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Show 14 rA,m VOL 383 NO. 213 L.t4,i'efo SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH PAGES :..5,1 't:S4.1t) titan iA3nen 15 CENTS 'TEASER 4; 1975 THURSDAY1 teril..Wry e of Descre urai k7zown as the ;,;1 k.'., .1 ()Unfit:NI.: '4 P,AErRO 1:112 emt 4r ,441 rIA qkf, al 4( ;t4 - 7'; r ;;. 4 far .tztE4 , n 4 c stayed away rather than etrbarass Russia by underlining its absence. Israel GENEVA. Switzerland (UPD and Egypt signed their second interim 0,1 ,,r, t ",47,20,0 ortrapmetnt ivriov il's 0 brio SOiemn ceremony marred by a Soviet 0 vl k boycott that led the enited States to Iwithdraw its observer as well There were no smiles, handshakes or 1 as a soldier and diplomat from signed the accord, worked out in of shuttle diplomacy by Secretary Ispeeches Henry A. Kissinger that obligates give up another 3.500 square miles peninsula. rut. Soviet Union aoti the United States, the cochairmen of the U.N. Middle East Conference, were to have been observers at the ceremony. J, But Russia boycotted it in anger at the prospect of a new American presence- -- 200 civilians to man monitoring stations --introduciAl Into Sinai and the United gtetec ,1 6. ' - - el arid n the abbence hid no oce1 on the agreement Although the peace conference's two chairmen were not there, the U.N. role in the signing was established by Lt. Gen Ensio Sillasvuo, the Finnish commander of the U.N. peacekeeping forces in Sir;, acted as official witness. Delegates from Israel ad Egypt shmk mith SilYasv7,e but nc,t ith cach other. Both nations sent relativ..;ly official to sign the important documents. Israel sent Maj. Gen Herz! Shafir, head of the Israeli general staff, and Mordecai Gazit,' director, genral. of the prime minister's office, while Egypt WaS by Maj. Gen. Tana el Magdoub Solict-America- ' I I r,;',17:, a, low-ranki- -- 1 , repri-.'sc- I 2 billion -- t 110w Ar ,rto , it. .,,,,,,,A.,41: , ..:.,--4,,- 'k- t ,,, . - y- .T- '11- r- 1,r- ''' e;,..e4.5,,, . i'' , ' -'' Kles of - 4 , ,l'-- , . ' , '' 't',z ,tervee,- 5,...ie'i,' e,t. dr.i; , ,'' .. ''4' 1, " L :' ''' ,:,,, 4 ''À .; - in., ,.'.,.' '. t,,,,,,,,,,, v., Ia - l',, I , - 4 e- t:,- - katarowal ,t;-- ,' , 3 ' ti''""ti1,4 Le AP muto reiay water to Trenton. , ;1114 wN 31 ' A trickle .11 $2.3 billion - he expeeted it would be approved. Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the 'ssistant Senate Democratic leader, said after the meeting that the Israeli aid rd said he has some personal reserv about the plan. Congress still must vote on whether to we the American observers in the butler By package may be toned down somewhat because there is "the general impression that the Israelis are pretty well armed." Byrd said he anticipated there will be "some problem" in getting Senate approv- zone, House Speaker Carl Albert said he told Ford he supported the agreement and prc.dicted it would pass the House. al of the plan to station American civilians in the Sinai. but that "in the final analysis" investigators be allowed to determine the relevancy of documents for themselves, called the agreement "a good faith effort to provide the committee the papers it needs." Both Buchen and lawyers for Nixon tressed that the decision to voluntarily comply with the Senate 'subpoenas did not mean the former president would not resist any other congressional demands for his files. ' Committee vice chairman John Tower, said the agreement removed the possibility of a lengthy court battle which could liav further delayed the committee's investigation of the CA and other U.S. intelligence agencies. The Nixon 'files, consisting of so" o 42 million items, are the subject of another to determine complex legal proceeding whether they are owned by Nixon or th. government. WASHINGTON (AP) Former President Richard M. Nixon has agreed to turn over to the Senate intelligence committee some of his papers which outline former U.S. policy toward Chile as well as plans for domestic .: intelligence gathering, White House counsel Philip Buchen said today The committee had isLied sul,po-.31afor the documents. The committee will be furnished those documents which relate to the subpoenas," Buchea said, adding that the documents deal with Nixon administration policy toward Chile and plans for domestic intelligence gathering. The agreement on the Nixon documents was worked out Wednesday among lawyers for Nixon, the White House and the Senate corn mittee. Under the terms of the agreement, which still requires formal approval by a federal court, Nixon's attorneys will search the files to determine what documents and tapes relate to the Senate subpoenas. Committee chairman Frank Church. D1,1i10, who last week insisted that Senate s rcsnts , The subpoenas were issued by the Senate committee last month as part of its investigation of Nixon administration efforts in the fall of 1970 to prevent Chilean Marxist Salvador Allende from coming to power. 3 ....................... overna a nining 1A1 - Concerned over inflationary wage settlements. the Ford administration is seeking to overhaul collective bargaining in the strike-pron- e construction industry and delay threatened walkouts there by 0 days. ' of Labor John T. Dunlop said legislation drafted by the administration is intended to hting sertc order to the industrv's oltea cha.atie bargaialag. '7;114 Prq1osed rriaehinery deA rot congi!ate wage arid price control. is it a (0111V f.if compulsory arbitra t4;111 reporters ' , rty that would step in to moimte disputes; try to heT.1 off mrikos and attempt to keep settle- ,q,ittee ments nonintlafionary. Unlike other industries siwn autos or steel where contracts are negotiated nationsAde, national leaders in the building trades have Rtle, if any, 8E3y in local " union bargaining. '7 AFL-CIpresideat Georg e Meany already has givut roemire his approval it as an effort "to bring with no ration in mai O strd cornpoisioit jsruts M tk4 the proposal, natitzal lendr:rs would Raul more UNI-i- q: ';;;A:itrol (?Yi-i- 41ggressive 6 ti,,,Q01-,e;- 1:111a.na t elt-go- v jailt, ernment , 10 trti li.!01- - tom Sfm-c,v- e, 63; e'tz,,,tcutitist .t'iwOsted. Amertoso Getters! colrartor4 8a2d that whitle the "bill falls short in stveral areas,' it is "teristaly Za right (Egra4etiort," :gi,ilatizt would create a i,911L'e ThZ Construction Industry Bargaining Commities- - voniprised of 10 man- agement representatives, 10 labor members and three neutral me,ztbcrs, ail appointed by the President. Local constrwtion unior.s would be required to give 60 days advance notice to their national unions before contracts expire or agreements are reopened. If the notional committee decides to Cr: dispute. tako co.:41'14-0f- f period wooid requir,nd treflr,,,, any Etrjte 7!cul,1 begin, Natioual union leaders would. effect, bold veto power over local settlements, since would be nt,etied h MI tioinal diczpLite in whir, the, cornmitleo haa Congress examines some tax shelters eec!ezr7e4 te-e-tz e-- i-t V.re on shore for mIre than two hours. Six guerrillas were woureteci. THE APPARENT ,V.PICIDL rif a Russian navigator a.,ard a Soviet airliner "suggests actions of a man who knows tea: within a few hours something is going to happen to him," the London Daily Mail said today. But the Deily Telegraph said sources at Heathrow Airport said they understood there had been an argument aboard the plane between the navigator and another crew member. ECUADORI PREPOENT Guillermo Rodriguez Lora S&YS he has four,d no evidence that foreign oil cornpanies or foreign agencies were involved in the attempt to overthrow hien. Radriguez said his oil Policy "is that of establishing a reasonable price which favors the interests of both pries." COAL OPERATORS have agreed to an industrvunioa paacl to head grievances of wildcatting West Virginia coal miners. While United Mire Workers President Arnold Miller predicted the strike could end in a few days, 20,000 miners remained off the lob. THE CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION of New Yolk PIISOn employes should be able to loin the Ku Klux Klan if they want to and the NYCLU Promised to represent any worker who wants to challenge the edict banning such membership. Corrections Commissioner Benjamin Ward said Wednesday, "a limited number of employes" have been asked to resign Klan membership or face dismissal. CAMPAIGN is under way in New Mexico following the death of a boy from a form of bubonic plague. State health officials say a dog or cat probably picked uP a FLEA-KILLIN- central flea that transmitted the disease to Witham Handley, who died Monday in San Francisco. The youth had spent the summer with his grandparents in Carlito Springs, 'a village east of Albuquerque. WASHINGTON (AP) Thanks to various tax shelters, no tax was paid by a dentist earning $156.000, a lawyer getting $151,000 or a physician making $105.000. A real estate partnership started one late December day lost $215,00, For each $1 invested, the partners were able to deduct 95 cents in the first taxable year -- - which was just three days long. Likewise, in three business day s of operation, a tax shelter lost $1.927 million. Investors got a deduction of $1.93 for each $1 invested. cattle-feedin- Eight film partnerships involved a total investmet.t of $141 million. The aggregate net loss of these eight was $4.30 million and only one had any income, which amounted to $16,0e0. The loss passed through to individual partners averaged 197 for each $1 of investment. Making public such details in a congressional tax analysis, Congress on Wednesday began a new examination of tax shelters. The House Ways ato-- i Means Committee received the analysis, which did not identify the taxpayers referred tax retsrns of 24 partnerships laid three small business corporations, concerns tax tthg hi the areas of real estate, cattle breeding and feeding, movies. and oit aid gas drilling funds, A tax shettcr is a Icg;1 investment device ezoA by persons who put girt-- Itl,C:!.1 into a project with a goal of up some accounting Molt ,,,ipo trot trig thou reu4 .tas Ste TAX nu A4 4 tw,ig their-sipprovi- l Secretary John. i3 rc,t wege-pric- tays o contra. AGRICULTURE SECRETARY Earl Butz told the Senate Agriculture Committee today there will be no further grain deals with Russia until a union txtycoot of the shipments has been settled. And, Stn. responded that the ad Henry Be Ilmon, ministration is pursuing the "most gutless POlicy" in President the nation's history for allowing AFL-CIGeorge Meany to Interfere with the grain shipments. O PANAMA STRONGMAN Gen, Omar lorri ios has been assured the Ford administration is committed to negotiating a new Panama Canal treaty. Geri George Brown, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, William Rogers, an assistant secretary of state and Deputy Defense Secretary William Clemente "discussed the situation at length" with Torrilos Wednesday then flew back to the U.S. PRESIDENT FORD FLEW to the West Coast today for two days of public appearances. Ford will g luncheon-- . m address two Republican Seattle, and another in Portland. Also on the agenda is an appearance at a White House conierence on economic affairs and a tour of a cancer research center. The President will address the California Legislature Friday and return to Washington, D.C., that night. STOCK MARKET TODAY NEW YORK (UPI) stock A meandering on the market headed higher today in slow trading New York Stock Exchange, where Investors were hoping for a solution to New York's financial problems. Shortly before 3 P.M EDT, the Uow Jones Industrial Average, uP and down all day was aheaj 5.08 points to 837,37. It gained 8.60 points Wednesday. Advances led declines, 647 to 566, 51110119 the 1,669 issues crossing the tam, ) on (Complete New York, American its D-- 6 Our phone numbers, suhscriptinn infornith'ion carried on A-4, 1)6, 7 62 Cornks C1rnment AS De,i-f-s Do4i-Ma- 1.41, n Forum 10 A3 A4 C1 living Our Man Jones A3 D1 Sports TV T,Aay B8 Thoaicr A16, 17 What's Doing 132 UTAR tk,'ATHi.ER Sunny and warm through with the Prdbability of rain dw ef ;s4 , zero except in the &twit. Highs 4 90, lows in mid-50: - near near s. The anablis, dealing wit, MS-select- ed . Kleppe g to. k THE PRESIDENT has nominated Titoine,, Kieope, now head of the Small Business Administration, to become secretary of Interior, says Sen. Milton Young, RN.D. But the White House Wednesday refused either to confirm or deny that President Ford has nominated KlePPe And Kleppe, a former two-tercongressman from North Dakota,: was not availaLie for comment.. fund-raisin- 50-pa- ' !cd AP ort010 Pres. Ford chats with Kissinger after the secretary's return. hand over some papers to pane' Hoses from TRENTON, N.J. 'WM) neighboring Pennsylvania today provided only a trickle of water to thirsty residents, forcing them for the fourth day to develop ways of coping with a water, shortage caused by a malfunctioning valve. Half the homes in Trenton were reported without water and lines grew longer at tank trucks that provided the only source of drinking water in many areas, "In the, city itself, about 50 percent of the people do not have water," said Mthin deputy civil defense director in Trenton. Th crisis was even worse in Ewing Townsl-,4- i iitcre 75 percent of its 30,000 wpre siotthig only about one fourth of their daily water aceds. , bottled trucks and tank The hose line, water have ; supplied only- about eight million gallons of water daily.' The 250,000 residents of Trenton and four affected suburbs normally use about 35 million gallons. City officials say the mailutiction trio, not be rcpaired uotil tee! $1.5 XOn will to Trenton WASIIINGTON ;"t 41,1 pact , -- billion and eeeletee, guerrillas A I billion of the Israeli aid will of military assistance, the rest in economic help. tbe said the congressional leaders were told in the briefing that Egypt would cut off all ties With the Soviet Union Others emerging from the meeting said $650 million to POO million had been pledged to Egypt in econotnic aid. Bid administration officials said the top figur e I or Egypt was $650 million. Earlier news reports inddcated the overall assistance to Israel might total over the long term. nearly $10 'billion . e l.e . OM t riVitt d a epare can ark. De ince ra- tic leaders to the White House for the rundown by Kissinger who returned Wed- nesdaY night from hi's successful Middle East mission which culminated in the new , e vs.v.,' ',15c'ee,,';4;1,;,A,,. ,., $2,1 ,( y' 1.155-1- 0, He said ',,. , fesp--"e,e,' , 7. h ' sal , t147,4 bt in the form 'rt..".,1.1fi:''.: '...' ' ,; ,,,,,, " t t,5 ., t ,e ee r,, . ,e4, ';','!,-'- '',,-,-' .7t ,',,, .,',,,4: ',!, W.e"! t,r.,..,,j 'l '',., ee.t4 4' r in ,,,.'"'eI4,', 1 ,4' F;,'.: i Kissinger will run between ,, ..7:77.,,,,f rk,::,;-'?- g oti; ii .,,::'!:,1, , A ktl ,,, ,e.., -- f':, ,'"t - - ISRAELI COMMANDOS landed on the southern Loast ot Lebanon early today and battled Palestinian guerillas for three hours, guerrillas said. Sources in Beirut claimed the invaders were driven off In AS state says The United Henry. i';' é. i - '''''"" i r;',.''"'4',:' ,1 A'"'" ,',,, e4';',',49.4. :t'' ''''',:....,,'' ,4,,'1;, '. V mai, . 5 '4 t, - el '''''. - (UPI) 4 onar 1 was disclosed today. House Republican Leader John J, Rhodes said after a White House bnefmg of congressional leaders by Presi- - at,,,, 11 ' VITASHDIGTON C.-- -, 1.; 0 States has promised more than $2 billion i.n military and economic aid to Israel this y ear and up to WO m illion for Egypt under temis of the new interim Sinai accord, it ""',,e,-'''',;- 1 .A - and Ahmed Osman, bead of the Egyptian the United Nations in Geneva. Aracric -Aol,4'7nr, Secretary of State for Middle Eastern Affairs, arrived Wednesday to represent the United States at the signing. lie also brought the official agreement documents to be signed. But the US. mission here announced today that Atherton would not attend. It said he had handA over the documents to U.N. officials in an earlier private meeting. The mission gave no reasons. But the suarces said it had become tnown Russia planed to boycott the Ression and it would be diplomatically rude -- - especially when the Ford Administration is pushing detente with Moscow --- for the United States to he the only cochairman present. Atherton and a Soviet otticiat had been scheduled to attend only as observers. They were to have had no role in the signing cl4'1Atik)rt aid for raa Issi nger Chai A,p4zi ;ai in OiJ . ,ftJ 4zP . Nts40 'W"x 14,00$ (cadge v itAertS; t, yam" wit 44 otertertarektree IVO), arra Lur.W1 at male 90 Fro "celery I 1,0199,ktott Front) etetot wrote, wilt keen lore irfnicli in Sett Lake erte 0ert, irt Provo, torts neor 90 Priday Isms 3, 4 (Delo, Mittorti, Cootrt Surto, Cist erte ðer Valley rood wain tatet tows tonight 15 et rttrwr ttei 9 10 Ctebrr Cite. ttleh ' Wei 5 (Lttatre Dixie! 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