THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Despair, violence mar Hearst food program I - a ~ a a a a Dope note THOMAS MAHER, (left) special agent in charge of the St. Louis Drug Enforcement Administration office, and an assistant carry cocain, marijuana, hashish and amphetamines which they said were seized during a seven-month investigation of drug traffic in the East St. Louis/Illinois area. The drugs, valued at more than $1 million, were introduced as exhibits at the trial of ten narcotics agents on civil rights charges. The charges grew out of raids last year by narcotics agents based on erroneous addresses. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Or- ganizers of a $2 million food giveaway to help free kidnaped heiress Patricia Hearst an- nounced yesterday they are out of food, out of money and tem- porarily out of business. But Ludlow Kramer and Peg- gy Maze, directors of the People in Need program, said the pro- gram would resume in some form if Miss Hearst is freed and the Hearst Corp. pays the $4 million it promised on her safe release. PROBABLY THE worst part of the whole operation was the total violence that was around the op- eration," Kramer said. "We ob- viously made some mistakes but we have fed the people we said we would." Asked later to elaborate about the atmosphere of violence, he said: "The constant yelling, day in and day out, the constant threats on our lives, the constant ripping off of Mr. Hearst." Asked at a news conference howhefelt the program affected Ms Hearst's chance for release, Kramer said: "I feel we're kind of back to zero." KRAMER SAID THE pro- gram had distributed 150,000 packages of food since it was or- ganized Feb. 22 in response to a demand by the Symbionese Lib- eration Army, the terrorist group that has claimed it is holding Ms Hearst as a "prisoner of war." About 35,000 cartons of grocer- ies were distributed Monday in the final giveaway, estimated to ' be worth $1,225 million whole- sale. Kramer, Washington's secre- tary of state, said he and Maze are returning to their home state this afternoon but said they would remain in existence as a legal entity. THE VICTIM'S father, news- p a p e r executive Randolph Hearst, funded the program with $500,000 of his own money. The remaining $1.5 million came from the Hearst Foundation. Hearst was in New York today to meet with directors of the Hearst Corp. A spokesman told reporters that Hearst will make no statement to the press until he and his wife return to San Francisco, either Wednesday or Thursday. .4 MEET THE AUTHOR OF, "FAULKNER A magnificent achievement, a two volume biography illustrated; 2000+ pp., and index. The first major biography with access to the complete Faulkner archives MEET THE AUTHOR, JOSEPH BLOTNER THURSDAY, March 28-11:30-1:00 AT 316 S. STATE ST. 668-7653 ~i- - _ - ~ -----_ _ _ I SWITCHED TO NIXON: Milk industry aided Humphrey in '68 Volume LXXXIV, Number 140 Wednesday, March 27, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May. nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pusarea); $11 local mail (Michigan and ); $12 non-local mail (other stater Iand foreign). Summer session publishea Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip' tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area)- $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail ;other states and foreign). WASHINGTON (P) - An in- ternal audit shows that Asso- ciated Milk Producers Inc., (A- MPI) paid at least $91,691 in cor- porate money to support Hubert Humphrey's 1968 presidential campaign, and $34,500 to his 1970 senatorial campaign. The audit and a lawyers' re-' port, obtained from court re- cords,.show that the giant dairy co-operative retained its ties to Democrats as it switched its main support to President Nixon after his 1968 victory. The 1968 Humphrey money' went to pay the $15,000 nine- month salary of a campaign worker, to reimburse him for $11,641 in campaign travel ex- penses, to reimburse at least $54,000 in campaign donations by a number of individuals, and to pay miscellaneous expenses of a campaign rally, a dinner and a parade, the audit shows. FEDERAL LAW prohibits cor- porate contributions to political campaigns. Two former officials of the milk producers pleaded guilty last January to conspiring to donate $$22,000 to the Hum- phrey campaign, and former general manager Harold Nel- son was indicted earlier this month for perjury because he denied knowledge of that dona- tion. The $22,000 is included in the total $91,691. Through a spokesperson, Hum- phrey said, "I have no knowl- edge of these transactions . an organization as large as AM- PI should have had the kind of legal counsel that would have prevented these types of trans- actions." The auditing firm, Haskins & Sells of San Antonio, Texas, said its accounting may not be com- plete because some cancelled checks from 1967 and 1968 cannot be found. THE AUDIT IS attached to .a report for the cooperative's board of directors by attorney Edward Wright, a former presi- dent of the American Bar Asso- ciation. The board commissioned Wright to investigate illegal po- litical contributions and other payments by past officials of the dairy group. After Humphrey's defeat, gen- eral. manager Nelson decided to "make peace" with the Republi- cans, according to two officials quoted in the report. In August 1969, the co-op shipped $100,000 in cash to Nixon's lawyer fund- raiser Herbert Kalmbach. The milk producers recently said the $100,000 was an illegal corporate donation. The coopera- tive asked Nixon campaign of- ficials for return of the money, but have as yet received no- reply. TO COVER the $100,000 dona- tion and some other expendi- tures, the milk producers used a system of bank loans, transfers, payments and reimbursements that involved a nuniber of Dem- ocrats, according to the Wright report. Generally, the milk producers made payments for admittedly phony lawyer's fees or public relations fees to persons who later passed on part of the mon- ey to repay bank loans covering the $10,000 donation. April 1974 PART If MARCH 25-31 UNION GALLERY 1 st floor, Michigan Union painting-sculpture-jewelryIa photography-prints by Flax/Gardiner/Gordon/Locca Jones/J udkiss/Koch/Lowel l Orlin/Reinhart/Thon/Trupp Special Gallery hours for BFA show: EVERY DAY FROM 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M. 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