Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - September 5, 1973, Winona, Minnesota Mostly fair skies and mild temperatures of Publication Winona Daily News 110 TW MM WINONA MINNESOTA 55967 WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 2 Sections 20 15 Congress back lo tackle money bi WASHINGTON AP gress returns today from a month's vacation to tackle money bills that carry over- tones of the legislators power with the White House First on the Senate's list is appropriation measure from which the House deleted a cial presidential fund The House also added strictures on the spending of government money for security on such private properly as presidential homes away from Washington The Honse Appropriations Committee cut the money from the after discussing er the fund might have been used to finance the special plumbers unit of White House investigators The full House went along The Senate Appropriations Committee however replaced million with a provision for reports to Congress on the spending Acting after news accounts broke about expenditures for security at President Nixon's California and Florida houses the House approved language requiring that future spending on private property first be re- ported to the appropriations committees The Senate com- deleted the reporting re- The fund and property ing issues were sent to the full Senate The Honse is to act on a million State Department with a ment that the department and affiliated agencies must re- spond to congressional requests for information or lose their funds The also would give Con- gress a look at campaign con- by persons sub- sequently nominated for Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana in- on the eve of the re- session said he favors stricter wage-price controls but that there is nothing more Congress can do to fight in- Arab gunmen take over Saudi Arabia embassy in Paris PARIS AP Three Arab gunmen invaded the Saudi bian Embassy today took at least five hostages and end to blow up the building un- less they were flown to an un- named Arab capital police said The assailants who claimed Ehrlichman is indicted LOS ANGELES AP For- mer presidential adviser John in addition to the unspecified charges related to the D Ehrlichman has been in- in itself Sources for the dieted in connection with paper report were not cited breakin of the office of Daniel There was no immediate psychiatrist the Los cia comment on the Times Angeles Times said today i story After the sealed in- Ehrlichman who was White were returned leased immediately afterward i indictment in the probe Dist House adviser on domestic af fairs was indicted secretly Tuesday along with former aide Egil Krogh Jr David Young a former aide to aide to special Watergate Archibald Cox said they Kolts also ordered that arrest warrants not be issued until next Tuesday to give the in- a chance to surrender on Atty Joseph Busch declined comment on that report local attorney Joseph Ball said he had not Ellsberg Four others have been named publicly as participants in Sept 3 1971 breakin at the Be- verly Hills office of Dr their own He set bond at whether his client But the four E been indicted I don't know Howard Hunt Bernard Barker Eugenio DeDiego for each person indicted Cox's aide James Doyle said the Watergate prosecutor could could threaten Cox's Watergate expected to issue a investigation ment today about the effect of Superior Court Judge indictments on his Henry A Kissinger and con- G Kolts who received the in- gation They ve got a sma Watergate conspirator late Tuesday f the documents sealed un- at least one of those indicted G Gordon Liddy the Times the documents sealed un- said The newspaper said that it had learned Ehrlichman was piece of a much bigger Doyle said Sources close to the grand surrenders to authorities jury previously had said that Names and charges stemming Ehrlichman Krogh Young and anything about he said Sources said the 18 grand rors filed into court at 7 p.m CDT after spending most of the day hearing a replay of testimony before the Senate Watergate Committee about the Ellsberg breakin The and Cuban nationals Martinez and Felipe were granted immunity from prosecution in return for grand jury testimony In his televised Watergate testimony Ehrlichman ed the breakin as a vital indicted on a perjury the probe were to be re- Liddy were possible targets covert plans relating to McCord Magruder told to halt public speeches jurors reportedly also had been tional security operation He shown three White House it was well within the con- office memorandums involving i function of the Ehrlichman Krogh and Young John Ehrlichman Strikers defy railway law WINNIPEG AP Strikes in defiance of federal work legislation were expected to keep train movements by Canadian National Railways and CP Rail at a standstill in Winnipeg and Thunder Bay day Railway carmen and ists in Winnipeg voted Tuesday to maintain picket lines at way installations and rating railway employes were not expected to cross the lines In Thunder Bay the had pickets posted along all major railway lines late day The Winnipeg meeting of six unions attracted more than union bers Although some of the un- ions voted to return to work the two largest groups decided to continue their protest and loudly booed otherwise those who voted electricians and boilermakers at both CNR and CP Rail voted to return to work workers for CNR also decided to return but their collegues at CP Rail voted to stay off the job However one union official to be members of Predicted few members of the splinter group said they would trade the hostages for the re- lease of Abou Daoud a ranking Palestinian resistance leader held by King Hussein in Jordan rank and file would cross et lines manned by fellow union members W H Matthew spokesman for in Winnipeg said individual union members had been told earlier they could de- cide for themselves whether to report for work The had refused to cross picket lines Tuesday The current phase of the strike has halted grain ments in southern Manitoba and northwestern Ontario but the CNR's northern Manitoba line to the port of was opened up early Tuesday The strike was also cited as a major factor behind the down of the Great Lakes Paper Co Ltd plant in Thunder Bay A company spokesman said Tuesday the opening after the Labor Day weekend had to be postponed until Thursday and could be further postponed if the rail strikes continue The plant is the largest of its kind in the lakehead city and produces about tons of newsprint a year Meanwhile a CNR man said in Winnipeg there to be a standing on the part of some union members about the term of the passed Saturday by parliament to restore railway service He said the increases for union members and members of the United Trans- Union in the are minimum increases only and could be increased by further negotiations or arbitration WASHINGTON AP A federal judge ordered an end today to public speeches by James W McCord Jr and Jeb Stuart Magruder saying it was a disgrace that the Watergate criminals could profit by their wrongdoing McCord convicted of glary received for a speech at a university in Il- linois last week He and uder who has pleaded guilty to conspiracy had planned al lecture tours I don't understand and don't think it's fair lor Mr McCord and Mr Magruder to profit by their Chief U.S District Court Judge John j rica said in ordering an end to their public speeches To me this is a disgrace McCord's request for a ture tour was ordered canceled by Sirica last week But when SCHOOL Gary Alloto 6 of Miami Flu is pulled toward his first grado class as ho begun school for tho first time In his life And from tho position of his font didn't want any of the school AP OAS eyes end to Cuban embargo it was brought to the attention that Magruder planned a similar series of speaking engagements the judge summoned both men to court for a hearing Bernard Fensterwald McCord's lawyer asked the judge to modify the speaking restriction to permit McCord to make speeches outside a mile radius of Washington with no radio or television coverage Fensterwald said McCord es to speak to church and groups as a matter of conscience Sirica replied that his con- cern is not only for the con- rights of people who may still be indicted in the Wa- tergate scandal and the need to refrain from prejudicial pre- trial publicity but also over the paid for men being ances Fensterwald then asked if McCord could speak exclusively to religious groups without re- speakers fees The judge also rejected that al decision on the ture tours came as both the White House and special gate prosecutor Archibald Cox planned to appeal a court order for presidential Watergate tapes The White House said it would file its papers Thursday in an attempt to block efforts to force President Nixon to turn over the tapes Cox's appeal will seek clarification or of the standards and procedures to be followed in de- termining what parts of the dence will be presented to the grand the prosecutor said He did not elaborate Magruder asked Sirica to grant him unlimited permission to travel around the country in order to pursue his consulting business Sirica okayed this Sirica granted Magruder that permission and advised McCord that conditions for McCord's re- maining free on bail are that he refrain from public es or interviews relating to Wa- Sirica then granted McCord the same liberalized travel restrictions as uder Magruder former deputy di- rector of Nixon's re-election campaign cancelled a speech set for today at West Virginia University that was to kick off his national lecture tour McCord convicted of pating in the June 17 1972 Wa- tergate break-in already has been tentatively ordered by rica to stop his lecture tour SMALL NATION CONFERENCE Prime Minister Forbes Burnham of Guyana left and Prime Minister Fidel Castro of Cuba are shown Tuesday with President Houari at Algiers Airport The men are attending the fourth summit conference of nations in Algiers AP Algeria hosts 76 leaders for summit ALGIERS AP Leaders President Tito of Yugoslavia a the proposals from various WASHINGTON AP A from 76 nations assembled the seeking special committee of the today for the fourth of American States summit conference in g they hope will in- crease their influence and gaining power with the appears ready United States a setback by ending the to deal the major trade and diplomatic embargo of Cuba The committee which con movement The four-day conference Algeria the conference host expected to approve a series of resolutions on such issues as natural resources nations tion rial the Middle East fishing texts on item on the had prepared every agenda and was expected to ex- ert a strong influence behind the scenes Conference sources said nu merous resolutions on the Israeli conflict were presented limits nuclear More than half the nations anj tne international were represented by their vened here Tuesday has not i kings presidents or prime committees worked yet formally received the Cuba Heading the lineup was carly rounding up to the political drafting com- all of them pro-Arab One from the Palestine ation Organization called for full support for the Palestinian movement and condemnation of Israel for its policy of and settlement of lands captured from the Arabs in the 1967 war A stronger Egyptian tion called for an international boycott of Israel and its con- as an international outlaw There was no possibility however of n resolution calling on the Arab oil nations at the conference to withhold their oil from the United Stales and Eu- rope as a pressure weapon against Israel The Arabs have been in repeated ings the most recent one on issue But it is a recurring theme in corridor talk at OAS headquarters The United Slates strongly supports continuing the year-old embargo but an tally showed 12 countries opposed to the U.S stand Virtually all hose supporting the U.S position are military dictatorships or under heavy military influence Opposed are nearly all of America's representative democracies President Nixon supports the Cuhn embargo primarily cause Havana still supports subversive movements In Latin America although nt reduced levels Some countries defied the embargo by unilaterally tics with Cuhn zuela find arc ad- proposals designed nullify it News leaks on Agnew probe linked to Justice WASHINGTON AP Atty Gen Elliot L Richardson has received information that some of the news leaks about a al investigation of Vice dent Spiro T Agnew have come from within the Department of Justice a department man snid today Richardson obtained the in- formation from news media sources said spokesman John W hits publicly accused unnamed Justice Department officials of leaking information in n deliberate attempt lo I smear him Anwar Sadat Tuesday in Kuwait to agree on the use of their oil as a weapon Advertising have taken off their gloves and started calling each er names in public story page 2a memorandum on Winona's Cablevision advisory Com- brought Tuesday night from tee secretary Mrs Curtis Johnson who told men to decide a new chise ordinance on facts story page Negotiators for I alKS Chrysler Corp and the United Auto ers were to return to the bargaining table today national news roundup page Instead of pancakes or eggs for breakfast row why not substitute a pizza or a That's tho recommendation of a who says America is turned off by a stereotyped breakfast story page New autos go on sale without hike WASHINGTON AP The first of the 1974 model autos were scheduled to go on sale day without the price increase that automakers had hoped to win from the government The Cost of Living Council has not yet decided whether to approve an average increase of per car by American tors Corp a council spokesman said Tuesday night American Motors first of the automakers to introduce its 1974 models had asked the council for permission to put the increase in effect today The three other auto com- panies Ford General Motors and Chrysler also have price increase proposals pending be- fore the council They are not scheduled to go into effect be- fore Sept 13 if the council proves the price hikes A spokesman for American Motors in Detroit indicated the company hoped for action by the council at the last minute But a council spokesman said there was virtually no chance the council would complete period expired tion on the price increase that soon We're not going to have t decision until we have made an analysis of the issues and we are doing that as rapidly as we he said The council held public ings last week on proposed price increases by the auto- makers and also by 10 major steel companies Council Director John T Dunlop has indicated a major worry of the government is the effect the proposed increases by steel and automakers would have on the economy and the success of the new Phase 4 program Phase 4 provides for a delay between the time major companies notify the ment of price increases and date they can put them into fect This gives the council time to block the increases if it chooses American Motors asked to put its price increases into fect before the waiting A Cambodian boy weeps over tho body of a government soldier killed In fighting to reopen 4 west of Phnom Penh Tho attempt to open the highway was dropped Tuesday AP