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J , , , ' .7,4,, , , 15' CEN'TS LITA,H ', 17, 1C75 .1ULY THURSDAY, - ' ' ,METRO e, : - :,''' f,, ta ., frl.,,,,,...-...- k I I, v'. ma, 7 1 i meelm, ii.u4.,, - R:) ,,, . .alt 6,4,..: ) cri.,,,,-E,, fl 1 1- 1,,s: R: 1 , Off ..,,x, .1 0 rm, LI ris ,,,,,. ,,,,,.,,,,4' a ii.. i ' If ' ,: I gpmvilpfir ,,,,", L ,,4 vczeizir , ' ft Ii ' 11. c ' ; it 1 I 11',, , 1 4 I , - ii , r 110 i - "'d !ill kva," igi , 0,titat hiodLikt Mocktie . 4,1 c - .dslit' f, A ':' ' ' ' ' ' 4,,-- ;.. ' ' . , - - - ti ii ii toos. - ' 1 , ' , Descent Vends) , . ti. , ;,...,,, ,ere.:eede-,,--- e 4,',".!,Itit , ,t; ' :,... .?''''''-''- t :'.140DireeR ,, t ,....-...., r...,, ,;:- ,- ee "efe, e,L '- 'in,ea,ree 4 : -- -, e; tet. - .:::deeee : N , .''''Oe,4 .:: ,f,, - ,-- ,,,,,f, . " , ,, , ..: ,,e r, -- a, a r Oe, a I A-- 7 a .. .. - ' e a 'i , ael., aeaa .' ' .t.Th .; , .'n......,Aess. :ea .....p, eta ae esieinsW, aaa ' ea e. aye, ; -.,,g-,:i.aaaaaeaaaaaae , '2 , . 4' I e3 , a . e .' 1 I , 1 ' - 1 - I ,, I 1 I - 1. I '. g:,4 es , ; 3." ' .,- '''. . 1 ' - - , ' , , e ' - ' - I ' ' 1 1. . - , a 2- i , I gyael I 1 . I , I i 1 1 , r ,. . , - . .....;.,.....,,,., , , ,,..,- : ., .,.: .,.,,, , , - ' ., ''- 0 , - - ' Alf ' ' ' : I , . ' W,.: ..:::,.':: .,,:;:!.,,.,.,,,..,;,.i!....,,,..:;: ,5,....,,,,:;.,,,,,,,,,,,..- T.Hr,', '''',. c See GRAIN on A-- 7 L ', ' , - , . 3 , - preceeding ' ',$8.2 billion. . st : , threc-mont- . - - - - i x - ' - , - ,;'- a - : , :.. , ; i . , Fhurch, ! i ,, - ' , ' On Wall : Street . - - ' '' - - 1;4 The churning stock market :: headed lower today after a brief rally attempt fizzréd e fairly-activon the New York Stock Exchaqe..:: trading ' , The Dow JOnes Indlistrial Average, off more:than tour points at the outset and ahead more than one around , noon, was off 1.33 points to 870,78 shortly before 1..15 p.m. EDT. It lost 9.70 points in profit taking Wednesday.. Declines led advances, 655 to 617, among the Iii6d turrioiier issues crossing th,. tape. The three-hou- r amotmted to around 12,950,000 shares, (Complete New York,, American lists on .) . e , , - , NEW YORK 11:PI) e i , - :1 - ' : F-6- , .., h , " ' tr:.i,,.'t Variable clouds, ' - ' ,, r),.,.....,.....1 CC:3 a little cooler , Variable clondineSS and a littleioeler through Friday.. percent chance of scattered afternoon thundershowers. Highs in the mid atis and lows near 00. Generally fair' through Monday. (Details, weather map on .. A 10 : .) . - Business F6; 7 Music - Ccrcs ' will depend upon I - . During a fourear period beginning in 1970, the Mebd;:- Oil Corp. legally contributed $2 million to Italian Political parties, a Zompany official told- - Congress today; Sen-.,-;, chairman of the Senate subcommittee,took corporations exceptioe: multinational to the conipany figurez, charging that the iccords did not tell the full story, Mobil also admitted making political ;:; contributions in Canada.- Both Italy and Canada- are ,'? places where donations by corporations are legal. Z , for period ' ' years. During the firq, quarter of 1975, the GNI' dropped by 11.4 percent, the worst, threemora performance by- the American economy in three decades. The department measured the "real" GNP at $779 billion during the second quarter. , "The economy' is now ready for takeoff," said Commerce Sec:etary Rogers C.B. Morton, after reviewing the GNP report. "Whether it flys smoothly and steadily-- upward on a long, stable path of whether it shoots up sliarpiy and then comes crashing down again, : : - - in more titan I : ., - 14 ' Comment - ' the , - El -- 8'. . 7 Al 6;17,, A3 Theater C1-- 9 F5 What's Doi,nci .. '1 ' , - - A - - , Information News tips 524 4445 Sports Scule Ombudsman Action Ads 524-14- 524.4400 , - ..,. - Little Leafy: - - :1 - --- ERVP COLlf-ro-f - 1,010 I4 I- - A4 nalF. - FuhpF, 1.0411 I s 114111-- I 1 364-863- 6 ' , ,, A A'''''' ;! 7" 1144f441S1 521-353- 5 ;:'..-2 1,11,,,'-:-"'4,,1- -2 VOU014 1 t'uverkism,g - , t Is 4 A , 1 I rys Today- - , 4 ' , , - '' living , D5 , Our Man Jones Al' '- 135 , - - A5 ' Sports Deaths Do4t-Ma- n a . economic policies we choose in the next few months." , Morton called the GNP figures "heartening, because they indicate that the rece6- sion has finally touched bottom." The recession has' now run six quarters and real GNP has droppei 7.8 percent dur ing that 4411e. .... :.1....,,,,,sit",..,,1- I inteaVMMINKOWSIDIA4 Home delivery problems , (Call Mondayprough Saturday before 8 p.m) .1)52:4-2S41- , ':,- , .,r, - , , " 1 - . . . ,..":".;'''''''':','"':''4'.'-',.;'' ei , .. , - - - , - , ., - ...., ''' - "' ,,..-- ;..''.."...'lv''', ' , - ::.!' ,z ;!, ,. . ... .... . ... ,,. .... ..... ., - ,,,....... '4"1,g'C ;.....,i...,....:7,..::',,V...........ilfl: , - .. . .... - - , ., WASHINGTON' ' (UPI) '1 The .Grosa National i Product, a vital barometer in the - nation's fight-tshake off the recession, registelvd a miniscule 0.3 percent annual decline between April and June. : the Commerce Department , , said today. , The departmenit also said that the country's inflation rale, a major administration concern last fall, dipped to its loWest level in 2144 years. Prices roses at a 5.1 percent rate compared with 8.4 and 14.4 percent rises a Ma the two quarters: previous ' The - encouraging escond quarter figure was a solid indication that the country is snapping back from the recession, which has cost millions of persons their jobs since early last year. The 0.3 percent decline in the GNP was the smallest quarterly drop since the recession began and was the biggest improvement from a '72 d:eal 9 between the tim governments --: President Nixon's spokesmen hailed it as "a very important, concrete forward step in commercial relations . . which benefits both countries." In the next IA years, wheat moved in price from about $1.60 to more than i16 a bushel, an all time high. The then Treasury Secretary George Shultz had a of the deal: r,adder but wiser appraisal ' , "We were snookered." Butz says the situa- Agriculfture Secretary Earl now. This year's grain sale is r - :' . . --- , . : I( ... decline , aaid - . - , ' , i 1 , :;s Nineteen hours of Marathon contract, talks, werc,-..- ; broken off today between be Railway Clerks Union' andi bargainers for the nation's railroads and the union caaed for a nationwide strike. The contract expires at 12:01 dire, 3; this coming Monday; but the union said the first possible; day for a strike would be the following Monday, Juli2.8.,a , Such a walkout could deal a severe blow to the patiOn's freshening economy and the Labor Departmentindleatee rorce President Ford.tn:-:,-,tiri htheaedtaolfkts might abkrceaonkdgorevTs ' the walkout.-U.S. arms sales aboard, and to Persian GuIfstatii particular, have continued to grow and totaled more tflä4;;.:' $9 billion in fiscal year 197,5 despite,- administration 1; assurances such transactions' could be. expected to)taPet: off. Unclassified figures from the Department of Defense-,-..-..- . disclosed by Rep. Les Aspin, show that the US:, contracted in 1974 to sell ships, jet fighters, tanks Cal)d for an estiniated variety of missile systeros to 72 nations - ' ' - -, United Pres& Irtternational Some cal' it "the Great Grain Robbery." The announcement Wednesday of a new Purchase of US. wheat by the Soviet Union recalla the record Russian wheat deal of July, 1972. Oniginally viewed ars a noble experiment in detente and a shrewd bit of Yankee trading, the reault , proved to be an inflationary fiasco aor the American farmer, businessman and consumer. When Bin United Statns agreed to son $79 million in wheat and feed grains over three years - the 4' in Washington-- - in ,GNP, . of , ,,,4 , 4- . hade a -- ' ' I ., ., ' Remember - ' ' , ,AweveumlwremP.DgMA9." A '. 2 Cook Industries, Inc., of Memphis, Tom., announced Wednesday night it will sell 2 m illionmetric tons to the Soviets and Cargill, Inc.; said in a similar Minneapolis at the same time it sale 1,2 million tons. , I could total an estimated $350 million or The deals , more. The Canadian Wheat Board announced today that it will also sell two million wheat to Russia, which has sugared crop losses due to bad weather. Butz said sales in that range would be "well within our capability" and would have only minimal effect on food prices for American consumers. - , rt,f , ' . rmiti. - peace-keepin- 1 ' er - six-mon- th 1 1 ''', ili rirtli sou. 1I .. - , a ' d WASHINGTON (UPI) TWo U.S. grain companies have contracted to sell 3.2 million tons of wheat to the Soviet Union and Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield warned today such deals must' be closely monitored to protect American consumers. , a -I hope he's 'not burnt Butz' has been warned said. deal should be Mansfield "The again," scrt.tinized most carefully. The cost of living reold be affected." Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz promised the shipment of 117 million bushels of winter wheat most of it from the United Stite- s- to Russia over the next 12 months will not send prices of breand other grain products soaring in American markets as a much bigger deal did in no. - conference this week in There have been persistent United Press International Jidda, Saudi Arabia to seek reports in Tel Aviv, WashingIsrael's ton efx.n.tx!sion from the current and that the Cairo E have United ..Nations and other reached agreement on the negotiations involve a partial international orgonizetions. tLe general principles for a new Israeli wiihdtewal horn interim peace accord, an Mitla and Gidi mountain pasit l' Israeli government source was too early to predict, if field in the Sinai and some said today in Tel Aviv. such a move would succeed, sort of unspecified American lie said, despIste., Egypt's but said if it did it would of aid. guarantees threat to oust U.N. troops "The general principles affect the operation of UN. from the Sinai Desert, negoti- are g forces in the agreed," the source said. ations on an interim accord -- The Middle on the which East. principles could succeed, "if things are next agreement would be played right.".: based are understood." Secretary of State Henry urr Cr,rrespondent Jack he cautioned that ,' Kissinger told a news colifer-- ' However, Tel from Payton reported ence in Milwaukee Wanesan Arab move le expel Israel Aviv that the statement ' United the Nations from day the United States would and have meant Israel Egypt could hinder the talks. strongly any effort to oppose agreed on the general princi' oust Israel from the. Unikd to of I minibters The not foret'gn on ples to 1)e workel out, natil4s voted at a Nations. the actual issoeF themselves,. I , 7 ' . , - ' .,.. .' ,,,..,.. a :4- to Russians - ' :. Tr :,,,.y; : ..:,e, ..-- --,a :. ' ' ' '.'"''''s'aah .. . :.. ',,,: ..:' .'''' ,...0)41,tr-4- zest, ea ah- -' ..sa-'- e. , - .. , .. .firms 2 se Isgrain : ,,:, ,f .i a - Israel, Egypt in agreement on Ooint.T'or interim peace , , , ,,, .,.. , i:;:,i: .;.,0,-;, ' - Li. ' '''''..---- : , , '..401;0:4NS:!-.:'..- : ., ,,,. e ' ' ,i , , ' ... , ' ,..' 4 ,;,,e,$,4.:?.,:, es ..., ..,0' 1, ;:.,...0.,:2,,,...,:;pit,.4,,,,,r;:,:4t,..i !:'57.''',- ,tete.eae :aeai ad-4 ' aaa a se - : ' ,. a::' .. , 4 I $ , ,, six-Inc- h .,.:.,,e,,,,:,.,-, maeeeetand;ad - . th Ford sent his proposal for ending price controls on "old" domestic oil to Capitol Hill Wednesday. The measure could result in gasoline price increases beyond the three cents that went into effect July I and an additional two cents energy administrator Frank Zarb predicted would be in effect by Labor Day. , Even before Ford sent his proposal to I ' ' .,..':!,,':'",,e'r , aaah ;,..:,:.:.., ' - pricf i , ' pi ' 4.,,,,:. ..,'..4.';',,,'.''.- - ''.'- -' , ' - ''' e a ,,,,,' - ' 't . , ' Committee Chairman Henry M. Jackson. expressed optimism that an agreement with Senate Republicans could be reached for a floor vote within the five-da- y period. Ford's plan, which he described as a compromise to his earlier call for complete decontrol, would phase out controls on period. But old oil over a Jackson said it was not a compromise. "I want no decontrol because there's no justification for it," Jackson said. .' I I:. '' - The Interior Committee passed the resolution opposing Fords plan by a 9 to 5 vote. ,I I - ,,I . ' '. - ' ' . . , o country in Southern California's, rugged Desert State Park. Flocks of rare desert bighorn sheep have ;escaped the flames. Crews battling the holotaust , express optimism that the fire will be brought under , control today -- if winds favor them. 0t ' :1! :,;$ The floodwater that has plagued the Noitheast for , several days began receding today. Civil Defense officials are collecting damage estimates in New Jersey after torrential rains ruined crops, roads and building-a- , and left seven persons dead, four others misaing Meanwhile, a number of central Georgia homes were caught in three to five feet of floodwater due to a e : rain, that pounded part of the state. Blacks who lost their jobs in the current recession because they had low seniority have not been diserimi- t, nated against, a federal appeals court in New Cirleansabas ruled.. "The seniority system with its last hired, 1 first-fire- d provisions is constitutional," the court rulea."; Black workers laid off by Continental Can Co., Inc ,.,had :: charged that they wereput at the bottom of the seniority--' , ; ,. system. ' . -- , ,,,,,,..i.:. .. ''''' e eae aaws,a'as sea seaseee.se "New" oil is that produced in wells- which became operational after 1972 or the amount of oil from older wells produced in excess of ' ' ' '' 1972 levels. By a vote of 51 to 40, the Senate approved a bill that would compromise house-Senat- e on 'new" set to Ford ceilings price tequire oil no higher than $11.28 a barrel. It also would force the President to get congressional approval for any increase of more than 50 cents' a barrel la the "old" oil. The House is expected to pass it, but Ford almost surely will veto , the legislation because it runs counter to his conservationby-price-hike philosophy. Ford's plan is opposed by most Demo- crats. It would replace the current federal price control system. to expire Aug. 31, and 3110W the price of "old" oil to rise over a period from its current limit of !a25 a barrel to the predicted world price of $13.50 a barrel. Either house can kill Ford's proposal by it down withilifive working days. voting , The Senate has approved a extension of old oil price controls. Speaker Carl Albert has said the House would take the , same approach.-- Under law, only one house of Congress has to formally disapprove the proposal within a five-da- y period after it is submitted' by the President in order to void it, i.. ' e. ,??(.:'-'- q. iesem e - 3 ',1 : ' , a .::' men o, ..neonameeonO es en' - - , . , '; efeemeoidea...ess..eaeeeee - eahe - e se a- ,.i., :,,,. Congress, the Senate had followed up its decision to continue controls on -- old'' oil by approving another measure that would roll back slightly the price of "new" oil. ' - - Anza-Bii'-r- set'.7-7:'-- , The Senate Interior Committee today passed a resolution against President Fords planned phaseout of price controls on some domestic oil 7- - the first congressional step to kill the controver, sial move. (LTD 7 Fire fighters are galeire the upper hand agallitit stubborn blaze that has cht;erred .S,500 acres, of .bru4h ,,. , WASHINGTON . r' :: .' , 7: - Across the nation -- ''t' ea t.0:.,....i.:11....F...0,...1'::..d.'.i...0i:1:0...!....0,:.;::........r-.:-.,::- v 4 ;- - , ,,,... es 1 - ' '''.' ....irth;,5, -,- : i, . - ",.. - s.,,... - , , - .Tee , aia.............aaasaaa,aaaaa.aaaaaa ' ' 41w I Ottawa, announcing plans to negotiate cutbacks to 'beAmerican market and to - reduce eonsumpt1on'1Canadian industries until new supplies are availahld.- - s'e I ds 1: 'Moo e. A I ASO . a,f--,t:S- , c 4"J AR A A ..,..,:, , e !pee' .. . - e- .,..,,,,.- ,,e . roma. .'iia ''' e'e t t ,,, ,,,, ee Veaesnie aa e. e 1... ItA I lk,1 t.,, ?, t - ' 1 ditial, Fit A '44 , The Canadian government plans to reduce the export of natural gas to the United States, but Energy Minister- - i Donald MacDonald says U.S. border areas without alternate supplies of energy will not suffer, "We're not going to leave peopleo people out in the cold," he said in ;: ,,,- - t I.--' r-, ,,,,,,, ,, ::y,..1.4,''' : ' 'N : : i 7, l'',;': es. a -;- .,,-, , .,. ,1 ic I . , .. . '''' ',: ', ,' 2. ez ' eeee".',"-- - !''''.:::.: t, sa''' ;,!anaae,a,aa ane. '- a -- 0 S,pooteT.,0..or:ip.1::....0tOS:-...::::',-.::.i:- s. ' 't's .1 .. 'A ; ?, , Radicals buriedMolatav cockialis at Japanese Ciovin Prince Akihito and Princess Idichiko today dining' a ceremony at a Naha, Okinawa,' war memorial. The royal couple vvas not hurt,' but a guardsman behirid The heir to the Japanese throne - was slightly: ' : injured. ,:'.,.. . fa - ; 4e '4''4., . .:: hl'. me- - 1 .A.e.,. z io'ete: , , e e-- -- ,, '' APC;, to V e :, v 4N-,,,,- , ' ...17;:4,Clz ;,e.-- , . e- ' - N,:do-!- ateeeee're7e'fr a i 4 , , , .. t-British legislator John Stonehouse, 49, and his secretary, a: q 4: t Mrs. Sheila Pink-Je28, back to England today to face charges in connection with the theft of more than 9 '''1.i.. ' , n quarter-milliodollaria, Their extradition from Aust'alia : ended a worldwide drama that began last September;- . :i when Stonehouse disappeared from a Miami Beach hoteL Ile faces 21 counts of forgery, fraud, theft and conspiracy,,,1, ,i,..e, 0.N,,, 4! rit'S'-e"- .dror-,, - .. . ',-,v-,----q '''''' '( ''''l 44;. 1 - ,,,,,i., : ::4 ,:,,...::,.,,,:: . 1 .., .-. . :..: ,,..se. '. , A re' 4 e ,, - ,, e' .4-e, eat Ns,. - .., 4 e') ' 4 ee,'..'ese ;ty, 1:::1,...:ee, 1,b a 1 ,, ,, , ' .e., , . , 'F-e,t; . .4: '.:. e, eesee f i,,7' fI es : " , ..ei t.,- , e- a : I lfa t Z .,.......4, $ 'AF , 1''60r'-'klt4-G ee to VA' , .:.. , n 1 té : Four Scotland Yard detectives escorted fugitive. e, - e I've...a.. ' e;, ,: ereeelae - a , - .:10111". , See APOLLO on - , 4. . .. - - - II .. a e s - - - 1.1 11.. - - - k .... 47---1 - Around tho world up,,..,,,, ye. a... :Ake' II 11 - -- i ' DOCKING COMPLETED ,, , it , - I al A. 11 BbIllW11,...11: - el I how betweerC rendezvous and Soyuz was made this morning. Drawing at left ' illustrates linkup. Artists cutaway below shows commanders Stafford and Leonov: Taking the symbolic handshake three hours after the docking. The two spaceships will remain together for 44 hours. .r4 , Quay . This' iis Assembly modufe II iffilcio ' - Instrument 4 r t r, - crIAKOBKA - 9 ', .... .,4,4,14 ti - . ' 'r, ,,,:14,.. , i, t... - rt7v7:1 . Docking Ns..., IttlaL:.:;,,," Stafford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton brought the to ships together at 10:09 p.m. MDT over the Eyropean coast in full view of 3 television audience about 139 11 s, - i,- 0 g rl .91 , , a . odu)e NI igriole , Leonov and Valeri Kubasov calmly waited in their Soyuz during the excitement. , . ...AM.,. --.... . In ' '' - - 1 'I, - g ' II , r ift, All ,7, . - I elle tql ,,,a.v...1. . , : 1 I , i3 . , Modui Thomas Stafford met Alexei Leonov in the docking module joining the two spaceships in a ceremony that opened an age of internaI tional unity in the side's. There was a brief scare when Stafford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton reported a burning smell in the docking module. This was noticed shortly after the f midday linkup as the hatch to the docking module was opened. Houston Control at first ordered the tnree Americans to put on oxygen masks, but the eoncen of controllers eased a few minutes later. The astronauti. were told there probably was nothing wrong. Flight surgeons, ground controllers and the astronauts decided the smell was from stale- air released when the tunnel to the docking module was opened. - The astronauts went into the module Wednesday for a checkout and performed a gold melting experiment in a furnace there. Houston Control speculated the furnace experiment might have created the odor, but the astronauts indicated they did not think so. "We think probably the ' most likely explanation is we've had the doeldng module locked up for 412 hours and the smell just built up a little bit," ground communicator Richard Truly told the Americans. ' The astronauts apparently never did Put the oxygen masks on, but Stafford said the masks were at their sides, ready for use if necessary. ,. z li ii . r Service handshake , -- t - rt il ,, ri 0 . , ' i ; ,,g,....13; ..,,,, HOUSTON (UPI) L. The commanders of the linked American Apollo and Russian Soyuz spaceships shook hands 139 miles above earth today in the first meeting in space of men from two nations. I, 'A-1,- !:, , - - t- . . ''''' S '! 4.i .;:i' " It space era begins with :.: : ,, , ...... . ladoominaiMPAMANAINA00.0.0A.OWNINDASMANNO, Anna. . ' - fr i : .. .. . I a a a ,' , . WeliNts.Wwwwwasmongoos , t - . . a ,!..,,:, - r:si--1 t:4 4 ' - NO 170 ,..,. 7 49sel nis 44 s It isi 04 11,4 .4 ivir. :,,:i4:,,,, ,,rzig sk,agm r2,44,42 la ,, . . , . , I a t- ,..V,'.' 1, , '" , rrri El grf Fi:4 A wiiirazwaa ' ,,,,!ri 4 At '1 s . , . ' 1 - .2,e :, me..A.'7, ' , - , , . -- -- --. ,', 4.,.k-rv- , '.'''', .;',w',g.i .qait,y,,,:g6!;44,4604,v4;, ,, . . . , , , , - ' . , .. --',cs'- - A , " ,71 " , . ; . ; 0, , , ,.',,.; " ' ,,;-q,- r, ,:. r , - if.',',, ;!. , , ,,;',,:,-,,,,- ,,,,i,T-- ,,.,- cv |