Th Oa;.y Tat Htei Gibson declines energy post Ttm&rf. tiovember 12, 1S74 by R.H. Growsld United Press InternsliensI WASHINGTON Andrew E. Gibson will request President Ford to withdraw his controversial nomination as federal energy administrator in an exchange of letters to be made public Tuesday, it was learned Monday. A White House official, who declined to be identified, said that Gibson in his letter to Ford will express regret if he caused the President any embarrassment in the disclosure of his severance contract with a Philadelphia oil transport company, which would have netted him $880,000 over a 10 year period. The official made it clear that White House pressure has been on Gibson to voluntarily withdraw his nomination and to save Ford from the embarrassment of cancelling an appointment he . made with such a fanfare at a news conference Oct. 29. Despite the mounting pressure for him to quit, Gibson had hoped to clear himself of possible conflict of interest by taking the top energy post while he had a tie with a top oil company. But the White House apparently made it clear to Gibson that his nomination would cause a battle on Capitol Hill. A White House spokesman said earlier Monday that Ford had not been told about the severance pay when he nominated Gibson. Deputy press secretary John Hushen said Friday unnamed White house aides knew of Gibson's agreement with his former oil company, but did not inform the President before Ford nominated him as federal energy administrator. Gibson has acknowledged that he will receive $880,000 over the next 10 years from the company he headed, but he has resisted official pressure to withdraw his nomination as successor to John Sawhill. Gibson was at the White House on Monday, as he was on Friday and Saturday," meeting with various officials regarding his nomination, Hushen said. ' I I j J i : . i Jr v iff, , -""j SK r t' 7 vV 11 It il -1 for - meffgeeey J bodl -s. I - J by Peggy Polk United Press Internationa! ROME Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz has put his weight behind an appeal to President Ford to pledge an additional million tons of emergency food aid for the world's hungry nations. Sen. Dick Clark said Monday. Clark, an Iowa Democrat, said that "after some resistance" Butz signed a telegram from the entire U.S. delegation at the current United Nations World Food Conference supporting Clark's proposal for an announcement of increased U.S. aid totaling 4.3 million tons before the end of the fiscal year in June. Ambassador Edwin M. Martin, deputy chief of the U.S. delegation, said U.S. pledge to abstain voting may doom Cuban embargo end mm. fx X k '::S:Wc5:. irfr-- -nmnnrrn----riwit "iiirrtrii"n"-"-'"'--Hi-,ii'tr,-s"-m UPltetepholo Arnold Miller, president of the United Mine Workers of America, announces at a news conference that there will be a strike by the miners beginning at midnight Nov. 1 1 . He declined to say how long the strike might last, adding fuel to the fears that the strike could have a devastating effect on the U.S. economy. Court won't hear Haldeman grand jury indie tments to plea stand United Press International WASHINGTON The Supreme Court today refused to consider arguments by Watergate cover-up defendant H.R. Haldeman that he and four co-defendants were indicted illegally. The justices declined to hear Haldeman's appeal of lower court decisions upholding the - indictments. TheWatergate xover-up trial today r began ! its' sixth week in ' U .S: . District Court. Haldeman had contended that the Watergate grand jury which indicted him was illegally sitting past the normal 18 month grand jury term. He said the charges against him should be dismissed. The first Watergate grand jury, impaneled on June 5, 1972, normally would have expired Dec. 4, 1973. But Congress voted to extend its term beyond that date and indictments were returned March 1, 1974, in the Watergate cover-up case. In other Watergate developments today a tape played in the cover-up trial revealed that President Richard M. Nixon apparently agreed to Haldeman's suggestion on J une 23, 1 972, to tell the FBI to stay the hell out of the Watergate investigation. According to transcripts prepared by the Watergate prosecutors for the assistance of the jury in listening to the tapes, Nixon's chief of staff H.R. Haldeman relayed the plan for thwarting the FBI investigation, and Nixon responded, "Um huh." But that response was missing from the transcripts as released by the Nixon White House last August. According to the tapes, Haldeman told Nixon in their first conversation June 23 that Mitchell had conceived and White House Counsel John W. Dean III had concurred in a recommendation that the CIA tell the FBI to halt "ah' investigation ; in Mexico ' concerning the origin of funds used to finance the break-in. Deputy CIA Director Vernon A. Walters testified that the FBI had found four checks totalling $89,000 used to finance the break-in that had been drawn on a bank in Mexico. . v Walters said he, was summoned to the White House six days after the burglary to meet with Ehrlichman and Haldeman. He testified Haldeman said the bugging case was "making a lot of noise, the Democrats were trying to maximize it and it might get worse." He said Haldeman told him "it is the President's wish" that Walters contact Gray and explain that the FBI investigation might uncover covert CIA operations in Mexico. Walters said that in two meetings with Deanu t he f 61 lowi ng 'weekt he r 'ggest ion. wain made. Walters testified that he did not know of any such CIA activities in Mexico. He said Dean suggested that perhaps the CIA could pay the bail of the Watergate bugging suspects. Walters said he told Dean, "No way, this would be no service to the President or the nation." by Juan J. Walte United Press International QU ITO, Ecuador The hemispheric conference called to end the Cuban embargo appeared on the brink of failure Monday with an announcement by the United States it would abstain from voting to end the sanctions. The U.S. decision, relayed to Latin American foreign ministers by U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert S. Ingersoll at a closed door meeting, followed announcements by Haiti and Guatemala, considered crucial swing votes, also to abstain. Latin American diplomats said the U.S. decision could doom the Quito Organization of American States conference unless there was a last minute compromise. Mexico is reportedly looking for just such a compromise, the diplomats said. The defection of Haiti, previously thought to favor ending the sanctions, reduced to 12 the number of countries expected to vote to end the 10-year-old boycott against Cuba. At least 14 votes are needed to get the necessary two thirds majority to end the sanctions. The announcement by Ingersoll that the United States would abstain was the first concrete statement by the U.S. delegation since the conference began Friday. : ;'Two major resolulionsihave:beerv 'aebated. The original one sub'mittedby Costa Rica, Colombia and Venezuela called flatly for ending the sanctions, and a less precise resolution worked Sunday would allow nations to choose to continue the sanctions or end them.j Both are now apparently doomed unless revised. The Guatemalan and Haitian foreign ministers, however, said they were still open to a compromise formula. Although sanctions on Cuba are theoretically mandatory, seven OAS members already have economic and political relations with the Castro regime. . Guatemalan Foreign Minister Adolf o Molina delivered a hard-line speech accusing Cuba of "grave and repeated cases of intervention" in the internal affairs of Paraguay, Chile, and Uruguay, the three countries committed to vote against lifting the sanctions. He added that Guatemala might vote in favor of a compromise resolution that would "conciliate antagonistic points of view." Systems & Processing Co. 207-B Executive Offices 1801 East Franklin Street Providing computer services in: Computer Programming Systems Analysis Systems Development Data Processing Keypunching Experience with IBM 360370, FORTRAN, PLI, COBOL, RPG APL, Statistical Packages, .. Assembler and Teleprocessing. ' For information call: 967-2515 at a news briefing he understood that members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries were preparing a proposal for a new institution to collect funds and direct spending on food aid. Martin said the institution, to be funded by OPEC and other countries, differed from the rerves coordinating group proposed bv Secretary of State Henry Kissinger litfiis keynote speech last week in tb4t"it would be an administrative agency rather than a forum for exchange of information. A commitment of oil dollars to a long term food aid and development plan would be a major accomplishment by the conference. Canada has pledged a million tons of grain a year for three years starting in fiscal year 1975-76 and Australia said it would make a similar donation in proportion to its smaller population. The U.S. government has allocated $990 million for 3.3 million tons of food aid for the 1974-75 fiscal year but is reviewing the aid on a quarterly basis to try to avoid aggravating domestic inflation by taking too much grain off U.S. markets. WOW.OPEW DANIEL BOONE ICE Daniel Boone exit off 1-85 HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 3- 5:30 p.m. 7-10 p.m. Saturday 10-12. 1-3 4- 6, 7-10 Sunday : 1-3, 4-6 7-10 fcJ0 its " m mm 1 L Rink available for PRIVATE PARTIES Phone 732-9647 THE 'HEW L00X' IN SCULPTURED JEWELRY Specializing in custom work ef oricinal design by Ctrolista and Walter Eaum far anassa men! rings n4 wedding bands. DIAMONDS CMEKaLOS. tun 15. SAWHIKIS jtifCl Jewelry Designers KCK3 PLAZA aammmm atAranU.ic otu . B9N.-UT. 10-130 (llf) ftt-TOM I J.. r The Daily Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Student Publications Board, daily except Sunday, exam periods, vacation, and summer periods. No Sunday Issue. The following dates are to be the only Saturday Issues: September 14. October 5 & 19, and November 2, 16 23. Offices are at the Student Union building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-1011, 933-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rates: $20.00 per year; $10.00. per semester. Second class 'postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapel Hill, N.C. The Campus Governing Council shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or tum away copy it considers objectionable. 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Tickets $3? advance $4 at door D 0 0 Now on sale at Carolina Union Crossword ACROSS Puzzler Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle 1 Once around track 4 Metal strand 8 Slave 12 Beverage 13 Arabian seaport 14 Great Lake 15 Deface 16 Performance 18 Something that refracts light 20 Temporary shelter 21 Faroe Islands whirlwind 22 Conductee 23 Smaller number 27 Conjunction 29 Seed container 30 Doctrine 31 A continent (abbr.) 32 Stroke 33 Possesses 34 Negative 35 Coy 37 Vast age 38 Music: as written 39 Narrow . , opening 40 Hail! 41 Three-toed sloth 42 Solicitude 44 Cove 47 Modeled 51 Guido'shigh note 52 Skin ailment 53 Withered 54 Nothing 55 Loved one 56 Girl's name 57 Hindu cymbals 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 17 19 22 24 25 26 27 28 DOWN Lantern Winglike Punctuation mark Temperate Cyprinoid fish Leased Finished Colonizes Silkworm Spanish for "river Marsh Preposition Compass point Parcel of land Printer's measure Dispatched Portico Emmets Metal fastener AlBIEt SM t3MjAiaiff" R EMoffEt IT AP gifts AsOneft e i wOa n ZTK0P I L L , E AS E I O TRtlEjATSt;gEe SW E P TQV E. E & jgR IIIATrsAR fr SRHs I AeTt I A ftA TIAIm flL E T SOP A TN a 1 1 Mel' a n t s "TjC or" I bURpTA I LSlT0 p e s i r erle a sjT eTk 12. 29 Cushion 30 Sunburn 32 Baseball player 33 Garden tool 36 Note of scale 37 Smoothed 38 Quiet 40 Got up 41 Indefinite article 43 Three-toed sloth 44 Mental image 45 Lamb'ipen name 46 High 47 Novelty 48 High card .49 Nahoor sheep 50 Sea eagle 12 IS 18 27 31 33 39 47 32 55 28 48 21 36 49 32 42 13 16 29 43 22 40 20 37 50 17 30 14 23 41 24 25 126 1 33 51 Distr. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc. 10 111 34 45 U6 V MA'AM OJeWANTTO&Uf 50iW MATERIAL JO MY LITTLE FKIENP HERE HAS VOLUNTEERED TO MAKE ME A SKATIN6 OUTFIT fOK A COMPETITION I'M GOING TO 06 fN J OH, AND 6EF0RE I F0K6ET IT, U)'LL NEED ABOUT A MILLION 3UIN5! UJHEN I'M OUT THERE D0INS Mf NUMBER I (JANT TO KErALLV SPARKLE! o o o m w 3 HZY, ZSV WHATAMe OUTHBRB? h 2 20NKZ.tT'S MY nmL- ITS FINALLY FDR. PUBLI WPtSAYweYime m my say I'm m$ HEY, 10 BS FAMOUS, A STAZl THATS XM BSIN6 SB NT ON 6RBAT, A 30-OTY TOUR. SCOTTYi ' TACK SHOWS AUW" 6XAPH PARTIES, imtWRKS ! r tw THAT5HIHYI CAME OUT HERE, 20NK! I HAD 10 GET OUT OF THE CITY, TO SET IN TOUCH WITH MYSELF BEFORE IT ALL BE6INS! I i-K.:.: ': The Carolina Forum presents 8 - s i, IrytKK J M ! J R OH...CUEU, f J i Wed. Nov. -13 4 D.mV I Y0UCANUSE THANKS, ft L t j -p.iii. J mike's room zonk, i ft izz&xfr'''' x i Memorial Hall F YOUtiJANT- APPRECIATE ft XfT ( V f IVlCIIIUIiai nail f m H I i i Admission Free a . n nVHt caronna o . m a -d in conjunction vith Student Government's Colloquium on Individual Rights And Liberties presents!! cm 0 0 n j