton as interior SENATE Minority Leader Hugh Scott (R-Pa.) meets with reporters outside the White House yesterday, following a meet- ing of GOP senators with President Ford. Ford told the sen- ators that he will run a vigorous campaign for the presidency next year and carry a strong and constructive program to the people. rrG t* 2 I t i and the former governor's ex secretary. Morton as mOvea planation of his dealings with posit state money. to the Commerce Department as the bank. TO AVOID any appearance of secretary.F t r all so te m h e House passes $5 billion bill to to fly homemade zeppelin CHANDLER, Ariz. (A) -From The Conrads said their alum- cr' /eatQ co ns fr uc t Ion id sry o s a distance, it looks like t he inum welding overcomes th e c jo b s world's largest chicken-wire weaknesses asociated with riv- watermelon, rising above t h e eting in 1930s zeppelins. Non- WASHINGTON(P) - A House- public works projects. More stimulate inflation. farmland near this Phoenix su- flammable helium, they say, is passed bill to authorize $5 bil- than 18 per cent of the con- Administration officials oppos- burb. far safer than the explosive hy- lion to prop up the sagging con- struction employes in the na- ing the legislation claim the But Clair and Darwin C o n- drogen used by the Hindenburg. struction industry is going to tion are out of work, claimed bulk of spending would come at rad, a father and son team, are "We've spent about $40,00 - the Senate. There, a similar bill the bill's sponsors, and "i a time of economic upturn, trying to build and fly a zep- all our own money - and work- s opposed by the administration many cities" more than 30 per crowd out private investment pehn. -ed 10,000 to 12,000 hours of as inflationary. cent of them are jobless. and thus stimulate inflation, THE CONRADS believe their our spa time it over the By a 313-86 vote Tuesday, the Rep. Robert Jones, (D-Ala.) 225-foot air ship will not have past six years," Darwin said. House sent the emergency em- chairman of the Public Works IN DEFENDING the House's the structural defect which "The biggest problem has been sloyment bill to the Senate, Committee, noting the House .5billiontauthorization, Rep. caused ze as earlier t h i ms which is holding hearings on a vote was more than the two- Harold Johnson (-alif.) said:- century tobreak up or burst in- money, but when you do some- measure to authorize $1.9 bil- thirds necessary to override a "We will spend an estimated to flames as the German ship thing long enough, it kind of ion for the same purs. The possible presidential veto, com- $30 billion this year alone in Hindenburg did in 1937. grows on you." Senate vote is expected next month. THE HOUSE bill calls for federal grants to state or local governments, including Indian tribes, for construction, repair or other improvements of local public works projects that can be started within 90 days of pro- ject approval. No state or local funds would be required. The House was told that state and local governments confront difficulties in funding construction of "badly needed" mented: "THIS OVERWHELMING, non-partisan vote should be a clear signal to the administra- tion that Congress is determined to break the rising spiral of un- employment that's spreading hardship and distress all over America." Meanwhile, Under Secretary of Commerce John K. Tabor told a Senate Public Works sub- committee that the economy al- ready is on an upturn and a public works job bill would only unemployment insurance, food stamps, welfare, public serv- ice employment and the like." Proponents e s t i m a t e the House bill could provide up to 250,000 construction jobs on such projects as municipal of- fices, water and sewage treat- ment plants, health, education and social services facilities across the nation. 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