Thursday, June 13, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fame Three Source says FBI sent reports to W pers wire cials teak a so ve ll Th that loMs and Hous NI sume ping June Nixon, Kissinger during wiretaps ASH1NGTON (A>) - President Nixon Hoover ordered that they should be de- 13 government officials and four re- its beginning in a telephone call t onally received FBI reports on the livered to H. R, Haldeman, then White porters, were placed under surveillance. J. Edgar Hoover on May 9, tw%9, taps placed on administration offi- House staff chief. In all cases the surveillance involved Dr. Henry A. Kissinger." and reporters in an effort to trace Haldeman continued getting the FBI tapping their home telephones. In at s of national security information, reports until the program was termi- least two cases, individual surveillance BUT ON May 10 1969, accordi iurce familiar with the entire hur- nated in February 1971, also was undertaken. the source, Alexander Haig, then ance program said yesterday. The source said it never was clear singer's deputy as national securil t source told The Associated Press edstory Pa 10 whether Kissinger had initiated the wire- viser to Nixon, went to assistant FBI summaries, signed by J. Edgar ftaps. director William Sullivan, who w ~er, were delivered to the President . The Washington Post yesterday pub- charge of the bureau's internal se to Henry Kissinger at the White In a statement on May 22, 1973, Nixon lished a memorandum identified as deal- division. ;e. said he authorized the wiretapping in ing with the surveillance program. The According to the source, Haig an effort to determie the source of memo sent to William Ruckelshaus on for wiretaps to be placed on c XON AND Kissinger received the leaks of what he described as secret May 13, 1973, when he was acting FBI individuals and said he was acti mares from the time the wiretap- information that were endangering high- director, said, "It appears that the pro- the request of "high Whitel program began in May 1969 until ly sensitive diplomatic negotiations. ject of placing electronic surveillance authority." 1970, when according to the source, EVENTUALLY 17 persons, including at the request of the White House had See NIXON, Page 10 o Mr. from ag to Kis- ty ad- t FRI vas in curity asked ertain og at House Egypt demands U.S. effort for Palestine peace CAlOI) 1_ More than two million Egyptians chanted a joyous welcome to lresident Nixon yesterday as he rode through the streets of this ancient cap- ital to inaugurate a new era in American diplomacy in the Middle East. Then, amid the poop of a state din- ner, their president, Anwar Sadat, blunt- ly told Nixon that the United States must do more to settle the Palestinian ques- tion --_"the crux of the whole problem" in the troubled region. HE ALSO declared again that Egypt would fight if necessary to regain terri- tory now occupied by Israel. "It is in- evitable for a country like Egypt . . . to regain its territory either through peace ful means or by might," Sadat said. Nixon skirted direct responses to Sa- dat's challenges, saying "I did not come with ready-made solutions" to decades- old problems. They will require "a great deal of delicate diplomacy on the part of all parties involved," he said. The presidents' exchange of toasts at the dinner, on the grounds of Kubbeh Palace, injected a tone of political real- ity into what had been almost a euphoric mood of celebration on Nixon's arrival to launch a week-long, five-nation tour of the Middle East. Their aides had said talks that began earlier would lay a strong foundation for peace and future relations. STEPPING front the jetliner that car- ried him from Salzburg, Austria, Nixon had told Sadat: "It is a great day for both our countries." At the dinner, Sadat hailed Nixon's journey as "one of your major achieve- ments" and said it marks a "manifest change of emphasis in yours and in American strategy. We welcome this change with all its political and psy- chological significance." This was a reference to policy shifts by the Nixon administration which has led to rapidly improved relations with once-antagonistic Arab governments such as Egypt's. See THRONGS, Page 10 EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT Anwar Sadat and President Nixoh drive in an open car through a crowd near the Ciro airport yesterday. The sign in the background reads, "Nixon, Remember the Palestinians," a theme reiterated by Sadat during official toasts later in the day. Police and government troops held back the crowd of two million that came out to watch Nixon ride by on his way to the Kubbeh Palace. B~~~ a t rl aoS I er Bullard.pinitiatesbilltond state police subversion unit By DAVID WHITING State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Ar- bor) introduced legislation yesterday to abolish the Subversive Activities Inves- tigation (SAID) of the State Police. Bullard proposed the bill before the state House because the existence of SAID is the "complete antithesis of a democratic society," he explained. HE CHARGED that SAID, which was formed in 1951, "collects information on citizens and terrorized students and pro- fessors during the 50's and 60's when it was referred to as the Red Squad Unit." Bullard asked State Police Director John Plants March 28 for cost-effective- ness and performance information on the division but has not yet received a reply. Plants was unavailable for comment last night and is the only officer allowed to discuss the special division. Complaining about the lack of avail- able information regarding the police unit, Bullard noted that the police budget is scheduled to go before the House Appropriations Committee in the next few weeks. IN JANUARY, after Governor Milliken asked that the number of undercover narcotics agents be doubled, Bullard began his investigation of "secret police." "Probably half of them (undercover agents).are on the take," charged Bul- lord, referring to alleged police payoffs. "Secret police tactics invade privacy and create paranoia," he continued. Stressing that "Oklahoma abolished their secret police three years ago" following an investigation prompted by public pressure, Bullard discussed a "nation-wide effort by civil liberty or- ganizations to stop this secret police activity." HE ALSO emphasized that "under- cover agents may be used for political work." Bullard likened SAID to the White House 'Plumbers, the FBI, and the In- ternal Revenue Service saying, "The existence of a secret police leads to abuse." Bullard has requested SAID to release information on the types of arrests they have made, whether wiretaps are used, and how many files on citizens are main- tained, as well as the number of em- ployes the unit includes and their sal- aries. He also sponsored a resolution that would create a special legislative com- mittee to review surveillance and related activities of the various state agencies. Group blames jobless rate on military By JANET HARSHMAN with Wire Service Reports If you work in Michigan and you've been laid off or you can't find a job, the blame may lie with the Pentagon. The Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) said yesterday that the state's unemployment rate would be cut in half if military spending was redirected into civilian sectors of the economy. "EVERY BILLION dollars spent by the Pentagon costs the national economy 20,000 jobs and 3,200 in Michigan," said Marion Anderson, legislative director of the student-supported consumer research group. Anderson based her remarks on a re- port she prepared with the assistance of professors from Columbia University and Michigan State University, using state and federal statistics. With a budget of $80 billion a year, Anderson said, the Pentagon is responsi- ble for about 260,000 of the state's job- less workers. SHE CLAIMED the Pentagon's budget is "an inflationary force within the econ- omy" and "has acted simultaneously to depress employment and inflate the cur- rency." There would be more jobs, Anderson contended, if the government woul spend money to hire people to work for Gen- eral Motors or to build hotels in the Upper Peninsula, rather than pouring the money into Boeing or Lockheed. "The military industry has become ex- tremely inefficient," Anderson contend- ed, especially because "lots of very high salaries are paid to those who do not produce much of anything or anything at all.' FOR EXAMPLE, she said the $80,000 a retired general may receive could be used to create jobs for eight painters or construction workers at $10,000 apiece. In contrast to the military, the civilian economy includes a vast variety of jobs, Anderson pointed out. Furthermore, she See DEFENSE, Page It