Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 24, 1976 1 Page Two THE MICHICAN DAILY Saturday, July 24, 1976 Jury finds Howe guilty on sex charge Ford said to request more wiretaps (Continrued from Pate l) I think justice will be done in District Court." Howe's wife, who has been with her husband in each of his court appearances, said, "He will be proven innocent in Dis- trict Court." IN HIS closing arguments, prosecutor Philip Palmer told the jury: "You may feel badly for Mr. H1owe. You may feel a career is on the line . . . But I submit you cannot have a de- cision on that. There are many tragedies in this life." Mitchell then told the jury: 'Allan Howe is not here today asking for sympathy. He's here 4 There IS a ~ difference' ; : PREARE FOR: OvTOe;r35years " of experience " DCAT and saecess " A Smallclasses : LSAT - : Voluminous home G E stud materials : GRE "''' Courses that are * II D constantly updated@ .ATGS8 -t-tr----- NPA Tapetfacilities for: reiews of class * 0 A lessons and for use.0 " A of supplementary . S FLEX materials f EC M Make-ups for * SECFMG sed lessos :NAT'L MED DOS:# HAI.DENT DOS " 'lriteor Wll .* " 1946 Paulin* Blvd. e Aa Arbw*11 B 5-31#9 " 00 1 S EDUcATIONAL. cENTER " * Esn encEuIs As2 L7 .rsninaS 0iaUC*" asking for justice. If his career is wrecked, that remains to be seen." Ie described the prosecution's case a a sham and said an ac- count by the decoy prostitutes of their conversation with Howe was "a contrived, fabricated script." HOWE DID not immediately pay the fine. The judge gave the defense 30 days to pay the fine, while the appeal is being made. Howe, in a statement issued by a campaign aide yesterday, said. "I am innocent of this misdemeanor charge and I in- tend to keep fighting. "I have said from the begin- ning that because of the mas- sive and prevasive pretrial pub- licity containing inflamatory and untrue statements, which this court openly acknowledged, it made a fair and impartial trial for me impossible. "I HAVE said before, and still do, that I want to tell my side of this matter . . . I shall, at the appropriate time, either in court, or, if necessary, in another public forum, tell all that I know about this matter. "I'm still a candidate and I will continue to fight for what I know is right," Howe said. Howe is not opposed for re- nomination in the Democratic primary, but he will face op- position in the general election, Two Republicans, Dan Mar- riott and J. Preston Hughes, are seeking their party's nomination in the Sept. 14 primary. IN WASHINGTON, Sen. Frank Moss (D-Utah) said that while he has compassion for Howe and his family, he still stands by his earlier statement that it would be best for Howe to step down from office. Moss said, however, that, "until he has exhausted his legal remedies, I will not comment on the crim- inal charge against him." WASHINGTON '?)--A House subcommittee chairman con- tended yesterday that the Ford administration wiretaps more than the Nixon administration did. But the Justice Department said he misinterpreted its rec- ords and that the number of taps actually declined. "We've seen a marked, dra- matic increase in wiretap re- quests under Ford," Rep. John Moss (D-Calif.) said after a Ford-sought court order success- fully blocked American Tele- phone & Telegraph Co. from giving the subcommittee its rec- ords of government wiretap re- quests. "WHO IS he tapping? Why the escalation?" asked Moss, chairman of a House subcom- mittee on investigations and oversight. He said the panel's counsel will ask the court next week to lift its ban. Moss said a Justice Depart- ment affidavit outlining its wire- tap requests to AT&T shows 76 in 1972; 95 in 1973; 141 in 1974, the year in which Ford became president; 141 again in 1975 and 58 for the first six months of this year. The Justice Department said the number of wiretaps actually undertaken dropped from 190 in 1974 to 122 last year. THE difference appeared to be over what was being counted -wiretap requests or letters making the requests. A Justice Department spokes- man said, "The reason why there is an increase in letter requests to the telephone com- pany is because of a change in policy between the Justice De- partment and AT&T." The spokesman said that "prior to 1974, one letter re- questing a wiretap could cover several wiretaps. After 1974, Justice and AT&T officials agreed that one letter should cover one request. "ALSO AFTER 1974, the at- torney general could terminate a wiretap, then after a review, reinstall the tap, but this would take an additional letter of re- quest." A temporary restraining or- der prohibiting the release of AT&T's records was issued by U.S. District Judge Oliver Gasch on Thursday, hours after President Ford asked the Jus- tice Department to "undertake such action in the courts . . . as may be appropriate to pre- vent the disclosure of this sen- sitive information." "THE President has decided to stonewall this subcommittee and stonewall the people of this nation," Moss charged. "The President is charged with seeing that the laws are faithfully executed. Rather than carrying out his responsibility, he is in- terferring with the legislative powers of the Congress enum- erated in . . . the Constitution," Presidential spokesman Ron Nessen declined comment on Moss' statement because he said the matter was in litigation, There was no indication how many, if any, requests came from Ford himself or from others in the administration. But Moss° said Congress has the right tofind out. "The subcommittee is op- posed to the unwarranted judi- cial interference . . . and would resist any attempt to have a temporary order made perma- nent," he said. Television viewing tonight 6:00 2 4 11 13 NEWS 9 CBC NEWS--George snFituel 30 WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 50 STAR TREK 56 UPSTAIRS DOWNSTAIRKa 62 GINO WASHINGTON- Variety 6:30 2 11 CBS NEWS-Dan Rather 4 NRC NEWS-Toan Brokaw 9CANADIAN OPEN GOLF REPORT 13 TV-13 REPORTS 20 MOVIE-Western SW "Arizona" 30 WALL STREET WEEK- Louis Rukeyser 62 BILL COSBY--Comedy 7:00 2 TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES 4 PROFILES IN BLACK 7 DETROIT-Discussios o XXI OLYMPIC GAMES 11 HEE HAW 13 50 LAWRENCE WELK 30 FIRING LINE-Buckley 56 EVENING AT POPS 6t2 FISIIIN' HOLE 7:30 5 225,000 PYRAMID--Game 4 DAVID NIVEN'S WORLD 7 MICHIGAN OUTDOORS 62 OUTDOORS WITH KEN CALLAWAY 8:00 2 11 JEFFERSONS 4 13 EMERGENCY 7 XXI OLYMPIC GAMES 30 AT THE TOP-MusIc H0 MOVIE--Deama "Track of the Cat" 56 MEN WHO MADE THE MOVIES 6t WITHIT 8:30 1 DOC--Comedy 11 ELEVEN AT LARGE H0DANIEL BOONE- Adventure S2 BLACK ON BLACK 9:00 2 1t MARY TYLER MOORE C13 MOVIE-Cime Drums 30 MOVIE-Comedy BW "The l '*s we" 56 MOVIE-Documentary 67 FUTURE SMOCK--Dunce 9:3012 11 BOB NEWHJART 20 TEMPLE BAPTIST CHURCH 10:00 2 11 DINAH SHORE-Variety 20 LESSON-at Robertson H LOU GORDON 62 MOVIE-Drama BW "Tile Big Tip Off." 10:30 20 CHRISMA-Religion 30 DANCE FOR CAMERA 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 NEWS 9 CBC NEWS-George Finstad 20WARREN REPORTS-Re- ligion 11:15 7 ABC NEWS 9 NIGHTBEAT 11:30 2 MOVIE-Comedy 'HBoys' Night Out" 4 MOVIE-Thriller "The Revenge of Franken- stein." 7 MOVIE--DraiMs "Joe" "The Delicate Delinquent" 13 MARY HARTMAN, MARY HARTMAN-Serial Mary (Louise Lasser) learns about the mass murder down the street and Grandpa's flash- ing incident. Then, she and Heather are questioned about the killings and Grandpa (Victor Kiln) is arrested (2 hrs., 15 msin.) 50 SATURDAY NIGHT- Variety 11:40 9 CANADIAN OPEN GOLF- Report 12:00 9 XXI OLYMPIC GAMES 1:00 5 SUPERSONIC-MuSIt 11 NEWS 50 CHAPLAIN O FBOURBON STREET 1:30 7 MOVIE-Drama BW "Sanctuary" 1:40 2 MOVIR-Celme Drama BW "Dick Tracy Meet Gruesome" 1:45 13 NEWS 3:10 2 MAYBERRY R.F.D. -Comedy 3:30 7 COUNDINGS--Discussion 3:40 2 NEWS 4:00 7 NEWS THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 53-S Saturday, July 24, 1075 it edited and managed by studens as the tntversity of Michigan News phone 7604-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published da ly Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- arty year at 420 Maynard Street.Ann Aebnr, Michigan 41100 Subscription raes: $12 Sept. Ibmu Aprul (2 scemrs- tesemi $13 bysal outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday mornng. Sub r$iptyn rates: $6 50in Ann Arbor; $7.10 by maloutsider Ann Arbor. Theatre Co. of Ann Arbor PRESENTS THEY'RE BACK EXCERPTS FROM BOTH MAD MADONNAS AND BITCH, YOU CRAZY! July 21, 22, 23, 24 Trueblood Auditorum in the Frieze Bldg. CURTAIN: 8:00 P.M. TICKETS $2.50 Sponsored by U of M Women's Commission HOURLY RA's Interested in GEO Contract Protection? AN ORGANIZING CAMPAIGN IS UNDERWAY CalI the GEO Office: 995-0221 mornings ~f50c DISCOUNT on Admission ~ -COMING ~ uly 25-.--.-....-..-..-.GAMES SJuly 26-.-....-.MOJO BOOGIE WEEKLY HOURS: 9 p.m.-2 am. HOURS FN. & Sot. 8 p.m.-2 am. 516 E. LIBERTY 994-5350 I