Page 14 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1974 perfect gift! afahflOZ, I rf 36" only' $]09 Former adviser ‘misled’ by Nixon Deceived about clemency WASHINGTON (AP)—John D. Ehrlichman told the Watergate cover-up trial Tuesday that former President Richard M. Nixon misled him about whether Nixon would consider granting clemency to the Watergate burglars. tee headquarters. Ehrlichman said he didn’t learn until recently that six months later, Nixon and Charles W. Colson, then White House special counsel, dis cussed clemency. Ehrlichman, a former top Nixon White House adviser, testified that during a walk along the beach at San Clemente, Calif, on July 8, 1972, Nixon said he “would never enter tain a conversation” on clemency for the men arrested June 17, 1972, in side Democratic National Commit- William S. Prates, Ehrlichman’s lawyer, then asked, “were you aware after listening to the White House tapes that the President was telling you one thing about cle mency and Mr. Colson something else?” “Well, if you compare what he told me in July and what’s on the tapes, it’s very different, yes,’ re plied Ehrlichman. Ehrlichman, ex-White House staff chief H. R. Haldeman, former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, former Assistant Atty. Gen. Robert C. Mardian and Kenneth W. Par kinson, one-time lawyer for the Nixon re-election committee, are charged with conspiring to bostruct the investigation of the Watergate breakin. In his opening statement to the jury, Frates said part of Ehrlichman’s defense would be that Nixon “deceived, misled and lied” he was kept in the dark about the June 23, 1972, discussions between Nixon and Haldeman in which they decided to have CIA officials get the FBI to restrict its Watergate inves tigation. During discussions in midsum mer 1972, Ehrlichman said he proposed a program of full disclos ure about Watergate. Out of those discussions, he said, came Nixon’s statement on Aug. 29, 1972, that no one on the White House staff was involved in Water gate. 29th <^t.‘~UJctrehon*e 3715 £La.t 29tl* St. T Float trips down swift Wyoming Snake River >ryan, 77801 (713) 693-4511 TOWN & COUNTRY CENTER frrr- ■=: MOOSE (AP) — The rubber boats slip silently down the swift Snake River in western Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park, provid ing tourists with a panorama of wild life and wilderness. Last year, more than 60,000 per sons took advantage of the services of numerous professional floating outfitters to take a trip through the Snake River flood plain. The attrac tion is the magnificent Teton Moun tain Range, moose, elk, eagles, waterfowl and hundreds of other wildlife species in their natural habitat. But there is a growing concern that the float trips are destroying the very attraction which they are geared to provide and which the Na tional Park Service is struggling to maintain. Concrete information on the ef fect of the passage of the rubber rafts is difficult to obtain and now is vir tually nonexistent. For that reason, the service has launched a long- range study of the problem and is considering limiting the excursions until that study has provided it with necessary information. “We are about five years late on a river plan, says Pete Hayden, a biologist for the Park Service at Moose. Some of the problems are obvi- BB&Xi Bryan Building' & Loan Association Offices in Bryan/Huntsville/Madisonville • Save-Mobile service to Caldwell/Franklin/Normangee BB&L savings accounts vs. blue chip stocks, bonds and mutual funds. ;r j. Guess which returns interest to investors. more Guess again Financial counselors often deliver pious injunctions to stash away a nestegg in a savings and loan, then venture into more glamorous investments. A quick glance at the earnings perfor mance of BB&L savings accounts com pared with more “glamorous” invest ment vehicles tells the story: BB&L sav ers have earned more interest since 1966 than speculators who invested in utilities, transportation or industrial stocks. compound interest so interest accrues on principal plus interest. Open end mutual funds, front-loaded with an 8V2 per cent sales commission, are depen dent upon the stock market to show ap preciation. It takes a healthy increase in market values to cover the initial com mission — much less show profit. Bond investors didn’t fare much better. Dividends from bonds are, by definition, equal to simple interest since they are paid out as earned. BB&L savings earn At times, the so-called “glamour” in vestment must be sold at a loss (without dividend) if there is an urgent need for cash. BB&L savings accounts are al ways redeemable for full value (plus in terest). But that’s another story. $220 QUARTERLY EARIMIIMGS ON $10,000 INVESTMENT 180- 140- 100 60 *. Transportatio s«oc k s r \ i BB&L Savings v Account l / M A 7 i Utility stocks \ \ S, Tv * /» k !\ / V V •/ ■ — > 7^ ' v; *• ——/ ♦ ****.„' 1 1 1 - — *. * - - - - . f i i i * i t t i i i % • — *** _ /•> > : b\f • i i i 1 1 1 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 SOURCE: U.S. Savings & Loan League and the Investment Company Institute. (Some reports, including Economic Indicators, published by the President’s Council of Economic Advisors, express earnings for common stocks in much less favorable terms than indicated here. The case can be stated in a great many ways using different indices, weighted advances and declines, beta factors and regression equations, but simple lines tell the story . . .) ous. Access roads to the river, prob lems of traffic and noise, deteriora tion of the river banks at the points where boats are launched and de struction of plant life by increasing size of the parking areas. Though the access roads are limited in number, there Is the feeling that still there are too many. Officials already have noticed changes in elk habits along the river. Many now come down from the timber only at night and move away during the day. Naturalists presume the elk would stay longer if the boats were not there. There is no question that the in- Beef grades draw fire WASHINGTON (AP) — An un precedented outpouring of mail has prompted the Agriculture Depart ment to reconsider its plans to change the beef grading system. creasing traffic on the river, bothbv the commercial outfitters and fishermen has disturbed the nesting waterfowl and driven many of them from the main channel. “We can’t make a good case hi the ecological problems yet Hayden said. He adds that people who float tie river now are not seeing the same thing as those who saw it 10or20 years ago. Hayden said the park has aban doned the idea of limiting the pas sengers which make the various float trips each year. But he said it would like to limit the number ol trips beginning in 1975. "Wewant to hold the status quo forafewyears until we get a better picture.” Present plans under considera tion in Grand Teton National Pad call for limiting the trips in 1975lo slightly above the average for the period covering 1972-74. 7 The system is l>est known to con sumers by the labels on supermar ket meat designating the cuts as Prime, Choice or Good, the top three classifications. Job Corps celebrates 10th birthday The department had received 3,637 letters on the proposal by Tuesday, with many more letters expected. Sources said the tre mendous response has prompted serious talk within the department, meat industry and consumer or ganizations of redrafting the prop osal this spring. Any decision is at least a month away, said John C. Pierce, director of the Agricultural Marketing Service’s livestock division who is weighing what he expects will amount to 4,(X)0 or more comments on the complicated changes. SAN MARCOS (AP) — CapJd) Corps Center near here will ob serve its 10th anniversary Saturday Speakers will include Rep. ] | Pickle, D-Tex., and John H. Stet son, national director of,job coips, Lb S. Department of Labor. Gary officials said center ^ processed more than 51,000 yoiaj men during the lb r years oftlf center’s existence. Of that numb there have been 9,219 who graduated and returned to theii home areas to seek employment The center said 6,947 were placed in jobs throughout the nation and another 1,883 went into the armed services. RAPl Jexsun 4 4