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Correspondent Reports U.S.-Russia

On Verge Of Signing Trade Pact > : < MOSCOW (AP)--A leading Soviet news correspondent, reporting on Henry A. Kissinger's talks here, said yesterday the United States and the Soviet U- nion are on the verge of signing a giant new trade pact. It may include the location of an American trade center in Moscow, complete with hotels. Kissinger, President Nixon's special adviser, wound up three days of C talks with Kremlin leaders and prepared to leave this week for Britain for talks with Prime Minister Edward Heath.

The Kremlin talks have been held since Monday in secrecy with officials from neither side disclosing what was going on. But Victor Louis, a Soviet citizen whowrites for the London Evening Stan- dard from Moscow, said in a dispatch to the newspaper yesterday that one of the outcomes of the talks would be a trade agreement that would be worth $4.90 Billion a year by 1977. Louis has often reported accurately on what has transpired inside the Kremlin. He was first to report the ouster of Nikita S. Khrushchev in 1964 and predicted the Soviet-led invasion of Czech- oslovakia in 1968. He wrote that Kissinger's decision to extend his stay in Moscow by one day "seemed to under- line" that the trade negotiations "had gone beyond the stage of consultation." "The pact would lead to trade and export-import bank credits on a scale that only the superpowers could afford," he added. "The Americans are already planning a trade center in Moscow complete with American firms and hotels - and the American way of doing business." U.S. officials in Mos- SENBYKENINGER cow said they had no information on the report.

0Gen. Creighton Abrams Discusses Air Raids Ordered By Gen. Lavelle

WASHINGTON (AP)--General Creighton Abrams wentbeforea Senate committee yesterday for an unusual round of questioning of high-level military con- duct. With such issues as civilian control of the military on some senators' minds, Abrams was to be asked about his version of the North Vietnam air raids ordered by General John D. Lavelle.

Senate action on Abram's nomination as Army Chief of Staff has been held up by the Armed Services Committee's inquiry into Lavelle's conduct. Committee Chairman Senator John Stennis, D-Miss., said the senators want to know "what information Abrams had of the situation. .what was his duty. .and what he should have done.'' in his capacity as topU.S. commander in Vietnam. Stennis after secretly questioning Lavelle, Abrams' subordinate as commander of the 17th Air Force in Vietnam, said the inquiry seems to be "more a question of disobedience ." Senator Stuart Symington, D-Mo.,a W ATER CRISIS: former Secretary of the Air Force and committee member, has said he feels Figures for Wednesday, Sept. 13 Lavelle wasn't alone in ordering the raids last winter and spring. WATER PRODUCED: 665,000 Lavelle was relieved of his command WATER CONSUMED: 1,375,000 amid accusations that raid reports were falsified to cover them up and that the WATER LOSS: 710,000 raids were not authorized. Lavelle said he thought Abrams knew WATER IN STORAGE: 17,823,000 what he was doing, but crucial speci- fics did not emerge in Lavelle's ear- lier public testimony before a House committee. Once Abrams is finished, the Lavelle inquiry will continue. 14, 1972 Page 2--LATE NEWS ROUNDUP Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, September

GAZETTEER McGovern .a digest of late news Charges Political Perversion

The Soviet government announced yesterday PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Sen. George S. McGovern accused political perver- in Moscow it had given permission to the American petro- the Nixon administration yesterday of Bicentennial celebration as leum firm, Occidental Corporation, to open a business sion of the nation's 1976 office in the Soviet capital to "expand business ties he campaigned in Pennsylvania with Sen. Edward Kennedy. to with Soviet foreign trade organizations." A report from In Pittsburgh and Philadelphia McGovern spoke for the Tass indicated the representation was agreed upon during cheering street-corner rallies and appealed the past week's discussions between Occidental President help of party regulars. Armand Hammer and Soviet First Deputy Foreign Trade Min- 10,000 gave the Demo- ister Ivan Semichastnov. A pressing throng of more than cratic Presidential candidate one of the most demon- A political storm erupted yesterday over dis- strative receptions of his campaign at a midday rally closure that child killer Myra hindley had been taken in Pittsburgh's Market Square. his temporary campaign partner, out of jail for a walk in a London park. Home Secretary McGovern and Kennedy, two blocks through Robert Carr issued a statement rebuking Dorothy Wing, spent about 15 minutes wading the to their cars follow- governor of London's Holloway Jail, and ordering that the downtown crowd from the stage Miss Hindley should have no more outings. Miss Hindley, ing the rally. now 27, was jailed with her lover Ian Brady in 1966 for was sweating heavily and the murder of a 10-year-old girl and a youth of 17. A smiling, waving McGovern his suit was rumpled in the most excited moment of the Sen. J.W. Fuibright, D-Ark., urged Senate four-day string of rallies in big, heavily Democratic northeast which McGovern approval of the U.S.-Soviet Arms Limitation Agreement cities of the midwest and Tuesday night. yesterday, saying it gives both sides "an opportunity of and Kennedy began in Minneapolis for the Philadelphia rally, the stepping off the arms race treadmill together." But the In a speech prepared nominee said the bicentennial chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said Democratic Presidential been "working hand in glove with Nixon's he would not vote for the agreement if the Senate adopts planners have campaign." he added the celebration "is an amendment calling for equality in intercontinental re-election of '76' but to political nuclear forces in any future agreement with the Russians. geared not to the 'Spirit gamesmanship, perhaps the 'Spiro of '76'." A delegation of peace activists prepared to reference to Vice President Spiro T. Agnew was leave for Hanoi last night to escort three American The has made to the Vice President, prisoners of war back to the Untied States. Relatives one of the few McGovern Democratic target. of two of the POWs also were to make the trip. The make- once a favorite street crowd heard perhaps the up of the delegation was completed yesterday when a In Pittsburgh, the speech of the week. But he drew the federal appeals court in Chicago granted David Dellinger mildest McGovern for his pledge to end the Vietnam war. permission to make the journey. Until then the status of usual applause slogan of "four more years," the long-time pacifist had been in doubt. Hitting the Republican he declared: "I say it's going to take all the patience Vice President Spiro T. Agnew announced yesterday we can muster to stand four more months." he will make a nine-day campaign trip to seven states starting Tuesday. Agnew's tour opens with visits to Minnesota and Missouri on September 19. On September 20 he will be in Missouri, Ohio, and the District of Col- umbia. On September 21 he goes to Tennessee and moves on to Kentucky on September 22. Stateside Temperatures

Local Forecast Boston pt cloudy 82 Jest Ville tiolk . .ei JtS .1t0eat. tiit tdittr New York pt cloudy 80 JOt KItM teI.Spllis *dli-O Partly cloudy with scattered SOS Is t I .tIe.I. . 1 it. itor Miami clear 84 J02 Jetty .d.tete iesot showers in the local area. Chicago rain 70 Ll. ld. -e se I- .C .te .itt! Winds fthie Mfit. Offi-e Chief P-7tUn Offce I e fog 69 Visibility unrestricted. St. Paul SE light & variable becoming testhti-t f-t Ait sld etaiIa ~ .eMtiItd"t~pr il Little Rock clear 89 "bill 10-16 knots with gusts to 24 MMtat P.35 Ild Mwd thel dinette. of tie N.e. Denver clear 80 knots in the afternoon. High S t- o., pp- h.qi.i. Itetto.eo ttot Seattle clear 70 iaM.lI.e -fheilpehereIt-r -t -,,I h. N today 38. Low tonight 75. Bay oiiitie ft . efit. h 0. fCetteto o San Francisco clear 67 conditions 2-4 feet. High Los Angeles clear 78 tide 1544. Low tide 2223. Atlanta clear 85 Washington, D.C. clear 79 Thursday, September 14, 1972 Guantanamo Gazette LOCAL NEWS--Page 3

A Thought For September

The heart of a child is with us always. The world grows more important, moves faster, complicates its design. Weapons and wars and enmities Movie Schedules cause nations to grow old. Adults hold meetings, lead parades, and I rule the world. But there are children everywhere. They are underfoot, holding our hands, distracting us. They talk in riddles and smile Club Iguana unexpectedly. The secret of the world is in the heart of a child.

Tomorrow: "ROBIN & THE SEVEN HOODS" We should look up from our work or down from our worries to be with & Dean Martin NRA the children. They must grow impatient with our ignorance. We treat Saturday: "THE GOOD GUYS & THE BAD them so casually as though we wish they would grow up to be like us. GUYS" Robert Mitchum M Their tears disturb us and we hasten to feed them or clothe them or Sunday: (mat) "THE NEW CEILING" NRA console their pains. But we don't look deep into their eyes; (eve) "STARATEGY OF TERROR" M we don't try to understand their hearts. Monday: CLUB CLOSED Tuesday: "STILETTO" Alex Cord & Britt They could teach us so much. They could teach us how to forgive and Ekland R forget. Children don't have enemies until we tell them how. The giants Wednesday: "NINE HOURS TO RAMA" of the adult world are sometimes cruel but a smile and a gentle word Horst Buchholz & Jose Ferrer NRA are taken simply for what they appear to be and there is no more pain. Thursday: "THE SHOES OF THE FISHERMAN" We could learn to forgive with the heart of a child. Anthony Quinn & Oskar Wernek G They could teach us to depend on God, to be less involved in our own importance, to be less concerned about the day after tomorrow. Our CPO Club goal is security, complete assurance that we are rich enough, healthy Tonight: "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" enough, important enough to live forever. But the child ends the day Gig Young & Bonnie Bedelia R without a thought that the sun might come up tomorrow. Or that he Tomorrow: "THE SICILIAN CLAN" Alain might awake in heaven. Delon & Irina Demick GP Saturday: "THE MURDER CLINIC" William They could teach us how to pray. For the child lives in the presence Bircher & Francois Prevost NRA of God. They would not hesitate to invite their angels to join their unday: "THE PRISONER OF ZENDA" Ste- games. And we could live like that: Knowing that each moment of our wart Granger & Deborah Kerr NRA work is important in heaven, that our hearts have nothing to hide, Monday: "THE BRASS BOTTLE" Tony Ran- that we are the house of the Holy Spirit. dall & Burl Ives NRA Tuesday: BINGO AT 8 p.m. In the heart of the child is the salvation of the world. When we have Wednesday: "THE HOSPITAL" George C. grown small enough, when we have thrown aside our toys, when we have Scott & Diana Rigg GP cleansed our hearts with tears then we can become like little children again. When we have learned to laugh and forgive and hold up our arms COMO Club running then we shall be given the heart of a child. And heaven. Sunday: "WHO SAYS I CAN'T RIDE A --CHAPLAIN RANNIGAN RAINBOW" G Tuesday: "BULLIT" Steve McQueen & Robert Vaughan M Wednesday: "THE SECRET LIFE OF AN AMERICAN WIFE" NRA Thursday: "STAR SPANGLED GIRL" Sandy Duncan & Snthony Roberts G Friday: "COUNTRY FOUR" Wait Until Dark Saturday: "THE ONE AND ONLY GENUINE ORIGINAL FAMILY BAND" G Memorial Service Sept. 1 5-1 6-17/22-23-24 To Be Held Tomorrow Morin Center The memorial service for Wil- liam Allen Darling will be held at the Base Chapel at 1 p.m. to- morrow. 8p.me All personnel are invited to attend. Tickets 11 &__ Page 4--ENTERTAINMENT Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, September 14, 1972

Sparkling Channel 8 leek of 15 - 21 September

F 4:30 Harbor Command 5 10:30 Vusic and the Spoken 10:10P-ter Gunn R Stars Wendell Corey U Word Stars Craig Stevens I 5:00 Animal World N ll:C0 The Christophers 10:35 Playhouse 90 D "South Africa's D 11:15 Sacred Heart A Feather Farms" A 11:30 This is 2he Life T 4:30 Doris Day E 5:00 Y 5:30 Big Picture Y "Dangerous Moments" Kitty Wells 5:55 Notes of Interest & 12:00 Biography D 5:30 Julia N 5:55 Interest I Movie Schedule 12:30 On Campus Notes of .ovie Schedule 6:00 Panorama 1:00 Sports Specials 6:00 Panorama 6:30 Catch 72 4:00 Info Specials D 6:30 .'ilson Football Premier 5:55 Notes of Interest & Flip Guests are Lee 7:00 High Chaparral Movie Schedule Mar- Y , 6:00 News Briefs vin Ruth Euzzi "Bad Day for a Bad 7:30 The Virginian Man". Stars Lief 6:05 Sammy Davis Jr. "The Mustangers" Erickson 7:00 Bonanza 8:55 Notes of Interest 3:00 Sonny & Cher "Face of Fear" 9:00 r: rcus elby Guests are Chad Stars Lorne Greene "Teonler Comrades" Everett and Lorne 8:00 Dean artin Greene. Guest: Jonathan 10:00 Tenth Hour News 3:55 Notes of Interest inters. 10:10 Arnie 9:00 Ironside 8:55 Notes of Interest New situation comedy "The riddle of room 9:00 ission Imoossible starring Hrschel six. Raymond Burr "Cat's Paw" Bern ordi stars. 10:00 News Briefs 10:35 Lcovie: 10:00 Tenth Hour News 10:05 r7-vie: Pete Kelly's Angel Zaby Drama 10:10 Naked City Blues. Drama and starring Last Show musical starring George Hamilton 11:00 Movie: Stop Trait Jack .ebb. 12:30 Play>oy After Dark T 4:30 Marvel Toons M 4:30 I led 3 Lives H 5:00 Assignment Underwater U 5:30 As it Happened S 9:30 Sesame Street TO0 5:00 Sports Thallcno A 10:30 Cartoons N 5:3 0 Science Tiction Thtr 5 ' otaes of Interest & T 11:00 Dusty's Treehouse D 5:55 Nctes of Interest 5 'ovie Schedule 0 U 11:30 Life Around Us A moviee Schedule 6:00 Panorama 6:30 "ocm 222 R 12:00 Movie: It's Your Y 6: OC anorama Ay 7:00 lunsmoke D Move. 6: 30 Route 66 "IDraerjoa" A 1:30 Special: The Eye of "Goodnighlt alde'-' Y the Storm 7: 30 Alternatives 8 00 Sun City canalss 3:r5 of Interest 2:00 CBS Solf Classic "Drugs - P re-rots Notes 3:00 American Sportsman Mama of the Game 9:00 -od Cuad ",eet 3:40 Wide World of Sports 8:55 Notes of Interest of Clay" Auto Racing 9: cc I augh In 10: 00 Tenth Mour News Sanford I Son: with 5:00 ride Wide World 10: 00 Hour Me.!s 10:10 Tenth Pedd Foxx "Fan against Ice" 10:1 C Johnny Mann 10:35 5 :30 My 3 Sons 10:35 Tonight Show Greatest Fights 10:40 Boxing 5:55 Notes of Interest & Elke Sommor is a Movie Schedule guest 6:00 News Briefs Because of possible film 6:05 Jacques Cousteau T 4: 30 Partridge Family delays, Channel 8 re- "A sound of Dolphins U 5:00 Buck Owens serves the right to 7:00 World of Disney E 5:30 Beverly Hillbillies a 1kelast minute -hanges "Banner in the Sky" 5 5:55 Notes of interest 5: Part II D Movie Schedule 8:00 The Everly Brothers A 6:00 Panorama 8:55 Notes of interest Y 6:30 Nanny & the Professor 9:00 Perry Mason 7:00 Raihide Take A Navy 10:00 Neas Briefs Carol Burnett 10:05 Man called X: Premier Nanette Fabray guests 1O: 30 Greatest Fights 8:55 Notes of Interest 10:40 Boxing 9:00 This is your Life 11:40 Movie: I was a rMale June Allyson Shower War Bride. Comedy 10:00 Tenth Hour News *tarring Cary Grant Thursday, September 14, 1972 Guantanamo Gazette ENTERTAINMENT--Page 5 Cine Scene SAT SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI Naval Station 1/8 2 3 4 5 6 7/9 Naval Air Station 10/9 1 2 3 4 5 6/8 Marine Site 11 10 1 2 3 4 5 Naval Hospital 12 11 10 1 2 3 4 Camp Bulkeley 13 12 11 10 1 2 3 EM Leeward Point 14 13 12 11 10 1 2 NAS Leeward Point 17/18 14 13 12 11 10 1/15 BOQ Leeward Point 16 15 14 13 12 11 10

1. THE GREAT NORTHFIELD MINNESOTA RAID: Cliff Robertson, 10. LATITUDE ZERO: Joseph Cotton, Cesar Romero. Top Robert Duvall. Failing to secure amnesty from the Miss- scientists are working in a secret city beneath the sur- ouri legislature the outlaw gang led by Cole Younger and face of the Pacific Ocean trying to develop man's know- Jesse James decides to rob the "biggest bank west of the ledge. Mississippi at Northfield, Minnesota." Science Fiction Color 99 min. G Western Color M 11. CATLOW: Yul Brynner, Richard Crenna. After the Civil 2. CABARET: Lisa Minnelli, Joel Grey. The rising tide War, Brynner and gang round up stray steers despite the of Nazism is ridiculed in a cabaret in the Berlin of 1931 brands of various Texas cattlemen. Brynner rescues in which the lives of an American girl, a British scho- Crenna from indians and learns that his old friend is lar, a Jewish girl, a German Baron and a student become out to arrest him. enmeshed. Western Color 101 min. GP Musical Color 124 Min. PG 12. TWISTED NERVE: Hywel Bennett, Haley Mills. Bennett 3. THE WORLD OF SPORT FISHING: Narrator Cutt Gowdy, ang- is a strange young man, coddled by his mother, whose ling in a stream in his native Wyoming, explains his first child was a Mongol. He often reverts to a child- philosophy about fishing and clearly shows that fishing like state and during one of these periods meets Mills. is an effort as well as a rewarding experience. Drama Color 117 min. M Documentary Color 108 Min. G 13. DEADFALL: Michael Caine, Giovanna Ralli. Jewel thief 4. HANDS OF THE RIPPER: Eric Porter, Jane Merrow. A- Caine has had himself admitted to an alcoholic's sani- midst an array of magnificently opulent Victorian set- tarium to get close to David Buck, a playboy he intends tings, London shrink Eric Porter decides to try out a to rob. few of the new theories of "this fellow Freud" by taking Drama Color 120 min. NRA a murderously.schizoid damsel under his paternal wing-- 14. THE MAGUS: Anthony Quinn, Michael Caine. Caine is a only to get stuck in the side for his pains. non-committed egocentric, Quinn claims to be a tycoon, Horror Color 85 Min. R a doctor, and a motion-picture director. Candice Bergen, 5. THE COWBOYS: , Roscoe Brown. News of a gold who may or may not be a ghost, pretends to be an actress strike prompts all of John Wayne's ranch hands to leave And a sick nyphomaniac. The three somehow agree to play their jobs before a big cattle drive. Bartender Slim a curious game. Pickens suggests that Wayne use school-boys as wranglers. Drama Color 116 min. R Western Color 128Min. PG 15. PEPE: Cantinflas, Dan Dailey. Hollywood director 6. THE KILLERS: Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson. Ernest Hem- Dan Dailey buys a white stallion loved by Pepe hoping to ingways famous short story in which treachery, murder get Edward G. Robinson to invest in a picture. Pepe, and thrills run rampent following million dollar mail missing the stallion and urged by Greer Garson, goes to robbery, as Angie Dickinson betrays her auto racing suit- Hollywood to be with the horse. or for all the robbery loot. Comedy Color 157 min. NRA Drama Color 95 Min. NRA 16.SINFUL DAVEY: John Hurt, Pamela Franklin. Hurt is 7. FORBIDDEN PLANET: Walter Pidgeon, Anne Francis. the illegitimate son of a notorious Scots highwayman Nielden, Commander and Kelly, Captain of a space ship, who vows to follow in his father's footsteps. are on a mission to rescue professor Walter Pidgeon and Comedy Color 95 min. M his group of scientists lost in space on Planet Altair-4 17. THERE'S A GIRL IN MY SOUP: Peter Sellers, Goldie for 20 years 2200 A.D. Hawn. London TV star Sellers, 40, is well known for his Sci Fi Drama Color 98 Min. NRA "Good Taste" gourmet show. He never passes up a chance 8. CARNAL KNOWLEDGE: Jack Nicholson, Anne Margaret. In with a bird and succeeds in bidding a bride (not his) the late forties, Amherst roomates Nicholson and Art Gar- immediately after her wedding. funkel both become interested in Candice Bergen from Comedy Color 96 min. R Smith College. Although Garfunkel sees her regularly, Ni- 18. R.P.M.: Anthony Quinn, Ann Margaret. Gary Lockwood friends progress and dates cholson is impressed by his and fellow students have jammed into the administration her also. building and promulgated their manifesto for change in R Drama Color 95 Min. policy regarding admissions, cirriculum and faculty. 9. MAKING IT: Kristoffer Tabori, Joyce Van Patten. Drama Color 92 min. R Kristoffer is a smugly self-sufficient high school stu- dent, living at home with his mother, Joyce Van Patten and aware that her weekend "rest-trips" are really ren- dezvous. Comedy Drama Color 95 Min. R Page 6--National News Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, September 14, 1972 Martha Mitchell Says Nothing Wrong With Her Mind WASHINGTON (AP)--M1artha Mitchell, saying there's nothing wrong with her mind, has denounced Republicans who are contending her husband's resigna- tion from President Nixon's re-election campaign came because she suffered a nervous breakdown. "I think it is rotten after all I've done for the Republican Party for them to cast aspersions on me," the outspoken wife of former Attorney Gen- eral John N. Mitchell said in an interview published by the Evening Star and News today.

"I want to be sure my side is revealed and that people know I'm not sit- ting here a mental case or an alcoholic," she told the Star-News. The newspaper said Mrs. Mitchell talked freely about her much-publicized ultimatum to her husband last June that he get out of politics or she would leave him but refused to discuss the alleged bugging of Democratic National Committee Headquarters. MARTHA MITCHELL Some highly placed Republicans have contended, the newspaper said, that Mitchell left his post because Martha suffered a nervous breakdown.

--- NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS--- President Nixon U.S. Sells Wheat To China Gathers His Staff WASHINGTON (AP)--Government sources said yesterday the United States has THURMONT, Md. (AP)-- President sold some wheat to China, the first American grain sale to the Communist Nixon gathered his campaign high country in more than 20 years. command at his nearby Aspen lodge The sources, asking not to be identified, said at least one U.S. export yesterday night for dinner and ser- company is involved. The Agriculture Department declined comment. ious talk about the electioneering ahead. According to the sources, however, the Department has received applica- Invited by Nixon to his rustic tions for export subsidies on wheat to be shipped to China. home at Camp David were Campaign A spokesman for the Export Marketing Services in the department said he Chairman Clark McGregor, former cam- could not confirm or deny the reports. However, he said "something" might paign manager John N. Mitchell, be announced later this week. Subsidies are paid exporters to make U.S. White House Chief of Staff H.R. Hal- wheat more competitive on the world market. deman and former Secretary of the Treasury John B. Connally, head of Rumors have circulated in the grain trade that China has ordered at Democrats for Nixon. least 20 million bushels of U.S. wheat. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the aim was to lay plans for Ex-Chief Snores Too Loud the final eight weeks of the Pres- idential campaign - a matter that LOS ANGELES (AP)--Harris Robinson is not a man to take accusations about has been claiming increasing amounts his loud snoring lying down. of Nixon's time in recent days. Robinson, a 59 year old Navy chief petty officer, has been a subject of The President will be back in the controversy over the effects of his snoring on residents of the suburban White House in time for a Thursday Huntington Beach housing development into which he and his wife recently morning session with wife Pat and moved. Secretary of the Interior Rogers C. B. Morton. They're going to talk a- Sirs. Robinson admits her husband's snoring is like a storm. "It is a long bout the celebration of the 100th rolling sound like thunder in the distance," she says. "There is a second anniversary of the national park of silence and then it begins all over again." system and, presumably, announce But 15 years of marriage has apparently numbed Mrs. Robinson to the plans for Mrs. Nixon to visit the nightly sound. "I have three options," she said. "I can try to fall asleep pioneering park, Yellowstone in Wy- first. I can take my pillow and go to another room. Or I can get up and oming, on September 20. Ziegler made listen to an all-night talk show." But the Robinson's next door neighbors, a variety of announcements on Nix- Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hardenbrook have not adapted to the rumbles. Their bed- on's behalf, all ostensibly nonpo- room window is only 10 feet away and the snoring keeps them awake. litical. Thursday, September 14, 1972 Guantanamo- azette WORLD NEWS--Page 7 Thurday Sepembr 1, 192 Gantnamo aztteWORLD NEWS--Paae 7

Israel Denies russians lack consumer goods Losing A Plane MOSCOW (AP)--The sector of Soviet officialdom concerned with pro- mises to consumers of more and better goods was jolted yesterday by some bad news: not only does the consumer economy continue to lag but the food production outlook is less than rosy. Ekonomicheskaya Gazeta, Over Syria Economic Gazette, published a review of economic performance for the first eight months of the year which reported shortfalls in clothes, TEL AVIV (AP)--Israel denied los- knitted goods, shoes, television sets, textiles-and washing machines. ing a plane to Syria in an air bat- tle yesterday while newspapers for both countries issued calls to arms. taub refuses to talk about past A small, radical Arab guerrilla or- PARIS (AP)--William L. Taub, the self-styled "legal counsel" to ganization threatened violence James R. Hoffa during the former union leader's attempt to travel to against West Germany. North Vietnam declined yesterday to answer direct questions about his Both Syria and Lebanon braced for background. On Tuesday, government sources in Washington said Taub is more Israeli attacks in retaliation not a lawyer. In addition it was reported that Taub had variously re- for the Arab terrorist attack in presented himself in mysterious roles in the past. Munich at the Olympics. The siege ended with the deaths of 11 Israelis, five terrorists and one West German protest mob attacks station policeman. The Lebanese Army has BELFAST (AP)--A rioting Protestant mob yesterday wrecked shops, been ordered to fight back. attacked a railroad station and tried to burn down the city hall at Carrickfergus in county Antrim. In Belfast, the ultra-Protestant Rev. "There was no incursion, no en- Ian Paisley put another damper on the British government's hopes of counter, nothing happened today," holding an all-party political conference to decide on the future of an Israeli military spokesman said Northern Ireland. Paisley said his Democratic Unionist Party will after Damascus Radio announced that boycott the conference. Syrian forces shot down an Israeli jet over the occupied Golan Heights. Residents of the Biblical cities british rule out wage and price freeze of Tyre and Sidon in Lebanon report- LONDON (AP)--British leaders have ruled out an American-style wage ed four Israeli planes swooped over and price freeze to check what seems to be a wild rush toward a new at dawn yesterday. There was no gun- economic crisis. They made this known yesterday through senior author- fire. ities after announcing the nation's world trade account last month nose dived to a near-record $464 million deficit. The Department of A flight of four jets was reported Trade and Industry blamed a three-week strike of longshoremen for the to have flown a reconaissance mis- August slump in exports. sion later over the Lebanese garri- son town of Marjayoun, scene of a massive Israeli retaliation raid Friday in which 19 people were kill- ed and 29 wounded. Most of the casualties were civilians. Syrian reports said casualties in Vietnamese Occupy Citadel similar raids in Syria were much higher. SAIGON (AP)--A heavy artillery pounding and stiff ground resistance yesterday prevented South Vietnamese reinforcements from reaching the A Tel Aviv newspaper said yester- Quang Tri Citadel but the government commander claimed he already had day that Premier Gold Meir's warn- enough men in the fortress never to be driven out. ing that Israel will fight terrorism South Vietnamese marines, who stormed the stubbornly defended Citadel with all its power amounted to an through a bomb hole in its southern wall Tuesday, reportedly were locked "official. .declaration of war on in tough close-quarter fighting. Arab terrorism." Several other Israeli dailies Radio Hanoi reported more heavy U.S. air raids on North Vietnam yester- urged the government to take the day and claimed six U.S. aircraft were shot down in provinces around Hanoi initiative in the fight against and Haiphong. The broadcast said nothing of the fate of the crewmen. terrorism in foreign nations. The U.S. Command makes no announcement of plane losses until search and rescue operations are complete and had no immediate comment on the Hanoi The Syrian government newspaper claims. Earlier in the day the command announced that three North Viet- Al Thawra called on other Arab namese Migs and a U.S. F4 Phantom were shot down in two days of air bat- countries to unite their strength tles north of Hanoi. The loss of the Phantom brought the number of Ameri- in the battle through military and can airmen listed as missing since resumption of the bombing campaign to economic aid. 100. A similar call was first made at The Phantom was downed by a Mig 48 miles northeast of the North Vietnam- *a session of the Arab League Coun- ese capital Monday, the U.S. 7th Air Force announced. The three Migs were cil last week. destroyed in dogfights as U.S. planes kept up their blitz on the Hanoi- Haiphong heartland for the third straight day. Page 8--SPORTS Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, September 14, 1972 baseball SPORTS Pirates Overpower Chicago Cubs CHICAGO (AP)--Roberto Clemente's tie-breaking home run in the seventh inning powered the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 6-4 victory over the Chicago Cubs yesterday. The triumph, Pittsburgh's 14th in the last 16 baseball games, reduced to five the number of victories they need to clinch the National League East Division title. Clemente's 10th homer off Ferguson Jenkins, 20-11, followed a single by winning starter Nelson Briles, 14-7, and broke a 3-3 tie. FootbDon Kessinger's single and Billy Football Se Williams' double for the Cubs in the eighth off reliever Bob Miller made 1 2/8 Marines it 5-4 but the Pirates added a run 2 Naval Station "B" ( PWD ) off Jack Aker in the ninth on Gene 3 Security Group Alley's single, a sacrifice and 4 Naval Air Station Rennie Stennett's single. 5 Naval Hospital Pittsburgh built a 3-0 lead through 6 Marine Barracks 5 1/2 innings but Chicago tied it in ~~-m~' - 7 Naval Station "A" the sixth on Jose Cardenal's two-run September 13 6 p.m. 6-2 double and Jim Hickman's single. 8 4-7 15 7 5-1 18 6 3-4 Buchanan Stands in for Duran 8 6-7 20 7 2-5 22 6 7-3 For Ali-Patterson Pre-fight Match 8 1-6 25 7 2-4 NEW YORK (AP)--World lightweight champion Roberto Duran is out and the 27 6 5-3 man he beat for the title, Ken Buchanan, is in as an opponent for Carlos 8 7-1 Ortiz, Madison Square Garden announced Tuesday. 29 7 6-2 Duran of Panama will not be able to appear in the fight on the Muhammad Ali-Floyd Patterson card because of a stomach virus, Harry Markson, Garden October 2 6 3-4 boxing boss said. 8 7-5 Markson said that Buchanan, of Scotland, was to fly to Boston Tuesday 4 7 1-2 were he will train for the 10-rounder against Ortiz, a New Yorker who 6 6 5-6 also is a former lightweight champion. 8 4-7 9 6 3-1 8 2-5 Yankee's Lyle Pitches Another Win 11 7 6-7 13 6 1-4 (UPI/AFRTS)--When the New York Yankees have to go to the bullpen, Sparky 8 2-3 Lyle is the man they call on. 16 6 5-1 They called on Lyle Tuesday night and he tossed three innings of one-hit 8 6-4 ball as the Yankees beat the Boston Red Sox 3-2. Lyle has now had a hand in 17 7 7-3 41 of 74 Yankee victories, winning eight games and saving another 33. 19 7 4-5 20 7 3-6 The Yankee win left the New Yorkers one-half game behind the Red Sox in the American League East and in a tie with the Baltimore Orioles for sec- NOTICE: There will be an officials ond place. clinic today at 7 p.m. in the Spe- The Orioles lost to the Detroit Tigers 3-2. The Tigers are now one game cial Services Conference Room. All off the pace. poaches are urged to attend. In other American League action, Chicago shut out Kansas City, 6-0; Oak- land defeated Minnesota, 7-4; Mil- waukee beat Cleveland twice, 4-3, Spitz Overwhelmed With W(Contractith Conrac OfersOffers and 42in2 a game called because of (UPI/AFRTS)--Super swimmer Mark Spitz has been flooded by contract offers, rain after eight innings and Texas requests for personal appearances and fan mail since winning seven gold blanked California, 3-0, on a one- medals at the Olympic Games. hitter by Bill Gogolewski. Included in the offers was a chance to make a shaving commercial for $25 In the National League, Pittsburgh thousand to shave off his moustache. "I might turn that one down," says blanked the Chicago Cubs 7-0; the Spitz. New York Mets nipped Philadelphia, 4-3; Cincinnati beat Atlanta, 7-5; Frank Shorter returned home from the Olympic Games and'said he enjoyed Montreal trounced St. Louis, 7-2, his grueling race in the marathon so much that he already is looking forward and Los Angeles lost to San Fran- to the next Olympics. Shorter won the Olympic marathon in Munich. cisco, 3-2, in 10 innings.