The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXV, No. 23-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, June 7, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Ford gets report on CIA IINGTON (UPI) - The Rocke- tee on Intelligence, also probingt ommission delivered to President P an Ilhob sdeuthh rn declined to elaborate. esterday an inch-thick, controver- But the Minneapolis Tribune z port on the Central Intelligence WASI feller C Ford ye sial ref the CIA, reported Agency (CIA) and secret evidence on charges the agency plotted foreign as- sassinations. Vice President Nelson Rockefeller per- sonally handed the 350-page report, bound in a blue cover, to Ford in the President's Oval office. THE REPORT on six months of prob- ing -- mostly into alleged domestic spy- ing on Americans by intelligence groups -did not go into the charges the CIA helped plot the deaths of foreign lead- ers. But separate material on the sub- ject was passed on to Ford. "We did not feel we had the full story on assassinations that would make the basis for conclusions and recommenda- tions," Rockefeller told the President in the brief ceremony attended by five other members of the commission. Ford said he hoped the report's recom- mendations, when implemented, will as- sure "that there .is no question in the future that the CIA will live within the law." DETAILS of the report are expected to be made public over the weekend and Rockefeller indicated earliefall of the commission's evidence will be handed to a Senate committee also probing the CIA and intelligence groups. After receiving the report, Ford said the investigation "will give us the basis for firm recommendations to make sure we end up with a CIA that will do an excellent job and at the same time as- sure the privacy of individuals." The probe of the CIA, FBI and other police and intelligence groups dealt only with their domestic activities, including alleged illegal spying on Americans. De- tails may be made public this weekend. SEN. FRANK CHURCH (D-Idaho) charged yesterday the Rockefeller Com- mission chose "to duck the issue" of as- sassinations and that the alleged plots were "more than simply plans." The chairman of the Senate Select Commit- yesterday the CIA was involved in the assassinations of former Dominican Re- public dictator Rafael Trujillo and Pres- ident Diem of South Vietnam. The newspaper said the Rockefeller Commission itself received evidence the CIA supplied guns to Trujillo's killers and money to South Vietnamese generals who gunned down Diem - then tried unsuccessfully to call off the plans at the last moment. "EVIDENTLY the commission has chosen to duck it (the assassination is- sue)" said Church. There's really no way in this society that this kind of thing can be swept under the rug." f; ::: Ci C 1 }{.:V}y i'' ; '" + L. 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"Thisndmerof incrsen Statet polticanclierpfrlat's saean ecatm By BILL TURQUE Sen. Philip Hart's (D-Mich.) long-antici- pated confirmation Thursday that he will retire from the U. S. Senate in 1976 has touched off state-wide speculation on his successor. Long rosters of prospective can- didates are forming in both- parties, and hotly-contested primary races next sum- mer are expected. Republican observers, encouraged by Hart's withdrawal, see Congressmen Mar- vin Esch (R-Ann Arbor) and Philip Ruppe (R-Houghton) as prime contenders for the nomination at this point. University Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) has also indi- cated an interest in Sen. Hart's seat. THE LIST of Democrats is somewhat long- er, with state Attorney General Frank Kel- ley, Secretary of State Richard Austin, as well as Congressmen Donald Riegle (D- Flint), William Ford (D-Taylor), and Rich- ard VanderVeen (D-Grand Rapids) all in the running. Esch is acknowledged by many to be the favorite on the strength of his resound- ing victory over Democrat John Reuther last November. "He's looking at it very seriously," said an aide to Esch yesterday. "He's consid- ering several factors, including who else might be in the race." THAT "who else" the- aide is referring to is Gov. William Milliken, who is on re- cord as saying he has "a moral obligation" to finish out his term in Lansing, which runs through 1978. One veteran Michigan Republican who thinks Milliken has no de- signs on Hart's seat is former Lt. Gov. James Brickley, now president of Eastern Michigan University. "I don't think he's interested," said Brickley. He's never shown any interest in Washington." Brickley himself has been mentioned by state Republican Chairman William Mc- Laughlin, as a potential candidate, but Brickley says it is not in the cards. "I'M COMPLETELY immersed in the ad- miisration of this university, he asserted. "I don't have to rule the possibility out be- cause I never planned on it." Baker, who has been traveling the state since January attempting to line up party support, indicated "a very deep interest" in a Senate rini. He plans to formally an- nounce his candidacy for the Republican nomination either late this summer or early in September. Secretary of State Austin said his most recent efforts have been aimed at urging Hart to cancel his retirement plans. See MANY, Page 10