n--- *r...- 'V-1 I fw A A A 0-- A 0 1 0-4 & k . & . A - - Page i wo THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 12, 1976 Kelley: 'Can't deny' FBI burglaries WASHINGTON ' - FBI Di- rector Clarence Kelley said yesterday he cannot flatly deny that FBI agents or informers are conlinoing to burglarize the homes and offices of American citizens. "I wish I could say categoric- ally, unquestionably, that this is not going on," Kelley said at a news conference. "I will say, however, that I feel that it is not heing done. I can also say if I determine it's being done now, I will take action." BECAUSE FBI officials de- ceived him in the past, he said, "I can no longer make cate- gorical, sweeping statements." The director said he has in- sisted on thorough FBI and Justice Department investiga- tions. Burglaries were conduct- ed by agents during the past five years and a burglary was allegedly carried out by an FBI informer only last month. '-If there's linen to be clean- ed in our own household, we should clean it," Kelley said. KELLEY REFUSED to pre- dict that the investigations would lead to criminal charges and said agents who carried out the burglaries "may not be charged" because they were on- ly following orders from their bosses. But he said many FBI em- ployees fear they will be in- dicted or disciplined for their role in the burglaries or other misconduct. "Right now," he said, "there are many people whose morale has been seriously affected by virtue of the possibility of eith- er disciplinary or prosecutive action." TEAMS OF FBI agents have been assigned to work with de- partment prosecutors on the burglary case and on a sepa- rate investigation of financial improprieties involving FBI in- surance and recreation funds, purchasing procedures and pos- sible misuse of laboratory equipment. Kelley said he has insulated himself from details of those probes, but will act on the de- partment's recommendations when the investigations are concluded. For that reason, he said, he has made no effort to ques- tion the officials who may have deceived him. KELLEY NOTED that at his last news conference more than a year ago, he said no burglar- ies had been conducted against domestic targets since 1966. In a statement six weeks ago, he said he had discovered some burglaries as recently as 1973. "I know that I was lied to because some of those who conducted these burglaries very definitely knew about them hav- ing been there," he said. "I was out making statements that there were none, while they- knew that there were." IN A PREPARED statement, Kelley announced several pro- cedural changes and also made his sharpest attack yet on the regime of J. Edgar Hoover who ran the FBI for 48 years until his death in 1972, During the Hoover era, "there was a certain amount of arro- gant belief at high levels in the infallibility and appropriateness of all FBI activities and poli- cies," he remarked. Congress and the news me- dia, as well as FBI officials themselves, allowed those "hu- man failings" to develop "t h r o u g h indifference or through unquestioning belief in a perfect image," he continued. KELLEY SAID he has made changes slowly "because of the complexity of the problems, be- cause of the necessity to deter- mine all the pertinent facts, and to avoid destroying the ef- fectiveness and dedication" of employees. He said he is transferring do- mestic intelligence investiga- tions, the area which produced the burglaries and a broad range of illegal operations, to the General Investigative Divi- sion to be "managed like all other criminal cases." The oldest public college on the West Coast is San Jose State University, San Jose Ca- lif. Greenland is the world's big- gest island. Count on a medium head of Iceberg lettuce, after coring and shredding, yielding about one quart. Medicaid services restored Television viewing tonight By IOIS JOSIMOVICH State Medicaid recipients Iave some extra relief in store for them, at least through this fiscal quarter. As of August 1, many free medical services were restor- ed after a six-month black-out due to lack of funds in the state Department of o Social Services (DSS). The tab for the new vision, hearing and speech assistance programs will be paid through the state Medical Assistance program. There is a catch to the res- toration of services, however- they are not entirely free. Den- tal work for Medicaid recipients age 21 and over will require the patient to make a 'co-payment' of $3 for every dental visit; and for vision services, pa- tients age 21 and over will make a co-payment of $2 for each service. "POSSIBLY THIS will dis- courage some of the people who come in," said Maxine Arnett, Intake Supervisor at the Washtenaw County DSS building. M e a n w h i 1 e, speech services will only cover recip- ients who are under 21, hearing coverage is limited to hearing aids, and re-imbursements for new eyeglasses will only be per- mitted once every two years for those under 21 and every three years for anyone over that age. This means that if glasses get broken or if some- one is having a lot of eye trou- ble, their assistance will not be completely state-paid. Dentures will only be auth- orized for reimbursement once every five years. A L L REIMBURSEMENTS will be handled through the state Medicaid office in Lan- sing, leaving the County DSS unaffected as far as its budget goes. But according to Edith Goldman, DSS Assistance Pay- ments Section Supervisor for Ann Arbor, there will be more of a workload for DSS staff in the area of health care itself, Goldman attributed the new Medicaid restorations to "a combination of complaints from just about every segment of the population," including coun- ty departments and community services which she says may have been providing the serv- ices in the absence of state aid. Iii S fo---« ,w ,.-.-_ _ 'O tit lum OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION - 764-0558 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 a.m.-2 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS -764-0557 100 .m.-4 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY-12:00 p.m, DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 MONDAY thru FRIDAY--9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Deadline for Sunday issue- WEDNESDAY at 5 p.m. DEADLINE 3 days in advance by 3 p.m. Thursday at 3 p.m. for Tuesday's paper mmmEb-m1 .1 6:00 2 7 11 13 NEWS I DREAMOF JEANNIE 20 CISCO KID-Western 30 ZOOM-Children 50 BRADY BUNCH-Comedy 62 1ISPY-Adventure 6:30o 4 13 NBC NEWS 9 NEWSDAY 11 CBS NEWS-W. Cronkite 20 DANIEL BOONE 30 HODGEPODGE LODGE 50 I LOVE LUCY-Comedy d:00 2 CBS NEWS-W. Cronkite 4 BOWLING FOR DOLLARS 7 ABC NEWS-B. Reasoner 9 ANDY GRIFFITH-Comedy 11 FAMILY AFFAIR-Comedy 13 IHOGAN'S BEROES 30 ROBEET MacNEIL REPORT 50 MICHIGAN STATE LOTTERY 56 ORLD PRESS 02 SPEAKING OF PICTtBES 7:30 2 TREASURE HUNT-Game 4 DON ADAMS' SCREEN TEST 7 MATCHS GAME PM 9 EROM 222-Comedy-Drama 11 WILD KINGDOM 13 ADAM-12-Crime Drama 70 ST TAKES A THIEF 30 CONSUMER SURVIVAL KIT 50 HOGAN'S HEROES 56 ROBERT MacNEIL REPORT 62 NEWS 7:45 62 TEEN PROFILE 8:00 2 11 WALTONS 4 JOHNNY MATHIS IN THE CANADIAN ROCKIES 7 WELCOME BACK, KOTTER 9 MUSIC MAKERS 13 COME INTO MY PARLOR 30 UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS 50 MERV GRIFFIN 56 DETROIT BLACK JOURNAL 62 MOVIE-Adventure (bw) "Intrigue" U S There IS a Se differencer : MCAT Oes thatYare OAT and success r : DAT ssusa SLAT voluminous home E study materias "- 0 #courses that are # !constantly updated # # ap fc.itesfo NA T reeDo Ds wA lessons and for use 1540 Pu~ne ird, A Makerupso 40 o * sEF missed lessons # NAT'I MED BDS : HATI DENT BDS # write or call: # 1945 Pauline Blvd. # # Ann Arbor 48IQ3 # 662-3149 # K# # # EastATONAL CESTES Bas-no a 0:e 8:30 7 WHAT'S HAPPENING!- 9 ROLF HARRIS-Music 20 WRESTLING 56 BLACK JOURNAL 9:00 2 11 HAWAII FIVE-O-Crime 7 24 STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO 9 SUMMER EVENING-M,,sic 20 700 CLUB--Religion 30 MEN WHO MADE THE MOVIES 50 MOVIE-Drama "Cash McCall" 56 OLYMPIAD-Documentary 9:30 9 POINTS EAST, POINTS WEST-Variety 10:00 2 IRONSIDE-Crime Drama 7 BARRY 0-Crime Drama 9 AMERICA-Documentary 11 BARNABY JONES 56 UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS 62 PTL CLUB-Reigion 10:30 20 MANNA-Religion 30 WOMAN 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 NEWS 9 CBC NEWS-LI Robertson 20 ADVENTURES IN PARADISE 50 BEST OF GROUCHO 56 IT'S YOUR TURN 11 :20 9 NIGHTBEAT 11:30 2 MARY HARTMAN, MARY HARTMAN-Serial Mary and the sergeant meet -alone; Charlie gets in touch with the record company. Charlie: Graham Jarvis. Foley: Bruce Solomon. 4 13 JOHNNY CARSON 7 MANNIX-Crime Drama 11 AMY PRENTISS 50 MOVIE-Western (bw) "Trail Street" 56 ABC NEWS-H. Reasoner 11:50 9 MOVIE-Comedy "McHale's Navy" 12:00 2 MOVIE-Adventure "The Aquarians" 62 NEWS 12:40 7 24 MAGICIAN-Drama 1:00 4 TOMORROW-Tom Snyder 13 NEWS 1:30 11 NEWS 1:50 7 NEWS 2:00 2 MOVIE-Cosnedy (bw) "My Favorite Brunette" 4 CLASSROOM 2:30 4 NEWS 3:30 2 NEWS THE MCIIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 66-S Thursday, August 12, 1976 is edited and managed by studcnts at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a i y Tuesday through Sunday mosrning daring the Univer- oily year at 420 Maynard Street, Ass Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside An Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday mornine Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Anir Arbor. e x I __ . f IM