'I Page Ten THE SUMMER DAILY Saturday, August 11, 1973 Agent suspected of spying on McGovern fContinued from Page 3) the Internal Revenue Service, and the Departments of Justice, Defense, Commerce and Interior were used to investigate Sen. Ed- mund 1Muskie, (D-Maine) former Democratic Chairman Lawrence O'Brien; McGovern; Henry Kim- melman, McGovern's chief fund raiser, and McGovern staff mem- hers. The newspaper quoted one of the meios as saying information was seat to the White House by Secret Service agent James Bolton about a meeting that at- legedly took ptace between Mc- Govern and an unnamed suhver- sive. IN OTHER EVENTS related o the 1972 caspaign, Gulf Oil onrp. yesterday said that in re- sponse to intense political pres- Lire, it contributed $100,000 to y President Nixon's re-election campaign. Federal law prohibits corpor- ations from making direct politi- cal contributions. The donation was iade at a time when there was growing concern over oil imports, the controversial Alaska pipeline and the'possibility of an energy short- age, but Gulf said specificatty that it "was not seeking any spe- cial favors and did not have any corporate activity under govern- ment scrutiny." IN WASHINGTON, a spokes- man for Watergate special pro- secutor Archibald Cox said that AP Photo several other firms have volun- tarily notified Cox they had made illegal contributions. He declined to name any of the firms or say how many had come forth. . The spokesman said that C'ox's position that voluntary disclosure would be considered a mitigating circiimstance by the prosecutors had not changed. BUT, lIE ADDED, "The inves- tigation is going forward and if corporate officers decide to dis- close illegal contributions only after the invest-igition foicuses on their firms, one ight que, tion how ' otuaturs ithe disclo sure was." Meanchile. at auni David, President Nixon worked with his :hief speechwriter and Water- g'te law rias the White louse amnounced lie would make his promiused response to reve'itions of the Senate Watergate conunli- tee next week. The White Ilose said the re- sponse would conic in a speech in Washington sometime inumid- week. Off to jail again A police matron leads Dorothy Day, 76-year-old editor of the Catholic Worker, off to jail yesterday in Fresno after she was arrested for violating a court restriction on United Fam Workers' picketing. Day said the Fresno jail was "paradise compared to others" she's seen during a half-century of militance. 'UNUSUAL PROCEDURE' Laird hits bombing (Continued from Page 3) "This was not the normal type of reporting procedures used in Vietnam . . . but because of dip- lomatic sensitivity a separate channel of reporting was estab- lished," he said. "AT NO TIME was there an authorization to falsify Air Force, 'U' refuses to publish pay list (Cototied from Page e) agencies receive sex and racial classification of the staff on a regular basis, he added. The Daily's editors have main- tained that publication of detail- ed salary data "may indicate possible discrimination by race or sex, or overt piadding of the salaries of particiily - presti- gious but not so industrious pro- tessoras" The University believes that - the present public disclosures in addition to external and internal audits sufficiently protect the public interest, according to Daane. IN HIS OPINION, Kelley cited numerous legsi precedents, in- cluding a Iwsuit f i I e d against Saginaw Valley College. Last year the small, state-supported colege was ordered to