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Show 4,, , ' 1 ' . , ' , . 1.14 . lt,,,l, .: ' , Ill172raaona : :: - - '0,1 laA';670? t..ttgeNet1 .4 re''''''' - 1 it rssi Pi Pse! , ,,, met,t, saa;"- . ,' t , ' s ! 14 4 ; PA V 4 . )7-e- powe, kt,..11 04 ' - re 1 V - '!,' v kg I WitetAl ',"i 0 qcli4 2 ''. Pluot,f;" igeMalia..q fialk,greti 44 i k , k't S 'It ro et,,z,,,,a V44 1,;;;:.,.. .: til 'C.6"d'aci k lifr'4 ' rk,., ,i,,,,, viv,, ', , dpgim4 1 A'A., , , , tzu rw'I I - ,,,,,,, .4t 14110,4 N k ,,,,,, 1 , - , -153 , was T ika-I- ' x4 - ,, , 18 ,50 whe n Wait territory ,,,; .: Fod knoita as - , ,.'' the 'Stale of Deseret : - ' ., -. ' . . . . VOL 283 NO. 171 60 PAGES tt,,,,, I r a SI .., ' 15 CENTS . , , , ' 7 r; littri : .14 I ;',7-- 4.. 4 '4t, if . " e 7 , ,,,,,, t..,,,,,so t ,... ..,,,,,,,,., r,,.,T : ,,, ,,,.. fi ' - , n , Leonov was the first of the Russian crewmen to visit Apollo: Americans Thomas P. Stafford and Donald K. Slayton visited the Soyuz for nearly three hours Thursday after the nitlemilethigh docking of the two ships. - slipped through the Apollo hatch and was greeted by Stafford and Slayton. , , Leonov Stafford and moved to the Soyuz, and Later, Brand and Kubasov shifted to join Slayton in the Apollo. , Dualog the transfers, astronauts and cosmonauts are conducting joint medical and scientific experiments and sharing meals. Thronghout the joint activities, the Americans speak Russian and the Russians speak ' English. , Who has had three an artist Leonov, accomplished books of his paintings published, today handed Stafford a sketch he had made of him, apparently during the , . . . . -, 0 - t am, -- ---1 recovery is at i.',.:,:.,i'i.A::.,f0 ':.,'.: ' ? - , , A At.r7 - , -,r - ,,..,s..,,:ti,: , ,, a' , ,'' ' F.. ' ' , 1? ',., , .., .;..::': :? .:. :,: - , ' ;: ..g ' -- A,. 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I wouldn't change it for the world." some-rook- ie would day The cosmonauts' wives are looking forward to the reentry stories On 0. earth and to a quieter life; , See , , for so - oil policy 3 0 z A-1- I e , '" eni syn visstirs-ua mountain in Oval Office I , stuck on 'veto' President .. if-A1,- ' ittII) , and his Ford gecretary of state over vhether Ford and the wri- ter shuld meet. - .s.,...414. ''11' --- - President Ford says he wants to meet vv ith Sol- ,,,,,ti .p,:c. zhenitsyn while the Nobel laureate is in Wshington. .411,1 .,r--Secretary of State Henry A. - .y it,,.'''' Kissinger says the Presi- ! 4.2., ,.,, dent should not. 1;: '!; ' A new dimension was 1011110."' No ', ' ' added today at the White Solzhenitsyn House, Press Secretary Ron Nessen ,said he would expect Ford and the author to meet at some point But then he seemed to cast some doubt on the possibility. Nessen reported that SOMe people close to Solzhenitsyn have indicated that "a formal written . :71v, ,. ,k. , ,,,-;.- , ill 239-17- ' - WASHINGTON (AP) Unwittingly, perhaps, but as effectively as Russia's Ural mountains separate Solikamsk and Serov, exiled Russian author Alexander I. Solzhenitsyn has divided WASHINGTON - to . I (UPI) Congress and President Ford are at a standoff on energy each can veto the policy proposals of the other. A majority of congressmen want to preserve and tighten price controls on domestic oil. President Ford wants to relax them. The House Thursday ap2 a proved by a vote of bill already passed by the Senate: it would extend price controls now in effect on 60 percent of domestic oil and roll back permissible prices on the remainder. The Ibill would be effective through Dec. 31. It now goes to the White louse. where it is sure to be vetoed by President Ford, and Con- gress apparently lacks the votes to override that veto. Ford has proposed lifting price controls grativally from that produced by "old oil" wells drilled before 1973 ;And allowing the price to rise from t5,25 to $13,50 a barrel over 30 monthsBut ICongress has Rs own veto power over that propos- al. The Senate Interior Com- niittee Thursday voted 9 to 5 to ask the full Senate to disapprove it. The Senate could kill Forics proposal by I ajority vote within five days after it reached Con- gress. On another issue. oil executives of seven firms denied at Senate-hearings that their companies tried to profit at public expense by raising gasoline prices just before the July 4 weekend. They,said tho price hikes Honly partially off.',et rising production costs. , . ,,,, 1 ' , . , See A1..7110111 on A-- 7 - i , , ! , t. , , , : : ' 1 I 1 tr, 3 18-d- v , Her views contrasted With those of Sen. who told her Hubert H. Humphrey, such a decline means a housing recovery has not developed and the industry remains i in the worst &pression since World grippe4 War II. 'f 4 comparison , with other postwar cyd"eRsy, this housing recovery appears to be progressing," Mrs. Hills told Humphrey's congressional Joint tconomic Committee. Her testimony tame a day after govern- ment economic indicators signaled a start to .recovery from the deepest recession since hot underlined, in reporting World War II the June housing Start decline, just how soft Tr fu r othnewjartartieosnu'ms , erancowntarYasct t - r , - v, . ' ' , , 1 i ' i t le(htt: "We do not expect a constant incrPase in housing starts A:om month to month," Mrs. HMS Said. ' 1 She said that while the 1.07 million starts remain wuti in June --- atan annual rate below the paiik rate of more than tWO MiniOn starts reacyed hi 1971 to 1973, "the bottom of the cycle !As passed and a recovery is under - 1. - ,,,;! wei." ' Humplirey noted that President Ford vetoed ailemergency housing bill that would have provided government assistance to permit vo,000 families to buy affordable homes lifgely on the basis of the 15 percent increasqui May housing starts ovcr April. "Thghousing sector has turned out to be a Rip Vat Winkle sector," Humphrey said. "It stirretta little in May only to turn over and go back t4 sleep in June." g M. Hills said, however, the recovery is real ind enduring. ' n the curren t recovery, all sectors seem to he rebounding ," she said. "'rhere has been an unusually sharp recovery in the West wtere starts have already come back almost tof long-tertrends and promise to be sibstantially above trend." I However, she said, housing starts in the ;Northeast still are 20 percent below normal. II Mrs. thls predicted national housing I starts for the next four quarters at the following annul rates: third quarter 1975, 1.35 million; fourth quarter 1975, 1.50 million; first quarter 1976, 1.55 million, and second quarter 1976, 1.60 million . . She said another promising sign is the inflow .131 nearly $32 billion into savings institutions in the first half of 1975 and slowly declining mortgates rates. Around the world , I Argentina's national crisis deepened today, The economy minister, Celestino Rodrigo, resigned under mounting pressure from labor leaders, and there were reports that President Maria Este la (Isabel) Peron will ask for a leave of absence from office because of illness. ' , An IsraeH army patrol trapped three heavily-arme- d Arab guerrillas in an orchard today, killing them in a gun battle near the Lebaneqe border, In other news: the U.N. intensified efforts to keep momentum going in negotiations for a second-stag- e peace agreement between Israel and Egypt; Israeli Ambassador Simcha Dinitz reported progress in his Washington talks with Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger on an interim agreement, and the Senate passed a resolution sharply criticizing efforts to expel Israel from the UN. 0, ; : ' 4 60-d- i invitation would be desired." "That is noithe normal way of doing business at th e Whit e house," Nessen added, The press secretary said Ford secs a dozen or so all without written invitations. people every day Nessen also reported that Ford agreed to receive Solzhenitsyn at 5:15 p.m. Tuesday at the behest of After the appomtment Sen. Jesse Helms, was arranged, Nessen said, it was learned that Solz henitsyn was to attend a reception at that boar an d con Id no t meet with Ford then ''."'" Nevertheless, Nessen said, "The President conciders that Solzehnitsyn has an open invitation" to the White House. I The dispute began last month, when Sclzhemt- syn arrived M Washington. On Julie 30, he spoke for 4,,n hour and a half to the AFL-CIEmotionally, in Russian translated into English, Sokhenitsyn cautioned Americans not to be misled by fetente, There has been no change in the 'inhumane ideology" of Russian leaders since the era of Stalin, Solzhenitsen said. In negotiating deteitte, the policy i !; and a 117,000- - , talks today in hor,su ofait,v.ertilnt a crippling railroad strike later.this a tep P4rlPl W.:TkPrs 'Union official said today he expects the Postal Service te present a ' complete money package in negotiations on - a contract that expires at midnight on Sunday. Two federal judges have ordered that former President Richard M. Nixon must answer questions 10 days in his his suriuidtetro fithoirsniwha hitoetriouws reagtham' control tapes. The judges denied a plea by Nixon's lawyers that a deposition "would , create an unreasonable risk to his health." If the current scuttlebutt about next year's political conventions has it right, the Democrats will return to the and city where they took ,,,1003bbaaelklott(s) to nominate a the Republicans will the place they All Landon to challenge Franklin D. Roosevelt. The official convention site recommendations are still two to five weeks away for both major parties, but the hottest prospects now seem to be Cleveland, Ohio, for the , Republicans and New fork City for the Democrats. In a letter to six key legislators, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger has appealed to them not to interfere with the administration's attempts to negotiate a new Canal Zone treaty with Panama. Kieeinger criticized t he... "unwise initiative" of the House of Representatives under which the State Department would be denied funds for continuing treaty negotiations. meNmebgearticalimeresks . , - In Washington , thought the never come." - - pay a , It's been going on "it , was worth the sixteen , years waiting. The wife of : - ,.i ,,, ,,, ,,. , ' - ..!, ',..-F- ' ,,,,. 1 - ',- - - 17 , ,,2 . . ,. ;' .,,,.4,0,,w,,. ' nationwide remains at 7 percent reflecting relatively light demand for feeds. The Midwest cam crop baked in the blistering sun today. Without substantial rain, experts warn, the' projected temper crop may be wiped out by drought for the second year in a row. Light rains are predicted for the weekend for Iowa and surrounding corn belt states, but not enough to start crops flourishing and prevent another, crops. year of drought-ravage- d Oil rich Saudi Arabia will lend the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. $100 million to help finance its Bell System operations. A company financial officer said the transaction "relieves some of the demand on the domestic capital market and should make it easier to raise the reinainder of the year's finatichig required by - Bell operating companies." , Albuquerque was left with 180 police officers today after more than 300 resigned in the sixth day of a strike, The New Mexico city also' lost some of its backup deputy'. sheriffs. Meanwhile, a tentative settlement calling for a increase over two years was reached strike by state unemployment and an today welfare workers in Pennsylvania, WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary Carla A. Hills said today rerovery is at hand in the housing industry though housing starts fell back about 5 percent In'June. - : - : , - - I , 7 On Wall Street NEW YORK (UP!) Trading slowed considerably, and prices dropped on the New York Stock Exchange today as a result of investor disappointment over a rise in interest rates. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, a 17.53-poiloser the previous two sessions, was off 4.92 at 859.36 shortly before 3 p.m. EDT. Declines led advances, rio to 517, among the 1.755 issues crossing the tape. , (Complete New York, American lists on . ) 'Michael Sumichrast, chiefi economist for the National Association of Home Builders. said, "I'm terribly disappointed by the figures, It really worries me." , . 4, Partly cloudy, ' - - ! I generally fair L...k.4s.,..,,4J - Home building usually bounces back from a recession and generates jobs in related busthesses such as-- home appliances and lumber. Partly cloudy at times, but otherwise generally fah. through Saturday. Highs near 90 and lows 60 to cs. Southerly winds 10 to 20 mph. Less than of rain. (Details, weather map on , 10 . . - percent chance . . , Business I - 7 Do, 0 I i e im I , least, there seemed to be enough income to match the rising prices, Americans eontinued to believe that they had an inherent right to bigger and better things, year after year. - ' ' ' A . r A recie if ning or necessity . i ...,.,, 1.4T"11, AP I necessity. Americans tried both ! 'they sought some of the big- gest wage increases of the cen- tury, only to find that the cost of these higher wages simply wes included in the price of the items they sought to buy. Nevertheless, for a while tit is ECOTIMIlieS I L tendency on the part of ma' nufacturers to load up their products The customers with extras. want them," thcy said. Want them or not, the customers bought them. Extras added hundreds anti even thousands of dollars to the prices of new automobiles and houbes. Sorrte niqus involved. made the discov- ery 'inevitable. If you cannot afford to pay for what )ou consider the necessities of life you must increase your incotne their dollar I tech- Chess D8 Comics Co Al2 ,.. Our Man Jones A3 Comment Deaths A5 - ; D1-- 4 Sports 65, 6 TV A Do-IT-M- an A3 Theater roruiTi A4 What's Doing r ) - B4 Today -, -- 1 0 ' ' 1- i . . , C7 - ' ed The Congressional - .. y But or redefine the meaeing of the NEW YORK Americans seem to be rediscovering the siinplk life, at least insofar as ;, considered necessary. The sin. pler, "no frill" life, is being rediscovered. It was bou nd to co me. Throughout the 1960s and into the - I Be John C edit' ,,,1 jr......,..... LasisAaa., continues to rise, the tendency is more toward redefining what is ushers in the no frills era I 141"1, times the buyer had no choice; the extras weren't extras at all, but part of the basic ceinir ; ,:a The It was bound house rose in typical less than four years --- front from early in 1971 to late l974 $24,300 to $37,300, according to the National Association of . . Rome Builders. At that price, a average family earning a typical income of $13,000 a year was priced out of the new home the situation might even be worse than that, as other statistics suggest. 0-- 5 living Music 1 oil-pri- 1 ' , I''''''''''"m""4611' .400.5,4,4,14i,,:: - fist mid-Marc- h. HUD says - 1- .:'7.:,'? , :". 1 ;:4 ..P-- ..n,' .,, ...'" ,- .; - , o' -' ,4 t,,,,, ' Iv ,, ., ,.,. ; ,, '" '- I - r 1,:ry.,,,,, - ,i. 7,,,, , ' ''' '",-; , :,;,..0',.m.'",4 9,Nti., 1,,mi: ' , '$- -:,'' y..- , , el ,,e,,:, ..'" --4, - ,,:..'''L' L'....."'''t.' ..f Z:71:' '..;,'''' ":7 ,,,'Ar;;:5;i4Wit,, ,74.144 ,tki0',. .;.' ... Eigigatmaittati.;.,, Mrs. Donald Slayton ';,;-- . ', r va- , For the third week in a raw, First National City Bank of New York City lifted its tending rate for prime business' loans a fourth of a point, bringing it to 7.5 percentthe A number of major banks highest since followed Citibank to 7.25 last week, but the prevailing rate , X t..,- 4 ; :',01' -,- qt.,--,- - 5,I,,e, ,,,, ' 1p,,,,, '' ,;s:'-...--.-- - c!'..?2--'- , ':,;.-.- t :', , f .- v:.', : , ' 'il.. 4:1:e' --,- ': ,,, , ,: .,,.-v- - - '''''st .7",k. : ,, !,;- - I va :;;, '');',',...- '4-.1.'!!!!,1- 1 7,k. '7-4- 4, .., 4. 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Over breakfast, they had recalled events of Thursday anti LetThnov termed it "exciting for both crews. This was a very important moment for both astronauts and cosmonauts. The minutes flew by very rapidly, . . . This was a meeting that emphasized the good will of sour : peoples." On Saturday, the spaceships will separate and a second docking will be attempted, this time with Soyuz as the active vehicle.Apollo was active for the initial latchup Thursday. Then astronauts and cosmonauts will bid a final farewell, and Apollo and Soyuz will go their own trays, working on independent experiments. The cosmonauts are to return to earth Monday and the astronauts next . , Thursday. AtToseow, high-altitud- - - ' ,. ceremony and a televised news conference later today, to answer questions hubtuitted by newsmen in Houston and hand-shakin- ,. E 8 ,41101 , . . - . . - , . - METRO , , , SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) In the spirit of camaraderie, Apollo astronauts and Soyuz cosmonauts executed their own brand of shuttle diplomacy teddy in a series of visits between their linked orbital homes, , ,, There was mueh g g and as spacemen moved through a tunnel connecting the two ships. , Hosts took visitors on television tours of the respective craft, family pictures were prOudly displayed and meals shared. Cosmonaut Valeri Kubasov pointed a television camera out the window over Russia as be gave visiting e Vance D. Brand a travelogue of his homeland, a vast stretch from the Black Sea to the Pacific. As the spacemen continued their unprecedented space journey, Soyut commander Alexel Leonov and Brand made early morning transfers to the other's craft. It was the first of three transfers on this final day of linkup on the first international space mission. The five spacemen also arranged a farewell , n 47 .ii, i d - , . .!' back-slappin- , 1975 FRIDAY, JULY 18, , . . ' cALT LAKE CITY, UTAH , I 4,01V). ' - ; - ' (?r-1-1 kj I I Joint 1 Economic Committee found the median price for a new home has reached $11,300, which BUSillegg Week magazine says means that 85 p?.reent of U.S. families have See SIMPLE on 0 I; - 1 ' A Little Leary ' two..mmara Information News tips tk17,01,VsCENcla 524-440- fkIim tvF1441' Sports scores Ombudsman Action Ads 7,24 4148 Advertising Cit41044(7.. S1Ttan34 NGES 364-862- 6 13-- IS s . 5244445 , I , I15 - ' alp, .III4 - 19t1 . , 1 I ?';';1341 Uida"17., I p.c.f.c. 20 Pt 521-353- 5 524-23- 1 - sfrI4SIS fiVZ) ?-- Home dellyPrIt problems A-1- (Call Monday tiltutigli , - :latafo 8 0 p,m2) , . i , , ' '4 , OR - - 0 , , I ttlz:"! r,7,6r:7,,Tr''....:,' i'72,1':.1VV4 ',.! . , - . 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