Correspondent Reports U.S.-Russia on Verge of Signing Trade Pact 0Gen. Creighton Abrams Discusses Air Raids Ordered by Gen. Lave

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Correspondent Reports U.S.-Russia on Verge of Signing Trade Pact 0Gen. Creighton Abrams Discusses Air Raids Ordered by Gen. Lave 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 Frank Sinatra & 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.
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