Page-2-Tuesday, April 11, 1978-The Michigan Daily CHARGED WITH ILLEGAL WIRETAPS OF RADICALS: Former FBI Director Gray indicted for bugging WASHINGTON (AP) - Former FBI Director L. Patrick Gray and other former key FBI officials were indicted. Monday in connection with bureau wiretappings and breakins. Attorney General Griffin Bell, an- nouncing the indictnents at a news con- ference, said the ;charges arose from FBI activities earlier in the decate when the agency was pursuing radical fugitives. THE FEDERAL grand jury in Washington indicted Gray, former Associate FBI Director W. Mark Felt and former Assistant Director Edward Miller on a single charge of conspiring to violate the rights of citizens. The charge carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a fine of $10,000. At the same time, Bell said the Justice Department has dropped its prosecution of John Kearney, a former FBI supervisor in New York, indicted a year ago in connection with the same activities. KEARNEY WAS the first agent in FBI history to be charged with a felony COMEO AND GETT! AT BELL'S PIZZA S. State & Packard 995-0232 Open 11 a.m.-1 a.m. involving official duties. Bell told reporters that a thorough review of unlawful FBI activities during the agency's pursuit of mem- bers of the Weather Underground showed that the responsibility lay at the top and that prosecution of Kearney could not be justified. In addition. to the indictments, Bell also announced that he is taking disciplinary action - presumably in- cluding the prospect of dismissal - against J. Wallace LaPrade, currently an assistant FBI director of the Bureau's New York office "for his con- duct in these matters." BELL SAID 70 other persons will be subjected to disciplinary action ranging from censure to dismissal. Most were members of the New York unit which conducted the anti-radical activities under Kearney's supervision. Bell issued a written statement declaring he had "determined that in HlRFSWD/0 Stereo A .V. Service Fast-Competent RENTALSAT STUDENT RATES 215 S. Ashley 769-0342 Downtown, i block west of Main, between Washington and liberty There's a solution but... r.. Birth deects are forever. Unless you help. March of Dimes this case the most severe sanction of criminal prosecution should be brought to bear at the highest levels of authority and responsibility at which the eviden- ce will support prosecution." Gray was appointed acting director of the FBI by then-President Richard Nixon in May 1972 following the death of J. Edgar Hoover. Gray's nomination as permanent director was later with- drawn during the _height of the Watergate scandal. It was later disclosed that Gray once destroyed Watergate documents for a White House aide. GRAY, THROUGH his lawyer, said he "never participated in or knowingly authorized any illegal conduct." Felt called the indictments "a tragic mistake" and Miller's attorney called the charges "unfortunate." Felt, reached after Bell's announ- cement, said he, Gray and Miller had rejected a Justice Department offer last week to plead guilty to a misdemeanor charge. Miller's attorney confirmed that. Gray, who was in his law office in Groton, Conn., when the indictments were issued, declined comment. But his lawyer, Allan Baron, later issued a statement from Gray that said he had done nothing illegal. MILLER'S ATTORNEY, Tom Ken- nelly, said his client "emphatically denies any wrongdoing and I think when the smoke clears he will emerge as a good man who at all times acted in the best interest of the United States." In the past, Miller has publicly said he authorized breakins after receiving approval from Felt, who in turn, has said the go-ahead came from Gray. Previously, Gray has denied through his attorney that he ever approved any illegal actions. Bell said the dropping of the charges against Kearney, for whom various organizations had raised more than $500,000 in defense funds, did not mean that carrying out orders represents an i t FAST, FREE DELIVERY From 4:30 p.m. excuse to break the law. "And that will not be an excuse in the future, but I do not believe it will be just to prosecute him for activities which now are not likely to recur." Kearney resigned from the FBI in 1972 after 25 years as a special agent and is now an executive with a private security firm. He lives in Simsbury, Conn. Kearney had been charged with five counts in connection with FBI break ins, mail openings and wiretappings between 1970 and the summer of 1972. P ot buyerxs toessed out of Bursicy (Continued from Page 1) Lambert and Michele Pickett could not be reached for comment. Freshperson Christine Hurst and sophomore Jacquelyn Adams also sit on the Board, but were unaffected by the Housing Office's action because they weren't present at the meeting when the marijuana purchase was ap- proved. The money for the party came from Bursley Enterprises, a student fund supported by the Bursley Store, pinball machines and movie fees. DIRECTOR HANSON said the lease terminations were "a reasonable ac- tion," but opinion among Bursley residents was mixed. "It was a good party," commented a Bursley freshperson who asked to remain anonymous. "It is against the law, but provisions should be made so it doesn't happen again without ter- minating the leases." "It was pretty harsh (the lease ter- minations)," said junior Tom Studen- ski, a Bursley resident. "But then again I don't know what else they could have done to them." Sophomore Margaret Siebel, a Bur- sley resident, said terminating the six leaves was the Housing Office's only alternative. "They (Board members) were pretty stupid to get themselves involved in that in the first place," she said. Another Bursley freshperson, who asked to remain anonymous, said he saw nothing wrong in the dope pur- chase. "It was just an ordinary party," he said. "There was booze there, too. Basically it was what some of the students wanted." Lebanon 0 repatriates refugees (Continued from Page 1) to the central sector of the invaded territory. He said the Lebanese had held no prior consultations'with Israel on the resettlement. tlement. Tyre, 50 miles south of Beirut and 12 miles north of the Israeli frontier, is the only. enclave south of the Litani River held by guerrillas and their Lebanese Moslem allies. The river, which zigzags between 12 and 18 miles north of th Israeli-Lebanese border, marks the limit of the Israeli advance. Israel has announced plans to with- draw its troops from almost one-fourth of the occupied zone in a two-stage operation, today and Friday. They are to be replaced by U.N. troops. U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim reportedly told Prime Minister Menachem Begin over the weekend that the United Nations wanted more - a fast, full pullout. Waldheim also issued a report Mon- day in New York, saying the U.N. peacekeeping force would reach its authorized strength of 4,000 by the end of April. The report said the General Assembly would be asked for $58.7 million - instead of the $68 million originally estimated - to fipance the U.N. force. DISCO Lessons at af A Mm 1=1ROORR