Show October 2 1972 b&at on on relies cop Police- force “srsssar Page 6 with Miami policemen riding in - Sir John Waldron' retired head of Britain’s Scotland Yard says the effectiveness of any police force MIAMI Fla (AP) firpatrol cars and getting a sthand view of a US police department u action “The reputation of the police force depends on the bearing and efficiency of what we callJhe constable or the Bobby Sir John you call the patrolman said Friday “He’s the one who has contact with the man on the street with the public He must comfort the widow in the murder case must tell parents their child has been killed in an accident He has to deal with armed criminals depends on the cop on the beat Sir John 62 who retired last the April as commissioner of London Metropolitan Police after four years as Britain’s top cop is helping plan the modernization - dangerous (AP) — U S District Court Judge Aldon J Anderson has dismissed for lack of jurisdiction a suit seeking to ban further nuclear testing in Nevada The suit filed July 29 1971 by Mr and Mrs Francis J Nielson behalfef of Salt Lake City all other and children three their establishalso Utahns sought ment of a $100 million trust fund to aid those injured by nuclear testing Defendants were Dr Glenn T Seaborg chairman of the Atomic and the Energy Commission federal government claimed Nielson's The themselves to irreparable injury and others living in Utah because of testing by the AEC in neighboring Nevada In his statement Anderson said a deposition of a radiation ecologist indicated that radiation levels in Utah may have risen as a result of testing but makes no suggestion of resulting injury to residents SALT drugs that his iob here is to at veteran of and to see where my experience - Sir John ed““tedand one of bridge University of police work in might be helpful” 38 vears He said he may recommend England s top private schwls England and Asia describes the of the 20th that Miami experiment “in quiet said the technology be allowed crime problem here as acute never with century should In IjpndQnuI had 23 districts residential neighborhoods” in to overshadow the fact that the used each with about the same the “home beat system” policeman’s job “is very earthy population and the same number London contact down to the grass-root- s Under that system he says “a of police as the City of Miami But nature despite all the number of murders and mature policeman has the- with human the machines and all the robberies in Miami is about the responsibility for one comwork remains same as for the whole of Lon- paratively small area the kind of technology police a on a basically area he can walk or travel don” The tall gray-haire- d people-to-peop- London has a population domestic He chooses his own hours gets to know the people learns the problems of families He becomes a pillar of support on of bicycle more than eight million and Miami about 334000 Sir John said in an interview job The game Committee to ponder tribe fuss LAKE CITY break for graon xpinrii§ WASHINGTON (AP) — The Treasury Department Friday moved to block a special tax break for exporters of subsidized agricultural products including the recent sale of some 400 million bushels of wheat to the Soviet Union The Treasury proposed a regulation not yet final which would make government-subsidize- d agricultural exports ineligible for tax deferments under a program known as DISC or Domestic International Sales Corp Under the program written into tax law last year to stimulate exports exporters who form such have taxes corporations deferred possibly indefinitely on half their profits if the money is used in the export business The wheat exporters backed by the Agriculture Department have sought DISC benefits The question turns on whether the law gives the secretary of the Treasury authority to exclude such exports from the program The wheat sale to Russia was conducted under the broad Exports Payments Program according to the Agriculture Department It was one of the three subsidy programs included in the proposed Treasury regulation The United States has used direct export subsidies since 1949 to make its wheat cheaper on the world market The subsidies are paid to exporters to bridge the gap between the domestic price and the normally lower world price The subsidy rate which rose to 47 cents a bushel in late August was reduced to zero last week by the Agriculture Department The sale to Russia and other wheat as shipments may have added much as $200 million since June to the nearly $276 billion spent on the subsidy in the last 23 years —The Agriculture Department maintains the exporters should be eligible for DISC saying the subsidy merely compensates for WASHINGTON (AP) Henry M Jackson v & has sub- bondary lines A bill to settle the dispu pending in the Senate Committee but JacksoriT’com-mitt- e chairman said he feels it would be unwise for the committee to act “without a more thorough examination of the the price differential “The facts” farmer’s price is what we’re was subcommittee The protecting” said one agriculture directed to report its recomofficial mendation by March 1 1973 The Treasury will ask for The House already has passed comment on the proposed the legislation But Jackson said regulation and will hold a public he wants representatives of his hearing if one is requested Then committee to conduct field the Treasury will decide whether examinations and hold local to put it into effect hearings Qpaii 99 iliaiDB (Mft Bakery Fresh Snacks Baked Fresh Daily Freshes! 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