THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 13, 1974 Page Ti en Conflict cloaks Kissinger bugging role WASHINGTON 0' - Henry Kissinger's future as secretary of state could hinge on how deeply he was involved in 17 wiretaps that ended three years ago but still haunt him at the height of his diplomatic tri- umphs. The fact that 13 government officials and four reporters were bugged between 1969 and 1971 is not in dispute. AT THE CENTER of the con- troversy that led him to threat- en to resign is the question of whether he directly ordered the wire-tapping, was an enthusias- tic participant or passively Judge a ters (cantlnued from Pate 1) William Merrill, an assistant special prosecutor who had argued against separating Ehr- lichman's trial from the others, called it "a change in circum- stances." From the comments in court it appeared likely the judge will delay the start of the trial, originally scheduled next Mon- das, for a week or two to give Ehrlichman's lawyers a chance to go through the papers. "NOW IT APPEARS we are in a position where we will be able to go ahead with all the defendlnts at one', fiesell sad. Ic said today s confer- ence would he to see whether see ral remaining issues can be resolved Btu-zhardt's affidasit, filed by the special prosecutor yester- day along with a motion for G;esell to reconsider Tuesday's decision, appeared to satisfy the judge that legal require- mnents for prosecution informa- tion to a defendant had been met. Meanwhile, in another Water- gate-related development, Presi- dential Counselor Dean Burch called upon the House Judiciary Committee yesterday to "clean its own house" over leaks to the news media. complied with the judgment of the attorney general and the director of the FBI. Kissinger told an - emotional news conference in Salzburg, Austria, on Tuesday that his "office" supplied the names of individuals to the FBI. He claimed essentially the same depersonalized role last Septem- ber in confirmation testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. However, an FBI report dat- ed May 13, 1973, as quoted yes- terday by the Washington Post, said: "It appears that the pro- ject of placing electronic su- Vice President Gerald Ford also said news leaks about the role of Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in national security wiretaps "is a very strong argument for open hearings." IF THE committee does not hold open hearings voluntarily, Ford said, "I think the public ought to rise up and demand it. Blurch said "it would be a tragedy, a calamity" if Kissin- ger resigned from office. Ford described such action as "catas- trophic " Kissinger said on Tuesday that he would quit unless he is cleared of allegations of lying about the wiretaps. lord and Burch appeared at a question-and-answer session with reporters in the office of White House Communications Chief Kenneth Clawson. BURCH SAID that House Ju- diciary Committee Chairman Peter Rodino (D-N.J.) "seems to have lost control" of the im- peachment inquiry and the judiciary members. Rodino, apparently angered by the latest leaks from his committee, scheduled a closed meeting of committee Demo- cra1 to follow the day's pre- sentation of evidence. veillance at the request of the edged at a news conference that White House had its beginning the 17 taps had been instituted in a telephone call to Mr. J. Ed- "in an effort to pinpoint re- gar Hoover (the late FBI direc- sponsibility for leaks of highly tor) on May 9, 1969, from Dr. - sensitive and classified infor- Henry A. Kissinger." mation, which, in the opinion AND HOOVER, according to of those conducting our foreign a Knight newspaper story last policy, were compromising the weekend, quoted Kissinger in nation's effectiveness in nego- a memorandum as saying: tiations and other dealings with "Keep up the investigation and foreign powers." if you find somebody, we will That same day, Kissinger told destroy them." The New York Times in an in- Kissinger said at Salzburg terview that he had seen sum- that he could not recall the re- maries from several wiretaps mark. placed in 1969 and 1974. But he In a letter to the committee said he had not asked that they chairman, Sen. William Ful- be installed nor had he specific- bright (D-Ark.), without refer- ally approved them in advance. ring to any specific "leaked" AS PRESIDENT Nixon's na- documents Kissinger said he tional security adviser, Kissing- had explained apparent discrep- er said he had conferred once ancies to members of the com- or twice early in 1969 with mittee. "The innuendos which Hoover and told the FBI direc- now imply that new evidence tor of his "very great concern" contradicting my testimony has that national security informa- come to light are without foun- tion be fully safeguarded. dation," he wrote. On May 29, Kissinger ack- KISSINGER was first drawn nowledged that his "office" had into the bugging dispute 13 supplied names of some of the months ago. members of the National Secur- William Ruckelshaus, then ity Council to the FBI begin- acting FBI director, acknowl- ning in 1969 to wiretap their Throngs hail Nixon iniulned from v-i-:3 MORE CROWDS turned out at M O M E N T S L A T E R, dusk to see Nixon travel agait Sadat sounded a hard line on by motorcade to his meeting the Palestinian issue, telling with Sadat in Al Tahra Palace. Nixon the "real cause" of trou- As he left the Kubbeh Palace, ble in the Middle East was ag- trumpets blared and an escort gression by Israel against the of two dozen blue-helmeted and Palestinian nation, white-coated motorcycle police Saying he wanted to be can- flanked his black limousine and did to avoid misunderstandings five jeeploads of riot police. in the future, Sadat declared All day long, the crowds there was "no other solution, no were friendly and warm - other road to durable peace" waving, applauding and cheer- than settlement of the emotional ig. and political issues concerning TIEY WAVED signs, plar- the Palestinians ards and hand-painted banners Presumably the Egyptian praising the visiting American president was touching on chief executive in both Arabic some of the issues he and Nixon chiEeit hA had covered in their opening "Keep it hp, Nixon," one round of talks. said. Others read: "You have our confidence," and "God EGYPTIAN security officers, bless Nixun." in an estimate relayed byb - spokespersons with the travel- ing White House, said more y Offcia Buletin than two million people had La fficial thronged the streets to cheer Nixon and Sadat as they rode Thursaay, June 13 shoulder-to-shoulder in an open na aCalendar litmousine from the airport. wuos: Dr. Kat A. Meninge tectures on "whateveri Became o Throngs waiting hours in 90- Sin?" recorded 3/13, 91.7 Maz, degree heat showered the 10:00 am., President with cheers and General Notices chants of "Neek-zon! Neek-zon! - June 25(4:0)p.mI)i last date asherue n nfoe Spring.5uriuiuir Term when Neek-zon!" as he rode inan Registrar's office wit atow reund open limousine with the Egyp- for a 50 per cent witharawa. tian leader from the airport to -- Kubbeh Palace, where the Pres- ident is staying overnight. Ladesand Children's Nixon is the first American Hairstyling a Specialty- president to visit Egypt since Aoointments Available Franklin Roosevelt made the trip during World War II. ascola Barber Sps - Arbortand-971-9975 Male Vitage- 761-2733 E. Lberty-668-9329 M-PIN BOWL ING E. University-662-354 Win a Free Game U-NION LANGES OPEN 11 A.M telephones. He described wfre- taps as "a distasteful thing in general" and declined to ex- plain what he meant by his "of- fice." "I am responsible for what happens in my office and I won't give the names of the peo- ple who did it," he said. Nixon, Kissinger knew of taps? (Continued from Page3) Haig never identiifed Kissin- ger or anyone else as the authority. Neither did he men- tion the telephone call the day before between Hoover and Kissinger. HAIG DESCRIBED the news leaks and told Sullivan they could "ruin the foreign policy of the United States." From that time on, Haig per- iodically would call the FBI and say, "The White House wants a tap on so-and-so." Under strict o r d e r s from Hoover, the taps remained in force until Haig or someone else at the White House ordered them lifted. The duration of the taps varied from one month to 21 months in one case. HOOVER WAS quoted as say- ing, "The White House request- ed these taps and they are to stay on until the White House asks us to take them off." H-aig would periodically call and say, "We don't need them anymore. They've served the purpose." In his testimony, the Presi- dent said hoover, Kissinger and Atty. Gen. John Mitchell de- termined who was to be tapped "THOSE wiretapped were se lected on the basis of access to the information leaked, mate rial in security files, and esi dente that developed as the it quiry proceeded," Nixon said. "Information thus obtained,' he added "was made available to senior officials responsibl: for national security matters it order to curtail further leaks.' Defense spending slammed c(11tunedfrominPage3 claimed, the military economy is under no cost pressure since "they can pay anybody any- thing they want." While many assume that spending on military contracts such as the Supersonic Trans- port (SST) creates jobs, An- derson said such contracts "put more people out of work." "For every worker that Sen. Henry Jackson would have picked up in Seattle (to work on the SST), she claimed, two workers, maybe a policeman and a teacher, somewhere in the United States, aren't find- ing jobs." ACCORDING to the PIRGIM report, Michigan suffers to an exceptional degree from de- fense spending because of the state's large automotive and U clericals to unionize? (costinuied from Page 5 until the election is a s n r e thing, according to its drector. And even then, Thiry claeis that MERC may find clericals here far less enthused about unions than they now appear. "A good deal of the activity at this stage of organizing could have very little to do with is- sues or even with unions. It might have to do with a ;riend saying, I signed a card, will you?' - and rather tran ag- gravate that friend, a person will agree. It doesn't abligate themr to do anything. "But, at the pint where we think the attention of the em- playes is on the decision, 'Do I vote'tole representedor not?' that's the time to talk about issues," lhe says. tourist industries. Prof. Bruce Russet of Yale, a major source for the report, analyzed the effect of military spending on other industries to find out, Anderson said, "what went down when the military budget went up." His findings showed that the produ'ction of durable goods such as automobiles declined, as did tourism. "SO MICHIGAN has doubly suffered," Anderson s a i d, "since our two biggest indus- tries are hardest hit." Furthermore, Anderson said, the state's loss of 3,200 jobs per billion dollars of Pentagdn spending is "especially intoler- able when nearly 10 per cent of Michigan workers can't find work." To combat the problem, PIR- GIM has recommended a $20 billion cut in the military bud- get, which Anderson predicted would create at least 65,000 jobs in Michigan. men's clothes with the of PIANO LESSONS JOAN HOERLEIN - . - currently working on her doctorate at the University, will be taking appoint- ments for private instruction. FOR ENROLLMENT, CALL 769-4980 Ann Arbor Music Mart 336 SOUTH STATE Open 10:00o .m,-7:00 o,m, Mon.-Fri.; Sot. 'ii 6:00 UNIVERSITY DANCERS at POWER CENTER FRI., JUNE 14 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets at the door! $2, $1 for students Presented as part of the 18th Annual National Convention of the American Dance Guild with the support of the Michigan Council for the Arts