The Michigan Daily Vol LXXXV, No. 33-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, June 21, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Death renews talk of CIA-mob link OAK PARK, Ill. (P) - Crime syndi- cate figure Sam Giancana, linked to CIA plots to kill Cuban Premier Fidel Cas- tro, may have been killed to keep him from talking to a federal grand jury, police said yesterday. Giancana, 65, was found late Thurs- day in the basement-kitchen of his home by a caretaker. The dapper underworld leader, who started his career as Al Ca- pone's wheelman and dated singer Phyllis McGuire in recent years, was shot six times. THE SMALL-CALIBER bullets used in the shooting, however, are unlike most of those in mob slayings and could indi- cate that Giancana was killed in a per- sonal vendetta, some detectives said. Others said they believed Giancana was under heavy pressure because of the grand jury investigation. Chicago newspapers, quoting unnamed investigators, portrayed the aging and ailing Giansana as fearful of a possible prison term for perjury and perhaps ready to use mob secrets to bargain for his freedom. Police said the .22-caliber slugs that killed Giancana - five in the neck and one in the mouth - are small compared to those usually used in mob assassina- tions but noted the similarity of the slaying to that of another underworld figure. OAK PARK police Chief Wilbur Reich- ert observed that Anthony Battaglia, 61, was fatally shot in the neck April 29 out- side his suburban home with small cali- ber bullets fired at close range. He was the brother of Sam Battaglia, who is be- lieved to have succeeded Giancana as leader of the Chicago crime syndicate several years ago. . Meanwhile, Sen. Frank Church, (D- Idaho) chairman of the Senate commit- tee investigating the Central Intelligence Agency, said he would give "no cred- ence" to any suggestion that the CIA was in any way connected with the death of Giancana. Church said Giancana may have been shot to prevent him from giving testi- mony to the grand jury. He said the CIA had no motive for murdering Giancana because the committee "already is in possession of the facts and we have other sources." PETER VAIRA, head of the Justice Department strike force in Chicago, said the shooting "doesn't look like it is an official Mafia hit . .. and the manner in which it was done leads us to believe it might have been something personal." About $1,400 in cash, mostly $100 bills, was found on the body, Reichert said, discounting robbery as a motive for the shooting. Reichert also said that Giacana ap- parently knew his killer and admitted him to the basement of his home, a raised ranch in a quiet tree-lined area of Oak Park, one of the near western sub- urbs where many of the crime syndicate leaders reside in rustic, private luxury. Vaira said Giancana made appear- ances in December and February before a grand jury investigating organized crime but doubted his testimony was connected with his murder. merican Indian group-r ends protest By TIM SCHICKy r . :.;'"... Is a surprise move late last night the Native American Student Association (NASA) removed their teepee from University President Robben...:;yw;.;, Fleming"s lawn and apparently ended their 36-t iv hoar vigil without explanation, although no : : s agreement was reached between the demon- strators and the administration. About 20 NASA members had been campedt Out on the front lawn of University President Robben Fleming's S. University mansiontsince Thusrsd-ay evening when they erected the teepee to dramatize their efforts to obtain a cultural center. IT IS not knowsnsvhy the group decided to end their demonstration. NASA members refused to;' comment ots why the vigil ended last nighst. b'ySTrIVEK, aG The University had indicated that the group could remain as long as no property damage oc- curreda 3.y t>ยข x : : 4 n } Earlier Vice President for Student Affairs Hen- rv tJohnson met with NASA inside the teepee for Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN almost two hours in a vain compromise attempt. A young American Indian passes time during yesterday's Native American Student's Association protest on Presi- dent Robben Fleming's front lawn. The students have been occupying the lawn since Thursday to dramatize their See NATIVE, Page 9 demand for a cultural center. DETROIT MAYOR REQUESTS INCREASED FUNDING Young challenges Democratic Congress "Democrats, we are told, really care about people . . . and Demo- crats control the Con- gress. It's time to put- up--or shut up.". -Coleman Young WASHINGTON (UPI) - Democratic Mayor Coleman Young of Detroit yesterday praised the Ford Administration for its efforts to help his city's financial crisis, but attacked the Demo- cratic - controlled Congress for inaction. Young's surprising testimony before a session of the Joint Economic Committee of Congress brought strong reaction from two Democratic members of the panel. THE BLACK mayor of the nation's fifth largest city said his Democratic Party has always talked of a special commitment to the cities, and the urban poor. "Democrats, we are told, really care about people . . . and Democrats control the Con- gress," he said. "It's time, I believe, to putup- or shut up." Detroit has been one of the hardest hit cities in the recession, with unemployment nearing 25 per cent and a financial situation which has caused massive cutbacks in city services. YOUNG SAID since he presented a $2.7 billion plan to rejuvenate Detroit to President Ford sev- eral months ago "we have had repeated signs of interest, cooperation and hope." Sen. Hubert Humphrey, (D-Minn.), committee chairman, and Sen. William Proxmire, (D-Wis.), challenged Young's comments, claiming presi- dential vetoes of job programs were the main deterrent to helping the. cities. Humphrey said forecasts of rising inflation due to spending programs by Ford's economists were "scaring the living daylights out of Con- gress." w N E V E R T H E L E S S, Humphrey said Young's "scolding of this Congress is justified." Proxmire, however, directly attacked Young's See YOUNG, Page 10