Times Recorder, The (Newspaper) - October 6, 1971, Zanesville, Ohio Today's Chuckle very Is often he result of thinking twice before you your mouth The Times Recorder PAGES Your Good Morning Newspaper OHIO WEDNESDAY 6 1971 Today's Weather FORECAST Variable and cooler today and tonight High in the low 70s low in the on Page TEN CENTS Adviser Leaves This Month Kissinger Due In China To Set Up Nixon's Trip Henry A Kissinger President Nixon's national security adviser left announces to newsmen at the White House that he will visit Peking Telephoto later this month to make arrangements for the President's planned trip to Red China At right is Ron Ziegler White House press secretary WASHINGTON UPI Vhite House adviser Henry A Kissinger announced Tuesday he will return to Peking late this month to zero in on a date for President Nixon's visit next year confident that current political turbulence in China will not disrupt the trip Kissinger who made a highly flight from Pakistan to Peking last July to arrange the visit told newsmen he hoped to leave as soon as possible after Oct 15 spend a maximum of four days conferring with Chinese leaders and have a fixed date ready for public announcement soon after his return Kissinger said he would fly to Peking aboard a presidential Jetliner via Hawaii and would be accompanied by about 10 White House and State ment officials and Secret Service agents No newsmen will be allowed to make the trip but Kissinger said a member of White House press secretary staff will go to make preliminary arrangements for press coverage of Nixon's visit Officially the date will be sometime before next May 1 A simultaneous ment of Kissinger's trip was made in Peking The one- statement broadcast by Radio Peking and the New China News Agency said Kissinger will visit Peking in the latter part of October for talks with the Chinese ment to make concrete ar- rangements for President on's visit to China Kissinger said he would meet again with Premier Chou En- lai but had no idea who else he would see or whether he might travel outside Peking this time There is no evidence the Chinese have changed minds about Nixon's trip he said On the contrary we have a great deal of evidence that the preparations on the side of the Peoples Republic of China have gone forward seriously and he said Kissinger said there was nothing unusual or unforeseen that has produced this an But in contrast to the strict secrecy that shrouded his first mission to Peking Kissinger's openness about his plans this time seemed intended to head off speculation that widely circulated reports of political upheavals in China might jeopardize Nixon's plans We have not raised the issue with the Peoples Republic of said Kissinger who is Nixon's national security affairs adviser They have not volunteered any information but their performance has made perfectly clear that if anything is happening it is not related to the visit because our communications have been unchanged Despite lack of diplomatic relations the two countries are m regular direct Kissinger said These contacts have continued without inter- ruption throughout this period and without any reduction in either frequency or serious he said Kissinger conceded however that we do not have any reliable information except for the facts that arc generally known about what is going on in the Peoples Republic of China Neither Mao Tse-tung nor his defense minister and ed successor Lin Piao at National Day nies in Peking Oct 1 for the first time in many years and the traditional parade was canceled This plus the grounding of all plane flights m China in mid- September led to speculation of a power shakeup in Peking There have been reports that Coal WASHINGTON UPI -As the administration took legal steps to force striking back to work Labor Secretary James D Hodgson told negotiators in the soft coal walkout they could not delay settlement in hopes of beating President Nixon's controls After separate discussions with coal industry and union representatives at the Labor Department Hodgson reported both sides were interested in early agreement ending the five-day strike by mi- Seen ners The negotiators declined comment United Mine Workers union sources said the talks were stalled because mine operators were holding out for details of President Nixon's controls A spokesman for the tors denied they were refusing to bargain because of the government's controls but con- ceded that the lack of information on Phase II has complicated negotiations But Hodgson said neither the wage-price freeze nor the controls following its expira tion Nov 13 could be an excuse for delay especially in a key industry such as coal More than 200 agreements have been reached since the onset of the freeze some tor interim work arrangements and many for complete labor he said All these agreements are subject to the freeze and to the terms of Phase II as they would be in the instance of coal tions It was the first time any federal official had intervened m the coal strike and it coincided with Nixon's first use of the 1947 Act in the hope of breaking the impasse in the East West and Gulf Coast dock strikes Rep Paul Findley asked Hodgson to consider including in the prospective order for an cooling off period a Chicago grain elevator strike he said effectively embargoes the shipment of grain by Midwest farmers Economy Split Deepens Elections Ordered In WASHINGTON UPI rancorous split between the administration and organized labor deepened Tuesday culture Secretary Clifford M Hardin deplored an strained use of power by some union officials and President George Meany ened President Nixon to a Latin-American dictator One day after he told the House Banking Committee that Nixon was unworthy of a congressional mandate to con- trol inflation Meany accused the President of running the economy from the balcony in the manner of romer Argen tine strongman Juan Peron He also charged that the administration was employing the big lie technique used by all dictators to try to convince the public that Nixon's new economic policies were fair and working Hardin in an obvious ence to Meany at an ture Department ceremony lamented the testimony of a prominent labor leader demanding that labor should get what its leaders want seemingly regardless of er it is and seemingly without regard for what it does for the rest of society Hardin cited the men's strikes that have closed down East West and Gulf Coast ports The inflation that is triggered by this kind of unrestrained use of power pushes farm costs higher and higher and grasps farmers tight in a he said Farmers hurt economically by the dock strike said are distressed by the lack of statesmanship on the part of some labor leaders The verbal crossfire erupted as Nixon faced a Senate challenge of his order ing a billion federal pay raise for six months until July 1 which the House upheld Monday on a vote of 207 to 174 The Senate vote comes day Aside from a move to veto the postponement Sen Gale McGee chairman of the Senate Post Office and Civil Service Committee proposed delaying all pay raises civilian and military empowering Nixon in the meantime to permit increases throughout Oct 1 1972 in line with his noninflationary lines Prime Minister Pleads For North Irish Unity BELFAST Northern Ireland Snipers attacked British troops with rifle and machine gun fire Tuesday as Prime Minister Brian Faulkner ed with his Parliament to unite and stop Northern Ireland from bleeding to death In Belfast Tuesday night a series of five bombs exploded almost simultaneously The bomb targets were a vacant Roman Catholic house a Catholic hardware store and a paint shop next door a Protestant supermarket and a real estate office in a religiously mixed neighborhood Had No Trouble No The person placing this ad said We've had no trouble renting a want ad in The Times Recorder If you have house apartment to rent or an item to Mil call The Times Recorder uric for Classified Ph In Londonderry another Northern Irish trouble center a bomb blasted a warehouse During daylight snipers with rifles fired at British troops trying to recover a hijacked bus in Belfast's Roman Catholic area wounding a soldier and a civilian passerby an army spokesman said At dusk a machine gun assault against an armored patrol in the market center wounded another trooper and civilian Faulkner announced he will fly to London Thursday for new talks with British Prime Minister Edward Heath on the grave situation which now exists Parliament reconvened tinder light security after a summer recess Security guards checked all persons entering and leaving the building and the public gallery was closed for the first time In Parliament's history Faulkner Parliament that Northern Ireland because of Catholic strife was Mewling to death and the first priority must be to bind up these Baltimore Wins Pennant OAKLAND Calif Baltimore Orioles won the American League pennant Tuesday by sweeping to their third straight victory over the Oakland Athletics It was the third consecutive pennant for Baltimore which has never lost a playoff game The Orioles defending World Series champions will meet either Pittsburgh or San Francisco when the series opens in the Orioles park on Saturday New Plan COLUMBUS UPI Secre tary of State Ted W Brown said Tuesday he would direct county boards of election to prepare to hold elections under the new legislative ment plan although he said the plan written by the Gilligan administration would never hold up in court Brown said the plan adopted by the Apportionment Board last Thursday was poorly drawn and full of errors But until the court actually declares the plan tional I must administratively prepare to hold elections under that Brown said He notified Gov John J gan elections would be held under the plan as adopted by the board not including about three dozen errors corrected by the Democratic board members the following day Brown's office also reported Monday the plan did not include the city of Zanesville in any House or Senate district I guess it's a vain act to advise the boards of election to hold elections on a plan which I know will not hold up in Brown said but only the court can rule the plan un- constitutional and I do not have the authority to make an administrative determination on a matter of constitutionality A wounded South Vietnamese soldier is carried to safety by his buddies near Krek Cambodia South Vietnamese troops are reported chasing the remnants of a big North Vietnamese and Viet Cong force lerm the biggest Communist losses more than 350 UPI Telephoto crushed in what spokesmen single battie in four months in the fighting are put at Red Survivors Hunted After Cambodia Attack SAIGON South troops hunted Tuesday for survivors of a retreating Communist infantry force that they had trapped and routed in the worst defeat suffered by the North Vietnamese in Indochina fighting this year Inside Index Crossword Deaths Editorials Financial Jeane Dixon Letters To Editor Ohio Report Sports Pages Women's Pages r Allied ground air and artillery killed at least 364 soldiers of the North ese 5th Division Monday military spokesmen reported as the Communists tried to flee to a sanctuary just across the Cambodian border from South Vietnam The allied victory in the biggest single battle in na in four months came m countering a Communist sive to push South Vietnamese troops from their last border base in Cambodia Spokesmen said 10 Saigon troops were slain and 39 wounded in 12 hours of fierce fighting along Cambodian way 7 two miles east of the important junction town of Krek and five miles from Vietnam Missiles Opposed In Senate WASHINGTON UPI Senate went on record Tuesday in strong opposition to ment of accurate new missiles that could destroy an enemy's retaliatory capacity in a nuclear war By votes of W to 12 and to 17 members rejected ments by Sen J nines I Buckley the New York authorizing research to improve the curacy and range of U S Minuteman and Poseidon Mis Buckley's aim was to turn the missiles into weapons which could knock out an enemy's missiles in their silos before they could be used Buckley contended that the United States must begin moving to match Soviet efforts the development of missiles that the United States fears could neutralize the Minuteman in a nuclear war But he ran into surprisingly stiff opposition not only from senators but from Chairman John Stennis of the Armed Services Committal Stennis said the United States should meet the threat not by matching it but by improving the of the Minuteman and ing their ability to penetrate enemy defenses The search for a capability in the 1970s is the search for a Stennis Buckley contended a counter- force weapon would not sarily be used for a but would be vital in a limited nuclear attack in which enemy would unleash a few of its missiles at the United States holding the rest in reserve Buckley contended the ident in an emergency should have the option of using missiles to destroy the my's strategic forces as an alternative to unleashing a nuclear holocaust aimed against the enemy's civilian population Inmate Sues CHICAGO inmate at Prison filed a damage suit Tuesday charging corrections officials with raising prices in the prison commissary in violation of President Nixon's wage-price freeze Manila Protest MANILA UPI men broke up an ment rally Tuesday with gunfire and homemade bombs turned on a student activist march moving along a main Manila Students Return Ohio Juniors returned to Middletown High School Tuesday in the ond day of classes since the school reopened after being closed last week because of cial disturbances Grave Strike Ends SAN FRANCISCO An agreement was reached Tuesday to end a marathon strike of cemetery Corkers which has left graveyards overgrown with weeds and hundreds of corpses stacked in mortuaries awaiting burial Market Opposed BRIGHTON England UPI leader Harold son called on his Labor Party Tuesday to unite against British entry into the European Com- mon Market Rut party sources said the government may win its case by 100 votes or more Lin Piao is gravely ill and that Liu a Mao foe who was deposed as chief of state during the Cultural Revolution had fled to the Soviet Union Kissinger said we would not presume to ask the Peoples Republic of China to explain to us what presumed internal developments in Peking would do to common plans However he said the two countries decision to improve relations are not going to be lightly reversed on either side He said his party would include John Holdridge and Winston Lord of his National Security Council staff who accompanied him to Peking last summer Al Jenkins of the State Department bureau of East Asian affairs White House advance man Dwight Chapin the Ziegler staff member a White House communications expert and Secret Service FBI Rapped In Fatal Hijacking JACKSONVILLE Fla father of a young woman kidnaped and murdered day during an attempted hacking accused the FBI Tuesday of making a error in disabling the plane to prevent a flight to the Bahamas George Mallory Jr killed his estranged wife Mrs Susan Lakich Giffe and a charter plane pilot Brent Downs after agents shot out the tires and one engine on the small plane on an isolated airport runway I think the FBI made a gross said ret Army Major Joseph S Lakich at his Nashville home I know George did not intend to kill her unless caged and cornered He saw the FBI had him Lakich continued There was no way of escaping So he decided to take body with him Lakich WJS joined in his criticism of the FBI action by Mack Brothers Jr operator of a small charter airline in Nashville and owner of the hijacked plane If it had not been for the fact that the FBI took matters in their own hands the pilot probably would be a Brothers charged Special Agent W M der said Tuesday he would have no further comment on the hijacking A federal law enforcement source told UPI however that a complete scrutiny of what transpired and what went wrong would be made The source and there are set procedures which are followed in these cases to protect innocent lives Arabs End Discussion On Mideast By United Press International The three top leaders of the Federation of Arab Republics completed discussions Tuesday in Cairo on flic military and political aspects of the East crisis which Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has pledged to resolve this year either by peace or by war In New York Assistant Secretary of State Joseph J Sisco said Washington was cautiously optimistic about arranging an interim ment between Egypt and on reopening the Suez Canal Other U.S officials at military and economic ance to holster Israel's ty if an agreement is reached optimism was not reflected in Israeli preM reaction to the plan spelled out by Secretary of State William P in policy speech to General Assembly JEWS PA PER I