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Show - V c - vi !;,k v .". t - - i ' . !, - -- v ; ' , r.c - r , , V, t - . y ky yy r ft " t:& June Salt Lake City, Utah Thursday Morning Yol. 207, No. 68 21. 1973 Pru t Ten Cents .Russian! Gain .. - KsgS c .Baum 7 By BalTV Schweld ssociated Press riter I President CAMP DAVID. MIX Nixon and Soviet Communist leader Leonid I. Brezhnev have reached agreement on a new declaration designed to spur a permanent ban on nuclear intensive weapons, authoritative sources closed late Wednesday ; 4. - V O .- I y '. s ' i The signing is tentatively set tor Thursday. At the same time, Nixon and Brezhnev may announce an accord for joint cooperation in peaceful uses of atomic energy. The finishing touches on the guidelines SLT for the jr ' talks II in Geneva were reached bv Nixon ami Brezhnev in summit conferencesjield in a mountain retreat here. J The agreement could nval in importance the accord reached in Moscow last spring when Nixon and Brezhnev held their first summit. Those talks produced permanent limits on some nuclear defensive weapons and a temporary limited o ban on some offensive weapons. To Speed Talks Associated Soiet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev waves to press photographers as President Nixon tells him it is time tor them to begin their mit conferences at the presidential much-heralde- It was understood the new guidelines reached here were mostly general in nature. But they are intended to accelerate the suspended technical talks covering such complex systems as missile warheads. Pre s Wireohoto multi-targete- d sum- d retreat . . The document would not lie a treaty, blit is considered essential to get the stalled Geneva talks moving again. A companion pact would pool U.S. and Soviet research in the field of peaceful uses of nuclear energy, including reactors and controlled . U.S. Balance and Dobrynin attending. Rogers and to discuss the met separately Middle Fad Gro-nnk- o - 5 Okay Spokesmen said Nixon and Brezhnev had expanded their disc ussions to include the forthcoming Helsinki conference on European security and prospects for a mutual reduction in the military forces maintained m Europe by the United States and the Soviet Union Tlie two leaders met under tight security. Ilelmeted Marines m combat green lined the electrified barbed wire k$- Of Trade e explosions. A Nixon and Brezhnev met late into the evening Wednesday and planned to reconvene Thursday. Shows Gains New York Times Service - WASHINGTON The deficit in the basic United States balance of international payments declined further in the first quarter of this year .and the balance on current account also improved, the Commerce Department reported Wednes- day. These are two of the four measures of the balance of payments now used, and are generally regarded as more meaningful than the two measures published a month ago liquidity balance and the official reserve transactions balance, both of which worsened in the first quarter entirely because of speculative capital flows associated with the currency turmoil of the period. mv... s - fcV the Nixon and Brezhnev as they until 3:15 mm. about strategic arms hnntations were Secretary of State William P Rogers, Henry A Kissinger, the President's national secunty adviser, A. Andrei Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin. Ride in Limousine With talked Then Brezhnev and Nixon left the lodge for a ride in the new Lincoln Continental limousine that Nixon gave the Communist leader as a gift. Brezhnev was at the wheel as they drove around the Camp David grounds for about 10 minutes. An interpreter was with them. The talks resumed in Nixon's lodge shortly after 5:30 p.m. with Kissinger Inside The Tribune The basic balancp is formally known fe 4k & ' ' v s A-- 2 In the first quarter, the deficit in this balance was $1.2 billion, only half as much as the quarterly average of $2.4 billion in each of the past two years. H' 13 The basic deficit was $2.7 billion in the third quarter of last year, then dropped to $1.6 billion in the fourth quarter and declined further to $1.2 billion in the first quarter of this year. By far the greatest improvement among the many individual accounts involved in the balance of payments was in the balance of export-impotrade, which showed a deficit of $960 million in the first quarter compared with $1.75 bil: bon in the fourth quarter. rt Associated ... JId., where light, and President in Camp David, Brezhnev, Press Wireohoto Nixon, stroll in contemplation of problems they will discuss. Offset By Decline Although there was a record inflow of dollars to purchase U.S. stocks of $1.3 billion, this was offset by a decline in new stock and bond issues sold abroad by U.S. corporations. The current account measures all transactions except flows of private and U.S. government capital. Grand AND MORE Thursdaya Forecast Salt Lake City and Vicinity Sunny and warm, with fight breezes. Weather Map, Page Page By Harry F. Rosenthal Associated Press Writer The American Civil' WASHINGTON Liberties Union Wednesday moved to have the convictions of the seven Watergate trial defendants tiirown out because they "resulted from . . frauds upon the court. Paris Bathers The police reported at least 13 dead id 250 wounded in the gunfire near zeiza International Airport, where the inner Argentine presidents chartered t was to have landed. Doctors attending to ie victims said the death toll could Peron put down at a military air base veral miles away after the bight from ladrtd. where he has lived in exile He canceled his pubW appearance. In nationwide broadest Wednesday night, s expressed some' over the dashes and lid: I givp yea a thousand apologies r not having had the opportunity to reet you personally. Peron, 77, said he would hold a news Todays Chuckle As his wife checked out at a loal supermarket. an irate husband complained: Nylons, cosmetics, records, magazines, no wonder grocery bills are so plants high! Taking to Topless Fad At first you could PARIS (AP) see them at St. Tropez, that French seaside test base for the scantily dressed. Last week they sprang out in the of more conservative Nice, only GO miles up the coast. Now they have come to light m women who sundowntown Paris bathe without a bra in public. A weekend of clear; warm sunlight had them discarding their bras at the Deligny swimming pool, only a stone's throw awav from the National Assembly. Same thing at Molitor in the fashionable west end of Pans. One day there was one woman, next day there heart were 10, reports the manager. There is a regular hare breast corner now at both swimming pools except for days set aside for school children and there has been no public At the Deligny polka station the other day a man came in complaining he was outraged at the sight of bare breasts. He could see them clearly from the window, he told police. Someone was sent to investigate Yes, he reported, the man could see bare breasts through his binoculars, 1.000 feet away. The complaint was dismissed. The ACLU asked permission of U.S. District Court to file a bnef in support of Watergate conspirator James W. McCord Jr.s motion for directed acquittal or a new trial. I hose convictions should be set aside and the defendants retried under a properly drawn indictment which charges all of those responsible for the Watergate conspiracy regardless of their station in life," the legal document said. E. Howard Hunt and four of the men arrested inside Democratic Party headquarters June 17, 1972, pleaded guilty to conspiracy, burglary and illegal wiretap- ping. They aw ait final sentence. McCord, the fifth man arrested inside the Watergate complex offices, and G. Gordon Liddy described as mastermind of the plot stood tnal and were convicted. Liddv has been sentenced to a minimum 6 years, 8 months. McCord's sentencing, scheduled for June 23, has been postponed because of his motion. Late Wednesday it became known that discharged White House lawyer John W. Dean III quoted President Nixon as saying last year that he might use wiretapping against political opponents after-- , being told by the late J. Edgar Hoover that wiretapping had been used against ' him in the 1968 campaign. Dean told Senate investigators the"-- ' conversation took place last Sept. 15 after; the indictments against the Watergate Seven were handed flown. A summary of the investigators inter-- " view with Dean said: Nixon said that Hoover had told him that Nixon had been bugged in the 1963 campaign, and Nixon said that sometime in the future they would have to use it to their advantage." The summary obtained by a reporter did not elaborate on this point, but a Senate source said Dean had testified the conversation referred to future use of . bugging. Asked about the report. Deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren said the White House will, have no comments on quotations attributed to Dean until he testifies in public and under oath. In other Watergate-relatedevelopments: d The Nixon finance committee was convicted of illegally failing to report the $200,000 campaign contnbu- See Page 2, Coluir.nl r iw z t 's . 2 - A r Lv $ , C tV . fy M" I' mm (Copyright) 13 Killed at Peron Welcome conference Thursday to explain the that 1 will lend to the government. Sporadic shooting near the international airport continued after dusk as hundreds of thousands of Peronists started back toward the capital. The new Peromst picsident. Hector J. forCampora, said after arming with the mer Argentine leader that the fighting elements who are was started by our nation. against Two earlier gunbattles that left three persons wounded appeared to involve Growing senotK the Soviet leader said of tin summit generally The re- Sce Tage 14, Column 1 cr Scores Wounded BUENOS A'lRES, ARGENTINA (AP) Gunmen opened fire in the throng of ,o million that waited Wednesday to elcome Juan Dommgo Peron back to rgentina. Scores fell dead or wounded, id Peron landed at another airport. Cen- - tra! Supplement. Performs Again break. Brezhnev pertormed again for photographers, tins time wearing a blue vundbroaker with a Camp David seal and lus namn on it. It's all He the President's doing," he said. gav e it to me " In a brief In Convictions of Watergate Defendants protest. The law so tar has not pronounced itself. Stat'ites provide for jail terms of from three months to two years for actions outrageous to ribltc morals. $1.2 Billion Deficit V nXV Tribune Telephone Numbers, Page as the balance on current account and long term capital. It includes all recorded transactions with foreign countries capital flows. except short-ter- r I' i 4 xW,: ! .v te. It rival Peronist groups. Peronists in the crowd blamed a Marxist guerrilla group for the prolonged gunfire that spoiled Perons peaceful return from 18 years in i - 1 3 1 ' : There was scuffling, and then shots were fired into the crowd from a clump of trees 300 yards from the speakers stand. Peronist security guards returned the fire and charged into the trees. See Page 15, Column 4 V' exile. Witnesses said some of the gunmen fled in cars, but others were captured and beaten to the ground. Minutes later, other shots rang out and the fighting spread. Police withdrew quickly from the area after the shooting broke out. land of Peronist youths seized three persoiis in the Ezeiza airport hotel and beat them unconscious. A spectator said the assailants were trying to obtain presi- e ACLU Seeks Reversal r 'Mfc- double femes that line the dential retreat . . - 4, ' j-tv- i 7? V f ' . A 4 p: ' i&t. .dn u irffmii1t ff Newsmen dived to ground when numerous bullets begn flying as shooting started at airport in Buenos Vo Associated Press Wircotioto where former Argentina was to speak. Gunmen killed Aires President 13, wounded Feroa 239. |