TUT w ffa T"! ppy Records access bill by Scott Lsthsm United Press International NEW YORK Nelson Rockefeller's wife Happy underwent an operation for . the removal of a cancerous left breast Thursday, and surgeons reported her chances for survival were excellent. The four-and-a-half-hour operation, termed a modified radical mastectomy, was performed at Sloan-Kettering Institute. Vice president-designate Rockefeller later was at his wife's bedside as the attending surgeon. Dr. Jerome A. Urban, told a news conference that his wife's "chances are excellent for a full recovery over 90 per cent in 10 years." . "The cancer had not spread to the lymph nodes," Urban said. I feel. I got all of it. 1 really dp." Urban, who described the 48-year-old Rockefeller as "a sturdy, wonderful woman." said there appeared to be no complications and listed her condition as excellent. Urban said a biopsy performed Thursday morning revealed a carcinoma less than two centimeters in diameter and two smaller modules that were found to be cancerous. He and two other surgeons. Dr. Edward J. Beattie Jr. and Dr. Roy Ashikari. then performed the mastectomy. V Urban said he informed Mrs. Rockefeller after the surgery was complete that the cancer had not spread. He said she replied: "Oh. thank goodness." Asked whether he felt a full mastectomy was necessary. Urban said he believed it was and he would continue to perform such operations "until we get more information on this subject." Urban said Mrs. Rockefellcr.discovered suspicious lumps in her breast by self examination two weeks ago and X-rays were taken last Friday by her gynecologist. Dr. Arthur V. Greeley. She entered the hospital Wednesday. Mrs. Rockefeller's surgery came less than a week after President Ford's wife Betty left a hostpial following a similar operation for removal of the right breast. The first lady issued a statement at the White House Thursday which said she was deeply distressed when she received the news of Mrs. Rockefeller's operation. "I'm sure that the love of her family, the prayersof the entire nation and her inner strength will be of great sustenance during this time." Mrs. Ford said. "I only wish 1 could be by her side to give her the strength so very many have given to me." At a press conference. Rockefeller apepared depressed and almost bitter. "Gentlemen, you'rte not going to believe what I have to tell you." Rockefeller opened. "Happy has just had a radical mastectomy of the left breast." Rockefeller declined to speculate on how the surgery would affect his political future, telling a questioner "I think at this time, perhaps all of us should think about Happy's future, which is the one concern 1 have." Turk ey compromise bill passes by Gene Bernhardt United Press International WASHINGTON Ending a major confrontation with the White House, Congress passed and sent to President Ford Thursday a measure to continue U.S. military aid to Turkey until Dec. 10 so long as no new U.S. implements of war are sent to Cyprus. Ford was reported by George H Mahon. chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, to consider the provision to be an interference in Turkey's internal affairs but was willing to sign it. Ford had indicated he would accept it "very; very, very reluctantly." The measure was forwarded to the President following passage by voice vote in the Senate. The Senate acted after the House voted 191 to 33 to appjove the provision which was attached to a continuing resolution for temporary funding of several government agencies. Passage of the continuing resolution, and the Turkish aid rider, cleared the way for a congressional recess which has been postponed since last Friday because of the dispute. The unravelling of a stalemate between the npea ppsttpoinies dleeiisioini obi testimony by Jane Denison United Press International WASHINGTON U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica, while saying he thinks former president Richard M . Nixon should testify in person at the Watergate cover-up trial, Thursday postponed a decision on whether to compel his appearance pending a further report on Nixon's health. He ordered Nixon's lawyers to submit a report on Mjxon s medical condition within three weeks and said he would then decide whether to send a team of doctors to California to examine Nixon on the court's behalf. "It would be helpful to the defendants and the government if he progresses to the point where it would not injure his health for him to appear here in open court," Sirica said. Sirica expressed his views at a brief hearing on motions by Nixon's attorneys to quash subpoenas for him to testify at the trial of five former aides accused of covering up the Watergate scandal. Nixon lawyer Herbert J. Miller Jr. said the former president is recovering well from his phlebitis condition and the "prognosis is very good" that within three weeks to a N month he would no longer claim ill health as a bar to testifying. Meanwhile, Nixon's attorneys moved to keep Nixon from testifying at the trial and to prevent the White house from releasing any of his presidential tapes or papers not already under subpoenas. At the hearing. Miller suggested that instead of requiring Nixon to travel to Washington, the court could obtain his testimony by written interrogatories whereby written questions would be sent to his California home for Nixon to answer in writing. The prosecution and defendant John D. Ehrlichman, who has subpoenaed Nixon to testify in his behalf, immediately opposed such a procedure. Ehrlichman's attorney William S. Frates said he would be satisfied, however, if Nixon's deposition could be videotaped. White House and Congress came early in the afternoon when the House failed to override President Ford's second veto of a similar measure which would have banned shipment to Cyprus of any U.S. -supplied military aid. Under the compromise " adopted by Congress. Turkey will be able to resupply its 40,000 troops on strife-torn Cyprus with ordinary maintenance materials but not with weapons, ammunition or other American implements of war. Ford appeared to have given the most in the final compromise. He had favored continuing U.S. military aid to Turkey without restrictions on its use in an effort to get Turkey to begin negotiations on a peaceful solution to the Cyprus conflict. Announcement of the agreement came close on the heels of Ford's second veto of aid cutoff legislation and the House vote on a motion to override him which, at 161 to 83, .was two short of the required two-thirds margin. The H ouse vote Tuesday on the first veto was 16 votes short. oC .Where can you ) r l j vL r. buy a tender- V, fff( V sirloin steak at ) Jm f eleven o'clock At RIGGSBEE R1EAT V1ARKET Carrbdro Dot 'n' Dash , 967-6830 East Main St., Carrboro OPEN 'til 11:30 p.rru EVERY NIGHT Your friendly neighborhood butcher offers quality - cuts at reasonable prices and BULK ORDER SERVICE for your club or group, parties, etc. O Choice Meats O Fresh Shrimp (from N.C. Coast) O. Bones tor dogs I,. $j i - it ; I , i ! KANKI Make It a point to visit Kankl, the only Japanese Steak House In ' the Carolinas, where your personal chef turns a night out Into an adventure in the culinary arts. Kanki Is located on the outside lower level of Crabtree Valley Mall In Raleigh. 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Canvas board : Duo-Mats Engineering Supplies Speedball Naz-Dar - Shiva Sculpture House Letraset Zip-a-line Para-Tone Krylon 3M Blair Staedtler Dri-Mark Eagle Koh-i-noor Eberhard Faber Morilla Ampad X-acto Rapidograph Grumbacher . Liquitex Hyplar Fidelis Vanguard Permanent Pigments Dana Aquatec Winsor-Newton . Pelikan Speedball Delta Robert Simmons Bienfang K&E Albanene open (y I S.m.-9p.m. Mon.-Fri. J 10a.m.-2 p.m. H " ' 3 "" " 1 The Daily Tar HmI is published by the University oT North Carolina Student Publications Board, daily except Sunday, exam periods, ' vacation, and summer periods. No Sunday issue. The following oaiet are to be the only Saturday issues: September 14. October 5 19, and November 2, 16 & 23. . Offices are at the Student Union building, Urtv. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-1011, 933-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. , Subscription rates. $20.00 per year, $10.00 per semester., i. . second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapel Hill. N.C . ' The Campus Governing Council shall have powers' to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate atl revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.14 of the Student Constitution) The Daily Tar Heal reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to, revise or turn away copy It considers objectionable., The Daily Tar Heel will not consider adjustments or payments for any typographical errors or erroneous; r ' -.i la ahm tn tha Business: Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement, iihbi mm Haw rtf Hta Me!wlna nf tear appear, w w - - i theets or subscription of the paper. The Daily Tart Heel wmi noi d wivwhb" Incorrect Insertion of an advertisement scheduied to run several omes. nww w ausn wmn be given before the next Insertion. W iita tWtfTHiMK METRIC! :r HON! 7 " THINK METRIC! V ?MS IT ON f 51IC!:; il AAUfiHHM CD CO LU Z o o Q OF THBCONF0RBHCB. 6UYS!lt!S607TA6er BACK TO CANADA! : BACK 727 TUB TALL, MISPBRIN'PINSS.'H -WTMAPLZmUP.. CQATEP MOUNTIBS PEZCHBP STIRRUPS.. : J3 wem pocks SHOTffm THBUIW.- ..THSS5A2S A F&W Of OUR. lv " I nee! HA! I nee! nesf we ALSO PI6 THB QJBBN.. GCPSAVgHZZ! SHB KEPT OUR BOYS OUT OF CHILB! ord quashed . Unitsd Press Interns tlcnsl WASHINGTON - President Ford Thursday vetoed legislation that would significantly broaden the laws under w hich the public , can gain speedier access to government documents and records. The bill, which would amend the Freedom of Information Act. had been overwhelmingly approved by Congress. The measure's chief provisions would: Restrict the time from 10 to 20 days an agency would have to respond to a citizen's request for information. Broaden public access to government investigatory files. Impose penalties on government officials arbitrarily withholding information. Allow judges to review classified documents in their chambers and, if they determine the materials are improperly classified, release them to the public. The bill also would have allowed for recovery of attorneys fees in lawsuits filed, to obtain government information. The provision relating to investigatory files was strongly opposed by F by the FBI uhkh said it would result in uncovering many of their sources of information. The National Security Council also objectid to the provision allowing judges to rale on classified documents. The council argued that the bill set no standards of review forjudges to follow. The administration argued that the time limits were loo restrictive on government agencies and that it would place too great a burden on many of them to comply. ate fair United Press Intemstionsl RALEIGH The 107th North Carolina State Fair opens Friday in the middle of a fairgrounds construction program for a nine-day run. The fair, sponsored by the North Carolina Department of Agriculture, has a new 30.000-square foot exhibits mall - named Scott Pavilion ready this year. A new crafts pavilion is being built at a cost of S3 10.000 to replace the present village of yesteryear, constructed in the early 1950s. iiwfiiMl f miff 131 (mnmium li iii.iiiiiiim.il -i i inn I I m Tin- -i rn. mrr wimnriri 11 hwm -""""r n.rin.i.i. nr i i i.mhiii n mm 1111 - rrrwi i.rai.iini.l y a r fill St WW Kick In A Suit or Sportcoat From The Hub Ltd Remember The Hub Ltd. for that winning look... Suits & Sportcoats with flair . . Sweaters, slacks and shirts to co ordinate that "total look. 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Franklin St. Chapel Hill Shop Monday-Saturday 9 til G Crossword Puzzler ACROSS Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle 1 Footless 5 Equality 8 Edible fish 12 Mother of Castor and Pollux 13 Exist 14 Rise and fall of ocean 15 Advanced in rank 17 Sea in Asia 18 Scatter 19 Ultimate 21 stitch 23 Insect egg 24 Devoured 27 Yellow flowered plant 32 Painful 34 Meadow 35 Great Lake 38 Rife 39 In music, high 40 Demon 41 Definite article 43 Not ordinary 47 Those v opposed 51 Jargon 52 Repentant 54 Poker stake 55 Girl's name 6 Lamb's pen name 57 Musical instrument 53 Bone of body 59 Hind part DOWN 1 Mountains of Europe 2 Saucy 3 Aroma 4 Women of authority 5 Stroke 6 War god 7 Repetitious 8 Frighten suddenly 9 Lease 10 Man's name 11 Erase (printing) 16 Was in debt 20 Baker's product 22 Covering for wall 24 Snake 25 Rocky hill 28 Before - 28 Born " 29 Man's name 30 Lubricate 31 Openwork fabric 33 Dispossessed 37 French for "friend" : JCII TilSF 1TEAISI 1 arrant ,rU i sjTn leo OeV e r tH5 e I a n fs Lie S S iL e A A SffSALE S; P ERT sTejc uihaTrTf liaIsIh lUE E RlA I NI, HIE A t STTf 0 R E S TS E R S eTTP 0 L E S r U P R a pi (cTa r e s; m r a QSIIhaHeMisr o e s i sm Grades I M'ejS. jS A TAN 38 Siamese native 42 Go in 43 Mark left by wound 44 Sheet of glass 45 Heraldry: grafted II 48 Son of Jacob 48 Prefix: distant 49 Dolphinlike cetacean 50 Heavenly body 53 Catch . (colloq.) 1 I2 I3 I4 883 i6 I7 I9 P 11 il""""" 20 24J25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 ' 33 34 51" " : " 43 44 45 46 356 47 . 44 49 50 IT "" "" 3 52 T 53 54" '655 ""56 " 5T" sT"" "" iT" " " Dtstr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. Murray Pool. .Business MgrJ