Pat Embraces Liberian at Oath-Taking Ceremony

Pat Embraces Liberian at Oath-Taking Ceremony

Average bally Net Press Run For iHie Week Bnded The Weather November *0,1971 Becoming cloudy tonight with low near 30. Tomorrow chance ot anow/raln mixture; Wgh 15,590 aibout 36. Wednesday’s outlook Manchester—A City of Village Charm . cloudy and cold. VOL. LXXXXI, NO. 78 iTWENTY-FOUR PAGES—TWO SECTIONS) MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1972 (Ciualfled Adverttsliig oa Page 21) PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS ' Bhutto T o Release Cong Shells Batter Bangladesh Sheik Da Nang, DMZ Areas ‘After New Talks’ SAIGON (AP)— The "Viet where a major North Vietnam- and dusk while the skies were By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cong, after threatei^g to ratal- gse buildup is reported. South relaUvely clear of American 7-^' Z 'Vietnamese Rangers backed by Laotian planes, informed President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto announced today he North Vietnam, delled the Da , ^ j ^ sources In Vientiane reported. plans the unconditional release of Sheik Mujibur Rah- Nang air | base- ef|;)y today for ^ “*r strikes reported 19 ene- -^,3 informants said Ameri-t after at least one more round of talks with him in the first time In three mcmths my soldiers killed and eight can jets keep enemy forces pta- ‘ Pakistan. — ------------- ; and made a mortar attack weapons captured. No South ned down by day and gunahips along the demilitarized zone. - Vietnamese casualties were re- using flares to discourage the leculer had treason tihatges by Gen. Agha The attack on Da Nang came ported. enemy at night. But at dusk Mchammed Yahya Khan, then less than an hour after a 72- The U.S. Command an- and dawn, he said, the Nor S e e ^ of ^ TnSJTp president. In the March hour Viet Cong cease-fire for nounced that American, tnx^ Vietnamese fire their heavy- 1 the end of ttie Indla-Paklstan crackdown cn Mujlb’s New Year’s ended. Four 100- Strength was reduced 1,300 men tlllery without fear the fla war. East Ok II Pakistani .autonomy movement.. pound rockets hit the base, last week to a total of 167,000. will attract air strikes.. outstanding > wounding <me American and It was the smallest weekly re- The U.S. Central Intelligence l^< iay. The presl- leader of East Pakistan’s Ben- damaging- three support planes duction since September, but Agency maintained sophls- aent said then more confer­ galls and personally headed the ^and some ground equipment, officials .said they expected to ticated electronic equipment at ences would be held. bid for East Pakistan's seces- the U.S. Command said. meet and probably go below Long Cheng, -78 miles north of Mujib was the dominant lead- slon.* Da Nang is the headquarters the target of 139,000 which Vientiane, until the base’ was ^er (rf East Pakishm before his it was his Insistence on au- of the U.S. Air Force’s President Nixon has set for threqtaned, the sources said. est Md imprisonment In tonomy for Pakistan’s Eastern 303th Tactical^ Fighter Wing Peb. 1. But th^equipment has been re- there have pro- province, which had 76 million which flew scores of F4 fighter- m Laos, North Vietnamese moved along with all civilians, clalhmd him ^ as president of cf Pakistan’s 130 million bomber strikes during the five,;and Pathet Lao forces kept up Casualties from the shellings the new hame for people, that fouled Yahya’s days of jadds on North Vietnam their pressure on the CIA base were described as very lighL'^ ' plans for a constitutional as- last week. But the commohd at Long Cheng, firing mortar with moderate damage to buil^ The e a r^ r broadcast, which sembly last year, said none of the P4 Phantoms' and artillery barrages at dawn Inga / said Bhutto\had announced the Running cn Mujib’s six-point was hit. t ' ’ j / unconditional - release of the autonomy program, the Awaml . K'v The Viet Cong in a broadcast ' / ^-------------------------7----- sheik, reported that Bhutto league won 138 of East Pa- last Thursday said it would klstan’s 138 National Assembly “strike back against American seats in the 1970 election. aggressors in South Vietnam” Bhutto’s National People’s par­ in revenge for the, U.S. air Wetter^ Warmed Dacca ty won a majority In the, West raids. “We shall make the but fell far short cf a nation­ American aggressors pay heav­ Leader wide majority. ily for their barbarous murder With .Mujib refusing to budge of our compatriots in the Was Year Gonft By North.” ^»ke at a mammoth rally m autonomy or to .accept the WINDSORLOCKS (AP) Spring was ,4narked by ex- Karachi. It said the crowd president’s demands. Yahya The South Vietnamese com­ mand reported a 40-round mor- — ’Hred of the winter treme weafiier: March 4 shouted its approval of the de- postponed the scheduled open- cold? Then think back to June brought a record low baromet- clslon. Ihf of the assembly. 30, -when the temperature here ric reading'' cf 28.61 inches as The release of Mujib could then began the Inde- rose to 98 degrees—the highest an Intense/coastal storm passed pave the way for a settlement P«hdehce movement, which the Bombing of the year. over Co^ecticut, and May 29 between India and Pakistan fd- PaWstanl army attempted to T he. NaUuial Weather Serv- severe thunderstorms and lowing their two-week war last P*>‘ mverventlrni month. Indlaxand the 14-day war. Revenge ice, in its year-end recap of e* eur^Il tornado, that uprooted us.nK lo ,k_ A... Oh Suhday. Bhutto announced weather highlights, notes that Ireey and downed power lines T the naUcnmizatlon of meet of First New Year 1971 in CcmnecUcut was slightly ^ Ijiorth Granby, and Agawam ami League, now m power m p a k ,_ t a _ . B ke„vv industrv Mrs. Leokadia Rychert of Gdansk, Poland, left, watches her quintuplets on tar attack late Saturday warmer than most other- yean, Longmeadow, Mass, Bhutto said In a broadcast against its troops alcxig the The ^[verage temperature was /When tropic^ storm Doria their first New Year’s Day. The quints were bom in May. 1971. Center is eastern flank of the DMZ. It degrees, compared with a tooved acras toe state Aug. 28, that the natlonallsaUon does not quints’ father and at right is godmother. (AP photo) ® apply to foreign mvestrnents said three South Vietnamese normal high of 49.8 degrees. / and foreign credits. “We want were wounded but none kUled. It also was a wetter ye|(r ,^*\ronZi iUnnn “I hope India will similarly foreign investment,” 'h e told a Fighting erupted near High- than normal in Connecticut, , 'al- hurricane Donna’s world opinion and leave newsman afterwaM. “We will way 7 in eastern Cambodte. though the reverse was true for arrival in Sentem'ber 1960 occupied Pakistani territory.” encourage It.” North Vietnamese troops firing New England as a whole, A to- property dam a« was exten- Bhutto added, according to the Among the foreign firms not Pat Embraces Liberian mortars and rocket grenades tal-of nearly 46 Inches pre- ^ ^ ^ t n o Z X w Z atwS- radio. , affected were American Esso attacked a South Vietnamese clpitatlon fell here, or about Z d to the storm The radio did not say when perUllsers and British Attack armored unit and a reconn^^ two Inches above (^;itormal. ^he waim September and Oc- Mujib would leave West Paki­ sance company six miles north- That amount of snow and topar were ftdlowed bv a stan or if he had sdready left. (See Page. Two) east of Krek Sunday night. A rain is more s ta r il^ in light <rf -ihankselvlne Dav snow^rm At Oath-Taking Ceremony commi^que said Inl^ reports the fadt that at^dyear^n- J J ^ S n ^ more than one indicated that one Swth Viet- nwficut vras 3 28 in^es below ^ ^ jh^ ixl ■ 0 MONKCvia, Liberia (AP) — Mauritania and Ivory Coast for on the death last July of Wil- n ^ e s e soldier was killed and toe normal midyear tot^. ^ t e . The last tlmV Thanksgiv- A packed hall burst into loud the 90-mlnute oath-taking cere- liam V. S. Tubman, two were wounded. Enemy s u i p i ^ was ^ fact , accompanied by Uiat applause tcday when Pat Nixon monies at the Centennial. Me- On inaugural eve, capping a losses were not known. l■ ATJ r M A n v n r A. a“ m Aa M ^ A ^ r A M m ar m - much snow was “in 1938. gave William R. Tolbert Jr,, mcrlal Paviliwi. 12-hour first day in Liberia, In the Central Highlands, nwi 6^7 I f t ^ of snowfall dur- ^hg NaUonal Weather Service grandstm of an Arnerican .slave. Freed American slaves 'Mra. Nixon sa t down Sunday _________ ^ despite the scarcity of found the tag-end 1971 weather < M l i N A a cheek-to-cheek embrace to sigmed Liberia’s declaration of ni^ t for a private talk with snow, so far t l ^ wtoter. The in. OonnecUcut a bit itco unusual ® mark his swearing-in as Liber- independence in the hsi&. - Tolbert that she said would be normal amount is 66 Inches. to go immentioned. la’s 19th president. Cannons from historic ocean- “substantive.” T ^ y « r g ^ into.the record "Although the Thanksgiving: Mrs. Nixon stepped up to front Fort Norris boomed a 21- Aides did mk di^Iose wiut Meskill Sees entries snowstorm made -winter an'ear- give the traditional warm gun salute heard throughout they talked a h ^ t during their 'tor record h i^ temperatures, jy reality,” the weather bureau greeting after Tolbert took the half-hour session Rejection Of induto^ toe June 30 reading, said, “the weeks that followed oath of office from his brother.

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