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KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. White House
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler sharply
criticized Sunday as "inappropriate"
remarks by Vice President Gerald L. Ford
on his future plans should President Nixon
resign or be compelled to leave office.
Speaking of Nixon, Ziegler said: "He is
going to be here until 1977."
Ziegler made the comment to a TV
interviewer as he left the Key Biscayne
Community Church whert Nixon and his
family attended Easter worship services.
It was the first public comment by a White
House official on the interview which Ford
gave to John Osborne of The New Republic
magazine which has upset presidential aides.
In the article, Ford discussed a possible
future cabinet should he assume the
presidency before Nixon's second term ends
and he said Ziegler definitely would not be
asked to remain as press secretary.
Asked about Ford's remarks to Osborne,
Ziegler said grimly: "I don't think that's an
appropriate thing to talk about on Easter
Sun'day. It's not appropriate. He is going to
be around here-until 1977."
In the article Ford repeated that he does
not believe there will be a mid-term
succession to the presidency and "he does
not want it to happen."
Mitchell to end
i i
direct testimony
NEW YORK Former Attorney
General John N. Mitchell returns to the
witness stand Monday to wind up testifying
in his own defense and face cross
examination by federal prosecutors.
In the last session of the trial Wednesday,
the nation's one-time top law officer took the
witness stand and denied he conspired to fix
a major federal fraud investigation.
Mitchell, 60, at one time one of the
nation's most influential men as President
Nixon's adviser, former law partner,
campaign director and personal friend, is
expected to conclude his direct testimony in
an hour or two. Cross examination is
expected to continue into Tuesday before co
defendant Maurice Stans begins his
testimony in their perjury-conspiracy trial .
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from th wires of United Pr In tarnations!
compiled by Tom Scarritt snd Vslter CoSton
YIre Editors
Codeword gets loyalists close to Nixon
DETROIT Mrs. Robert Zako of Detroit managed to kiss President Nixon during
his campaign swing through Michigan last week by murmuring MCSP 227 to one of
his advance men.
In a copyrightsd story Sunday, the Detroit News reported that the President s
advance men use a secret password system to provide Nixon boosters a chance to
get close to the chief executive.
It quoted an unidentified White House aide as saying the codeword system is used
"to reward Nixon loyalists."
Libya cuts off oil shipments to Egypt
BEIRUT Libya has suspended oil shipments to Egypt because of President
Anwar Sadat's acceptance of the cease-fire that ended last October's Middle East
war, Libyan Prime minister Maj. Abdel Salam Jalloud said Sunday.
Col. Moammar Khadafy, chairman of the ruling Revolution Command, Council
(RCC), said Libya is prepared to give Syria whatever help it needs to continue the
fight against Israel.
Communist rockets hit Phnom .Penh
PHNOM PENH Communist forces fired 17 rockets into Phnom Penh Saturday
and Sunday and raided a Cambodian New Year gathering, killing at least eight
people and wounding 87 others in the worst such attacks in two months.
Twelve 107mm rockets tore into the capital at about 9 p.m. Saturday night, killing
six people and injuring 52, officials said.
Diplomat recovering after shooting
CORDOBA, Argentina U.S. diplomat Alfred A. Laun III, kidnaped and shot two
days ago by leftist guerrillas, is making a favorable recovery after his escape,
hospital spokesmen said Sunday.
Laun, the U.S. Information Agency (USIA) director in Cordoba, 420 miles
northwest of Buenos Aires, was surprised at his home by armed guerrillas Friday
morning.
The guerrillas of the People's Revolutionary Army shot Laun, 33, when they could
not subdue him by pistolwhipping him.
BEIRUT Israeli and Syrian forces
fought close-quarter battles Sunday over the
peak of strategic Mount Hermon. Both sides
said the other took heavy losses but Israel
admitted suffering the highest number of
casualties in a single day of fighting on the
Golan Heights since the October Middle
East wac
Syria also claimed ' and the Israeli
military command in Tel Aviv denied that
four Israeli planes were shot down during the
day.
The Israeli command said Israeli infantry
backed by air strikes and artillery fire wiped
out a Syrian infiltration force of at least 12
commandos who crossed into Israeli-held
territory on the mountain and holed up in a
cave. Syria said the Israeli attack on its
Hermon positions had been foiled.
A total of 17 Israeli soldiers were wounded
Sunday, the Tel Aviv command said. 13 of
them in the close-quarter fighting on the
Hermon slopes and four others later in the
day by Syrian rocket and cannon fire aimed
at the peak of the mountain and elsewhere
along the Golan line.
Syria said it had killed or wounded 50
Israelis but admitted .to losing 12 of its own
men killed and eight wounded.
The highest Israeli casualty toll before
Sunday was on Jan. 2, when three soldiers
were killed and two wounded.
Mount Hermon, 9.000 feet high,
commands the entire Golan Heights.
Lookouts on its peak can see for hundreds of
miles from Haifa on Israel's
Mediterranean shore to the Syrian capital of
Damascus.
It was the 34th consecutive day of fighting
on the Golan Heights.
Syrian plan explained
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger Sunday explained Syria's
new troop disengagement proposals to
Israeli Ambassador Simcha Dinitz, who said
the plan allowed room for negotiation.
Dinitz also said Israel was willing to cease
hostilities on the embattled Golan Heights
front with Syria whenever Syria would do
the same, but not before.
Kissinger and Dintiz conferred for about
one Jtour, 35 minutes on the proposals for
Syrian-Israeli troop disengagement
submitted Saturday by Syria's special envoy,
Hikmut Khalil Chahabi. The talks preceded
Kissinger's scheduled departure for New
York to attend the U.N. General Assembly
session Monday and host a dinner Sunday
night for a vice premier of China.
"We had a long and constructive
discussion in which Kissinger related to me
the substance of his conversation with the
Syrians and also passed on the Syrian plan
and the map, which I will now pass on to my
government," Dinitz told newsmen after the
talks. Kissinger did not appear.
Dinitz said he would also be passing on
"the explanations the secretary gave, which
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Salad, Oread
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Veal Parmesian "
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Beef Parmagsana
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Thursday 01.09
Fried Shrimp
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7:30-9:30 Mon.-Thurs.
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SIOLES AMD HENDERSON'
:EL 15, 1974 8 PM
. REYNOLDS COLISEUM
Tickets available at the Record Bars
Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill; area
Kerr Drus and Reynolds Coliseum.
Advance: 04, 05 06 Door: 05, 06 07
All Proceeds to
American Cancer Societv
were very helpful."
Asked whether he thought the Syrian offer
left room for negotiations, Dinitz said,
"there is definitely always room for give and
take."
Amid the fighting. Prime Minister Golda
Meir's caretaker government Sunday
confirmed the appointment of MordcchaP
Motta Gur, head of the northern command,
as Israefs new chief of staff.
Soviets to give
Syria more aid
MOSCOW - The Soviet Union has
agreed to give new economic and military aid
to Syria, Pravda said Sunday. The
Communist party newspaper also
denounced Israeli and American efforts to
conclude partial settlements in the Middle
East.
The newspaper's weekly review said
agreements signed Saturday by visiting
Syrian President Hafez Assad and Soviet
leaders "will undoubtedly assist Syria in
developing its independent national
economy and strengthening the country's
defense."
Pravda gave no details of the Soviet aid.
Beirut press reports said it would cost
between SI. 5 and 1.8 billion to restore
Syria's economy, shattered in last October's
Middle East war.
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Final day: April 19!