THE Susnuer Daily Vol. LXXXI I, No. 10-s Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, May 22, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Helms; Nixon named in co ver-up Symington domestic spy plan WASHINGTON I - Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.) said yesterday he has obtained secret White House documents sketching a plan to use the CIA and the Pentagon to gather intelligence information within the United States. Symington said some of the pro- posals were .in documents hidden by ousted White House counsel John Dean for a time in a safety deposit box at a suburban bank. THE DOCUMENTS "set no limits on :he amount of burglary" the Central In- telligence Agency and the Department of Defense could have been involved in, said Symington, acting chairman of the Sen- ate Armed Services Committee. In related Senate hearings yesterday, former CIA director Richard Helms testi- fied his deputy at the CIA, Army Lt. Gen. Vernon Walters, was ordered to discourage an FBI investigation into money linked to the Watergate affair because "that was the President's wish." In still another Watergate development, the White House said yesterday it had a special intelligence unit created in the Justice Department in 1970 to evaluate information about radical organizations. GERALD WARREN, the deputy White House press secretary, said the unit still exists, but emphasized "it was not created for political purposes." 'He said it was organized after President Nixon expressed concern about the evalua- tion of domestic intelligence involving radical and antiwar groups. Tom Huston, a former aide to Dean, told the Armed Services Committee that copies of the plan to gather espionage in- formation were to go to President Nixon and White House chief of staff H. R. (Bob) Haldeman, Symington said. HUSTON, WHO LEFT the administra- tion in 1971 after two and a half years service, testified he dealt only with Halde- man, not Nixon according to Symington. The acting chairman of the Senate panel said the apparent thrust of the plan was to increase the espionage role of the Central Intelligence Agency and the De- partment of Defense within the United States. Symington would not release -the texts of two different sets of documents which r he said "set no limit on the amount of burglary" the intelligence agencies could have been involved in. ..'.., ,Nss , BUT IN ANSWERING newsmen's ques- AP Photo tions, Symington indicated that burglaries FORMER CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Director Richard Helms tells the Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday-that former White House chief af foreign embassies were contemplated by. of staff H. R. (Bob) Haldeman told CIA officials "it is the President's wish" that the plan. the agency approach the FBI to discourage an investigation related to the Water- See SYMINGTON, Page 10 gate case. PRELIMINARY VOTE: City Council moves t revke$5 dop By GORDON ATCHESON unsuccessful," R o b e r t Henry (R-Third City Council last night took the first Ward) said in support of the move to definitive step towards eliminating the rescind the present marijuana statute. city's highly publicized, hotly controversial PREVIOUSLY THE Republicans have five dollar fine for the use and sale of expressed concern that the five dollar fine marijuana. has encouraged drug trafficking within the Council gave preliminary approval to an city. During his inangural speech last ordinance which, if passed a second time, April, Mayor J a m e s Stephenson called will rescind the year-old marijuana law marijuana dealers "social poison" and enacted by the Democratic-Human Rights said "they must be driven out of town." Party (HRP) coalition on the previous Council member Jerry DeGrieck (HRP- council. First Ward) termed the new ordinance NEARLY 200 persons, including street "extremely regressive." He asked that people and a large contingent from the the question of a five dollar penalty for Rainbow People's Party jammed the coun- marijuana use be put on next April's cil c h a m b e r s to vocally protest the general election ballot, allowing the peo- measure. ple to decide the law's fate. The voting broke along partisan political "A lot of people smoke dope. It's a lines as the Republicans cast the affirma- simple fact of life," DeGrieck commented. live votes. The ordinance passed by a 6-3 "ANN ARBOR was the dope capital of tally. the midwest before the five dollar fine "The city has diddled around with the and will continue to be the dope capital state narcotics laws and has been very of the midwest even after the law is re- e law , pealed," he added. Throughout the debate, members of the audience heckled the Republican council- members while passing marijuana ciga- rettes back and forth. In all likelihood the ordinance will come before council again at its next regularly scheduled meeting, June 4. A two-hour public hearing will precede any council action on the measure. CITY POLICE CHIEF Walter Krasny predicted rescinding the p r e s e n t fine would have no major effect on the use of marijuana in the city. He indicated laws against the use of marijuana will not be more stringently enforced if the five dollar fine is repealed. "The probability of getting caught is minimal and the odds of-ft being con- victed are pretty favorable," he said. ASSUMING THE city law is repealed, state statutes governing the use of mari- See POT, Page 10