Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY LAWYERS CITE 'BIASED' JURY: Watergate appeal trial begins (Continued from Page 1) | KREINDLER SAID 80 per before ruling, and Supreme! could have obtained similar cent of the jurors had shown Court appeals are certain if evidence from other sources. either casual or no interest in the defendants should lose.I Nixon was excused from tes- the scandal at all and five of Meanwhile, they remain free, tifying in his aides' trial be- the 12 final jurors thought it and Haldeman, Ehrlichman and cause of poor health. was unfair to prosecute the four Mitchell are writing books. "There is no basis in this trial Nixon aides when the former record that the result would President was pardoned by MARDIAN'S CASE was argu- have been any different if Mr.' President Ford. ed later in the day, separately Nixon had testified," Kreindler He noted that a fifth defend- from the others, because his said. ant, former Nixon re-election lawyer was once partner to one committee lawyer Kenneth Par- of the appeals judges. Only five WILLIAM HUNDLEY, de- kinson, was acquitted by the judges heard lawyer Davidj fense lawyer for Mitchell, at- same jury. "It was not a jury Ginsburg argue for Mardian. tacked Sirica's questioning of that went in and came back and '"Mardian's case should never prospective jurors as inade- said 'Guilty, Guilty, Guilty, have gone to the jury," Gins- quate to determine the effects Guilty, Guilty,"' Kreindler burg said. "It's impossible to of Watergate publicity. I said. "It was a jury that went believe the trial court's grev- IKreindler acknowledged that in and came back with a ver- ions errors." a few of the jurors may have diet that said 'Guilty, Guilty, Ginsburg said Mardian had had "vague impressions" about Guilty, Guilty, Innocent."' left the employ of the Commit- the defendants' guilt, but said tee For the Re-election of the after hearing three months KREINDLER SAID the evi- president months before the worth of evidence, "those im- dence considered by the jury cover-up conspiracy was form- pressions could not have played "showed a massive conspiracy ed, but Kreindler challenged his any part in their deliberations." by the president and his two statement. He said from interviews with aides to obstruct justice and de-I potential jurors before the trial fraud the United States, "THE GOVERNMENT showsI started in the fall of 1974 " it The defendants face jail' Mardian was a central figure turned out that the citizens of terms of 2 to eight years. Es- in the planning of this conspir- the District of Columbia did not timates vary, but the appeals acy," he said. "Mr. Mardian follow Watergate closely." court might wait six months was guilty by his own words and j j t I . t) t r " I f acts." Meanwhile, in Chicago, liter- ary appraiser Ralph Newman was fined $10,000 for falsifying documents that helped Nixon gain $576,000 in income tax de- ductions.1 RETIREMENT ADVICE. RECOMMENDED j Wednesday, January 7, 1976 hopefuls (Continued from Page 1) ubli aa Party for the past 15 years ard has made abortive atte--nts for Senate and Con- gressional seats. More conservative than Bak- er, Huber has said that if he ,does not receive the GOP nom- ?Pation-a very likely possibil- ity-he will run as third party candidate this November. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Mel- vin Jay Schwartz, an attorney who specializes in estate plan-} ning, says: "The great middle-class re-I tired section of our population is ignored, uninformed and eas- ily harmed financially by ev- eryhody from con artists to their children." Schwartzrsays he has coun-1 seled more than 4,000 retired persons and "not more than 20 of them had proper advice in planning their retirement." The greatest mistake, he be- lieves, is not spending some money for sound advice. "But people will take the word of a supermarket clear, a bank tell- er, a friend's counsin - almost anyone whose information is, free." AP Photo . Down hill doliheads These are not glassy-eyed Skid Row freaks re covering from drunken stupors, but masked and costumed children participating as symb ols for a West Germany skiing tournament. t pt F I may quit probe for Hoffa in N.J DETROIT (UPI) - A federal source says "logistical prob- lems" may force the FBI to abandon its search in a New Jersey# dump for the body of missing former Teamsters President James Hoff a. A U.S. magistrate in Newark has given the FBI three ex- tensions on a search warrant to dig in Moscato's Dump in Jersey! City, but a federal source in Detroit said yesterday it is not likely the warrant will ever be executed. HUBET DECLARED that he will simultaneously seek the Re- nliblican, Conservative, a n d Americah Independent Party nominations which violates a state law prohibiting a person from running for more than one party's nomination. However, he said he believes the law does not apply to fed- eral offices such as Senate seats. Described as a "militant" conservative, Huber won elec- tion to the House in 1972 by waging a tough, anti-busing campaign in the 18th district that is exclusively Detroit su- burbs. He was ousted two years later by John Blanchard who won hndily with a 26,000 vote mar- gin. HUBER SERVED in the state Senate from 1965 to 1970 and prior to that he was mayor of Troy for five years. In 1970, the wealthy indus- trialist gave up his state post to rim for the Senate but was beaten in the primary by Le- Pore Rom-ney, wife of former Governor George Romney. m; * CLOWNS-BALLOONS-LIVE DIXIEL ND h ~ firs J. .r T ! CLOWNS-B ALLOON-LIVE DIXIELAND BNS FREE PRIZES .....o °- JacksonJ REGISTER FOR OUR GRAND 1-34-on HOURS OPENING PRIZES. NO PUR- DowntownWED,THURS,FRI CHASE NECESSARY! WORLD Ann Arbor .1 VILLAGE 610P.® GRAND Prize-10'x10'Greenhouse MALL Stadium SATURDAY 10-10 2nd Prizes-TWO 10 Sreed Bikes.A - I 0 % I- J_ n.-l-_w ., eLocated in the SNA ~w MEANWHILE, a spokesman for the FBI is Newark said pub- lished reports that the FBI has decided that Hoffa's body is not buried in the dump are "totally untrue." The spokesman said no digging was underway, but added that "no final decision has been made yet." The Detroit News reported in its Tuesday editions that the FBI has given up on the New Jersey dump and had no plans to seek an extension of the search warrant, which expires Sun- day. Federal authorities in Detroit refused to comment. THE FBI was originally told about the dump by a secret informant who also claimed to know the identities of Hoffa's killers. Three New Jersey men he named were brought to tes- tify before a grand jury, but all three took the Fifth Amendment and refused to testify. The three New Jersev suspects are Salvatore Brigtiglio, an official of Teamsters Local 560, his brother Gabriel, and Thomas A. Andretta. SU-M,,STUDENTS: The University's Enrichment Program offers you the opportunity to take courses during Winter 3 Term in the Practical and Vocational Arts at the Washtenaw Community College Campus. This Fall's course selection includes Auto Serv- ices, Welding, Typing, Black Art, Carpentry, Photography, etc. The cost is $12.50 per credit hour with the registration fee waivered for U-M students. FOR MORE INFORMATION AND COURSE REGISTRATION, CALL WCC AT 971-6300 - - i Daily Official Bulletin Wednesday, January 7 Day Calendar Classes begin. t WUOM: Economist Eliot Jane- way. "How to Avoid Another 1929," 10 am. ISMRRD: "Single Malformations: Facial Anomalies Including Cleft Lip and Palate," 130 S. First Ct., 3 pm. Industrial & Operations Eng.: JohnNeuhardt, OSU, 'cApproaches to Planning Small Experiments with Budget Constraints," 229 W. Eng., 4 pm. Hockey: UM vs. Czech Nat'l Championship Team, Kil a nhd o, Czechoslovakia, Yost Ice Arena, 7:30 pm.- Music School: Dennis Horton, DMA trumpeter, Recital Hall, 8 pm. General Notices Att. U-M Faculty Members: Dur- ing Winter Term, Michigan Me- morial - Phoenix Project will make a limited number of grants for re- search in peaceful uses of nuclear energy, "l. work in social, physi Scal. & biological sciences. Requests for $3,000 or less considered appro- priate. Grants may cover equip- ment, supplies, research assistance, r& field trips, not salary or publica- tion expenses. Only projects rated "excellent" or "very good" by Di- visional Review Boards likely to be considered for funding. Priority goes to: 1) new faculty, particular- ly those seeking research support from outside agencies, 2) establish- ed faculty a new area of research. Lower priority goes to faculty who have received extensive Phoenix support. Return applications to Phoenix Project by Fri., Jan. 30, 1976. Grants will be made by April 1, 1976. Application blanks noW available at Phoenix Project office, Phoenix Memorial Lab, North Cam- pus, 764-6213. i1 00uK SA LE FORAFEW DAYS ONLYZ2 3u 3O0FF ALL. HARDCOVER BOOKS* CENTICORE'S POST-CHRISTMAS SALE AFFORDS YOU A ONCE-A-YEAR OPPORTUNITY TO AVAIL YOURSELF OF A VERY GENEROUS OFFER TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF A POST - CHRISTMAS SALE THAT AFFORDS Y O U A ONCE-A-YEAR OPPORTUNITY . .. 1. Cash or Check only Quantities Limited * LDEB Library Excepted (2). All Sales Final