THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 14, 1974 THE- MICHIGAN- --DAILY --Thursday,- -March -14, -19-74 TTX,. I . r Ir"r i mes reporter Hunter speaks (Continued from Page 1) "The biggest blow that he felt was the loss of his own seat in Grand Rapids. He felt a sense of disbelief that night," Hunter said. Hunter feels that Ford expects to be inhabiting the White House soon. She cited Ford's contacts with Congress as helping him to sense Nixon's f a11in g standing throughout the nation. "He's pretty good at feeling the political pulse," she added. Hunter characterized the Vice President as "not terribly original but a hard worker." In an earlier interview she termed Ford's in- telligence as "sort of average." ACCORDING to Hunter, Ford is "very e a r n e s t and seemingly honest." "He gets along very well with the press," she added. Hunter was born in West Vir- ginia but grew up in North Caro- lina where she attended Elon Col- lege. After her 1942 graduation she joined the Raleigh News and Ob- server. Since all the men were being drafted, the paper had an all women city desk. i Case dropped against Ebriebman, ' plumbers' She covered a wide variety of stories including the North Caro- lina state legislature. In 1949 she moved to the now defunct Houston Press. She then became the Winston-Sa- lem Journal's women's editor "only to get back to North Carolina," be- fore becoming a political reporter again. .Describing her start with the Times 13 years ago she said, "I was hired as the bureau female. I covered H.E.W. and thalidomide babies by day and Jackie Kennedy by night." By the time of the John- son administration, however, she was reporting on Congress. She, admitted, "There has been prejudice at the Times, there's no doubt about it." But she added, "I'm not a gung-ho women's liber- ationist probably because I never did feel prejudice against me.'; A Women's Caucus was formed recently at the Times to help bring women's salaries into line with those of their male counterparts and to demand the promotion of additional women to positions of greater responsibility in the Times hierarchy. Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results Arab minist end U.S. oil (Continued from Page 1) Office, said that drawing on in- ventories to spur economic growth would be a first priority once the embargo is lifted. But that judgment, when the time comes, must consider the rest of what the Arabs do. Unless Arab production were in- creased to pre-embargo levels and perhaps higher, petroleum supplies in the United States would remain tight and allow no flexibility for economic growth. That might well require continued fuel-conservation efforts. Last October, the United States imported about 35 per cent of its oil, and roughly 12 per cent of the total supply came from the Middle East. Federal energy officials said both of those fractions must increase rapidly if U.S. oil consumption in- creases, because the Middle East is the only place large increases in oil imports can be obtained. FEDERAL OFFICIALS m u s t also weigh the possibility that Arab-Israeli warfare could, sooner or later, break out anew and touch off another embargo. I They already acknowledge it would be wise to restrain the growth of oil demand to prevent ers said to NEW WORLD MEDIA INTERNATIONAL SERIES PRESENTS: embargo CNMANVIBAI U.S. dependence on Arab oil from getting much larger before the i United States can develop new energy resources of its own.I* Even if the Arabs provide all the, oil the United States wants, the * Y.r international oil price would re- main a problem. The more foreign Am b oil the United States imports, the=-Y* greater the problem would become *GLA.UBER as payments for that oil drain dol- G lars from the domestic economy. *R N Last September, the typical post- ROC A ed price of Arab oil was $3.01 per barrel; now it is $11.65. The prices are not likely to re- * East Quad Auditorium tonite Small Donation turn to their old levels. So yester- .** **** day's leaked word of an early endFQ to the embargo offers hope for Friday OB EAST QBAn Auditorium some easing of U.S. energy prob- PUERTO RICO Culebra: The * lems, but not yet the promise ofRC l* a complete or permanent solution * 8 P.M.-FREE Pais Colonizado to them. F F i * K i F F F i X K Kiy ayy (Continued from Page 1) Rodino defended his committee against White House charges that it is conducting a "fishing expedi- tion" and stated he was ready to issue subpoenas if necessary to ob- tain the requested evidence. President Nixon and his attorney James St. Clair have contended that the committee's impeachment probe should be limited to Water- gate and the related cover-up. The committee is seeking evi- dence involving a wide range of alleged presidential misconduct in- cluding Nixon's questionable in- come tax returns, the secret bomb- ings of Cambodia, and the ITT and Milk Fund scandals. Rodino was supported in his hard line against the President by the committee's r a n k i n g minority member, Rep. Edward Hutchinson (R-Mich.). Hutchinson has been noted for his especially conciliatory attitude toward the White House in the past. Yesterday, however, appearing at a joint press conference with Rodino, Hutchinson defended the broad scope of the committee in- vestigation claiming that "the re- quests made to date are very rea- sonable." He said the White House "should be t o t a 11 y cooperative with us." r ... ~ Ladies' and Children's Hairstyling a Specialty ... 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