N Bitter About Export Limits

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N Bitter About Export Limits MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, JULY 16, 1973 — VOL. XCn, No. 242 Maneht*ster A City of yiliage (.harm TWENTY-FOUR PAGES — TWO SECTIONS PRICE: FIFTEEN CENTS n Bitter About Export Limits 5 i Battered Farm SUNNY I. U.S. Urged To Discipline Bill Before ^ Clear tonight with patchy fog T j - developing over low-lying areas, then dissipating after Its Economy sunrise. Low tonight in the mid The Congress 50s to low 60s. Tuesday will be sunny with the high near 80. TOKYO (AP) - Reflecting mounting Japanese Precipitation probability is bitterness over American trade restrictions. Foreign WASHINGTON (AP) — A battered farm bill, the Alaska near zero through Tuesday. Minister Masayoshi Ohira today called on the United pipeline,, a minimum wage increase and historic legisla-, Winds will be north to States to “exercise an increasing degree of discipline in tion to curb presidential war powers are up for action in northeast at less than 10 miles ■■ I managing its own economy.” Congress this week. per hour tonight. 4^ Ohira told the opening session nations as Japan and the United First up was another try in the House to put out a farm High Low of the ninth U.S.-Japan Joint States should cooperate. ’This bill called off the floor last week because it appeared Anchorage 65 53 Cabinet Meeting on 'Trade and call for cooperation appeared to Boston 78 61 headed for President Nixon’s veto. Economic Affairs that Japan is be a substitute for Henry A. Chicago 76 54 Secretary of Agriculture Earl greatly embarrassed by Kissinger’s proposal last May Denveb 83 55 L. Butz huddled with House m i American attempts to iimit the for a consortium of oil-buying fields on Alaska’s North Slope San Francisco 62 56 ' 3 : leaders Friday to try to work exports of logs, scrap iron and nations, a proposal Japan has south to the port of Valdez. Washington 84 68 out a compromise. One amendment offered to soybeans, , been hesitant about for fear of The administration’s main the pipeline measure was He said it was of /^‘imperative alienating its Arab oil objection to the bill was a cost- designed to break up the major importance” to maintain the suppliers. of-production target price es­ oil companies. smooth flow of these and other Rogers recommended oil calator that it said would add Sponsored by Sen! Frank E. ‘Trailer’ products. And he urged the sharing arrangements when more than |12 billion to the cost Moss, D-Utah, it would forbid a United States “to continue its critical shortages develop, of the farm program. company from engaging in efforts to maintain a stable sharing of information on The Senate scheduled a vote more than one key operation- Session supply to.Japan.” negotiations with the producing Tuesday on authorizing con­ producing, refining, transpor­ He also criticized American nations; Japanesie-American struction of the controversial ting and marketing petroleum Begins “clamors for import restric­ cooperation in developing 789-mile Alaska pipeline-after pr(^ucts. tions, imposition of surcharges Siberian oil and joint research rejecting environmentalists’ ef­ The ^nate rejected 61 to 29 or exercise of export and development projects. forts last week to block or delay Friday an effort to delay con­ HARTFORD (AP) - Six bills restraint.” Ohira agreed that the two the project. struction of the pipeline for a vetoed during the regular 1973 ■M. U.S. Secretary of State countries should cooperate to The pipeline would'carry oil study on routing it instead legislative session are to be William P. Rogers responded resolve the energy crisis. from the new Prudhoe Bay through Canada. reconsidered today when the with a promise, inserted into a General Assembly meets to ii prepared speech, that the hold the “trailer session” , - United states will continue to President required by state law. '4, be a source of dependable supp­ But it’s unlikely Republican \ « ly for Japan. Continues Canadians Tell majorities in the House and Joyful Reunion He added that controls on Senate will give any of the soybeans, the source of much of Recovery vetoed measures the two-thirds the protein in the Japanese diet, vote need for passage. Jody Stratton, center, of 87 Seaman Circle, rejoices with James Stratton and Michele “will not last a day longer than WASHINGTON (AP) - Of Treatment One of six bills rejected by Mattera after her cat. Max, was retrieved from a tree after a five-day ordeal. Max, who is necessary.” President Nixon, in his fourth Gov. Thomas J. Yeskill would had remained in the tree since Wednesday night, failed to come down despite attempts hy Ohira said Japan regrets con­ day at Bethesda Naval Medical allow Connecticut residents 65 Jerry Hollis, a neighbor; HELCO; and the fire department. After the Connecticut Humane trols “which seek short term Center for treatment of viral By VC Captors and older who earn less than Society was contacted. Max was retrieved by the Carrier Brothers Tree Service of New solutions at the border.” pneumonia, is showing “con­ 312.000 annually to defer up to Britain. (Herald photo by Klemens) He said, “In view of the siderable improvement,” his 32.000 a year in local prc^rty predominant role and respon­ doctors reported today. sibility of the United States in They said the chief SAIGON (AP) — ’Two C ^ dian officers released by the taxes. Hie deferred taxes would be coUieeAed-^^Rlieii the the wortff economy, it Is our executive's chest congestion Viet Cong after 17 days iii captivity said today that they homeowner died, in effect strong wish that the United had lessened and he had a were marched through a jungle bound hand and neck. givi|j|g towns a lien against the Max Now States would cope with and find minimum of pain. They said that at times they were interrogated without profferty. iCalmbach Admits solutions to these questions on The President slept soundly sleep in efforts to force from them a confession of spying. Meskill said he vetoed the bill Safely the basis of a long-term Sunday night, the doctors because it discriminated perspective.” report^ in their early morning Capt. Ian Patten of Toronto ment; I just mean the whole against homeowners who Raising Funds Rogers endorsed Prime medical bulletin. harassment they were getting. At Home and Capt. Fletcher Thomson of weren’t 65 years old. The Minister Kakuei Tanaka’s Nixon has been making slow That bothered me more than Ottawa told a news conference Connecticut Conference of proposal for a general Asian- but steady progress since he anything.” they successfully resisted. The Mayors opposed the measure For Defendants SUE KLEMENS Pacific peace conference and was hospitalized Thursday The two Vietnamese, an in­ two members of the Inter­ saying it would create more red (Herald Reporter) listed several ways In which night. terpreter and a driver, were national Commission of Control tape for community tax collec­ WASHINGTON (AP) — Herbert W. Kalmbach, Presi­ such major oil-consuming His four-a-day chest therapy released with Patten and Thom­ and Supervision were released tors. dent Nixon’s former personal lawyer, acknowledged today Picked on by birds, rained on treatments have poduced the son. All four were with the ICCS Sunday in the Xuan Loc area 45 A second measure turned by heavy thundershowers. Max improvement in the lung con­ at Xuan Loc. he raised funds to pay the original seven Watergate defen­ miles east of Saigon, where down by Meskill would allow managed to survive his five day gestion and chest discomfort, they fell into Viet Cong hands Patten said they were asked dants but denied any prior knowledge of the Watergate ordeal lodged in the crotch of a The Great doctors said. utilities to raise rates while break-in or its later cover-up. June 28. repeatedly to sign a document court appeals were pending. In­ towering tree. Steak Robbery However, they said the stating they had entered the treatments result in fatigue “to “On the whole we were creases now granted by the K a lm b a c h ’s p r e p a r e d tions by the No. 2 and No. 3 men Viet Cong area “illegally, LOS ANGELES (AP) - the point that he has been given treated humanely, with Public Utilities Commission testimony was made public on the White House staff made Max, a white cat owned by without prior notice, without a Police report that burglars got mild analgesics for relief.” respect,’’ said Patten. “But (PUC) cannot be implemented while White House aide it absolutely incomprehensible Jody Stratton of 87 Seaman Cir­ liaison officer, without the away with 350,000 worth of Nixon was reported to have there were certain per­ until the appeal process is com­ Richard A. Moore faced con­ to me that my actions in this cle, had climbed up a tree in a other three members of the meat from a processing com­ had ”a good day on Sunday,” sonalities... that did at times plete. tinued questioning at the regard could have been n e ig h b o r ’s b a c k y a r d commission,” and that they during which he had a nudce life uncomfortable. PUC procedures "already Senate’s televised Watergate regarded in any way as Im­ Wednesday night, and was un­ pany by breaking into the plant ^hVI minimum of business to con­ “We were bound on a number entered the area with “articles seem to favor the utilities over investigation. Kalmbach wa to able to climb down. through the roof and driving proper or unethical,” he said. duct and enjoyed a visit from of occasions, particularly on of war” —their jeep, two radios the public and I do not favor any follow him to the witness stand.
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