Morning Herald (Newspaper) - June 15, 1974, Hagerstown, Maryland MORNING HERALD VOL 101 NO 142 MARYLAND SATURDAY JUNE 15 1974 PRICE TEN CENTS Faisal blunt about Arab lands plant Nixon lectured on peace in pay dispute By Paul Over 150 workers staged a wildcat strike against the Dorbee on Commonwealth avenue Friday in a contract dispute The workers at the women's apparel plant ignored the ad- vice of their union leaders to remain on the job until settle the dispute a union spokeswoman said Friday night The spokeswoman who did not want lo be identified said the workers began walking off their jobs around and by they were just about all out The workers most of whom are women claim the firm has failed to grant them a cost of living increase written into their contract A union sanctioned strike against the makers of men's and boy's clothing was ly settled after the union and the firms agreed on a new three-year contract Several area plants were closed for more than a week According to Harry Frankel a regional official of the In- Ladies Garment Workers Union the union had been involved in negotiations with Dorbee to settle the blem when the walkout curred We just got a call that they had left work They didn't even go through a grievance procedure with the Frankel said The dispute centers around the union contract which provides a five per cent cost of living increase for the workers However Frankel said the contract did not specify when increase was to go into effect The union spokeswoman said the workers understood that they would receive the increase when the New York ladies garment industry received a similar increase guaranteed in their contracts The New York workers received the raise on June 3 as did the employes of several other clothing plants Please turn to DOREE page 2 Employes end strike By MILLS COWLING WAYNESBORO Pa A five-week long strike by nearly BOO employes of Landis Tool Co ended Friday after striking members of Local 110 International Brotherhood of Teamsters voted to return to work Landis President Ralph Price confirmed Friday that pickets at the plant have been removed and that workers would be back on the job Monday Earlier in the week Price had signed a negotiations agreement with union The agreement followed a ruling against Landis by the District Court of Appeals in Washington According to union official George Brody tHe appellate court ruled May 30 and dismissed a company appeal which sought to overturn the local union's by the National Labor Relations Board Certification was issued by NLRB following an election held three years ago But Landis a division ot Lilton disputed the union election outcome and refused to negotiate The five-week strike resulted Brody was unavailable for comment Friday evening but Price confirmed that the chief negotiator for the parent company is due here next week Earlier this week union officials and company re- met lo clear the way for a return to work Monday About tbe day Today is Saturday June 15 the day of There are 199 days left -in year On day in 1792 Benjamin Franklin relationship between electricity and lightning by launching a kilc during a storm in Philadelphia About the weather Mostly cloudy with thunderstorms likely tonight Highs in the low and mid 80s Lows in the mid 60s Past 24 High 76 low 52 8 p.m 72 trace of rain Variable cloudiness with thunderstorms likely Highs in the 80s About the paper Five strikers were injured Friday in a picket line disturbance in Waynesboro Pa page 11 Arnold Palmer shows some of his old self in the second round of U.S Open golf tournament page 12 Classified Comics Family Financial Movies Obituaries 9 Public Notices Sports 5 Television a 13 11 FAISAL WELCOMES NIXONS King Faisal center of Saudia Arabia chats with President Richard Nixon Friday after the President wife Pat arrived in to a subdued but friendly reception by a moderately large AP crowd The king welcomed Nixon with a warm embrace and a warning that there can be no permanent peace Israel gives Jerusalem back lo Arabs Mixon accountable Senators draft dirty tricks report WASHINGTON UPI A draft report of Senate Watergate committee charged Friday that President Nixon must be held responsible and accountable for a systematic campaign of dirty tricks against 1972 Democratic presidential hopefuls This entire effort was coordinated by President Nixon's closest adviser Haldeman and the former attorney general of the United States John N the report said However it is President Nixon who must be held responsible and accountable for the actions of his dinates Not only was he the candidate on behalf of whom these activities were un- he also set the moral and ethical standards by which his re-election paign operated The draft was another in a series of staff reports being ted to senators on the com- whose final report is due at the end of June UPI gained access to a copy of the draft The report took up the alleged activities of Donald the so-called dirty trickster who already have been in for illegal distribution of c a m p a i s n literature in the Florida primary John J Caulfield and Anthony Ulasewicz White House operatives Arthur Bremer convicted in the assassination attempt on Gov: George C Wallace incidents involving Sen Edward M Kennedy the suggested fire bombing of the Brookings Institute the International Telephone and Telegraph Dita Beard i t s Washington lobbyist and alleged donation for the 1972 Republican National Convention The report also discussed the use of the FBI the In- ternal Revenue Service the Secret Service and White House public relations efforts The Democrats were left far behind the starting line in the general campaign race Senate panel to get FBI wiretap memos i WASHINGTON UPI The Justice Department agreed Friday to turn over to the Senate Foreign Relations Com- secret FBI memos and documents about Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger's role in the White House wiretap controversy The committee asked for the documents as it began preparations to reopen hearings at Kissinger's request Deputy Attorney General Laurence H said he would turn over all materials previously submitted lo he House Judiciary Committee which indirectly or directly relate to the role of Dr Kissinger in the initiation operation ami termination ot those national security wiretaps White House compiles Henry A Kissinger in part because of the systematic campaign of illegal and unethical activity by the agents of the White House and the Committee to Re-Elect the the report said It is much harder to assess the impact of these activities on individual It is clear though that the dirty tricks contributed heavily to create an atmosphere of terness rancor and disarray within the Muskie campaign itself which played a major role in Sen Edmund S declining fortunes in 1972 The methods and tactics of the agents of the White House and CRP to interfere with and disrupt the cratic were un- precedented in their nature scope and objectives and have no place in the American political system The draft quoted Nixon's remark to House Counsel John W Dean III on Sept 15 day the original Watergate ments were handed down and when Dean said the President allegedly congratulated him for keeping the case outside the White House We are all in it the paign together the quoted Nixon as saying This is a war We take a few shots and it will lie over We will give them a few shots and it will be over Don't worry I wouldn't want to be on the other side right now Would JEDDAH Saudia Arabia UPI President Nixon who came to this oil kingdom after malting a controversial promise supply Egypt with nuclear technology was told bluntly by King Faisal Friday that there will be no lasting Middle East peace while Arab lands are Faisal the bearded white-robed ruler who initiated the Arab oil boycott against the United Slates last year lectured Nixon during a toast at a lavish banquet in his honor It was the toughest talk that Nixon has heard since he began his triumphal Middle East trip four days ago with an unprecedented reception by millions of cheering tians There will never be a veal and lasting Faisal said unless Jerusalem is liberated and returned to Arab unless liberation of all the occupied Arab territories is achieved and unless Arab peoples of Palestine regain their to return to their homes toast echoed a theme which dent Anwar Sadat had ed several times with Nixon but the king's language was much stronger As with Sadat Nixon avoided any direct response and said only that the United States wants In a positive rota in bringing peace to the Middle East Faisal had gone to the port near this Red Sea port city earlier in the day to greet Nixon Thousands of Saudi Arabians watched the tion but they were far more subdued than the estimated 5.5 million to 7 million persons who followed tbe President in Egypt event which one Cairo official said Allah alone could have planned Before leaving Cairo Nixon and Sadat signed a joint communique in which the United States agreed to vide Egypt nuclear technology for peaceful purposes The agreement raised fears in Tel Aviv and Washington that it might allow Egypt to develop nuclear weapons but a spokesman called these fears erroneous At the banquet for Nixon which by Moslem custom ex- eluded women and liquor Faisal the Palestinian problem The injustice and aggression which were wrought upon the Arabs of Palestine are un- precedented in history for not even in the darkest ages had a whole population of a try been driven out of their homes lo he replaced by he said The Arab he said has appealed lo the of the world for more than a quarter of a century to regain their lost rights and to undo the injustice which was committed but those peals were in vain and they had no alternative but to resort to arms in the defense of their rights their land and their sacred shrines He praised the efforts ol Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger to bring peace to the Middle East and added he hoped these efforts would continue But Ills language seemed to be uncompromising in terms of concessions the United States will have to get from Israel In his return toast at banquet Nixon told Faisal the United States wants to play a helpful role And we believe the cretary of state has played a helpful role working with Please turn to KING page 2 Leonid I Brezhnev Brezhnev ready to ink test ban pact MOSCOW party chief Leonid I Brezhnev said Friday Russia is pre- pared right now to reach an accord with America on limiting and eventually ending underground nuclear tests His declaration came less than two weeks before dent Nixon's scheduled arrival here Under a 1963 pact Moscow and Washington agreed to ban nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere and under the sea but there was no vision against the explosion of nuclear devices underground According to the the U.S Atomic Energy Commission the last announced U.S un- test was Feb 27 and the last seismic signal presumed to be a Soviet un- test recorded on May 31 We arc ready to reach an with the United States right now on the limitation o f underground nuclear tests up to their full termination according to a coordinated the Soviet news agency Tass quoted Brezhnev as saying in a Kremlin speech Leaders ink nuclear pact 1 Ehrlichman trial slated WASHINGTON Concluding that the While House now has complied with requirements to produce a federal j u d g e Friday ordered former aide J o h n and three other men lo go on trial June in the Ellsberg break-in case During a court hearing U.S District Court Judge Gerhard A said the White House has satisfied legal ments for making available old tiles that he deemed necessary for his de- fense For two weeks While House refusal lo turn over subpoenaed documents had raised threat of Gesell's holding in contempt of court and of d e 1 a y i n trial for perhaps months Nixon's former No 2 aide is the chief dant remaining in the case growing out of burglary al the office of a psychiatric who treated tagon Papers defendant niel Ellsberg Former White House aides Charles W Colson and Egil Krogh lr pleaded guilty earlier originally had been scheduled tn on coining Monday with convicted W a t e r g a t c burglary conspirators i Gordon liernard 1 Barker and Kven with tbe later starling date trial presumably will be completed well in advance of the Watergate cover-up csse in which also is a set for trial Sept 9 The our men are charged with conspiring lo deprive Los psychiatrist Dr Lewis Fielding of his civil rights by breaking into his office in search of his files on Chief W bile II o n s e lawyer James SI lair told the While would turn over documents for June 19 1971 and June 22 1071 that an lawyer said two days ago he needed or his defense but which the While was withholding CAIRO Egypt AP The presidents of the United States and Egypt agreed Friday on negotiations between their governments to provide American help for a peaceful Egyptian nuclear power gram A communique President Nixon and President Anwar Sadat signed at the end of Nixon's two-day visit lo Egypt said the U.S Atomic Energy Commission and the Egyptian Ministry of Electricity will conclude a provisional pact this on the sale of nuclear fuel to Egypt That agreement apparently will take effect when the overall document on t h c sharing of American nuclear technology is concluded Since the atomic age began nuclear energy has been viewed by all nations as a double-edged sword offering opportunities for peaceful applications h u t raising the risk of nuclear the communique said It said that the United Slates has made its technology available to other under safeguards and In context governments will begin of an agreement for cooperation in the field of nuclear energy under agreed safeguards Upon conclusion of such an agreement the United Stales is prepared to sell nuclear reactors to Egypt lo generate substantial additional quantities of tric power to support its rapidly growing development needs The communique did not specify how Egypt would use American nuclear supplies but it said that the program is aimed al providing Egypt with the nuclear know-how to its economic ment Diplomatic informants said nuclear fuels and reactors would be for totally peaceful purposes signed the agreement with just before departing for Saudi Arabia after a triumphal two-day stay in Egypt Under its terms the President agreed lo send U S Atomic Commission experts to within month and lo sell Egypt nuclear supplies