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Show 2A Wednesdoy, December DESERET MENS, 24, 1949 Pesticide Arab Klatsons Fail In Try For Unity At Summit Meet MuRGCCO (IPI urr.rr.t meeLr.g called nn.te I1 e Ar.ih wcrM RABAT. Te tc -- tac.-der- m;air! "iuda m fa. lure, tea fusion and n guerri.l.t c.,- - ider. IV. leader Ya--Aia:a: Arab- - gave him "love and sympathy " i it very little al -- er A led v.hetr.er i.e Lad received all the material and financial aid be i..id asked, tne bio strx ky ralestmi-;.!- i leader said with a shrug: -- !.I-lo- a el-- e. conier-enc- e a new Spcakiiv Arab after ti.e H in summit meeting coll.p-e- d thao'. the f.ery head rf the he Pales; ire . ur: marines u.l never agree to a pui.tu.d settlement with despite lack of material aid for his cau-- The outcome of a confernever determines the of a people When we c.iii.e here, we e;ie ted to get zero. Anything atjove zero is a ga.n lor the Prle-tinia- n But revolution. revolutionaries do not expect v ictory from conferences. Victory' comes n!v from struggle through the barrel of the ence fate e. Aafat to minimize sought the breakup of the futh Arab mmmi' over demands by Gama! Egyptian President Abdel Nasser for a vastly contnbu'ion by the stepped-uwealthier jer nations, such as Saudi Arabia and gun." sources tiie to said much the discord over how money to spend on a new militant strategy was so large that the problem of organizing effective measures p Jiuwalt. against me Jew.-- n sdte . rot ev r. Collapse cf ti.e . umm.t. endangering Arab ur..;y at a t.rre when hrael m ? depute wrh was irvc-lvethe L'mted States, is tradi- anti-Israe- anti-Isra- wiggle. tional friend, was highlighted by angry scenes Tuesday, mcludirg a walkout by Nasser, then by other Arab delegations. t Apparently ur.d.smayed by e summit failure. Arafat ruled out any political settlement with I'iael. He sa.d the summit had rea'firmed the of tne Palestine viewpoint revolution. President Gair.al Abdel Nasser of Egypt, before walking out oi a summit conference session Tuesday, told fellow delegate he thought we should declare to people m a that the joint communique conference failed. . . There must be great joy in Controls Requested the H. of D?partmert Education Krael tonight, said one Arab delegate Tuesday r.ight in the lobby of the Rabat Hilton, site of the three-da- v meeting, as toe conference closed in confusion. After flPIl WASHINGTON ecretary Robert by Bil Keane FAMILY CIRCUS hc I hours of for- mal sessions and private negotiator. the summit, proclaimed as the most important since the 1967 Middle East war, ended without a formal statement on what was accomplished or decided. and their relationship Heatlth. .We must act now or f consequences of ha :r acted too late," Finch s. id The commission, in a repo: t Issued Tuesday, found tn., man's uncontrolled use of feticides threatenes the base processes of life, such as the producy.cn of oxygen. HEW must have the clearly defined authority te inter- ahead. took Congressmen for preliminary voter inspection today a mixed Christmas fca6 of successes and failures. House GOP Leader Gerald R. Ford, perhaps in a harbinger of Republican campaign tactics for 1970, labeled the session a do little year-lonCongress. He said it had done almost nothing about Presi-deNixon's legislative g "You better go to bed. Mommy! If Santa sees you're still up he might not stop here! nt program. Sen. Dodd Still Plans To Seek Re-electi- HARTFORD, CONN. (AP) Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, advised by the Justice Department that it does not intend a criminal prosecution against him on tax matters, has reiterated that he in 1970. will seek He is expected to face stiff opposition. I feel at last I have been cleared of any wrongdoing, senator said at the a news conference Tuesday in which he was flanked by his lawyer. Edward Bennett Williams. The Justice Department decision was set forth in a letter to Williams from Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell. It said the United States will institute no vene against registered esc-pesticides deemed hazardous to the heath of man or other living organisms upe.n which life depends," Fir.cii said. of Summit resolutions, if any, were not announced. Some delegates told newsmen they did not know what, if anything. had been deeded. NEEDED It is clear that greater protective measure must be taken to prerent further hazards." SANTA BARBARA. CALIF. Patches of crude oil (UPI) on the ocean surface which have .lapped ashore along scattered sections of 22 miles of beaches appeared to be breaking up early today and moving away from the coa-t-lin- e. Guard said an aerial survey of the Santa Berbara Channel, vvheie the oil leaked from a ruptured pipe on a Union Oil Co. well and natural seepage from the ocean floor, showed the oil was spreading and no linger threatened beaches. DESERET NEWS SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH Ea.twaJ 0c. Advtrtifcf 14 Silt Lm X E Erst Sovtti and Circvia? Mi St. cty uun $ Es4t'shed Jint E uni 15. IfeC. criminal prosecution against your client because government officials had found that no criminal prosecution is warranted. Dodd said the decision came after more than two years of exhaustive and intensive investigation of his tax records following his censure by the Senate in 1967 for allegedly converting campaign funds to his personal use. The Democratic party state leadership is reported to oppose the renomination of Dodd next year and the Rev. Joseph Duffey, chairman cf Americans for Democratic Action, already has announced that he will seek the Senate seat. Pu n'erea a? F SA.t L4e secora c ass matrf Pest Cttce Congress, ter accords? to Act ttarch 3, W Te Coseret Nts Pv.C"sr9 tor D.Mv no contr.b d pctDS'aP roar, user p's ttio RnccfdPts and afttc.es mays oMen pe'irus-be reamed on y co s wen in advance DELIVERY RATES CARRIE rfW! MAIL DELIVERY RATES Cj. y fc. crt ci" a. i ma.l soscftptcn crace Member tra t AwS- ooi'de V t" ST a e Bureau ct ofy m: 2 : me S3 3 me t mo. 3 0 Y t J mo I I yr. 3 ' C oc pat e r rculas. Nr1 cfy e The battles of the election year during which all 435 representatives and a third of the Senate must stand before are sure to get the voters heated up quickly. The Senate's first order of business is the highly charged appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor and Health. Education and Welfare (HEW). VETO THREAT Nixon has threatened to veto the bill because Congress his increased it beyond requests. Some Republicans hope Nixon stands firm on his threat to show he means business about keeping the costs WASHINGTON -S(UPI) Russell B. Long, divorced by his first wife earlier this year. Tuesday married the blonde secretary of a fellow senator. of government down and halting inflation. But should Nixon veto the bill. Democrats are sure to accuse him of turning down funds for such things as cancer research, grade school children and the blind. Democrats already were picturing Nixon as Scrooge, claiming he was sacrificing the sick and the poor while approving ether big money bills for weapons systems and planes that will carry passengers three times faster than sound. DEMOCRATS VS. GOP The first session of the 91st Congress, which ground to a halt at 3:10 p.m. EST, Tuesday. accomplished more than most observers thought likely when it convened Jan. 3 with Democrats in charge on Capitol Hill and a Republican about to take office as presi- dent. Some political standoffs did and for a time develop threatened to keep Congress in session through the holidays. But in the end tax loopholes had been narrowed, taxes for everybody reduced, and So- cial Security payments increased by 15 per cent, effective next month. Draftees hereafter will be selected by lot. NEST YEAR But basic draft reform was put off until next year, at a second session that wont start until Jan. 19. So was action on President Nixon's plan to get the mails moving by raising rates and abolishing the Post Office Department The bride is the former Or-olv- n Bason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam M. Bason, of Yanceyviile. N.C. Blonde and forty ish. the new Mrs. Ixng was a secretary to Sen. Sam a'ea People father-in-la- John i:::;aii.imiiimiiiiiiiniiimiiiiii!iiiiiminiiimui Long. 31. was elected to the Senate m 194S. He is the son of the hue Sen. Huey P. Long, He has two daughters by hts first marriage. Mrs. kav Long cf Riton Rouge. La., and Pamela Long, a colThe wedding lege student. took at Emmanuel place Church P r e sb tetian in McLean. Ya. DENIED S.sA(KE The Marine Corps says its M informal Inquiry" has revealed r.o substance to accusations that a massacre was committed in Vietnam by U S. troops under the command of Maj. Charles Robb. of former President Tne Lyndon B. Johnson. e only ore evi-ce- n con- r.t clusion: that Mcj. t Lien's ar.d men conducted tr.eir operations at all times in the humane manner f the Marine C.:p said. Ri-bh- . SGLO GOES MOD F.ep. Sen. Long Charlotte Miss Bason Reid. opened a Christmas present from her office staff Tuesday ar.d found it was a mod pantsuit. She tried it on. found it fit and wore it after checking the rule bock to the closing Houe session. Tee House rales written before anyone thought a woman would inhabit the chamber, much less one in a pa n is ai t specify crly that no one. irnie or femme. may wear a hat. No one challenged her. and from the her outfit drew from mcolleagues, ro one was - ahros-- j either " LIE DINCES L . tdtower. recovered Julie from an in the her U.S. Anbassa-do- r Eisenhower. Julie, the daughter of President Nixon and wife of David Eisenhower, arrived in Brussels Sunday to spend the Christmas with holidays David's parents. J. Enin, a Wife Seeks Talk With Viet Reds Continued from First Page members Strike for She had with Mrs. of the Aomens Peace. had correspondence Donald Glen Wait-meKellogg. Idaho, and said that Mr- - Waltmen was al- n, ready aware that her husband was alive before Tuesdays announcement UTAHN OX LIST One of the Mountain West men on the list of 133 POWs 7S0 N. 1600 West, Layton, whoie wife received a letter from him last week. Mrs. Lemmons said at the airport today that she sent a letter to her husband with the two women who traveled to Hanoi Women's for the Strike for Peace. hoping somehow she could reach him if he is alive. She has not receded any reply, however, and her husband was not on the list annonced in San Francisco she said. TRIES EVERYTHING Every possibility we have heard of, we have tried. We have sent letters with the Quakers who went to Hanoi, but nothing has worked, Mrs. Lemmons said. One problem, she srid, is that Hanoi does not release the names of POWs in Viet Cong camps, and because her was husband's helicopter South Vietnam, missing he may be a prisoner of the Cor.g. POW LETTERS In San Francisco Tuesday. Mrs. Cera Weiss, New York City, and Mrs. Madeline Duckies, Berkeley, Calif., told a press conference they had brought back 138 letters from POWs in North American Vietnam. The women mailed the letters from San Francisco Sunday. In Layton today, Mrs. Jensen said she had received a letter from her husbanu last Thursday, but apparently not the same letter mailed by the two women. It was postmarked Hanoi and dated Oct. 11. The letter said Capt. Jensen had not been injured, was well and had received two packages sent by his family. It was the first word Mrs. Jensen had received of her since a letter dated Feb. 6. 1967 just 12 days before he was shot down in his aircraft. We were quite excited and surprised. Mrs. Jensen said today. I understand now that we are going to receive another letter. HIS ARM'S OKAY She referred to the letter imbued with the mailed to her by presumably Christmas spirit have donated. the members of the antiwar more than S10.000 to a fund, group. for Been4 Gray, Hprnetta. Texas farm bov whose arms were torn off in a tractor accident. He also received another piece of good news Tuesday at the University of Oklahoma Medical Center: his right arm, reattached by a team of eight sur- PANTHER SENTENCED Elack Panther Chief of Staff David Hilliard has been sentenced to six months in prison and fined $300 for carrying a loaded gun in a pubhc place. Hilliard was found guilty by a jury Dec. II but the panel deadlocked on a second charge of carrying a concealed weapon. Municipal Court Judge Mario Barsotti sentenced Hilliard Tuesday and said he would set a new trial date on the concealed weapon charge Jan. 5. - WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon today signed with stated reluctance a bill giving him the authority to invoke voluntary and mandaa step tory credit controls which he currently does not plan to take. The legislation wax In the fight geons, is coming along niv. Hess Sees Wife After 28 Years (UPr) Hitler's against inflation. BERLIN Rudolf former Hess, Adolf deputy, saw his wife and son for the first time in 28 years today when they visited him in West Berlins British Military Hospital. Use Hess, 69, and son Wolf Ruediger Hess, 32, arrived at the hospital shortly after 2:30 p.m. for the visit. Hess, 75, was taken to the hospital Nov. 24 from nearby Spandau War Crimes Prison for treatment of a stomach ulcer. He was sentenced to spend his life in prison at the Nuernberg war Dismal Failure Proxmire called the administration's monetary and fiscal policies a dismal failure in curbing capital outlays by big business. But Nixon said These aspects of the bill made the decision to sign it a very difficult one, but the need to pre-rechaos in our interest rate situation has made my approval imperative. de- signed primarily to preserve the authority of a federal su- nt pervisory agency to regulate interest paid by batiks and savings and loan associations. The Chief Executive had no objection to this aspect of the legislation. White House press tary Ronald secre- L. Ziegler, questioned about prospects for the President to ue this authoriI assume these ty. said, steps would not be taken although the authority has been granted. Proxmire said that, despite a year of the income surtax, corporations increased their capital expenditures by 57 billion this year. He said this represented an 11 per cent increase over the previous year. Moreover, government surveys for 1970 indicate another huge increase in capital He did object strongly, however. to sections of the bill and authorizing voluntary mandatory credit controls. These sections, he said in a statement, would, if invoked, take the nation a long step toward a directly controlled we can economy and weaken the will for needed fiscal and financial disci- ... pline. The President signed the bill shortly after Sen. William Pro xm ire, chairman of the Congressional Joint reEconomic Committee, leased parts of the text of a letter he wrote to Nixon urging him to sign the bill and apply government credit controls over business spending is crimes tribunal. A British military official said the wife and son were given the Spandau prison regulations to read before they were allowed to see Hess. The official said two guards were present in Hess' hospital room as the trio met. He said they were not allowed to kiss, shake hands or otherwise Hess touch the for fear that they would pass poison to him. The Americans, Russians, British and French in whose custody Hess is serving his sentence, forbade photographers to record the meeting. bettie-browe- spending of around $7 billion or S8 billion, he said. A government survey report released Tuesday said corporations planned to increase spending for plants and equipment in 1970 by 10 per cent. d Job Plan For Blacks Gets Congress Okay WASHINGTON (UPI) The Nixon Administration has wo: congressional approval of its plan to compel the con- struction industry to hire more blacxs and members of other minority groups. It was perhaps the year's most significant legislation in the area of civil rights. I'm deeply gratified that Congress has acted responsibly to allow continuation of . . . our program of positive steps to assure equal job opportunity, Nixon said in a statement Tuesday. Every free American should have equal opportunity for new jobs created by the taxes paid by all Americans. Nixon said. The administration's Philadelphia Plan requires contractors bidding on jobs involving $300,000 or more in federal funds to submit detailed plans for hiring a certain percentage of blacks. There are no specific enforcement provisions once the contracts are awarded, but presumably the government could deny iolators the right to bid on future projects. The program is called the Philadelphia Plan" because it was first instituted in that city. It is only one method the Labor Department has used in trying to get more blacks into construction jobs. It has tried mediation in. Pittsburgh, filed suits against unions in Seattle and warned contractors in Chicago they may be violating the law by not hiring enough blacks. Gordon Lobb Over 33 Years in the Diamond Business DIAMONDS ; limited i j As little as $10 per month Priced $100. $200.. $303 & up , T0X shop O SAVE Well-wishe- rs nr systems in our global environ- ment." Reluctant Nixon Signs Credit Bill ovt slight illness, attended under 30 private dance Brussels Tuesday night at official residence of en. ccn-tr-iri- 'iji-ca- St-iat- Little Lisa Mueller, years old, tries to get the right view of her Christmas tree. Her parents decided to hang the tree upside down this year in their Bay City, Mich., home to be different. Colleague's Secretary 3CD C Ca. v Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield called most producthe session tive. He gave Congress good marks not only for its legislative attainments but its start toward redirecting national priorities from the Vietnam needs. war to home-froBut on DIFFERS Finch said pesicides imand prove food production control disease, but said their "have effects secondary caused Increasing concern for the health of man and .he life A Head stand Gives Right Perspective Demo Senator Weds Leaking Oil Dissipates The Coast MANSFIELD -- i the Nasser walked out of Tuesday morning's session, but returned in tne afternoon. Syria and Iraq left for good, and South Yemen joined them. The final session Tuesday right, carried on Moroccan television, lasted only 16 minutes. Voters View Mixed Bag home to ACT NOW CONGRESS OUT WASHINGTON (UPI) With an election year directly f and Wel:a: (HEW) has called for tror". er legislation to protect n e from pesticide hazarr-- . Finch said he was by the implication- - ' of a massive report filed -his corr.mis-io- n on pcstick -- PROTECTION J -S- Fneh Healr -- where pennies are at big at dollars . CLOTHING APPLIANCES FURNITURE COATS & SHOES at DIAMONDS thrift stores ttC.-2- 41 win OG DEM S. West Tciri iuioiu 3311 Wo.U. II otn n. to PJL A LIMITED Jiliuisisi KaTct Iji SURETY LIFE BUILDING 193JS0UTH MAIN f |