THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~1je Three Witness of Ves4 NEW YORK (A) - The gov- ernment investigator who headed a securities fraud probe of Ro- bert Vesco told the Mitchell- Stans jury yesterday he resisted efforts by his superiors to pre- vent disclosure of Vesco's $200,- 000 contribution to President Nix- on's re-electio0n campaign. The witness, Stanley Spork- in, director of the enforcement division of the Securities -a n d Exchange Commission (SEC), testified as the conspiracy trial of former Atty. Gen. John Mit- C hell and former Commerce Sec- retary Maurice Stuns started its seventh week. SPORKIN SAID that he was trying to find out the source a nd use of $250,000 in cash that Vesco transferred from the Ba- Ihamas to New York in April 1972. He said that in the effort Ito identify its source and use he had subpoenaed several Ves- Ico employes shortly before t he Nov. 7, 1972 election. Sporkin said Wiliam C a s e y , then chairman of the SEC, tele- Iphoned him on Nov. 1 and ask- ed if it wouldn't be possible to postpone the appearance of those Vesco aides because it C 0 U 1 d be "politically embarrassing." "I told him the testimony would not bepostpond," sai Sporkn claims cover-up cos contribution FREE TAPE was not the way to proceed." CASEY PURSUED it a i t tlIe further, Sporkin said, but Spork- in told him emphatically: "You must rely on my judgment in this matter. Some day you will be thankful." Other witnesses have testified that Mitchell tried to get Casey to prevent revelaion of Ves- Co's contribution before the election was held. In fact, Vesco and his aides all took the Fifth Amendment before the SEC prior to the election and the contri- bution did not become public for several months. The two former Cabinet of fi- cers are accused of conspiring to conceal Vesco' s contribution, to impede the SEC investigation h1i return for the under-the-table cash and of lying to a grand ju:'y about it. - VESCO'S contribution was de- livered April 10, 1972, t h r e e days after the effective date of a law requiring disclosure. In addition to the $200,000 cash con- tribution, Vesco gave a $50,000 on-the-record Check to the re- election committee. * The fugitive financier w a s cited by the SEC three weeks af- ter the 1972 election in a com- plaint alleging that he looted $224 million from mutual funds he constrolled. Sporkin said that Bradford Cook, then chief counsel of the I SEC and later its chairman, tried to limit the inquiry into tue use of the $250,000. He said Cook asked him why they needed any information other than t h e the sorurce of the money. Sporkmn said he told Cook they did need to know 'how the money was used. TIIE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume L XXXIV, Number 145 Tuesday, Apr11 2, 1974 iedite and managed by students at 764-0562. second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. PublIshed dail Tuesd though Sunday mornn nard street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. pusarel:$11 local mai (Mcian and; Ohio: $12 non-local mai (other states an'i foreign . S3ummeresion~ pulihee Tsds~ay lion rates: 55.50 by carrier (campus area p $650 local mail (Michigan and Ohioi: 57 0 nonal mail ;othei CLII YOU'R E INVITED: REEL TO REEL & CASSETTE Noon tilIl 9 pm. CL INIC SPE CIA L Reg. $3.38 SA LE $1.50 FORMER UNITED MINE WORKERS head W. A. "Tony" Boyle moves on is way to court in Media, Pa. Boyle is facing charges of murder in ski, his wife and daughter. Yesterday's session was the first day of Prosect vws to proe oye' guil TOUB f e R4, from a wvheelchair to a car the deaths of Joseph Yablon- testimony in this trial. with any trade-in cassette really sound s best?. MEDIA, Pa. (IF) - The prose- cutor in the murder trial of for- mer United Mine Workers Pres- yesterday he would prove Boyle personally ordered the 1969 as- sassination of a union rival and paid for it out of the union treas- ury. 1N HIS OPENING statement, Richard Sprague said, "This was no accidental shooting, it was a cold-blooded brutal assassina- tion.- In a 70 - minute address Sprague charged the 72-year-old Boyle "plotted and paid for the s e ablonski hisswifend daughter. Boyle has steadfastly denied any involvement in the deaths. Before court began yesterday, defense counsel said Boyle would testify in his own defense. Sprague alleged the murder plot was conceived in Boyle's of- Lice on June 23,.1969. "WE WILL SHOW how a fam- ily, named Yablonski, was mur- dered," Sprague said. "And you are going to hear from people who actually participated in this assassination, from the actual gunman who did it." Eight other persons have been accused in the Yablonski kill- ings, including the three men al- legedly hired to do the shooting. All eight have either confessed or been convicted of murder. JO ANN ALBER/JULIA ANDREWS/MARGARET BAUM/NANCY BERG/BARBARA CERVENKA/ MIGNONETTE CHENG/SUSAN CROWELL/RITA *MESSENGER-DIBERT/EDWINA DROBNY/CAROL FURTADO/GEMMA GATTI/ADRIENNE KAPLAN/ CHARLA KHANA/LEE KURTIN/FRAN LATTANZIO/ JOAN MATHEWS/DALEENE MENNING/ MARY ELLEN PORTER/JACKIE RICE/SUE STEPHENSON/ DOROTHY SMITH/SUE THOMPSON/ EL LEN WI LT/GEORGETT E ZI RBES/ WOMANSPACE APR IL 2-27 OPENS: APRIL 7, 4-6 P.M. UNION GALLERY 0 MICHIGAN UNION * ANN ARBOR Tu.,Apil 2 East Quad 7-9 P.M. Wed., April 3 Bursley Hall 7 -9 P.M. All the things you want to know about selecting packs, boots, tents, sleeping bags, cooking gear, clothes. What to take. What to wear. If you're into backpacking or would like to be, don't miss these informative sessions. 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