Page-Ten THE SUMMER DA{LY Prc .ra t1 10 Judge indicts Mitchell, Stans for $200,000 cover-up fund rrfaay, may t t, Ivvj 3 (Continued from Page } connected with the Nixon cam- paign McCord said there had been periodic discussions between him and Liddy about the proposed Watergate burglary extending back to December 1971. "My best recollection of the conversation at that particular point was he referred to the fact of previous approval of the opera ion and that Mr. Mitchelt ..in effect had told him that let's go ahead and be preparedto get into operation as quickly as pos- sible and he said by that, Mr Mitchell meant within 30 days if possible." Both Mitchell and Stans also issued statements through the Nixon campaign committee. STANS, BUDGET director tin- der President Dwight Eisen- hower and before that a deputy postmaster general, had been Nixon's chief fund raiser in the 1969 campaign also. "I am greatly dismayed by the action of the grand jury," he said in denying any wrongdoing. "I expect that when all the facts are heard I will be vindicated." The indictments are the high- est-reachin charges to date in the ballooning scandal know by the all-encomnassing name of Waterate. Only once in history has a US. attornev general been indicted and onty one Cabinet member has eer been sent to prison. NIXON NNlI'.) wili"m Colby as head of the fI A. Pentagon general o lsl . Fred Buzhard Jr. was anointad as a special coamel in the White Iose with "full resnso'ibilite in matters re ating to the Watergate investi gation The sh~fliug followed by 11 dys the resign tion of Nixon's closest aides, H. R. Haldeman and John Fhrlichman, as chief of staff and domestic assistant re- spectively. Press secretarr Ronald Ziegler, in announcing the shifts and Con- nally's return as a oat-time, un- paid adviser, sid Nixon intends to maintain more direct commun- -ation with his Cabinet, The President informed the Cabinet about the changes before making them public. DEAN, DISMISSED as White House counsel April 30, issued his statement through an interme- diary in wake of published re- ports that Senate and Justice Department lawyers feel he has no evidence linking Nixon to the Watergate coverup. There have been contrary reports that he has such evidence. Sound System Problems? REPAIR IS OUR BUSINESS TAPE RECOR SPECIALISTS INC. is the finest equipped Audio Service Company in Washtenew County and we're located right here in Ann Arbor. Be i a tape recorder, amplifier, or a high quality FM tuner, you can ex- pect the best from TUS. For es- tablished quality eepoio service, backed by a full 90-day war-I ronty, see us at 300 S. Thay- er St. in the Self Tower Hotel across from the side of Mil Auditorium. or call 663-4152 "The information contained in these stories is neither complete nor accurate," he said. "I have not. and will not, leak my testi- mony to the media." While he was still the official presidential lawyer, Dean issued a statement saying he would not be made a scapegoat for others' misdeeds. lie later put docu- ments info a bank safe deposit box and turned the key over to U.S. Dist. Judge John Sirica, wan will hold a hearing Monday on their disposition. "BLATANT EFFORTS have been made to publicly intimidate me," tean said in the statement. "Efforts have been made to pre vent me from obtaining relevant information and records; at- tempts have been made to in- fluence the handling of my testi- mony by the Watergate prosecu- tors; restrictions h a v e been placed on the scope of my tetsi- many as it relates to the White Misuse," Dean did not say who was to blame. "There have been discussions within the White House during the past four or five months as to how to end the Watergate mat ter, but these discussions have always ended with an unwillin'- ness to accept the truth for what it means," Dean said. Meanwhile, the trial judge in the Pentagon Papers case yester- day revealed a memo frot the new acting FBI director William Ruckelshaus, disclosing that Dan- iel Elsberg was overheard o wiretaps as long as two years before he released the papers to the news media. THE JUDGE'S announcement stopped further proceedings in the controversy-wracked trial as the government was ordered to find all records on electronic sur- veillance of Ellsberg. \ .; . 1 "I want them now." the judyse{ declared, saying the discovery was so serious it could take pre- cedence over scheduled leg arguments aimed at throwing out the case. The government had been tim- der orders for more than a year to tell the judge about all wire- taps relating to the trial. The memo from Ruckelshaus said at least one of the times Ellsberg was overheard in 1969 and 1970 was while he was a guest at the home of Morton Hal- perin, a former deputy assistant secretary of defense. He sAid it is believed Halperin, a trial wit- ness, was under electronic sur- veillance then. IT WAS the first disclosure tlat Ellsbeeg, whose name did not surface publicly until 1971, wein he released the Pentagon papers, had been overheard on taps. NOW SHOWING "2001: A SPACE OD'YSSEY" Once Only at 8:00 P.M. Sat. & Sun. matinee 2:00 P.M. SPECIAL LATE SHOW Fri. & Sat. at midnight "HA ROLD & MA UDE" 700 Subscribe to The Daily ;I :. : I , ]; { { , ! I ,, . . I BAHA'I FILMS 8:00 P.M. -- Have You Heard The News, My Friend? -Baha'i Activities in the Deep South and Jamaica 9:00 P.M. -- Give Me That New Time Religion with Dizzy Gillespie Seals and Crofts. 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