The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXV, No. 28-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, June 14, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages x Senate committee finds no evidence linkinIA to assassination attempts W A S H I N G T O N (/) - The Senate Intelligence Com- mittee so far has found no evi- dence linking any U. S. chief executive with the assassination of a foreign leader, Committee Chairman Frank Church, (D- Idaho), said yesterday. At the same time, members of the House Intelligence panel say they were told sketchy de- tails of CIA involvement in an assassination plot against the late Dominican Republic Presi- dent Rafael Trujillo, but some members were uncertain whe- ther that plot ultimately led to the dictator's murder. C H U R C H made his state- ment after a three-hour session today with former CIA director Richard Helms. "I would have to say that thus far the committee has no evidence that would directly link the CIA involvement in this kind of activities with the presi- dent of the United States," Church told reporters. He said Helms, now U. S. ambassador to Iran, was ques- tioned closely about "murder plots," that might have oc- curred from the late years of the Eisenhower administration through the early years of the Johnson administration. ONLY ONE of five members of the House committee inter- viewed said Thursday that a very brief report to the panel last week would support a state- ment by Rep. James Stanton, (D-Ohio), that the CIA was in- volved in the successful assas- sination of a foreign leader. Rep. Ronald Dellums, (D- Calif.), contending that what the panel was told about the 1961 Trujillo assassination would support Stanton's state- ment, said Trujillo's killing "could be traced to actions that were taken by the CIA." He declined to give details, and Stanton refused to say whe- ther he knows more than the committee was told in a secret session last week or whether he in fact is referring to the Trujillo assassination. TRUJILLO, a long-time dic- tator of the Dominican Repub- lic, was shot down by assassins as he drove outside Santo Do- mingo. Former CIA agent Phi- lip Agee, in his book "Inside the Company," quotes a former CIA official as saying the agen- cy was "deeply involved in planning the assassination, which was done by Cuban exiles from Miami using weapons we sent through a diplomatic pouch." But another member of the House panel, Rep. Michael Har- rington, (D-Mass.), said that if Stanton's statement is based on what the committee was told See NO, Page 10 FRANK CHURCH (D-IDAHO), Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee talks with Rich- ard Helms, former director of the CIA prior to closed hearings on alleged CIA assassination plots. T iland Cmbdia clash in disputed territorial Waters BANGKOK, Thailand (P) - The Thai government ordered naval and marine reinforce- ments into disputed waters of the Gulf of Thailand yesterday after a sea battle with Cam- bodian naval forces in which one Cambodian boat was re- ported sunk and six Thai ma- rines were reported wounded. A clash in the gulf also was reported between Cambodia and South Vietnam. U. S. intelli- gence sources said South Viet- namese troops occupied Poulo Wai, a tiny island 60 miles from both the South Vietnamese and Cambodian coasts, after a bat- tle Tuesday night. It was near Poulo Wai that Cambodian gun- boats intercepted the American freighter Mayaguez. POLICE sources in Bangkok reported an hour-long duel Thursday between Thai and Cambodian gunboats after a Cambodian gunship captured a Thai fishing vessel. The sourc- es said another Thai fishing boat escaped under fire from the Cambodians. It could not be learned whe- ther the fishing boat was re- captured. The battle occurred about 200 miles southeast of Bangkok in waters claimed by both Thai- land and Cambodia. Cambodian boats have captured several Thai fishing boats in the area since the Communists took over the Cambodian government. They claim that the Thai fish- ermen are spying for the United States. AN UNCONFIRMED account in a Bangkok newspaper said a Thai border policeman was shot and wounded in a 15-min- ute battle between Thai and Cambodian soldiers on the bor- der near Aranyaprathet, 200 miles east of Bangkok. It said Thai reinforcements were sent to the area. Elsewhere in Southeast Asia: A L A O T I A N government broadcast charged that an American woman held in a Vi- entiane jail for 10 days was "a CIA spy" who paid Laotian air force pilots to fly their T28 fighter - bombers to Thailand as the Communist Pathet Lao was taking control of the gov- ernment and the armed forces last month. The broadcast said this "shows" that the Ameri- cans still continue to aggress and interfere in Laos." Kissinger, Rabin will continue peace talks WASHINGTON (4)--Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin decided late yesterday to extend their Middle East peace talks into the weekend, height- ening prospects for an early re- sumption of shuttle diplomacy. Rabin flew to New York, Frlday the 13th strikes some By SUSAN ADES - games of paddle ball today," boasted Acting LSA Dean Billy Frye, who ad- and ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Schembechler. "He might blame it on mitted he made a concerted effort to Not only did Burger King have to hold Friday the 13th, but as badly as he got avoid ladders and black cats, seemed al- the pickles and lettuce yesterday, but beat I don't think he could get away most embarrassed that nothing unusual the Whoppers and Whalers as well. with it," said Schembechler of his for- befell him. The ominous evils of Friday the 13th mer star quarterback. "I WISH I could think of something," played havoc with the local fast food Franklin was unavailable for com- apologized Frye. "I guess I lead a pretty factory yesterday afternoon, limiting the ment. dull life, huh?" King's royal menu to Yumbo's and soft President Robben Fleming also had a On the city scene, Mayor Al Wheeler drinks for a whopping three hours. tale to tell. En route to graduation exer- confided that "getting out of bed was PLAGUED by a broken gas main, the cises at the University of Georgia, the only thing that went wrong with me noon to 3 p.m. operation was forced to Fleming, who was slated to deliver the today." subsist on the wonders of the modern commencement speech, ran into car City Hall ducked the day's hex too, microwave which spews only Yumbo's trouble. said Wheeler. "But if anything did go from its futuristic chambers. "FIRST IN Dayton, Ohio, they had to wrong, he added, "I'd probably be the Around the University, football coach change our front tire, and then in At- last one to know about it." Bo Schembechler said he escaped the lanta we had trouble with the electronic C O U N C I L M A N Roger Bertoia, day's curse unscathed, but disclosed system. We were delayed an hour. when asked if the 13th had slapped him, that he himself spread a little of the tra- "However, the rest of the day was paused and said, "My kids came home ditional black magic, very nice and I was graced by Southern from camp today . . . but that's jst a "I BEAT Dennis Franklin in five hospitality," he said, fact." where he will be joined Sunday by Kissinger. "ONE HAS to be always hopeful," Rabin said as he left Blair House after a 45-minute session with the secretary of state. Kissinger told a handful of newsmen that this was now "a relaxed time" in the Middle East negotiating process. His optimism comes with a pick-up of momentum that sources said is likely to return him to the Middle East next month if dif- ferences between Israel and Egypt can be narrowed further. Rabin had planned to stop in New York to attend a dinner tonight giv'en by American Jew- ish organizations and to appear on CBS's "Face the Nation" to- morrow. AT A DINNER given Thurs- day night by Israeli ambassa- dor Simcha Dinitz, Kissinger said the period of diplomatic stalemate "is drawing to a close." He told Rabin: "We could not live with ourselves if we had impaired the well-being and security of Israel." Rabin, evidently reassured during his summit sessions with President Ford, remarked: "I am glad that there is no need for Israel to do something which does not go along with the in- terests of the United States." See KISSINGER, Page 9