Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 22, 19715 MORE WATERGATE WOES Colson says Hunt gave info to CIA WASHINGTON 0P) - Former White House counsel Charles Colson has said that convicted Watergate conspirator Howard Hunt frequently passed infor- mation to the Central Intelli- gence Agency after the time the agency says it severed its re- lations with Hunt, two sources said last night. Colson told Sens. Howard Baker (R-Tenn) and Lowell Weicker (R-Conn.) that Hunt de- livered sealed envelopes and packages to Richard Ober, a CIA counterintelligence officer, who forwarded them to then CIA Director Richard Helms, the sources said. COLSON said he suspected that the envelopes contained tapes and other material relat- ing to operations of the White House plumbers unit, the sourc- es said. Both sources stressed that the two senators, both of whom served on the Senate Watergate committee, had obtained no in- dependent confirmation whatso- ever of Colson's assertions. Spokespersons for the two senators confirmed last night that they had met with Colson on Monday at their request. Colson was brought from Ft. Holabird, Md., to the federal ,courthouse in Alexandria, Va., for the meeting. COLSON is serving one to three years in prison after pleading guilty to one count of obstruction of justice for at- tempting to defame Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel Ells- berg. Colson said Hunt continued to. pass the material to Ober until late May.1972. The CIA has said it stopped providing Hunt aid for his projects on the plumbers unit on Aug. 27, 1971. However, it has acknowledg- ed providing a psychological as- sessment of Ellsberg as late as November 1971, but the agency maintained it was unaware of Hunt's role in requesting the profile. IN LATE May 1972. a group under Hunt's supervision enter- ed the Democratic National Committee headquarters to.in- stall bugging devices. The June 17, 1972, break-in was prompted in part by the malfunction of one of those de- vices. Ober has been named by the New York Times as manager of a massive, illegal domestic spying operation undertaken by CIA during the Nixon adminis- tration. CIA Director William Colby has said a unit was established in the agency's counterintelli- gence division to monitor do- mestic radicals in that period. Dems stand by (Continued from Page 1) ting through the Congress now. "I don't think the votes are here in the Congress at the present time to pass .a ration- ing bill, but I think there's aI growing feeling for rationing,'' Mansfield said. SEN. HENRY Jackson (D- Wash.), a frequent critic of Ford's energy program, said there are other solutions to the energy -crisis besides gas ra- tioning and Ford's plan to im- pose tariffs on imported crude oil. Jackson said Ford's reference to mandatory gas rationing is "a straw man. No one up here that I know is advocating man- datory gas rationing," he said. Sen. John Tower (R-Tex.), chairman of the Republican Policy Committee, indicated a planned attempt by Jackson and Sen. Edward Kennedy (D- Mass.) to force a delay in the oil import tariff might face a filibuster in the Senate. "IT MIGHT be debated a long time," Tower said. During the news conference, Ford said he would sign the presidential proclamation imposing the tariff this week. Echoing Ford,. Tower said ioning gasoline rationing "is exactly the wrong way to go. Itsub- stitutes government controls for the market." Senate Democratic Whip Rob- ert Byrd of West Virginia said, "I think the proposal to levy a $3 tariff on oil imports is a prescription for economic dis- aster in that it will push up the price of gasoline, home heating fuel, bus fares, airline fares, fertilizer and other items." FAR FROM reducing gasoline consumption, Byrd said, the tariff "will initiate a new spiral of inflation . .." Like Jackson, Byrd suggested there might be some middle ground between rationing and the tariff. AP Photo PRESIDENT FORD answers questions raised by reporters at a press conference yesterday. Although Ford presented a direct challenge to opposition Democrats, he claimed his programs, if adopted by Congress, would cure the country's eco- nomc woes by late summer. Ford rejects gas rationing plan - - . The Michigan Daily OFFICE HOURS Circulation Dept.. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 764-0558 Classified Dept.. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 764-0557 I I Graduate Students JOBS---75-76 Positions in teaching/counseling programs Residential College-East Quad- an experimental program Live-in positions, room & board plus stipend ($4000 per academic year) Innovative & creative approaches encouraged Contact-Ed or Tom at 47414 or Razelle at 30176 or apply in person, Residential Colleege offices (Continued from Page 1) Earlier yesterday, the Labor proposed permanent tax cuts Department reported that the to compensate Americans for cost of living rose 12.2 per cent higher oil prices as his program last year, the worst year for achieveed the hoped-for result price increases since 1946. f of cutting oil imports by one Ford said that opponents of million barrels a day by the end his program had no clear un- of this year and making the derstanding of rationing or of United States invulnerable to what it would mean for the oil embargoes by 1985l American people. Rationing would have to last HE ALSO urged Congress to more than five years, it would approve a 12 per cent rebate hurt farmers who needed to on 1974 tax payments, with a harvest crops and people driv- maximum of $1,000 a person, ing a long way to work, and it as an anti-recession measure, would not provide any stimulus3 for increasing domestic petro- leum supplies and encouraging the development of energy re- sources. MAKING IT clear he did not intend to budge, in spite of pressure from the Democrats, he declared, "We will not sit by and, talk about the energyj crisis and not do anything about it. much worse condition." On other issues, Ford said: -The United States must continue to supply arms to the Middle East, in spite of a dan- ger of renewed war there, to maintain a military balance while peace efforts are under way. -Detente between the United "I believe it is the right med- States and the Soviet Union icine for our current 'illness," would continue despite Mos- the President said in reference ! cow's cancellation of an im- to his energy program and pro- portant trade treaty because posed anti-recession tax cuts. of what Russia felt was Con- "If we had done nothing, the gressional interference in its patient would have been in emigration policies. Display Dept. 764-0554 11 a.m.-4 p.m Ford announced he will sign a proclamation later this week! putting into effect his contro- versial plan to impose an addi- tional fee on imported oil, be- ginning with one dollar a barrel on February 3, and raising that to three dollars a barrel on April d. T4e wx~nt ihao,4 with i rl n' GEO mediation collapses, parties call in fact-finder Please try to call our offices during these hours. 1 II t~dil APMob~~1Ybsti despite the introduction yester-{ (Co"ti""ed fomPage1> day by Democratic Senators proposed that a fact-finder be Henry Jackson and Edward ' called in. Kennedy of a resolution calling The union claims that fact- for a mandatory 60-day delay finding, since it is not binding in imposing the new tariffs, on either party, is an ineffec- tive way of resolving the prob- THE PRESIDENT'S critics lem, and acquiesced only be- claim his plan would hurt poor cause the University has re- Americans and would result in fused to agree to binding arbi- a new and severe round of in- tration. flation for the e m b a t t I e d "Although fact - finding w iIlI economy. oc-cur," said Gordon, "we don't feel that's a very constructive step to take. We really feel that what the University is trying to CHECK US OUT do is stall. It's to their advant-J , age to drag out the negotiations WAe have a good until the end of the academic R~ ~year. By that time most of usi Ii- mepuaTlon UM STYLISTS at the UNION will have completed our job service. We are willing to make the fact-finding binding. They're noat." LEMMER held that fact-find- ing resolves most contract dis- putes, and that binding arbi- 31, 1974, or have it cAncelled. tration is only a last resort. Consequently, with the addi- "The Employment Relations tional four per cent hike the Act provides for fact-finding," University's offer now stands he said. "That's the prescribed at 12 per cent. procedure. It's the same law GORDON objected to the Uni- that takes them (GEO) to the versity's position. "We've fallen bargaining table in the first back significantly," he said. place. There's no advantage for "We feel that this (the GEO) either party to bind themselves ' demand can very reasonably be in advance to somebody else's met by the University. With our view of what you should have present package, we can barely in a labor contract." keep up with inflation." During the meeting yesterday, As the bargaining moves into both sides made concessions on these final stages and the GEO economic issues. January 30 contract deadline THE NEW GEO proposal calls approaches, the possibility of a for an eight per cent wage in- strike 1 o o m s large. Though crease retroactive to Septem- Michigan law prohibits state ber, 1974; an additional five per, employes to strike, Gordon in- cent increase effective January, dic'ated that such action is a 1975, and a seven per cent in- definite possibility. crease for the 1975-76 academic* "We really hope it's not go- year. The union also proposed!' ing to come to a strike, but the a $200 per term fee in lieu of prospects for that are becom- tuition. ing bleaker," he said. "If we The University, making its do have to strike, it will be to first economic concession since put pressure on. the University October, proposed a four per to go to binding arbitration." cent increase over what it has Though Gordon would only say already offered, or the raise that the union has been gain- given to the faculty, whichever ing strength in certain key de- is higher. They also proposed' partments, other sources claim- to freeze the tuition level of all ed GEO has now mustered the Graduate Student Assistants strength to shut down most of (GSAs) who have more than a LSA, including the English, ten-hour teaching load. mathematics, a n d Romance The University also withdrew language departments. its ultimatum that the union When asked about the possi- accept its offer of an eight per I bilities of a strike, Lemmer re- cent pay raise by December1sponded, "I have no idea." 1'; ._ -- -- I generation* I now on sale in the fishbowl first five people to correctly com- plete the crossword puzzle receive a dozen fresh bagles. Mail com- pleted puzzles to 420 Maynard. I Probably not.All things considered you do what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one has taken your job. And youYe eating regularly. But... But have you ever considered what doing your job just a little better might mean? Money. Cold hard coin of the realm. If each of us cared just a smidge more about what we do for a living, we could actually turn that inflationary spiral around. Better products, better service and better management would mean savings for all of us:Savings of much of the cash and frayed nerves it's costing us now for repairs and inefficiency. Point two..By taking more pride in our work we'll more than likely see America regaining its strength in the competitive world trade arena. When the balanceof payments swings our way again we'll all be better off economically. So you see-the only person who can really li *the undergraduate interarts magazine i- ___ 'I IA CRAVEL MICH. UNION 7M3-214 - 'I A6ATION FIGHT \ March 2nd-9th 1 :f8 Days & 7 Nights , Jet Air Jamaica from Detroit PRICE INCLUDES: P CERound tripLiet between Detroit and Monteqoa} oav, Jamaica4I ARE YOU COLORBLIND? WE NEED YOU FOR COLOR VISION EXPERIMENTS Calt Vision Research Lob 764-0574 Kresge 1I-Rm. 5080 WE PAY! 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