Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, July 11, 1974 rinin ESen. Gurney indicted on perjury, bribery charges (Continued from Page1) WILLIAMS PLEADED guilty last February to federal charges of income tax evasion and aid- ing a former FHA official in accepting a bribe and was sen- tenced to one year in prison. Gurney has denied any wrong- doing in connection with the fundraising operation, under in- vestigation by the Justice De- partment, Internal Revenue Ser- vice and HUD. As the allegations mounted, the senator went on statewide television in Florida last Dec. 6 and declared, "I have received nothing, I've made no personal gain." HE BLAMED Williams wor using his name to extort money from Florida builders but con- ceded "it's true that I was care- less and unobservant and too trusting." Plumbers (Continuedt from Page 3) Q. Apart from whether you authorized a direct psychologi- cal profile, did you have any knowledge that a psychological profile was being worked on by the CIA or David Young? A. I had no such knowledge. Q. Did you have any knowl- edge whether there was a plan to obtain psychological infor- mation regarding Daniel Ells- berg or his psychological files from his psychiatrist? A. I had no such knowledge. Young, leader of the White House plumbers unit, had tes- tified that the purpose of a break-in was to obtain informa- tion for the profile. Young never mentioned any Kissinger involvement, but CIA psychiatrist Bernard Mal- loy testified last Friday that in an Aug. 12, 1971 meeting Young had told him Ehrlichman and Kissinger had requested the profile. Kissinger was on the stand less than two minutes. Pony Express rides again Thirteen cowhands were enlisted Tuesday to re-enact the days of the Pony Express as part of a protest, sponsored by several Colorado communities, against new U. S. Postal Service procedures for sorting and delivering the mail. The riders carried saddlebags stuffed with postcards from Telluride and Lake City Colorado to Montrose in eight hours. Residents claim it takes the post office, using presumably more modern methods, two to three days to accomplish the same feat. SHORT or LONGI HAIRSTYLES TO PLEASE DASCOLA BARBERS ARBORLAND-971-9975 MAPLE VILLAGE-761-2733 E. LIBERTY- -668-9329 t. UNIVERSITY--662-0354 HANDBOOK TELLS OF PHOSPHORUS WACO, Tex. (P)-Jean Morgan Spencer, assistant professor of geology at Baylor University, is one of four editors of a recently published book, "The Environ- mental Phosphorus Handbook." The book compiles articles on phosphorus by 41 authors from as far away as Japan, Rome, Africa, Canada and Switzerland, and from the United States. Mrs. Spencer said the book is designed to present the opinions and findings of specialists in various scientific fields on the subject of phosphorus. Written chiefly for scientists and government officials inter- ested in the effects of phos- phorus on our environment, the book explores all aspects of the mineral, including how and in what forms phosphorus reaches the earth, the weathering of phosphorus, phosphorus deposits and how to prospect for them, phosphorus in oceans and com- pounds of phosphorus. JOIN THE DAILY STAFF 603 E. LIBERTY Dial 665-6290 Open Doily 12:45A Showsnot1. 3 5, 7, 9 P.M. ENDS THURSDAY S STARTING t (Ow+"Vov,. FRIDAY: G nHOdkman Cybill Shepard in "DAISY M L LE R rin Prodc ppDiectd b MILLER" ~ l ENDS THURSDAY ThAr T "OUR TIME" PG 1955 in a New England private girls school, From the makers of "The Summer of '42" AT 7 AND 9 ONLY STARTING FRIDAY Bad... "JOHNNY Blackuiful . . TOUGH" Gurney, 60, served three terms in the House of Represen- tatives before his election to the Senate in 1968. During his service on the Watergate committee, he was considered a strong defender of President Nixon. THE INDICTMENT charged that as part of the conspiracy, Williams and Groot would use slush fund money for expenses of the senator's Washington of- fice and Florida field offices "and for the travel expenses and other political and personal expenses of Edward Gurney and members of his staff . . - in- cluding the salary of Larry Williams. It also was part of the con- sniracy that Gurney and his staff members "would corrupt- lv, directly and indirectly, ask, demand, exact, solicit, seek, ac- cept, receive, and agree to re- ceive things of value for Ed- ward Gurney and other public officials ... in return for their being influenced in the perform- ance of their official duties ...," the indictment said. Among other things, the gov- ernment charged that Gurney was bribed by the owner of a Vero Beach, Fla., condominium apartment project in exchange for the senator's influence with HUD. The bribe was a fifth- floor oceanfront apartment in the project, the indictment said. THE CATALOG-of charges traces a continuing series of contacts between Gurney for using his associates and Florida builders. The charges of lying to the grand jury stemmed from Gur- ney's testimony last May 13 in which he said he did not know learn until a year later that the money was being used for expenses of his Florida field offices. The indictment charged that Gurney knew of the fundraising scheme before dates he gave in his testimony. GURNEY ALSO was accused of lying when he testified that he had told his law partner's not to accept clients doing business with the federal government. In fact, the indictment said, he had given the opposite instructions. The final lying count said Gurney gave false testimony when he denied instructing For- rest Howell not to award a certain project to Joseph Chap- man. Howell is a former direc- tor of HUD's Florida area of- fices Sinatra stranded in Australia SYDNEY, Australia (M' - 1' Blue Eyes and Australian trade unions both did it their way- singer Frank Sinatra canceled his Australian -tour after a skir- mish with the press, and the unions threatened to strand him here until he apologizes Sinatra was holed up in a Sydney hotel yesterday - re- gretful of the brouhaha but un- repentent, according to his at- tofney. The trouble started Tuesday night when, at a con- cert in Melbourne for which 8,000 fans had paid as much as $26 a seat, he caled journalists "hookers" and "parasites" and other things. He also said from the stage: "W wh ae Go-ientl ents say to hell with them." A labor leader. responded: "Wo the hell does he think he 37 MPG INTRODUCING Peugeot-Diesel 4-door, sunroof INTRODUCING: the only Die- sel station woaon in America INTRODUCING: The sedan that costs about $2,500 less than the other Diesel. TOYOTA ANN ARBOR, Inc. 907 N. 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