THE Summer Daily Vol LXXXIII, No. 38-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, July 12, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Most heated exchanges thus far itchel enials of Watergate continue WASHINGTON (A--Under intense questioning by the Senate Water- gate committee yesterday, former Attorney General John Mitchell dog- gedly clung to his testimony that he turned down the burglary-wiretap- ping plan, despite a statement to the contrary made by his former, assistant. The questioning of jMitchell, in his second day of testimony, became so bitter that at the day's end he commented "It's a great trial -they're conducting up here, isn't it." DURING THE SESSION, Mitchell con- ceded that presidential silence about the Watergate scandal risks public suspicions but predicted "the good name of the Pres- ident is going to be protected by the facts and the President himself." Mitchell's own reputation as an attortney and former attorney general came under severe attack by Sen. Lowell Weicker- (R-Conn.) who cited several evident 'on- flies in Mitchell's sworn testimony before the committee and his earlier statements under oath. The senator elicited from Mitchell that he had not informed the judge in the Daniel Ellsberg Pentagon Papers trial- or anyone else - when he learned that Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office had been broken into by White House "plumbers." The incident was one of the "White House horrors" Mitchell said he feared would be disclosed if he told Nixon about Watergate. WEICKER IN HIS questions suggested that as a lawyer and officer of the court Mitchell should have spoken out because "you knew 'silence might possibly convict an American citizen by means of illegal conduct." Mitchell, however, added that "in retro- spect it probably would have been the right thing" to inform the judge about the break-in. While quizzing Mitchell, Weicker quoted" from a digest of testimony given by for- mer aide Fredrick LRue. LaRUE STATED Mitchell did not reject a political espionage plan presented by G. Gordon Liddy during a strategy meeting on March 30, 1972. Mitchell merely said the plan did not have to be decided on at that time, according to LaRue. "My recollection is very distinct," Mit- chell said. "The matter was rejected. I was tired of hearing about those things and didn't want to hear a b o u t them again." The March 30 meeting was the last of three at which Liddy presented plans 'hat included burglary, wiretapping, mugging, kidnapping and prostitution. Jeb Stuart See MITCHELL, Page 10 AP Photo JOHN MITCHELL takes advantage of a break in the hearings to close his eyes and collect his thoughts. The rest must have been a welcome one for the former attorney general as his day before the committee was highlighted by some of the most grueling and at times bitter cross-examination the hearings have thus far produced. A thr decision attorney status *o patients to medi' The W released case of State Ho a "crimi chosen b experim Court prohibits mental epa tien t psychsugr By REBECCA WARNER the Lafayette Clinic in Detroit could not due to. the "inherently coercive" nature ee-judge panel has rendered a experiment on Doe's brain. The decision of mental institutions: "Institutionalization prohibiting psychosurgery which effectively outlaws all psychosurgery in tends to strip the individual of the support s say could radically change the the state. which permits him to maintain his sense f involuntarily committed mental Basing its findings on testimony from of self-worth and the value of his own and prison inmates with regard psychiatrists, legal precedents established physical and mental integrity. cal research and treatment. during the Nuremberg war crimes trials, "Psychosurgery should never be under- c r rand the Bill of Rights, the panel pro- taken upon involuntarily committed pope- Vayne County Circuit Court panel nounced involuntarily committed mental lations when there is a high risk-low its statement Monday on the patients legally incapable of giving their benefit ratio as demonstrated in this case," "John Doe," an inmate of Ionia "competent, knowing and voluntary" con- the decision said. spital designated by the state as sent to experimental medical procedures. LOCAL 'ATTORNEY, Gabe Kaimowitz, inal sexual psychopath." Doe was rhe judges also argued the surgery would who acted as one of the plaintiffs in the y medical researchers to undergo violate patients' constitutional rights to - Doe suit, expressed exuberance over the ental psychosurgery aimed at freedom of thought and privacy.. curbing uncontrollable violent rage. HE WAS committed involuntarily at Ionia in 1954 for an indefinite period after confessing to the rape and murder of a student nurse at Kalamazoo State Hos- pital, which he had entered voluntarily. The panel ruled that neurosurgeons at ALTHOUGH DOE originally consented to the experiment, he did so under a choice between surgery and continued indefinite confinement at Ionia without treatment. The judges claimed involuntarily com- mitted persons cannot give legal consent aecision yesterday. "As far as I'm concerned, I've never read a decision of anyone's victory that's as great as the victory I just won," Kaimowitz remarked, claiming the panel's decision included "everything I wanted." He predicted the decjsion will affect See PSYCHOSURGERY, Page 9