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January 14, 1972 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-01-14

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r Page Ten

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, January 14, 1972

rPage Ten THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Friday, January 14, 1972

Milliken gives

of the
LANSING (A) - Declaring the
state "much stronger" than it was
a year ago, Governor Milliken told
the Legislature yesterday that he
will seek an 11 per cent state
spending increase for the fiscal
year starting July 1-without high-
er taxes.
The surprise announcement of a
$2.27 billion budget figure high-
lighted his "State of the state"
message in which housing, trade,
and new industry were stressed.

state'
He also told the joint session
that the Legislature should set
deadlines this year to avoid the
Capitol chaos of 1971, when no ma-
jor appropriation bill was passed
until the fiscal year had started.
The absence of deadlines and
delays in budget bills beyond the
start of a fiscal year "must never
be permitted to happen again,"
the governor said.
Outlining a 10-point program of
priorities for the new legislative

I'State
-!p)eeh
session, Milliken lead with an ap-
peal for economic growth.
A major goal, he said, would be
the creation of 80,000 new jobs in
1972 - a four-fold increase over
1971. To that end, he said he would
ask a tripled appropriation for
state economic development and
international trade, bringing the
appropriation to more than $1.5
million; and a $500 million increase
in the state's bonding authority
for housing construction, raising
the ceiling to $800 million.
Milliken also listed as his main
goals for the year:
-Passage of partial "no-fault"
car insurance;
-Completion of the petition drive
to put property tax relief on the
November ballot, as a means to-
ward more equitable financing of
schools;
-Improvement of state govern-
ment management through a pro-
posed Program Budget Evaluation
System;
-Faster progress on environ-
mental programs;
-Enactment of a presidential
primary for Michigan; and
-Passage of a transportation
package which would increase gas-
oline taxes by two cents for road
building and mass transit.

FBI charges private
in bank bombing case

Court rules atty. gen.
must approve wiretap

SAN FRANCISCO (R) - The
federal government charged an
AWOL Army private yesterday
with being the mysterious
"Christopher Charles Mohr" who
rented bank safe-deposit boxes
where time bombs were found
last week.
The U.S. attorney said Ronald
Kaufman was charged in con-
nection with bombs planted in
three San Francisco banks and
that he expected further charges
would be filed in similar inci-
dents at banks in New York and
Chicago. Kaufman holds a Ph.D.
in psychology from Stanford
University.
U.S. Magistrate Owen E.
Woodruff Jr. issued an arrest
warrant at his home in nearby
San Rafael for Kaufman, 33, a
native of Milwaukee, Wis., who
lived in Berkeley, Calif., until
July 1971. Bail was set at
$500,000.
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover,
who announced the warrant in
Washington with Atty. Gen.
John N. Mitchell, said Kaufman
was identified through finger-
prints found on various bomb
components taken from the nine
safe deposit boxes.
Hoover said Kaufman re-
enlisted in the Army last Aug. 10
using the name James Edward
Jensen and took a 30-day leave

from Ft. Polk, La., Dec. 9, with
orders to report to Ft. Jackson,
S. C, Jan. 9 for shipment over-
seas.
"There is no record that he
reported as ordered," Hoover
said, and federal authorities
have launched an investigation
for him.
Stanford University public in-
formation director, Bob Beyers,
who knows Kaufman but has
not heard from him for several
years, said: "He was extremely
bright and extremelyintense
with very deeply held views
against the Vietnam war even
as early as the mid 1960s."
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(Continued from Page 1)
The court said the section
"only permits the attorney gen-
eral or an assistant attorney gen-
eral who has been specially des-
ignated by the attorney general
to authorize an application" to a
federal judge for a wiretap per-
mit.
"Congress wanted to make cer-
tain that every -such matter
would have the personal atten-
tion of. an individual appointed
by the President and confirmed
by the Senate," the opinion said.
Federal agents who investi-
gated in Miami got their wiretap
by way of a deputy assistant
attorney general, who signed the
name of the executive assistant
to the attorney general.
"Congress could justifiably feel
it important that the public
know that only an identifiable
person subject to the political
process could trigger the un-
known, unseen, unheard intrusion
into public affairs that are con-
stitutionally protected against
unreasonable searches, entitled
to freedom from self-incrimina-
tory results and presumptively

innocent," the courtsaid.
"Our decision is reached with
full recognition that the statute
burdens the attorney general,
who is required to give his in-
dividual attention to many af-
fairs to great importance," the
decision added.
"However, if the load on this
officer is to be lessened, such
relief must come from the Con-
gress."
Defendants in the appeal were
J. W. Robinson, Mario Escandar,
Carlos Escandar, Aleida Jiminez,
Georgina Lafont-Escandar, and
Margarita Arce de Armas.
Convicted in 1970, they had
faced prison terms ranging from
two to 12 years.

PM

POET JAM
Benefit for Washington St. Community Center

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DONALD HALL
GLENN

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JERRY YOUNKINS
DAVIS

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