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Show tgnirti.irT ini f f-- to : The Salt Lake Tribune, Monday, September 17, 1973 t Shelling Flares Up In Cambodia Areas - PHNOM PENH (AP) operations by government troops continued on the outskirts of Kompong rham Sunday and the military command sa fighting and insurgent shelling flared up in at least three other areas of Cambodia Col Am Rong, chief spokesman for the command, said clashes continued m the uni versity compound at Kompong Cham in the western section Rebels Bide ime m Cambodia 1 of the city and at Boeung i r. f Meanwhile life in Phnom Penh is almost normal, with only an occasional reminder there is a war on there is not much of pinch for food and fuel Prices keep creeping up but not spectacularly Phmom Penh's central market is a cornucopia of fruit, of dned fish and cage after cage of live rabbits and sqawking. quacking poultry, of vegetables, commeal, sugar and tea, of fresh red meat and plucked chickens Rows of gunny sacks of fastmiracle nee growing U S jam the market. But the homegrown vanety is hard to find. The Cambodians prefer it. insisting that the U S. kind has no taste t i J U K to the north r . 1 J 1 1 4 Tf- I riv 4 lrtffft S, Kok 4 f . & y 1 V 3; ' H f L .y i miles northwest of Phnom Penh, killing two civilians and .wounding 15, Am Rong said. He said insurgent fire also was reported about one mile north of the area, site of the Angkor Wat nuns, where fighting had not been reported in recent weeks. 148 .(pmNViJP; ; IV if r ) Mi 4 A v tary procurement V & d U V 1 TV . - s J! , , 4 J J Assoc ofed Press Aireohoio Cambodian accused of working with Khmer Rouge insurgents stands tied to lightpole. A Gasoline is rationed, but plentiful. Traffic tarns clog streets and air Early Curfew The 9pm curfew makes dinner a hurry-uaffair for restaurants and their customers. Nightclubs as such do not eust A few girlie bars stay open after hours for Westerners. headquarters officers and officials with curfew passes. At least one opium den reputedly is still going, but well behind closed doors p Phnom Penh's population of a before the war has been swollen to at last three times that number by refugees The lucky ones, with friends or relatives in town, or the talent or resources to start life anew, have been absorbed into the settled populn ation Camped on Outskirts The less fortunate are camped around the outskirts of town in or shelters The government supplies timbers and heavy plastic roof and provides a coverings basic diet of soup and nee It is .ot much of a life. Prak Dim, 58, hasn't had a days work since he was dnv-eaway from his nee fields a year ago. He says he fled because the Khmer Rouge (Cambodian Reds, the insurgents) burned down his house and were prepanng to k'dnap him and his fellow villagers Lives at Shelter y y n Now he lives in a government shelter on the grounds of, the Champou Voan Pagoda, just south ok Pochentong Airport. with his three sons, aged 10, 16 a.d 17. His wife and (laughter are sheltered at a military camp nearby but he hopes they will be able to join Him soon By Donald M Rothberg gate prnsecuaor Archibald Cox nter has no comment The fed eral grand jury investigating the Watergate break-iand coverup has only to hear the White House tape recordings before deciding whether to issue indictments n The Associated Press has learned that the grand jury has heard all other available evidence in the case and except for listening to the tapes, is ready to vote on indictments charging conspiracy to obstruct justice and Hr-jur- The office of special Water- - Rift Denied Tax Boost Not Near, Covemp Effort Sources said nearly all of the charges that might be issued by the grand jury would involve the effort to thwart the investigation of the at June 17. 172 break-iDemocratic National Committee headquarters. Cox has argued in cmnt that the tapes of nine Watern presidential gate-related conversations are important evidence m determining th extent of the coverup. particularly whether the Pi evident was involved, and whether some witnesses lied to the grand jury and the Senate Watergate committee. Sen Jon C. Stenms, said Sunday that if President Nixon is ordered by the courts to turn over the tapes, it would take a very, vey strong set of facts to justify him if he chose not to. (AP) -S- nation with his Depression-erAre Potatoes hit song " Cheaper is dead at 76 Sherman, who wrote more than 500 songs, gamed h.s greatest fame tor the song with the Oh heck" attitude whose theme was- - Potatoes are cheaper, tomatoes are nows the time to cheaper a W Kalmbach told the committee he at first believed the fund raising was a legitimate attempt to pay living and legal expenses of the defend- fall m love Sherman died Saturday after a brief illness of an undisclosed nature, a hospital reported Sunday. Funeral services will be hud Mondax teen-ager- s In fixe veto override votes this year, the House has given Nixon a 100 percent record of success and observers said it probably will side with him again on the minimum wage The Kissinger nomination was expected to win swift up? proxal by the Senate Foreign ear Committee Relations this week and by the full Senate within a few day's later after he appears for one final day of testimony Nixons selection of Kissinger, his top national security adviser, to head the State Department ran into a temporary snag when some members of the Foreign Relations Committee questioned Kissingers role in wiretapping of persons who served under him at the White House The committee planned to meet Monday behind closed doors for a bnefing by two ol its members John Sparkand Clifford P man, Case who were alJ lowed to see a secret FBI report on the wiretaps. Sparkman already has said the report led him to conclude that Kisainger played a minor part m the surveillance In the projected tight over the military procurement bill. Sen Thomas J Mclntyie. D- H , prepared to offer an amendment that would cut the from Tndent authorization million, $1 5 billion to $642 allowing continued research and development on the submarine but not production The Pentagon wants to prowith research and ceed produc- - tlnn maioritv m the Senate appeared to' favor McIntyre's amendment despite Nixon s tlue.t te veto aov de A (UPI) -director of the Office of Management and Budget, said Sunday that while the WASHINGTON Roy L. Ash, is considering administration various tax increase plans, none will be recommended immediately. He said the proposal to levy a 10 percent income tax surcharge. first made public last week by presidential aide Mel-viR. Laird, was being studas a possibility when ied it is fitting" but the administration feels "this is not the time to raise peoples taxes " n Several prominent m If pattern baldness and canrlOU&TON. Texas not be helped. male from suffer you dont can But, if you ar not already slick you baldness, pattern how can you be sure what is bald, loss now stop your hair lose-' actually causing your hair . . . and grow more hair. Even if baldness may seem to "run For years "they said it couldn't be done. But now a firm of io-- s. Hair loss caused by sebum can also run in your family, and conditions can cause hair loss. No matter which one is causing your hair loss, it you wait They don't even ask you to take until you are sIick bald and your their word for it. 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Texa- - 77QU6 I am submitting the following information with the understandI ing that it v. ill be kept strictly confidential and that am under no obligation whatsoever I now have or have had the following condition-- , Doyou havedandruff ...... Is it dry? oroily? Does your forehead become oily or greasy . .. Does your scalp itch When How long has your hair been thinning? Do you st il I have any weak hair on top of your head? How long is it Isitoilv? Is it dry Attach any otherinformation you feel may be helpful NAME ADDRESS CITY former administration officials and campaign aides have been identified as targets of the inNixon vestigation They include former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, former White House aides H. R. llaldeman. John D Ehrhchman and John W. Dean III and former assistant Atty. Gen Robert C. Mardian. Research Aide, Savant Dies - one-tim- e wvfctnsw fluee! m your family, this i certainly no proof of the cause of YOUR hair laboratory consultants has de- eloped a treatment for both men and women, that is not only stopping hair loss . . . but is really growing hair' We believe that the best possible way to deal with Dr WASHINGTON (UPI) inflation is expenditure reducv ice tion rather than tax increases, Leonard Carmichael, but are certainly considering president for research and exU alternatives, including posploration of the National Geosible taxes, Ash said graphic Society, died Sunday of cancer. He was 71. last Laird's announcement week that the proposal was Carmichael, a former secreunder consideration brought a tary of the Smithsonian Instipresident sharp response from Treasury tution and Secretary George P. Shultz, of Tufts University, his alma who was in Tokyo for a meet- mater, was a prominent psying of the General Agreement chologist but also taught bioloon Trade and Tariffs organiza- gy and physiology during his tion long career ia. to Twese a bill desocial legislation 30 million assure to signed workers covered by private will pension plans that they receive a pension upon retirement New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair It would be the most grave situation that's arisen in li'O he said on the CBS years. television program Face '.he Nation. tin lie fense bill containing cutbacks which he considered a possible threat to national security The Senate also was moving toward action, possibly Tues-daon an important piece of bill R-- ongwriter Al Sherman who rused the spuds of a addition. Heibert Kalmbach. onetime personal attorney to President Nixon, told the Watergate committee he raised funds which were used to attempt to buy the silence of the seven defendants in the original Watergate burglary case Believed Legitimate ants ANGELES legisla- tion Sept. 5. claiming it would and other low price wage ucale workers out of the job market Grave Situation Aide Says ... - In Songwriter Of 1930s Dies at 76 LOS Jury Lacks Only Tapes - authoriza- The House, under major pressure from organized labor to go against the President on the minimum wage bill, sched-Jea vote Wednesday on whether to override his veto of legislation which would raise the bottom hourly pay standard for nonfarm workers from the present $1 60 to l 20 in two years x rejected the Nixon -P- tion bill X ,1 Watergate Evidence Mostly In WASHINGTON (UPI) Nixon appeared likely to win two more victones in Congees tins week with House vote to sustain his veto of a minimum wage bill aid Senate confirmation of Henry Kissinger as secretary of But the President could face W ednesday in the Senate when efforts will be made to delete production funds for the Trident submarine from the $20 4 billion mili- ! Highway 1 has not been used as a supply artery for more than a year, with large sections of the road held by Khmer Rouge forces Associated Press WASHINGTON a dose fight So far a s- state c r Ten rounds of Khmer Rouge mortar fire fell on Siem Reap, Wages, - Kissinger resident Am Rong, returning from a day in Kompong Cham, 4 of Phnom miles northeast Perh, said life among the vilian population of the city had shown a marked improvement over the last few day s rn Congress Sees Two Nixon Victories th- j 1 In the Phnom Penh area, the capital's two vital supply routes remained cut while the Khmer Rouge struck about mne miles from Phnom Penh, blocking Highway 1 to the South V letnamese border. Continued From Page one sive against Lon Not in the dry season Life Goes On mtn y rntJi5 STATE ZIP . . r |