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In a rare public statement. the CIA acknowledged the practice of detailing employes to other government agencies but strongly denied that this amounted to "penetration" or "infiltration" without the lmowledge of those disclosure of the Watergate tapes led to President Nixon's - downfall, held a special CIA military liaison clearance in 1959 c and special CIA intelligence , ; t t . , - , ,' , - . . , 4,,,- -- ,- , ' .-- , , , , ,, ,,, z ,,, " ,, ' ' ' , - ' 4 - '''', ' - , , . - ,, . ,,, , - ' - : , , s ,, ;, -, ', ' '''''' t,' ::.c:;,...'.'-- .''t :,., , ''''. .., -.- , ,,.,.. ;,. - ,, s;:., ---- --.: , 2 - , - :":':. - ' - , , . , -' ' ,A '," , ! , , , ,, , , ,- '".- - -- -: ' 5 ''' , ' , r : - ' '. '''''''''''.,';- 1.'r--," 1 : , , , 4:.,' ,.,':'..',- , i t .,:.4 ,: - ,, ':'- , ,,, ,..,,i , - ...,. :,., , - 4 , .. - zr':- ..., .,'.'.'-'- ,..., '. ,. ''''' - ',,,,! - - , - , . , '' ' - '11 ,,, : ,, A,ir... ,...,., .',' . ' , , . ,, , " ,,, :, :' . - - , ' - I e., 0, 10 - . I '. .::::, , : . - ,..:.:,:, : . ,, .,......--. ., ' -- ..,',t, , 5,41. N '' .''.0 , -- -" - , ,'' ' " ' "l a 4" r 1 - , 1,,,,,... - -- , ,, , '; ',, , ' Is: , ,, L., - ,. ' , ! ., ,, ' -' 7 4,,,,,,,,..4 UPI,,,,,,' , ex- posure. ,,, Asked by newsmen if Butterfield might have spied on President Nixon for the CIA, he ..Z 'I replied: "In this case, no." White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen, traveling with President Ford to the Midwest, gave reporters a written statement which said: "We have no infor-- ,,,g4 P)t0 'Sen. Frank Church says Senate investigation has found no evidence of CIA "plants" in White House. - , NI:11,t------,,- 7 $,J,,,,,L,:rretrt-4., , ,.,,., ! ::' ,.... , : i,, , tS.: If- , , - .,,, , , T''' ,1k--- ,,,L, '''':' ,,, A e54.e7?..:Ato ',90,,,7-1.-. ,, ,.,,kr,,,04-- x,dijesc9,51:r544,,,..4.,.2,2 N: .A..,,.4:, 1, ,,,,..,,;,,,I...,..,,-,,,..- ., ipA, Toda 1',7Z; Tr ....,...kso- ..':.'-- !...!:r,t II ,,1 4 - ' ,:-- ' 43:'''' '1- .,;:, to .':E; ..: .d'' .: ,t. Z- ., 44' - ' - I 41 I:. T , g i dA Fletcher Prouty explains functions of a "contact man." mation to substantiate the ellegation that a member of the previous administration was a secret CIA agent or indeed any kind of CIA agent, nor have we heard of such information." Sen. Frank Church, chairman of the Senate's select intelligence panel. said Friday his investigation bad turned up no evidence that the CIA had "planted" secret agents in the White House without its knowledge. But he added: "For a long time the CIA has supplied personnel that have te the W1,;t0 Hetiee becn and other personnel have from time to time been detailed to other executive departments of the government. "The President has known that these CIA agents or officials have been detailed." Prouty, who himself served as a liaison officer with the CIA in the Air Force, explained to newsmen some of the functions of a "contact man." He disclosed that the CIA sent two two-ma- n teams by small plane to Cuba in late 1959 or : an attempt to assassinate Cuban Premier Fidel Castro by shooting hitri. with rifles quipped with telescopic sights. The operation involved enter- ing the two aircraft falsely as a single aircraft on a single flight plan, and arranging for them to leave the United States and return to it without interference from US. air defense fighters. Prouty said as a CIA "contact man" he made those arrangements. In windier inkIllicazi, x,,,;c1,:s., ure Friday, Church said the FBI has failed to answer a number of questions of his committee and has not permitted questioning of its agents. He said that after about two months of fruitless inquiries, he wrote Attorney General Edward Levi and FBI Director Clarence Kelley Wednesday saying the committee wanted to question both of them next week on what was causing the delay. Church threatened to subpoena FBI agents if necessary. 1960 early in , sizt,-;:ile- d , - Russians-mov- ,.. (AP) --- President Ford said today he will send ,' Congress next week a plan to gradually decontrol the price of CHICAGO , domestically produced oil in a way that would avoid any "precipitous rise" in retail gasoline prices. Holding a locally broadcast regional news conference here, Ford by implication rejected a move now under consideration in ;, ',Congress to impose pace ceil ings on all U.S. oil production and actually roll back the price of ed "new" oil. The President said, however, that he would accept a congres- sional extension of the existing law "that permits some over-al- l control and flexibility for the President" in regulating oil prices. At the outset of the session, Ford said he was "deeply relieved" at the release of Army Col. Ernest R. Morgan, kidnaped hi Lebanon June man terrorists AFRICA t 1 le'.' , deregulate the American t' ;, Democratic-dominate- s Kissinger reportedly salved Rabin's doubts over a new interim peace pact with Egypt that could serve as the cornerstone for a complete Middle East agreement. : , the price of new domestic oil to $11.28 a barrel from the current level of about $12.75, it was announced Friday. The conferees were working on a bill that would extend the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act from its current Aug. 31 expiration date to Dec. 31 and extend from 5 to 20 days the time Congress would have to review presidential decisions on apportioning oil supplies. The administration favors decontrol of domestic oil prices, and House Democratic leaders have said they expect President Ford would veto the extension of the act. Under the regulations, old oil, generally that produced at levels reported in 1972, has been held at a price level of $5.25 a barrel. New oil, meanwhile, was permitted to seU at the prevailing world price, now about $12.75. ,,. . Tuesday's Soviet-America- space doubleheader. The pace of work also picked up at America's oceanside spaceport where engineers trainers. flight Weather continued to be a potential problem, but spaceflight meteorologist Jess Gulick said it appears the southwesterly flow of wind that has spawned thunderstorms for the past six days may be about to change. The announcement that the Soyuz and its rocket had been moved to the Baikonur launch stand was made by Soviet space officials at a briefing at the Kaliningrad control center side of Moscow. Cosmonauts .Rdexel A. Leonov and Valeri N. Kubasov have completed their training for the international rendezvous in space and relaxed in air ditioned quarters con- at the American official traveling aboard Kissinger's plane said the secretary 4' answered questions about what support : Israel could expect from the United States if it sigrts pact with Egypt. Neither Kissinger ' nor Rabin would reveal the rz,ture of the : 'aceretarY's clarifications. But even before the two met in the baroque, moated Gymnich castle about 15 Miles west of Bonn, Rabin had revealed some : of the questions he wanted answered. He s?id Friday he wanted assurances that ,: any agreement reached is long-terIsraeli sources spoke of a minimum three years. And be said he wanted to know just : how and by whom a proposed early warning 4 system agaimet surprise attack established between Israel and Egypt would be operated. t Since leaving Washington Wedesday, Kiesinger has gone through' a whirlwind of 'considiatioul, in Pans wiat French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing and in GeneJa With Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. A senior -- it I I 1 I ! i i 1 I ! ; I1 1 : iI j I1 I WAND, 0 ANGOLA - ,, 1,... . , ,i:1 ., ,It1 ...... 300 rti 1 I constituent assembly, government officials said ,aday in the seaside capital of Luanda. Friday's clashes were the worst since the liberation groups agreed last month in Kenya to cease hostilities and cooperate on preparing for independence from Portugal on Nov. 11. , Ismissed the Portugal's ' military riders today Socialist Party from the coalition cabinet and placed the alert. The alert, the first since the army on a govemmet crisis simmered last week and the. first publicly acknowledged since a March 11 cclunter-ecii- p against the leftist leaders failed, followed newspaper reports of "new maneuvers by reactionary elertienta.'.'.,,, I I I low-lev- , i 1 1 I , :.,1 ' el : "We see some indications that the patter' will change around the first of the week and redkice the probability of the afternoon thunderstorms we've been having," he said in an interview. 1 IT Stymied by lengthy debate on New Hampshire's,. disputed Senate election, the Senate has agreed to yote Tuesday on the first of 35 pending disputes involved; marking a break in a partisan deadlock that has snagged, the chamber for a month. A final decison on whether Republican Louis Wyman or Democrat John Durkin the Nov. 3 election may still be far off, as lawmalers have approach for dealing with adopted a cautious te the controversy. A bill backed by President Ford to lift Converge embargo on U.S. arms sales to Turkey, starting with $1851 million worth already contracted, has been cleared for House action. The House Internadonal Relations Committee, faced with Turkey's threat to consider cloelagall U.S. bases there, voted 1 Friday to release arms already bought by Ankara, but to continue the bail on new military aid. A bill that wotdd require autos and major household1 appliances to bear a label giving their estimated annual cost for energy has been passed 77-- 0 by the Senate and sent to the House. The bill would apply to all products consuming an average of more than 204 kilowatts of eleetricity a year or 2 million BTUs of fuel , , ; 1 1 t step-by-st- , 1 ' I - In Washington I 1 - Butz predicts stable food prices (AP) Agricidture SecL. confirms that US. grain Butz Earl retary traders are negotiating in Moscow but says the impending sale will have little impact on prices paid by American consumers. Butz told the Senate Agriculture Committee Friday that he expects food prices Et the supermarket checkout counter to remain stable the rest of the year. He said his price forecast was based on this week's estimate by the Agriculture Department of record harvests this year. The department issued another report Friday predicting that the 1975 U.S. grain crop will be so big that reserves will rise even WASHINGTON Allig U t)4o co 1 fie I Kid- BEIRUT (UPI) naped U.S. Army Col. Ernest R. Morgan was released today at the home of Premier Rashid Karanti after 13 days in captivity. ---- The Meer was brought to Karami's home in downtown Beirut less than three hours before the deadline set by kis abductors for his execution was due to expire. Morgan was wearing evijjap cloth ei and 'touted if the Soviet Union buys 10 million metric tons of U.S. grain, as reports indicate. A Russian purchase in 1972 of about 19 million tons of American grain helped spur increases in retail food prices of about 14.5 rcent over each of the next two years. Grain crops this year "appear large enough to meet substantial increases in domestic and foreign demand while still rmitting increases in carryover (reserve) stocks," the department's Outlook and Situation Board said. "Drought in primary growing areas of the Soviet Union is strengthening the outlook for grain exports from the United States." treed in, r eirur , oo exhausted as he arrived at a.m. Kararai's home at MDT. He told newsmen he was d by his abductors well-treate- and the food was "surprisingly good." Earlier, truckloads of relief supplies demanded by the kidnapers arrived in WO fillafitytowa of Karantina-A- l Maslakh but local residents turned them away, chanting they wanted "guns, nt4 charity." Witnesstt said four truck loads of cement and iron were delivered to community leaders in the predominantly Moslem area which the kidnapers demanded be given 280 tons of food, 600 tons of blinding materials and clothing for 3,050 persons. About 23 tons of the food was delivered Friday but witnesses said that when the was resumed today, residents waiting at the lo3ding4f spat began giveaway shouting: "We want guns rot charity." 4 Butz said that private American grain traders in Moscow are in communication with Deputy Assistant Secretary Richard E. Bell in Washington as the negotiations Proceed- I The law requires only that the companies report to Bell within 24 hours any final sale exceeding 100,000 tons, Butz noted. The traders "are going beyond the law's requiremerits and discussing it with him before the purchases," Butz said In other developments affecting food prices: ....peefiminney figures released by the Agriculture Department showed that retail meat prices are still climbing. During the week ended June 28, retail beef prices averaged more Mali t1.81 per pound on au all-eblended basis, compared to less than $1.59 a potmd a week eartier. In April, the average was less than $1.34 per pow& Major refiners atmounced their second increases in the wholesale price of grocery sugar this week. The increases have reversed a steady decline in the price of sugar since last November. The Federal Trade Commission said supermarket chains increased their profits during the 1972-7- 4 surge in food prices, but the FTC said the rise only restored profits to past leve'ia "It seezres to me that what we show is that profits dippeed below historical levee and now bave returned to historical levels," said Frederick M. ',Jeerer, director of the rrC's Economics Bureau. 7! .-4- a 1 - rizN Partly cloudy, chance of rain Partly cloudy with chance of thundershowers througit Sunday. A little warrer Sunday. Widely scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers are expected to continue through Wednesday. (Details, weather maps on A 9.) Business W7 Living Comics W3 Sports Comment Deaths A5 TN! Today ,A9 Thaater Helping Hand W2 What's Doing , , : ,W8 A6, 7 Vit2 I V74, VV6 A Little Leary Information News tips me may've. 524-44- 14 524-44- 32i 5'214535 Advertising 524-283- 1 k 1 itttoln. , . I NSPITE Ar I. ottisor VC VVINoti II itt: pi Home delivery problems (Call Monday throqit Saturday efore - A t 1 mris 1g-t-4-11 5244403 Sports scores Ombudsman Action Ads - )4 I ' ; mois Astronauts Thomas P. Stafford, Vance D. Brand and Donald K. "Deke" Slayton were wrapping up their training at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. They planned to fly to the Cape this evening in white jet readied an Apollo spaceship for ' I , ::: n.. Baikonur Cosmodrome in the hot Asian desert n I -, - . ...... 'i''O.'bi..- :..:'t0::::0..47. CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) Russia's Soyuz spaceship and rocket assembly was moved to the launch pad in central Asia today in a key step toward : 16-1- BONN (UPI) Secretary of State Henry Kissinger met with Israeli Premier Yitzhak Rabin today, flew to London for an airport meeting with British Foreign Secretary James Callaghan and then across the Atlantic toward home. , Sena- d conference panel cast aside Republican objections Thursday and voted to roll back te-House , - by economy." Finally, in the foreign policy' realm, he mentioned "forceful action in the Mayaguez case" the dispatching of Marines to an offshore Cambodian island to secure the release of the merchant ship Mayaguez and its crew. Henry eases , 29 , 1 tt;.--t- ' Asked to assess his major accomplishments and failings since becoming President some 11 months ago, Ford first listed a claim that his 'administration has "restored public confidence in the White House and executive branch." Ford also cited "progress in reducing the rate of inflation" and mentioned initial steps "to A , . I . - V , e- - i , : .:... 0 : , , .;j.j.,'..F:-04-40.-....-0'...i.,..0..i1-.-.0..1.6.:....- , ,,,, ,, A South Vietnamese man found guilty of plotting against the new Communist regime has been sentenced to 1,n,pilio 'tenni!". dee, by 1;:t1Z: -- ii..si ,21...ded tt, Nliat Tiatili in Saigon radio said today. Sentencing of Le of Doc occurred Chan Delta the Mekong July, 4, province the radio said, calling him "a henchman" of the tumor regime. In other reports, monitored in ,Thtands Liberation Radio said more than 290,060 peraoniiaihe Mekong Delta provinces have attended political indoctri, nation courses. Twohtmdred persons have been killed in fighting involving three rival African black liberation movements in the west African territory of Angola. Renewed urban warfare has threatened proiriuependence elections fora - - , . ' , ,,, : Around the world r , ' le A .., , .. .' , ,..:-v--- tLak1i . r',411;.gbits ii'0'0..:.'0:0:1...0......0p,.t:.!'.0.1..:....0.:,....0...t.'' l'; , - ' new-mod- el opl phoo , , - Totuists were warned to stay away from Menominee County, Wisconsin, today after violence followed thO Mexican Brothers religious orders announcement that it would not keep a promise made last February to tlyn over a vacant novitiate to the Menominee Indian tribe.' Bars were ordered closed and a curfew was established for juveniles after firebombings and scattered incidents of gunfire on Friday. The cost of a new car after the 1976 model year begins will increase between $150 and about $300, according, to'. figures from two U.S. auto companies and industry, analysts. The auto makers are hunting they will stick env ears anti, average price hika of about $300 On the but trucks this companies say fall, analysts light probably will bow to consumer resistance and that the 9, increases will range between $150 and WO. The 5CitelitiNIN MIMIC relWarVil was lamu 3;), trucztu government as the basis for its ban on cyclamates says he was shocked when the artificial sweeteners were ordered off the market. "It concluded nothing about cyc!arlat,.....,40, , Dr. Bernard Oster said of Ms study that was cited Itt'the 1969 decision halting the use of the chemical that neaten Americans were drinking in diet soft of drinks. The Food and Drug Administration has ordered a', study of new evidence and may reconsider the cyclamate ban next year. . ,, ., . "VI , r, 1100411, I 1 . . Asp,a 1 , ,. 2 t,,11.- 41, , r, !'':';',: : : a at. Litt 1 . .'.. It : ''.'1:Z, - ekA.,:,k.,.--3,..i.- ? IV Across the nation - , I " " ii7:1 's:):z -...f ;...:9y.:., rt p ' '. - it .., -- YI. 11 k Y ,: .'',1' -, ;k,,,,N,i,e, a ,.. , .,,,,,,....s.,....,,,.....,,,,,g,,:..$ ,.,..,.,..,,:,,,,,,,,,,v.,,,,,,,,,:.,,...,,,;,.. ,,,,,,,,,..,,,.,,,,,,,,u, , r, .,,,,,..,.. r-- kr , .,,,,, ,,- facilitating certain actions and possibly shield-- - .:, ' .1,,,c,,;--- : , ,, 's. CIA interests, , .. 14 - ', ', 4 '''',Nat'AW46..."...1:'4''':''''?i:riT!'rjr4Zrr,n,31,'771 - ,..?::',Ff '' Prouty inSisted that as a "contact man" Butterfield would be expected to look after - ,, ,,... t; ' ' , , '''''"" :,' 1, , tion. ,, .! 4,, . 1 , It. ,4',4 .' ' ' k ,''''' ','''''''-:- ' ,,r,s7 t - .:,,,,,-,Z, .. , . , - ' , ,, i '''.,','',',:',,::"'''''''''''','1, ' r I from - , ,,,,:,,,,. agencies. But the CIA denied that Butterfield was ever a CIA employe or worked for it "in any capacity." Me Washington Post reported today that a 1973 CIA inspector general's report said CIA personnel had kir niany yearn been detailed to "the iramediate office of the White House" and to other agencies such as the Treasury and Commerce departments and the President's Foreign Advis' ory Board.) Butterfield, who recently resigned as head of the Federal Aviation Administration, was unavailable for comment. His wife said he had gone to California in connection with a new position. She said she knew nothing of a CIA connection. Fletcher Prouty, a retired Air Force colônel, created considerable confusion Friday by publicly insisting that Butterfield, also a former Air Force officer, had been a CIA "contact man" in the White House when he wnrked there in the Nixon administra- WhiT6 Alexander Butterfield, the former presidential aide whose - It5 . f :ge''':;17:4!' Z' ,...,,,,,..., , ,.,. ir - 1.4'4 - ar - - WASHINGTON (UPI) -- The Central Intelligence Agency says HURD ngs ,4, 1 tit , , . A , , , ' :, .' '' '' I - - ,,.0 . .... ' r, 1:.;,:-,-- 01- -, ' :., , - .. .., s' t. '. - . ' ' denies I tott? . IF 4.,,,i AV el Pe , , jit ,: ...,, ,,, , W EEKEND OF SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1975 15 CENTS SALT LAKECITY, UTAH , i. 4 :,,v, ' - . ,, . : i !:::: te?. tlf,:t;t1 ( I 1 ,.-- .71) ,, 1 . 8 prn - 57V34:11. P F I p 1 k, ; |