Tuesday, July 15, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Tuesday, July 15, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Butterfield denies he was Popular Democratic CIA White House contact Party pulls out of ASHINGTON ( )-Former White House aide President so he needed the clearance "which is ander Butterfield said yesterday that alle- not a big deal." us he was a Central IntellIgence Agency In the Sunday interview on CBS' "61 Minutes,"go .in P ru a sander~~ ~ ~ Butrildsi W. Ales gatio (CIA) contact man at the Witte House are atse and defamatory. "Those serious allegations are altogether false. Moreover they are defamatory. In that I stated my White House duties in full under oath to the Senate Watergate committee and other high-level investigative bodies, Mr. Fletcher Prouty's alle- gation is tantamount to a charge of perjury. The damage to my reputation has been done . . , said Butterfield in a statement to newsmen. BUTTERFIELD was an aide at the White House when Richard Nixon was president. Butterfield had also denied the CIA connec- tion in a television interview Sunday, but Proity said later he would stick by his original state- ments. "I don't back off from any of that," said Prouty, a retired Air Force colonel. BUTTERFIELD'S denial of any CIA connection was echoed by the agency,- which said he had never been assigned to or worked for it in any capacity. The CIA did say Butterfield had clear- ance to see sensitive materials, but Butterfield noted that he read all material sent to the Butterfield said he had never met or seen con- victed Watergate burglar B. Howard Hunt, the man Prouty claims told him that Butterfield was the CIA contact man at the White House. Prouty said, however, that one of Hunt's asso- ciates at the Washington public relations firm of Mullen & Co., may actually have contacted But- terfield in connection with Prouty's attempt to get White House backing for a project involving Indochina prisoners of war. PROUTY SAID his claim was based on the fact that Mullen was a firm with CIA connections and that Hunt was a 20-year veteran of the CIA. Prouty contended, therefore, that whoever Hunt said he would contact at the White House "is by definition a CIA contact man." In an interview Friday on "The CBS Morning News" Prouty had said he had "no doubt" about Butterfield's employment by the CIA. BUT LATER Prouty said he was not certain whether Butterfield was on the CIA payroll when he worked in the Nixon administration. "You can never tell," Prouty said, "unless somebody comes clean with the precise documents, nobody's going to know . .. that's the name of the game. Indian St Gandhi a NEW DELHI, India (A') - The Indian Supreme Court handed Prime Minister Indira Gandhi a legal setback yesterday in her effort to get; quick resolution of :a court battle that threatens her grip on power. A four-man panel presided by Chief Justice Ajit Nath R a y overruled pleas by Mrs. Gan- dhi's legal team that hearings begin next week on her appeal from a conviction for election irregularities. RAY INSTEAD bowed to en- treaties from lawyers for jailed Socialist leader Raj Narain that the hearings be delayed for at least four weeks, setting Aug. 11 as opening day for the cruc- ial showdown. With arguments expec-e i by both sides to take three to four weeks - and with another two weeks for the Supreme Court to deliberate - it appeared M r s . Gandhi's fate in court wil not be known until the middle of Sentember. This leaves India in aispense for another two months on the outcome of an appeal that could determine whether Mrs. Gandhi remains in power, since the mandatory penalty for election law convictions is a six-year ban on holding elective office. upreme Court deals blow in power fight LISBON, Portugal (P) - The. moderate Popular Democratic Party (PPD) decided yesterday to pull out of the Portuguese government because of the lack of democratic guarantees and join the Socialists in opposition, a party official said. The official predicted that Portugal would be under full military rule within 48 hours, ending any pretense of civilian government. A PULLOUT by the two Pop- ular Democratic m in i s t e r s would leave the Communists as the only civilians in the cabi- net, but Premier Vasco Gon- calves is expected to use the opportunity to name an all- military cabinet, a step advo- cated by radical military lead- era unhappy with party spub- bling. Almost all power, however, is already held by the military's 30-man Revolutionary Council, which was summoned into emergency session to grapple with the worst crisis since the military overthrew the old right-wing regime 14 months ago. Following the withdrawallast week of the Socialists, the na- tion's biggest party, over a free press issue, the PPD gave a five-point ultimatum to Presi- dent Francisco da Costa Gomes demanding assurances for Por- tuguese democracy. Goncalves made it plain to PPD officials in a private meeting that the demands were turned down, the party official said. "THERE IS now one chance in a hundred we will stay it," he added. Nevertheless, the PPD will wait until the Wednesday deadline given the president be- fore pulling out. The Socialists called a mass rally at Sao Bento government palace Tuesday night to back up their leaders, exit from the government. Even if the Communists lose their representation in the gov- ernment in the naming of all- military cabinet, they could maintain influence by virtue of their domination of the trade unions and the press and local government and their close as- sociation with Goncalves. EACH of the four parties in the coalition had two cabinet members. The Communist par- ty, however, had four cabinet officers on its ideological side because its satellite party, the Portuguese Democratic Move- ment (MDP) which polled 4 per cent in the elections, was included in the coalition. The Socialists got 37 per cent and the PPD 26 per cent. PPD cabinet members were Joaquim Magalhaes Mota, a minister without portfolio, and Welfare Minister Orge de Car- valho Borges. Besides the political opposi- tion of the Socialists and Popu- lar Democrats, the military is beginning to get stiff opposition from other quarters. Among them were: " A Roman Catholic bishop who led 10,000 marchers in the northern city of Oveiro Sunday to pretest loss of the Church radio station in Lisbon to left- ists. "Let this example be spread en masse from the Min- ho in the north to the Algarve in the south. Christians have been asleep and now must awaken," said Mishop Manuel Trindade. * A congress of lawyers who met in Coimbra Saturday over- whelmingly rejected a motion to approve unconditionally the military's revolutionary course. Instead, the lawyers appointed a committee to report on civil rights violations by the authori- ties. AUGUST GRADUATE? The deadline for order- ing caps & gowns has been extended to July 16, 1975. ORDER AT THE UNIVERSITY CELLAR 769-7940 THE EMBATTLED prime minister met for more thmn 2 1 hours yesterday evening w it h the top leadership of her Con- gress party, reviewing the emer- gency rule declared June 26 to crush opposition calling for Mrs. Gandhi's resignation. A spokesman said party ma- chinery was put in motion far purging six Congress leaders who joined in the call far Mrs. Gandhi to step down because of a June 12 lower court convic- tion of illegal campaign tactics. All were members of Parlia- ment, including the fo: mer mi - ister of state for planning, Mo- han Dharia. Several are believed to be in police confinement along with scores of opposition leaders and thousands of other persons rounded up under emergency rules that free police from the need to bring formal charges or refer prisoners for trial. THE PARTY elders, who met in traditional Indian fashion slouched on cushions on the floor of party headquarters, labeled Mrs. Gandhi's anti-opposition crackdown an "epoch-making statement on the proclamation of internal emergency." "At first, many people did not grasp its significance and the background in whic this action was taken," they said in a resolution. "But since the facts and circumstances necessitating the proclamation began to un- fold themselves, the support for this move -has been growing and in fact many people now wonder why this action was not taken earlier." Mrs. Ghandi's lawyers pushed hard to get the hearings sched- 'led next week. They are known to want the aopeal over as quickly as possible to clear the poisoned political atmosphere. HER TEAM was hualed by Jagan Nath Kaushal, 'u balding erayhaired advocate general from neighboring Haryana State. The prime minister's original chief counsel, Nani Palkhivala, quit her defense to protest the emergency decree, legal sourc- es said. Narain's chief counsel, Shai'ti Bhushan, said he was bust with pending cases in Bombay and could not begin for at least a month. Ray, presiding in a teak- paneled courtroom with 14 fans whiring from a high ceiling, is- tened to arguments from both black-robed lawyers for about 15 minutes, then came down for Bhushan. The mustachioed Bhus- han said later that Ray's de- cision reaffirmed the independ- ence of the Indian judiciary. ART FAIR B K LE JULY 16-19 ONLY a offon all University of Michigan books at ZU o of our table in front of the Ann Arbor Bank on East University 50% Of for all graduate students and faculty on loff ectedbacklist books Tb e University of Micbi an Press ANN ARBOR 615 EAST UNIVERSITY telephone 764-4392