Beckley Post Herald (Newspaper) - August 30, 1974, Beckley, West Virginia 2 Men Drift To Hawaii Page 16 Volume 209 Schlesinger Meet Wil Friday August 1974 News Service RNS 2 Cents Plans Being Weighed Good Morning News Re Y the budget Thursday that President Ford planned to make an initial test next week of willingness to go along with cuts in the nondefense In an Ash Unit Ford would send to under the new congressional budget reform notices of almost billion of and ol oe safety and health training program of the West Virginia Safety Coun til has been extended until the end of the ASH Labor Department said The original agreement between the federal and state agencies was to expire months Supplemental Security Income payments to million blind and disabled persons will be delayed a few days because of the long Labor Day the government an The Social Security Ad ministration said the September totaling about million would begin arriving in mailboxes on the checks are targeted for the first of each HURRICANE BECKY and her winds of Kill miles per hour swirled further into the open Atlantic on and weathermen said the seasons first hurricane poses no threat to Becky was centered about 250 miles north of Ber muda and moving powerful nuclear charge was set off underground Thursday in the Soviet Novaya Marcus head of the Upp sala Institution were to resume Thursday night in the by sonic 166 employes of the Gallia Ohio Local Comer Bradbury Bradbury said the school board also would be meeting with Association officials in an attempt to resolve the contract dispute which Tuesday and has kept students out of 11 1 EDGAR chief of the Water Resources Division of the Department of Natural has been named to head the Water Development according to DNR Director Ira Latimer Latimer said no date has been set for Henry to begin the new job from a new office being set up in Dunbar Someone will have to be found to lake his old he complaint charging discrimina tion against women has been filed against the West Virginia Banking Commission by the National Organization of a slate Human Rights Commission official said The complaint said West Virginia banks discriminate in extending commercial and private credit and charg ed the banking commission with failure to issue rules and regulations to prohibit such a NOW representative of Charleston submitted Thursday an apparent low bid of for construction of a storage Cedar Lakes Camp and Conference Center in Ripley A state board of education spokesman said other bids were being con for the PRESIDENT that he nation faces nn uphill struggle in fighting was reported Thursday to be keeping open the possibility of an anti inflation lax increase in 17year old West woman died Thursday at tin University of Kentucky Medical in Lexington of injuries received in a crash in Clark Hospital officials identified the woman as Judith Gail Christian Pugh of East senior Japanese economic official said Thursday that his confronted wild continuing inflationary ex to retain severe restraints on the economy for about another Part Of Talk Lifted George Boall says lu doesnt fool he did anything wrong by incorporating buted portions of a published essay into a speech he delivered to the American Bar Brail acknowledged he lifted parts of an article in Tho American Scholar and Included them without into his speech to the AHA convention in Hawaii on I foci Ive done anything who lead Hie investigation Ihal resulted in former vice president Spiro resignation and no contest pica to tax evasion The American Scholar article was written by Vermont a journalism professor at the University of North Carolina and a former editor for the Wall Street Articles in the Washington Post and I ho Baltimore Evening Sun Thursday pointed out 12 paragraphs In Bealls prepared text which Virtually duplicated those written in If youll get Bealls speech and got my its a similarity ol Us Uip WASHINGTON AP William Saxbe and Defense Secretary James discussed on the conditional amnesty proposals they will deliver to President Thy two Cabinet officers at the In coordinate Justice Depart ment proposals for some 100 draft dodgers subject to civilian law and Defense D o p n r m e n t r e c for about 000 deserters under military Ford has requested Justice and Defense Department Sunday as he moves to implement a system to free Vietnam era draft and deserters from criminal prosecution under certain Prior to the meeting with the attorney general said the system will require that draft dodgers present themselves to a Selective Service official or to n The official then would im pose some condition for forgiving the If hes an it will be probably some probation and a tion to get a job in public ser in a hospital or some other service This is not firmed but this is the worst it could The minimum he would be just to be a good citizen for two Saxbe discussed the issue in an interview on the Today In settling on a final Ford must consider the penalties the courts have im posed on those already con of violations based on resistance to the Saxbe The attorney general noted that judges often have d r a f t evaders relatively Justice Department have m complete statistics on sentences impos ed on draft But they said the average penalty for those sentenced in 1973 was months in Ford Shuns Export Ban WASHINGTON AP President Ford is determined to oppose curbs on farm exports as a means of con serving grain for American consumers just as he is against wage and price con Agriculture Secretary Karl said The President reaffirmed his previous position that he saw no need for export con told reporters after a meeting with The announcement of Fords position came as the Agriculture Department released new government listings by exporters showing a 50 per cent increase in corn purchases by European Common Market European corn orders now exceed purchases made from the record Harvest last A department official de scribed the corn buying as and predicted much of it would not be also indicated Ford had also asked him to remain indefinitely in the but that he had given no com to do dodg ed further questions on whether he would continue after the first of next Major UMW Victory Walkout Ends At Duke Mine GENNADY LEV DEM IN Flight End Sudden Space Linkup Snafu Hinted MOSCOW AP Western space experts were convinced Thursday that the two Soyuz 15 cosmonauts tried and fail ed to dock at the orbiting Salyut 3 space caus ing termination of their It brought about the Soviet Unions first nighttime cosmonaut lan The specialists felt the capsule was probably dama gc d d ur i n g the attempted forcing c o s m o n a u t s G c n n a cl y Sarafanov and Demin to return to earth after only 50 hours and 12 minutes in They day night on the steppes of northern Kazakhstan and of were reported to be feeling But the of accounts of the flight pointedly omitted the cus tomary description of the mission as Progress reports during the brief flight had led most spe here and in the West to believe the mission was de signed to test the new docking mechanism built the Russians and Americans in preparation for next years Soon after the Soviets an the abrupt end of the Soyuz 15 the head of the space agency declared that the flight had nothing to do with the joint This appeared to contradict an earlier statement of Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir that the Soyuz 15 flight un doubtedly will be useful in preparing for the Soviet American Technical details of the latest flight were not publicly reported so it was not known if human error or mechanical failure in the clocking systems forced halting Docking will be the major maneuver of the Soviet American mission aimed at testing a rescue system for stranded spacemen of either Experts here were cd that the Russians attempted the night instead of wailing a few more hours for daylight during what was officially de scribed as a difficult mete orological Unless the Soyuz were damaged or short of they there was little reason not to remain in space for six more orbits of about 90 minutes The short flight of Soyuz 15 came only 38 days after two cosmonauts from Soyuz 14 successfully carried out a work session aboard the orbiting Salyut 3 WASHINGTON AP The United Mine Workers and Duke Power reached an agreement settling i turbulent the jn UMW President Arnold Miller called I he agreement a major breakthrough for the union which had rallied behind the strikers in its bat tle In establish a base in the Kentucky coal The which gives Brookside miners a contract similar to other contracts in the coal was reached early Thursday after an allnight bargaining session before a federal mediator between UMW and Dukes the Mining Miller said Eastover signed the expiring 1971 National B I T U M I U S Coal Wage Agreement and also to be bound by the yet 1974 agreement once it is ratified by union Miller told a news conference the settlement signals the beginning of the end for nonunion coal in this He said that 170 million tons of nonunion coal is mined in the United Stales The strike is only regret that thu price we paid for victory was so Miller miners walked off their jobs in July 197 after tin mines management refused to sign a standard UMW The refusal came after minors had voted lo leave the small Southern Labor Union and join Might weeks ago miners at a second mine in went out on strike in sympathy with the The and strikes have been accompanied by numerous incidents of the most recent last Saturday when a 23yearold Brookside Lawrence was fatally shot in the head luring a with a com pany Miller said under the new Eastover agreed to hold a speedy the 200 employes at the mine to if they also be represented by the Miller said Eastover also agreed to rehire the 59 Brookside miners discharged alter the strike In the union agreed that they will not call another strike at the mine between now the date the contract is About 400 miners were on strike against the two mines owned by the nations sixth largest electric com Miller selected the County site both lo begin organizing the mines of eastern Kentucky as well as for symbolic See 9 Ablaze PINE AP Hundreds of firefighters pressed their battle Thurs day against a rampaging fire thai has blackened 000 acres of brush and timer in and near the San Bernar dino National Officials said Wednesday the fire had been deliberate ly set The which broke out Tuesday was 20 per cent and of said the flames could be wholly contained by Thursday estimated five million board feet of went up in CoverUp Testimony Required Nixon Served With WASHINGTON AP A marshal personally delivered a to former President Richard Nixon requiring him to at the Watergate coverup trial of some of his closest Justice Department said weeks after the was Nixon accepted delivery at bis seaside estate at San Justice Department spokesman John Wilson said the was served Wednesday by a Wilson declined to identify the marshal or say anything about the mechanics of the Nixon was subpoenaed by attorneys for former White House domestic affairs ad viser John one of six defendants in the coverup now could seek to avoid an appearance in court by asking to have the sub poena A spokesman for Nixons new Herbert Miller of declined com ment on whether request will be made to District Judge John Si who is scheduled to hear the case starling Apart from Nixons appearance as a defense there is the ap undecided question of whether he will be indicted as a participant in the cover Indications are Special Wa tergate Prosecutor Leon Ja worski has delayed any deci sion on that until after Labor attorneys for Ehrlichman asked a second Supreme Court justice to delay the start of the trial beyond Andrew Hall sent a tele gram asking Justice William Douglas lo postpone the trial beyond Chief Warren Burger turned down a similar appeal Hall declined lo say if he would go one by one to the other seven justices if Douglas refuses lo any Ehrlichman is seeking the postponement on the grounds that Nixons resignation and the release of new White House tapes generated so much publicity it would impossible lo convene an im partial jury within the next several Nixon had to personally ac Sce Page Marshall Med Deanship Is Accepted By Parlett To Form Link With Red Germany c 1974 York Times Service WASHINGTON The United Stales and East Ger many will formally announce the establishment of diplomatic relations next State Depart ment officials said The official signing of a document at thu Stale Department will mark the end of a year of intermittent discussions between the two Half Of City Block Destroyed In Blast Ap Half a downtown block was leveled and set afire early Thursday an explosion that killed at least one person and injured This is Hie said Mayor Kirk There may be but know Chattanooga police iden the victim as Frank a janitor at one of ihe Only one of Ihe 13 injured persons was admitted lo a hospital Police and Depart ment officials refused In speculate as lo the cause of the in the predominant ly black Fire Marshal Mike said two city arson i n v e s t i g a I o r s h a d b e e n assigned to the We dont have any idea that its but we always investigate in something like The body was found by rescue workers and arson investigators probing the rubble of what had been a brick building that houses two night a barber shop and several secondfloor The heard several leveled one on East Ninth Street main do will own thoroughfare and gulled fhe adjacent James Map list church and an adjoining A struc ture across Hie sired was heavily damaged sides that were temporarily broken off on July 31 when East German authorities held up traffic on the roads lo West A Slate Department official said Ihal the East German delegation headed by Herbert a foreign ministry of would return to Washington on Monday to finish the His was Arthur assistant secretary of stale for European On Ihe two sides are expected to an that they hail agreed to establish diplomatic The first American ambassador lo Ihe East G er m a n govern situated in Easl is reportedly lo be John Sherman a former Republican senator from Kentucky who once served as envoy lo The and Canada are the only I wo members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization that have noi yet established diplomatic ties with Hit u e h r c I a I i o n s w e r e authorized by NATO after the the Soviet West Germany and Kasl Germany concluded agreements in resolving lhe problems of accesses u West Merlin and calling lor recognition of separate West German and East German AP Robert the new dean of the Marshall University medical said Thursday he envisions n facility in that competition with the West Virginia University medical school at Morgan The New Mexico native made the comments a news conference called Thursday by Arch Moore to introduce Parlett to newsmen as the new dean of the school and as vice for health sciences at said the school will emphasize the training of family practice physicians and provide con medical education for physicians in Ihe There is no real need for altitudes of competition lo develop between the two schools and he expressed the hope that a good working relationship between the He said the school will be of the magnitude of the facility at M organ t own which he described along lines offering specialities in the medical I said September would he a little early lo enroll the first medical at Marshall and il could lake up lo I wu years lor classes lo He said Ihe next six lo eight months will be spent planning curriculum and Moore said will sume the new duties I and added thai selection ol an administrative head for the school was a major step for ward in having the new medi cal school fully accepted by the Veterans Parlett has been associate dean at the Southern Illinois University School of Medicine in lie had pre served on faculties at the Northwestern Universi ty and George Washington University medical Moore said he would ask the Legislature for a appropriation as funding for the medical one of five being established nationwide in conjunction will VA The governor said he anticipated the maximum stale funding of the school to reach only million 10 Joining Moore at the news conference were Board of Re gents Chancellor Ben acting Marshall President Robert and Albert a who has promoted the medical school at Mexico Prods Si To End Cuba Snub c York Turns WASHINGTON Minister Emilio Rabasa of Mexico asked the United Slates on Thursday to support moves in the Organization of American Slates to lift the 10 y e a r o I d t r a d e a n d diplomatic sanctions against A day after President and Secretary of Slate Henry Kissinger to press for what he The Weather Oc periods ol showers or likely to day both days in the mid lows tonight in Hie low Winds today from the southwest at to If miles per hour with briefly higher gusts in and near thunders Probability of precipitation is 70 per cent ill Moore Says Fund Safe AP Arch Moore labeled as a recurring rumor reports which ion the actuarial son nd ss of Ihe stale Teachers A story which appeared in Thursdays editions of the Charleston Gazette said an actuarial report prepared by a firm allegedly showed the fund to be about million in Moore told a meeting of the West Virginia Education Association in Charleston Thursday that the is in a healthy financial and is in the most secure and mature hands in its modern J have seen nothing in the actuarial studies lo faith this Moore called A positive attitude by the towards moves to end the Speaking with newsmen after meeting Kissinger at the State Ra baza said that the secretary was noncommittal o n A m e r i c a n poll c Kissinger said that he and Ford would study the problem according to What is immediately at Kabasa is the ef fort by Cost a Colombia and Venezuela lo have the HAS Permanent Council in Washington appoint a com mission lo investigate whether sanctions imposed on Cuba in should he continue The sanctions were voted at urging of the because of Cubas close lies to the Soviet Union and bur alleged efforts to export to oilier countries in the The had broken diplomatic relations with on and had imposed an economic embargo on said he hoped the would go along with the call for the special meeting next Tonight til n JKAY CO Crah