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Show a, uaer . .. ' J.. f I A y fc- -" , VI f " f I . 4. fv. - ' " n f , i sr " - A i i , t n- - c wm - a- miKk' v .," i nihon i? ., i.' - 'fv n . 'u, '- .XvA. x r their constituents have become, and are acting on that understanding, even without a prod from the President ' Trt 4 4- J.y ,J right to know what!' DatV. r thop asked, t? 38 A agreed pent-n- t similar poll uas taken m 1974, and n percent agreed the state- This spring, bS percent agreed Those figures illuminate the obvious to a dangerous noort-- , Americans have lost confidence in the word of their government. Such Helms has said over the years arous a feeling of awe foi such mastery of the misleading Helms Testimony On Feb 7. 1973, Helms appeared before a dosed session of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for a hearing on his nomination as ambas-sido- r The transcript, subsequently published, includes the following exchanges wrh Sen. Stuart Syiuiiigtun of Missouri. Did you try in the Symington. Central Intelligence Agency to overthrow the government of Chile? Helms: No. sir. Did you have any Symington money passed to the opponents of distrust may be endemic in other countnes, but it is a relatively new phenomenon in the United States, and a corrupting one. Moreover, it peiisis even alter the replacement of a president who made lying a way ofhfeby one thought of as candid Seldom Pay Penally It is not hard to find reasons for the public feeling One is that high officials who are caught out in crude deceptons so seldom pay any penalty. On the central , they remain m office and continue to be treated by much of off.cial Washington as if they deserved respect An outstanding example of survival by deceivers s ihat of Richard Helms, the former director of central intelligence. ruw U S ambassador to Iran Reading back over some of the things Helms. Finlit City Hall, Klif Ready lo Wage War On N. Y. lo Save the City U. S. By fish heads and grapefruit rinds packed with wet coffee grounds Gerald Nachman New York News Writer Congressional sources say there is a ' chance that the United Sta?s may declare war this summer on New 50-5- 0 York City Trouble is definitely brewing tween Washington and the Mayor Beanie regime, srys one senator "Mmd you, Im no hawk, but I think the American people are ready to support a limited war. He adds: We'll take Manhattan, the Bronx and Stateu Island, too batObservers of that strife-totlefield say the present uneasy peace between Gen Boa me and the controlling government in Albany could disintegrate overnight. Upstate natives fear renewed fighting wiliun the demilitarized zone between Bronxv llie and Yonk-efI Kiwi dale gws. they Say, ould fall next be- s. CCOCS-dal- e ' Since last March, the Pentagon has to tram been sending in advisers Viewns residents in fighting Cdy Hall There have been occasional skirmishes - such as the recent bloody Battle of and there may be Gjrbage Mound more severe fighting in the future. Next time, vows a samtatumman. well roll up on the sidewalks tn garbage trucks and fire a voLey of raw Dr. T. K. l4 ! , high-explosi- olni'M KS vaoAf'Mf O H tfV . 4f overthrow Gen Beames forces by insurgent sanilationmtM is just what President Ford was wra.tmg for. V.'hen Beame went to Washington to ask for more money and arms to defend himself comments a against the taxpayers, diplomat, the White House realized the troubled city was ready to fall. An Illinois representative who sits on the House Armed Services Committee Everyone outside New York Says' hates the place, and there is little popular support within the city for the Beame regime. Theyre exhausted Its just a matter of time. A hawkish Senator adds. That area has been wracked with war, poverty and pestilence for 25 years, and I say w'e shoidd go in now and bomD em back to ike riuTello Age. Either that or get cut. n policy is ouiy Washington's prolonging the agony and draining us. Congressional doves insist the President has no power to move troops into the city to arrest muggers, man the subways and issue building permits. say his cabinet has no more will to win and that its just a mutor of weeks until Central Park is captured and the entire West Side surrenders Whisky Nose? Not Always leader tron Philadelphia wule at my mothers knee was taught never to lake an alcoholic drink Yet here I air t 57 with what is called a , whisky nose My ( friends keep tei- - l' ' ling me to forget it. "V-- ' but the blasted F- U i -- 'y y that ahohol used external-- ! excellent astringent (drying siibdum.il and cleaning agent. It youre real'y bniboied by your nose, you miubt also ask auout new surgical techniques wbnh have been tried in this condiUn ottu rwiaC known as acne rosacea It -. ironic is an No, sir. of As for President ambassador D-S.- (Copyright The existing program requires free lunches bo provided for ehddien from a family of four with le-- s than $",100 income It gives reboots the option of providing lunches for not more than 29 i cuts to those w hose family income is up to $8,500. McGoverns amcrdmeni would have raised the income calms to $K),0(h and made the whole program mandatory. It is the kind (f measure which the Senate w'ould have passed automatically m the old days. But Sen Edmund S. I) Maine, chairman of the new Senate Budget Committee, food up to note that only eight weeks ago the Congress had approved budget targets, including $125 3 billion for mccme kcrunty measures. The school luuiti program, even without the McGovern amendment, would exceed the amount ""d limUted for it by 300 mU' McGovern's amenaments would add another $!S0 million to that If the Budget Act is to mean anvthmg, Muske said, "it means that at ioma point wc must say, 'This much and no more.' ... There is no quedtnn inui many ttuidi'cn. including some ri my own state of Maine ... would re aided by this measure. ... But the painful reality . . is that we cannot meet all our needs all at once all tne tune." Muxkies objection was raised largely because he thought he bad a duty as spokesman for the hidget com tmit.ee to remind the Senate cf the fiscal lmphca-tion- s of its actions But much to his surprise, his argument prevailed mid the McGovern amendment was 01 tV. detracts from my appear- unco eantniscon- dition be cured 7f !,vA , . - Si lance as it set ms. even a ft " teelotaler cun de MM IVlIen Van Dr, nose rum a velop In some people, usually In line) tea, there is a heieditarv factoi of oily skin wha h ltuds to this condition of dilate.l vessels, pimples, and later, a outturns, gieusj , enlarged nose We have many remedies, but ireauncui is uul tra-- y h't You should avoid cutrcmcj of and cokl emi'tional tension and the (iiocolafc, inlawing foods iodized lokes ijiiees, ah oho! vly bi ehs salt. nuts, a uiiiiki scalood, pd 3 Goad soap ! vou u e a U' !d s .p (such ,.s D.ab with a w , hi loth twee a day. You mignt also be candidate Si f an Oiii antibiutic An an ehoi bu ,edi fuCe ml leia-f- n niv , pOicr i proic July i io75 Mots AuSIRINGFIELD, Mass. rora K Dimmotk attimpted to take the life of Dr W. Thompson with a revolver at Northampton, yesterday, because he laueii lo keep a prouiiuC to marry he.. She was foiled in the attempt and T'r. Thompson has since taken steps for her confinement as a lunatic. He friends ilaan she is t r--- mum excileident affair r-- me ifl i tiwm over tr.e status as they are today, margmal liberal programs have to chance at all The mam focus must be on helping those in greatest need, and the kind of realism i efi acted ir. the votes on the Reuss and McGovern proposals is a step m that direction. (Copyright) Jtdv 16, 1923 DA ION, Tenn. Judge John T. Raul.stall announced tonight he would take no furthei actnn in the alleged invasion of his pnvac fey Tiiliiain ix Ilutch'Jlsou, Intel naUonal News Scf U icnespondciil, by the sctuLng of a news dit; ath Toe. aj paposirg lo gvs his u.U" r.f um ccncenung the disposal of a V srft IP t 4 Jt M motion of the defense to quash the indictment against John Thomas Scopes in the evolution cac. The state rented its ca.-.- against John Thomas Scopes at 4 oclock this afternoon after testimony of four witnesses bad been heard The witnesses presented testimony to the effect that Scopes had taught them a theory cf evolution as expounded in the official text boon of the stale, and that he had admit e1 he could not teach this book without viulabng the teaching statute. Ui uuvy, iloomay to fashion separates for now and into fall - a. national si ney c d:::ikirg hnliL ir. w inch m'emewers questioned a boleros icctr.n of voters m e!l sections and ui oh walks of lif1 f i : n t, i 'a Helping the unemployed must have The Rockefeller Commission has just reported that the CIA under Helms set up a Special Operations Group to loilect information on dissident It ran Operation Chaos, Americans infiltrating the antiwar movement and collecting on a compidenzed index the names of more than 300,000 persons and Even by recent stanorganizations dards of official untruth, Helms's not involved mut set a record In the coiifirmation hearings Helms w as also asked about any CIA connection with E. Howard Hint Jr and G. Gordon Liddy, the convicted Watergate burglars He said there had fcvn no connection since Hunt retired from the agency m 1970 Later it w as learned vhal the CIA had supplied Hunt and Liddy with equipment for their buiglaiy of Daniel Ellsbergs psychiatn.it m 1971. Helms explained that he thought the questions had related only to the Watergate break-i- I uul July Six go of PRINCETON, NJ. c' ery 10 U S adults ennk beer or other intoxicating beverages, though many of these are only oecanonal drinkers and liquor fees been a cause of trojble in ttv heroes of one out of every seven s. top priority for realistic liberals, gnen the conservatism of American public opinion today. When most citizens are as concerned about their own economic The Wav It Wai Here ere bmfs of news m The Salt Lake Tribune 25, 50 and 100 years ago toaay. i y ized. - thing t tz to 29. was ' fc. Toss Lifeline to Jobless That means some working families with 4150 to $200 a week incomes will not have their childrens lunches subsid- Army Intelligence In the confirmation hearings. Sen. Clifford Case of New' Jersey mentioned the known ue of Army intdhger.ee to report on the antiwar movement. This exchange followed Case: Do you know anything almut any activity on the part of the CIA in that connection Was it asked to be involved? Helms. I dont recall whether we were asked, but we were not involved because ti seemed lo me that was a dear violation ot what our charter no-vi- IMIn an Foreign Relations Committee, the immediate v n Urn cf hu deception, recalled him but asked unfocused and deferential questions. The Rockefeller Commission, co: iprehensive as its report was, said noth ng about the hes that had allowed all those illegalities it found to fluorish O1 f S tb" btwen Republican presidents and of which Demoorrlic Congresses Presidert Fords four veto victories commute iht latest found Now, however, there is eviduvethat the congressional Democrats are beginning to understand how little public support there really is for programs that involve increas'd government intervention in the economy or promise only marginal benefits in relations to their cost Three weeks ago, for example, the House took up a bill to require the 200 largest banks in the country to report on the purposes for their credit policies which they are making loans As it came to the House floor, the bill was just a pale shadow of what its principal sponsor. Rep. Henry S Reuss, had first envisaged. Reuss is one ot the new committee chairmen elected in the liberal upheaval at the beginning of the year, in those heady days, he promised prompt passage of a measure that would direct commercial banks credit to purposes Congress decided should have priority. Gains Minimal Support It turned out that Reuss had minimal support even on his own committee for such a credit allocation plan But to save face and a shred of the idea, he came out with a bill requiring the big banks to report on the purposes of their loans. The House, sceptical of the need for such reports, promptly rejected the bill by 22 votes. An even clearer case occurred in the Senate last week, when ben. George S. McGovern, , tried to expand the school lunch progi am No one has called Helms effectively to account for his testimony. The Senate $5 Million Spent Smce that testimony, it has bf come known that the Nixon administration authorized the CIA to spend more than million on covert activities m Chile ween Allende s election as president m 197 0 and his tall m 1973 The cash went e civic groups, newsto papers, radio stations and others, with the aim of making it impossible for Allende to govern Helms has explained tnat he took Symmgions second question to refer to Ailendes two actual opponents in the 1970 election - and the CIA gave them no money. That is a strained argument, to put it mildly, since the first question was so clearly about the postelection period. And in any event, the CIA did give $500,000 to opposition party personnel dunng the 1970 election. I.V m via pi tax - Constitute Latest Round Mr. Broder Ford, at whose pleasure ambassadors serve, he has not been beard to murmur a critical word about Helms The governments failure to bring a particular perjury ease may always be explained by technical or evidentiary problems. But anyone who wonders why Americans have grown cynical about those who govern them pngb think nhnut this question WTiy does Richard Helms stdl hold the rank Allende v, The result of this divided mandate has been a series of "spending" battles Many Lies Go Unpunished s 1 tion That public is rcmo it a the history of the past decade decade of steady and sometimes drastic inflation, persisting in all phases of the economic ejele. Whether the economy has he mi expanding or contracting, rising, eroding family prices have y V- ,r , ,:.. Director A Cambridge Survey Research, public opinion analysts, ashed people whether they agreed with this statement Over the la'--t few years this countrys leaders have consistently "Sf- lied to the Ameri- 1 Of can people ! . YtM" i t cop'-crvstit- x (MVndin da popk-- New YotkTimes Service t rJ v'TVv nservative P . . ... In 1972 Ciiii .a . the legislators ate getting the message of how co- cVi. f -- Lewi- - Ex-CI- with ment R f-Jjk- vet- oes. A number of signs indicate to at ,. ... Democratic Congress, evea witbout intervention of presidential Ht.vsev. -- - T!it' dominant pubUc mood is beginning to assert itself in the hlxrat consenasm rOv - budgets and the basic st me of economic security Even though it fcas prevailed since that basic con icrvati v e impuLe 1J, has noi always been registered clearly in the election returns. Tne bemociaiu presidential nominees have won only 42 and 37 percent of the popular vote m ths tu o elections of this pci iod. But Democrats have maintained their margins w Congress by skillful exploitation of tl e advantages of incumbency and the weakness of their Republican opposi- Wartimcon Pvt Service WASHINGTON of th , ; Tl n uOllbCl VctllbiiJ. jlulj.c& A ,4V A Broder a .j, - j lino i V'J t -'v Dai! !. Periwinkle) and pLk paisley, a different flattering look fer our separcres from Glen of Michigan. So many ways to expand your individuality for late summer and into t3t(. Cool fehne com biriu (ions go with everything, anywhere. As iilust-etethe solid convertible collar hirt $26 avoilcbla in two colors. Corr.fcrtcfcb paisley belted western pants, $40. Paisley jacket $50 stroll 4(4, long oaMey riart, $54. The short "Ooi over a solid skirt $38. Blue & pink swing pullon pant $23, leaf prhtd shirt $32, solid blouse $26. Collection 6 to 16 has exclusive fabric designs. Other pant suits $60 up. Remember, Arenas is exclusive not osrnsive d, slew-eles- s Jil. yuui ifiinic f:k Parking for patrons rear of build-n- i |