THE Sununer Daily /o1. LXXXIII, No. 55-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, August 4, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages Admits deep cover-up involvement tels of role I concealing Hunt's file WASHINGTON Ap - Former FBI chief L. Patrick Gray admitted yes- terday he read secret documents be- fore he burned them, then lied about the event for months amidst the Watergate cover-up. Gray also told the Senate Water- gate committee he warned President Nixon 19 days after the Watergate break-in that "people on your staff are trying to mortally wound you by using the CIA and the FBI" BUT THE former acting FBI director contradicted much testimony given earlier in the day by Lt. Gen. Vernon Walters, the deputy director of the CIA, who told the committee he fended off White House AP Photo L. PATRICK GRAY, former acting director of the FBI, opens his testimony yes- terday before the Senate Watergate Committee by reading a prepared statement. Gray told the committee he read secret documents before burning them. Justice department reopens probe of Kent State deaths " WASHINGTON 0P) - The Justice De- partment yesterday reopened its investi- gation of the 1970 killing of four Kent State University students and suggested the case may go to a federal grand jury. Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson said he re- vived the case "to make sure the depart- ment knows as much as can possibly be learned as to whether there were no vio- lations of federal law in this matter." FOUR STUDENTS were killed and nine others wounded by Ohio National Guards- men who fired a 13-second burst of gun- fire into a group of students demonstrat- ing on May 4, 1970, against the dispatch of troops into Cambodia. The National Guard, stationed on cam- pus after three days of disruptions, at first said shots were fired in response to a sniper but later said there was no evi- dence of sniper fire. A state grand jury, exonerated the Na- tional Guard, and former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell dropped the case in August 1971, saying there was no evidence to justify calling a federal grand jury. RICHARDSON SAID he had no reason to believe Mitchell's decision was wrong, but that "there are some areas where an additional inquiry is desirable." He did not elaborate and neither did Asst. Atty. Gen. J. Stanley Pottinger, who heads the Civil Rights Division conduct- ing the new investigation. Pottinger said he sought permission to reopen the case because he was dissatisfied with some aspects of the original probe. MEANWHILE, Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.) released copies of letters from three Na- tional Guardsmen who were in the skirm- ish line. The letters "seem to indicate that it is possible that it was in fact FBI informer Terrence Norman who fired the first shot," Bayh said in a letter to Rich- ardson, which was inserted into the Con- gressional Record with the other letters. Bayh said the commander of a National Guard company, whose name he with- held, said in a letter July 27: "Four enlisted men made the following statement, "As Norman ran toward our lines, people were chasing him yelling, 'stop that man-he killed someone.' " "ANOTHER MAN, a lieutenant, over- heard Norman tell the campus police, "I think I shot one of the students--the students grabbed me and started beating me, so I pulled my gun,' " the commander wrote. efforts to bring the intelligence agency into the Watergate affair. The Gray-Walters conflicts concerned whether there was danger that the FBI's Watergate investgation could reveal CIA operations in Mexico, and who tried to promote that theory. The papers Gray burned were given to him June 28, 1972, in the office of John Ehrlichman, then top domestic advisor to President Nixon. They had been taken from the safe of E. Howard Hunt, a former White House consultant since convicted in the Watergate break-in. GRAY ACKNOWLEDGED in his 51- page prepared statement to the Senate committee that he was never directly ordered to destroy the two envelopes of papers. "But there was, and is, no doubt in my mind that destruction was intended," he said.. Ehrlichman and former White House counsel John Dean have each testified he did not intend for Gray to burn the papers. Gray, however, said Dean told him "that these files were 'political dyna- mite,' and 'clearly should not see the light of day.' " GRAY SAID the documents followed a route from under his shirts in an apart- ment closet to his personal safe and then to a chest of drawers at his Stonington, Conn., home. "I distinctly recall that I burned them during Christmas week with the Christmas and household paper trash," he said. "Immediately before putting them in the fire I opened one of the files. It contained what appeared to be copies of 'top secret' State Department cablegrams. "THE TEXT of the cable implicated offi- cials of the Kennedy administration in the assassination of President Diem of South Vietnam. I had no reason then to doubt the authenticity of the 'cable' and was shaken at what I read." Gray did not know the cables had been falsified by Hunt. The burned papers came to haunt Gray during his Senate hearings in March on his nomination to be FBI director. He said he talked to Dean about the papers early that month but did not tell Dean he had See GRAY, Page 5 Potfinger