perm filename NEWS.AP[NET,GUE]1 blob sn#003920 filedate 1972-11-02 generic text, type T, neo UTF8
010
Fashion Bjt 310
Wirephoto NY6
By LYNNE OLSON
Associated Press Writer
    NEW YORK (AP) - How do you transform a demure daytime outfit
into an elegant evening5 bo,,2 you wear a jump dress, says
Pauline Trigere.
    The jump dress, one of Trigere's new spring looks shown at
her collection Thursday, is basically a halter dress with
a bare back.
    A simple navy one, worn over a filmy navy and gold blouse,
is ideal for the office. Whip off the blouse and it's bare
and elegant - fine for the theater.
    Another, older way of using the same costume for day and
night was revived in the collection.
    Miss Trigere showed a bright green print shirtwaist dress for day
and then made it an evening gown by adding a long overskirt.
    The designer stuck to skirts, for spring showing only a few
pants outfits and those only for evening.
    There were lots of wrap coats with matching skirts and a
few little bolero jackets over princess and fitted dresses.
    Daytime colors were navy, black and white - combined in bold
plaids and checks - and a sprinkling of pastel blues and pinks.
    Color ran riot, however, in Trigere's evening wear. Her long
evening dresses were decollete. Several had scooped necklines
off the shoulders, and some were revivals of the elegant Grecian
look, with one shoulder bared.
    Anj then there were the so-called ''false modesty'' gowns.
They had males in the audience falling out of their seats
until they realized the vast area of seemingly naked skin
revealed by the gowns was, in fact, flesh-corlored chiffon.
    A good example was navy blue chiffon dinner dress, which
had a V neckline plunging below the waist. But there was more
there than immediately met the eye.
    Prices for the Trigere spring collection range from 300-$1,000.
    
0205aES 11-03


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003
                            AP NEWS DIGEST
                                 Friday PMs

                                 INDOCHINA

    President Nixon says the United States will find a Vietnam
settlement ''when the agreement is right - not one day before.''
    From Washington; new material; should stand; Wirephoto NY5.

    U.S. bombers hit at the North Vietnamese who overran the Duc Co
border camp. The Communists are in the camp; the B52s bomb two
miles away.
    From Saigon; roundup; may stand; Wirephoto NY2.

    The United States is contracting out some of its Vietnamization
training and maintenance programs in anticipation of a cease-fire
agreement calling for withdrawal of all American troops.
    From Saigon; new; may stand.

    The fast-talking, conical-hatted women who dominate Saigon's
sprawling black market want peace, but they don't agree on whether
it will raise or lower prices.
    From Saigon; a081 Nov. 2.

                                 WASHINGTON

    Three hundred Indians are occupying the Bureau of Indian Affairs
building after three hours of negotiations with a White House
official. The demonstrators are protesting life in white-dominated
America.
    Developing; Wirephoto WX1.

    The future of President Nixon's wage-price controls is murky, but
most government economic-stabilization officials agree it would be
dangerous to drop them prematurely early next year.
    New; will stand.

                                INTERNATIONAL

    Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau says he won't quit despite
the tie vote in Canada's general election and the leader of the New
Democrats pledges the support he needs for a majority.
    From Ottawa; may stand.

    The U.N. membership votes 115 to 0 to set up machinery for
international action to improve the environment.
    From United Nations; may stand.

    Muggers, including gangs of teen-age girls armed with switchblade
knives, are undermining London's reputation as a city with safe
streets.
    From London; a080 Oct. 31.

                                   POLITICS

    Sen. George McGovern goes on nationwide television tonight to talk
about the Vietnam war as his presidential campaign heads toward a
finish.
    From Grand Rapids, Mich.; new material; may stand; Wirephoto JAX1.

    Thirteen wealthy donors headed by million-dollar contributor
W. Clement Stone have given President Nixon's re-election campaign
$3.5 million in hithero secret contributions.
    From Washington; new material; should stand.

    The fate of California's defense industry - No. 1 in the
nation - has become the sharpest issue of the presidential battle in
President Nixon's home state.
    From Los Angeles; a078-80 Nov. 2; Wirephoto FX1 Nov. 1.

    Richard B. Ogilvie, running for re-election as Illinois governor,
says he doesn't know what charisma is. But according to the
governor, that's all his opponent has.
    From Springfield, Ill.; a089-91 Nov. 3; Wirephoto CX3 Nov. 1.

    Don't give Bill Clarke an excuse for not voting. He's paralyzed
from the neck down, but he's already cast his absentee ballot and
he's working to get others to vote on Tuesday.
    From Fairfield, Conn.; new; will stand; Wirephoto NX1.

    Early in the campaign, Democratic strategists were saying George
McGovern would cut Richard Nixon's lead once the President began
stumping. The Democrats are still waiting - while three dozen
stand-ins carry the bulk of the Republican campaign.
    From Washington; new; will stand.

                                 FASHIONS

    How do you transform a demure daytime dress into an elegant evening
outfit? Wear a jump dress, says Pauline Trigere.
    From New York; new; will stand; Wirephoto NY6.

    
0120aES 11-03


************************************************************


002
                            AP NEWS DIGEST
                                 Friday PMs

                                 INDOCHINA

    President Nixon says the United States will find a Vietnam
settlement ''when the agreement is right - not one day before.''
    From Washington; new material; should stand; Wirephoto NY5.

    U.S. bombers hit at the North Vietnamese who overran the Duc Co
border camp. The Communists are in the camp; the B52s bomb two
miles away.
    From Saigon; roundup; may stand; Wirephoto NY2.

    The United States is contracting out some of its Vietnamizat8on
training and maintenance 0rograms in ant
BUST IT
    
0108aES 11-03


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001
URGENT
AMs IN
Vietnamization
    SAIGON (AP) - The U.S. government is turning over parts of its
Vietnamization program of training and maintenance to civilian
contract firms in anticipation of a cease-fire agreement calling
for withdrawal of all American troops from Vietnam, U.S. military
sources disclosed Friday.
    The sources said that in this way American civilians would
remain even after the withdrawal of uniformed American advisers and
in effect would be an advisory group to the South Vietnamese armed
forces.
    Reports of the draft cease-fire agreement from both the North
Vietnamese and from the Americans have made no mention of any such
arrangement.
    Among other duties, the civilian advisory group will train
Vietnamese pilots to fly the four-engine C130 cargo planes that
began arriving Thursday to be turned over to the South Vietnamese
Air Force. The South Vietnamese will get about 30 of the $3
million planes during the next five days although no South
Vietnamese have been trained to fly and maintain them.
    
0106aES 11-03


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000
 Starting Day Report Now!!! a001 Next.
    
0100aES 11-03


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338
Nixon Funds Insert
WASHINGTON Nixon Funds a298 et seq insert after 7th graf:
$800,000.
    Stone, in a telephone interview, said the actual amount of his
contribution was, ''as a matter of fact, more than $1 million.''
    He declined, however, to reveal the exact sum, saying he preferred
to ''let the figures come out in due course.''
    Stone said he objected to the contributions being described as
''secret.''
    ''When I give to a church, I don't place an ad or call anyone
and tell them I made a donation nor do I do that with a political
candidate. There is no reason for me to openly publicize what
we do. It seems to me a private matter,'' Stone said.
    The 283: 8th graff which 1st graf a304 add
0059aES 11-03


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332
  $ADV 08
Adv Wed AMs AMs Nov. 8
BUENOS AIRES Take 2 Allende's Neighbors: rules. 300

    Chile's relations with Peru also have taken an upswing, but
there as in Argentina some diplomats appear wary of Allende.
One Peruvian official says: ''We keep an eye on Chile.''
    Allende visited Peru in September 1971. President
Juan Velasco's four-year-old military government claims it
rejects both capitalist and Communist theories. It backed
Chile in its dispute with the United States over Allende's
nationalization of U.S.-owned copper mines. Earlier, Peru had
seized U.S. oil holdings without compensation. Both Peru and
Chile accused the United States of pressuring international
lending agencies to bar loans to them.
    Another point of agreement, because of mutual hostility to
the United States, is their claim that territorial waters
extend 200 miles from their shores. Argentina makes the same
claim, but less vociferously.
    A still serious point of friction between Peru and Chile
is a war fought 88 years ago. Peruvians remain bitter at Chile's
keeping of a chunk of southern Peru and for not returning
a captured warship, the Huascar, a naval trophy in Chile.
    Uruguay maintains normal relations with Allende's government.
    Bolivia has not had diplomatic relations with Chile for more
than 10 years, so the Allende election didn't change anything.
Trade between the two countries is on the increase, however.
    Paraguay has frigid, formal relations with the Allende regime
and there is no hint of a thaw.
    Both Bolivia and Paraguay are controlled by right-wing generals
who have expressed their opposition to any Marxist-Communist
government.

    End Adv Wed AMs Nov. 8, Sent Nov. 2.
    
2335pES 11-02


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331
  $ADV 08f
ADV Wed AMs Nov. 8
Allende's Neighbors 330 two takes total 530
By ROBERT D. OHMAN
Associated Press Writer
    BUENOS AIRES (AP) - Salvador Allende has been on a diplomatic
tightrope with his neighbors ever since he became president
of Chile. So far the balancing act has worked.
    An improvement in Argentine-Chilean relations has been brought
about mainly through the initiative of Argentina's moderate
military government headed by President Alejandro Lanusse.
    In Buenos Aires a general says: ''Allende can't hope to promote
Marxism elsewhere until he gets his own house in order, but
if he secures it there, he may try and export it.''
    Most Argentine newspapers have not taken strong stands during
Chile's current domestic strife, but they write of the dispute
as a test to determine if Chile's democracy will survive Allende's
Marxism or a military coup.
    Chile and Argentina share a border more than 2,000 miles long.
When Gen. Roberto Levingston was in power he shunned Allende.
Argentina did an about-face when Gen. Lanusse ousted Levingston
in 1971. He flew to Salta, Argentina, for a conference with
Allende. The two presidents declared their mutual respect
for ''political pluralism in the international community.''
    The relationship was strained last Aug. 15 when guerrilla
terrorists killed a guard in an escape from a penitentiary
in southern Argentina and six hijacked a commercial jetliner
to Santiago, Chile.
    Lanusse telephoned Allende and was assured that Chile would
follow international treaties involving extradition, a spokesman
said.
    One week later 16 of the recaptured guerrillas were slain
by guards at the Trelew marine base in a reported escape attempt,
and that same day Allende granted asylum to the six in Santiago.
They then flew to Cuba.
    Government sources said Lanusse was furious when Allende
freed the hijackers, but he declared there was no dispute
with Chile and that the incident involved interpretation of
international rules.
    MORE
    
2330pES 11-02


332
  $ADV 08
Adv Wed AMs AMs Nov. 8
BUENOS AIRES Take 2 Allende's Neighbors: rules. 300

    Chile's relations with Peru also have taken an upswing, but
there as in Argentina some diplomats appear wary of Allende.
One Peruvian official says: ''We keep an eye on Chile.''
    Allende visited Peru in September 1971. President
Juan Velasco's four-year-old military government claims it
rejects both capitalist and Communist theories. It backed
Chile in its dispute with the United States over Allende's
nationalization of U.S.-owned copper mines. Earlier, Peru had
seized U.S. oil holdings without compensation. Both Peru and
Chile accused the United States of pressuring international
lending agencies to bar loans to them.
    Another point of agreement, because of mutual hostility to
the United States, is their claim that territorial waters
extend 200 miles from their shores. Argentina makes the same
claim, but less vociferously.
    A still serious point of friction between Peru and Chile
is a war fought 88 years ago. Peruvians remain bitter at Chile's
keeping of a chunk of southern Peru and for not returning
a captured warship, the Huascar, a naval trophy in Chile.
    Uruguay maintains normal relations with Allende's government.
    Bolivia has not had diplomatic relations with Chile for more
than 10 years, so the Allende election didn't change anything.
Trade between the two countries is on the increase, however.
    Paraguay has frigid, formal relations with the Allende regime
and there is no hint of a thaw.
    Both Bolivia and Paraguay are controlled by right-wing generals
who have expressed their opposition to any Marxist-Communist
government.

    End Adv Wed AMs Nov. 8, Sent Nov. 2.
    
2335pES 11-02


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330
  $ADV 04
    ADV SAT AMs NOV 4
    Briefs

    BERN, Switzerland (AP) - Authorities have placed matchmakers - or
matrimonial agents - under state control and required that all
of them procure a license, police reported.

    UPTON-ON-SEVERN, England (AP) - After 21 years of diligent
road-sweeping, Teddy Griffin was fired last year to make way
for an automatic sweeping machine. Now some town councilors
say the roads are in such a mess they want to replace the
machine with Griffin and his old-fashioned broom.

    LIMA, Peru (AP) - Forty-thousand rose bushes have been planted
on the barren flat that once was the Andean town of Yungay
before an earthquake destroyed it in 1970 and killed 30,000
persons.

    LONDON (AP) - The British post office is planning to use
a manned midget submarine to help lay telephone cable between
Britain and Canada.

    ORGOSOLO, Sardinia (AP) - An 81-year-old man and a 73-year-old
woman were wed here despite vigorous opposition. Many villagers
claimed the marriage was inappropriate because of the couple's
age.

    RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - A 255-pound police officer has become
the first black man to be chosen king of Rio's famous February
carnival.

    End Adv Sat AMs Nov. 4, sent Nov. 2.
    
2324pES 11-02


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329
  $ADV 04-05
    Adv Weekend editions Nov 4-5
    NEW YORK take 2 This Week in Business: products. 240
    What was booming - at least for two days this past week - was
the stock market. On Tuesday and Wednesday the Dow Jones average
of 30 industrial stocks posted a rise of more than 22 points.
The blue chip indicator was hovering near its 1972 high of
973.51.
    Wall Street experts said expectation of an imminent peace
settlement in Vietnam was the major factor in the rise, and
also cited President Nixon's big lead in electoral polls as
a factor. The surging rally cooled off Thursday when doubts
were raised about how soon a peace settlement would be reached.
    In other action on the business front:
    - A Commerce Department survey showed consumers plan to spend
record amounts in the near future on cars, houses, furniture
and major appliances.
    - Three environmental groups filed suit to block federal subsidies
for giant oil tankers.
    - Construction contracting surged 23 per cent in September
to $8.20 billion, compared to last September's $6.64 billion,
the F.W Dodge service said.
    - American Telephone & Telegraph Co. revealed it had filed
requests in five states asking that the price of a local pay
telephone call be doubled to 20 cents. Virginia and Connecticut
turned AT&T down, but Oregon, Washington and Maryland were
still considering it.
    End Adv Weekend Editions Nov. 4-5, moved Nov.2
    
2320pES 11-02


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328
  $ADV 04-05
Adv Weekend Editions, Nov. 4-5
This Week in Business 330 2 takes total 570
By JOHN DORFMAN
AP Business Writer
    NEW YORK (AP) - A slowdown in the growth of prices, an uncertain
recovery for the steel industry and high times for the stock
market were highlights of the past week in business.
    On Thursday, the Labor Department announced that wholesale
prices had actually fallen in October - the first decline in
13 months.
    The decline was only two-tenths of 1 per cent; and after
being seasonally adjusted it registered as a rise of one-tenth
of 1 per cent. Even so, observers were heartened by the development,
hoping it would help slow down retail prices, which had leaped
at a 6 per cent annual rate in September.
    U.S. Steel, the country's largest steel company and the last
major steel firm to report its third-quarter earnings, said
Tuesday it had earned $30.9 million for the period, compared
to a loss of $21.5 million in third-quarter 1971.
    Like other steelmakers, U.S. Steel was recovering from a
miserable third quarter in 1971, when shipments subsided to
a trickle because customers had built up inventories in fear
of a possible steel strike. Thus, the third-quarter figures
alone presented an unrealistic picture.
    For the first nine months of the year, U.S. Steel's profits
were down 5.4 per cent to $102.3 million, in spite of a rise
in sales of about 1 per cent to $3.91 billion.
    Meanwhile, Bethlehem Steel, the second-largest firm in the
field, announced it would continue a freeze on price rises
in its lighter items, such as sheet, strip and galvanized
products, through next April 1.
    Analysts saw the move as an attempt to increase Bethlehem's
share of the market, which had dropped from 14.5 per cent
to 13.5 per cent since the beginning of the year.
    Steel profits in general have not boomed this year as expected,
analysts said, because of a low demand for heavy construction
work products.
    MORE
    
2316pES 11-02


329
  $ADV 04-05
    Adv Weekend editions Nov 4-5
    NEW YORK take 2 This Week in Business: products. 240
    What was booming - at least for two days this past week - was
the stock market. On Tuesday and Wednesday the Dow Jones average
of 30 industrial stocks posted a rise of more than 22 points.
The blue chip indicator was hovering near its 1972 high of
973.51.
    Wall Street experts said expectation of an imminent peace
settlement in Vietnam was the major factor in the rise, and
also cited President Nixon's big lead in electoral polls as
a factor. The surging rally cooled off Thursday when doubts
were raised about how soon a peace settlement would be reached.
    In other action on the business front:
    - A Commerce Department survey showed consumers plan to spend
record amounts in the near future on cars, houses, furniture
and major appliances.
    - Three environmental groups filed suit to block federal subsidies
for giant oil tankers.
    - Construction contracting surged 23 per cent in September
to $8.20 billion, compared to last September's $6.64 billion,
the F.W Dodge service said.
    - American Telephone & Telegraph Co. revealed it had filed
requests in five states asking that the price of a local pay
telephone call be doubled to 20 cents. Virginia and Connecticut
turned AT&T down, but Oregon, Washington and Maryland were
still considering it.
    End Adv Weekend Editions Nov. 4-5, moved Nov.2
    
2320pES 11-02


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327
  $ADV 08
    ADV AMs Wed Nov.8
    LOS ANGELES take 3 Space Shuttle: payload. 200

    The shuttle will carry a two-man flight crew and a two-man
mission crew and will be able to accommodate up to 12 passengers.
    The orbiter will travel an estimated three million miles during a
typical seven-day mission, and plans call for it to be ready for
another mission within two weeks after return to earth.
    ''The shuttle is planned as a workhorse system that will be able
substantially to reduce the cost of space operations,'' North
American says. ''Primary source of the savings will come from the
shuttle being designed for re-use, with a goal of up to 100
missions.''
    The shuttle's main mission will be to transport scientific
payloads, laboratories, satellite systems and passengers into
orbit. This would include placing civilian and military satellites
in space launch carrying fuel into orbit for satellites and
spacecraft, use in space rescue missions, delivering crewmen
and supplies to an orbiting space station, and taking experiments
into orbit for periods up to 30 days.
    North American will carry out its work on the shuttle program
at facilities in Downey, Seal Beach, Palmdale and Edwards
Air force Base, Calif, and Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
    End. Adv AMs Wed. Nov. 8, sent Nov. 2
    
2310pES 11-02


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326
  $ADV 08
    ADV AMS Wed. Nov. 8
    LOS ANGELES Take 2 Space Shuttle: program. 340

    ''This is the first time we've gone out to alert companies
so that if they do bid they will know what they have to do.''
    Mihelich said North American has contacted many of the 9,000
subcontractors it used on the Apollo moon-landing program
and other companies with which it has had experience on various
projects. It also has notified the Small Business Administration,
minority business centers and Chambers of Commerce of the
available opportunities and the three symposiums.
    ''Since the Space Division was awarded the prime contract,
at least 2,000 inquiries have been received,'' Mihelich said.
''That kind of says there's a hungry world out there.''
    Up for bidding are subcontracts ranging from $50 - perhaps for
cleaning solvent - to more than $100 million for major elements
of the orbiter.
    There will be about 50 major subcontractors, with many of
the other firms involved being subcontractors to subcontractors.
    All subcontracts will be let on bids which must be approved
by NASA.
    Most of the subcontracting program is expected to get under
way between midsummer and fall of next year, Mihelich said.
    NASA has estimated that subcontractors will put 50,000 people
to work solely on space shuttle jobs. The White House says
160,000 will be directly or indirectly involved.
    A North American spokesman says the company expects to have
a peak of 9,000 workers on the space shuttle in 1976-77 with
another 6,000 to 7,000 in supporting activities.
    NASARS SIX+YEAR CONTRACT WITH North American calls for the
building of two test flights and three operational spacecraft.
Horizontal test flights are scheduled for 1976, orbital test
flights for 1978 and full operation for 1980.
    The orbiter will be an airplane-like craft, 110 feet long
and 55 feet high with a 79-foot wingspan. The cargo area,
60 feet long and 15 feet in diameter, will be capable of carrying
into earth orbit a 65,000-pound payload.
    MORE
    
2306pES 11-02


327
  $ADV 08
    ADV AMs Wed Nov.8
    LOS ANGELES take 3 Space Shuttle: payload. 200

    The shuttle will carry a two-man flight crew and a two-man
mission crew and will be able to accommodate up to 12 passengers.
    The orbiter will travel an estimated three million miles during a
typical seven-day mission, and plans call for it to be ready for
another mission within two weeks after return to earth.
    ''The shuttle is planned as a workhorse system that will be able
substantially to reduce the cost of space operations,'' North
American says. ''Primary source of the savings will come from the
shuttle being designed for re-use, with a goal of up to 100
missions.''
    The shuttle's main mission will be to transport scientific
payloads, laboratories, satellite systems and passengers into
orbit. This would include placing civilian and military satellites
in space launch carrying fuel into orbit for satellites and
spacecraft, use in space rescue missions, delivering crewmen
and supplies to an orbiting space station, and taking experiments
into orbit for periods up to 30 days.
    North American will carry out its work on the shuttle program
at facilities in Downey, Seal Beach, Palmdale and Edwards
Air force Base, Calif, and Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
    End. Adv AMs Wed. Nov. 8, sent Nov. 2
    
2310pES 11-02


************************************************************


325
  $ADV 08
ADV AMs Wed Nov. 8
Space Shuttle 320, three takes, total 860
With Wirephotos
By JACK LEFLER
Associated Press Writer
    LOS ANGELES (AP) - North American Rockwell Corp. is recruiting
an army of up to 10,000 subcontractors to help put the $2.6
billion space shuttle into orbit.
    North American, the prime contractor for the biggest space
project of the 1970s, must line up companies, large and small,
to produce components and supplies for the shuttle orbiter.
    These subcontractors and suppliers will slice up among themselves
about 53 per cent of the program's total cost over the next
six years.
    The space shuttle contract was awarded to North American
last July by the National Space and Aeronautics Administration.
    The vehicle - about the size of a medium-range jetliner - is
designed for extended stays in space where it would launch,
maintain, retrieve and repair satellites monitoring and analyzing
earth problems in such areas as air and water pollution,
agriculture, hydrology, mineralogy and urban planning. Some call it
a ''space truck.''
    To put the shuttle program together, North American
is hunting out and going to prospective subcontractors and
suppliers instead of waiting for them to come to it.
    This is being done by inviting presidents and chief engineers of
thousands of firms to attend regional symposiums at which they will
be told in detail what North American wants and when and where
it needs it. These meetings, conducted by a five-man North American
task force, will be held in Long Beach., Calif., Nov. 21-22;
Fort Worth-Dallas Nov. 27, and Boston Nov. 30-Dec. 1.
    ''To our knowledge, this is a unique approach,'' said John
Mihelich, director of shuttle procurement, in an interview at North
American's Space Division headquarters in suburban Downey.
    ''This is an attempt to provide a broad opportunity for interested
and capable subcontractors to participate in the space shuttle
orbiter program.
    MORE
    
2300pES 11-02


326
  $ADV 08
    ADV AMS Wed. Nov. 8
    LOS ANGELES Take 2 Space Shuttle: program. 340

    ''This is the first time we've gone out to alert companies
so that if they do bid they will know what they have to do.''
    Mihelich said North American has contacted many of the 9,000
subcontractors it used on the Apollo moon-landing program
and other companies with which it has had experience on various
projects. It also has notified the Small Business Administration,
minority business centers and Chambers of Commerce of the
available opportunities and the three symposiums.
    ''Since the Space Division was awarded the prime contract,
at least 2,000 inquiries have been received,'' Mihelich said.
''That kind of says there's a hungry world out there.''
    Up for bidding are subcontracts ranging from $50 - perhaps for
cleaning solvent - to more than $100 million for major elements
of the orbiter.
    There will be about 50 major subcontractors, with many of
the other firms involved being subcontractors to subcontractors.
    All subcontracts will be let on bids which must be approved
by NASA.
    Most of the subcontracting program is expected to get under
way between midsummer and fall of next year, Mihelich said.
    NASA has estimated that subcontractors will put 50,000 people
to work solely on space shuttle jobs. The White House says
160,000 will be directly or indirectly involved.
    A North American spokesman says the company expects to have
a peak of 9,000 workers on the space shuttle in 1976-77 with
another 6,000 to 7,000 in supporting activities.
    NASARS SIX+YEAR CONTRACT WITH North American calls for the
building of two test flights and three operational spacecraft.
Horizontal test flights are scheduled for 1976, orbital test
flights for 1978 and full operation for 1980.
    The orbiter will be an airplane-like craft, 110 feet long
and 55 feet high with a 79-foot wingspan. The cargo area,
60 feet long and 15 feet in diameter, will be capable of carrying
into earth orbit a 65,000-pound payload.
    MORE
    
2306pES 11-02


327
  $ADV 08
    ADV AMs Wed Nov.8
    LOS ANGELES take 3 Space Shuttle: payload. 200

    The shuttle will carry a two-man flight crew and a two-man
mission crew and will be able to accommodate up to 12 passengers.
    The orbiter will travel an estimated three million miles during a
typical seven-day mission, and plans call for it to be ready for
another mission within two weeks after return to earth.
    ''The shuttle is planned as a workhorse system that will be able
substantially to reduce the cost of space operations,'' North
American says. ''Primary source of the savings will come from the
shuttle being designed for re-use, with a goal of up to 100
missions.''
    The shuttle's main mission will be to transport scientific
payloads, laboratories, satellite systems and passengers into
orbit. This would include placing civilian and military satellites
in space launch carrying fuel into orbit for satellites and
spacecraft, use in space rescue missions, delivering crewmen
and supplies to an orbiting space station, and taking experiments
into orbit for periods up to 30 days.
    North American will carry out its work on the shuttle program
at facilities in Downey, Seal Beach, Palmdale and Edwards
Air force Base, Calif, and Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
    End. Adv AMs Wed. Nov. 8, sent Nov. 2
    
2310pES 11-02


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324
  $ADV 06
    ADV AMS MON NOV. 6
    TARZANA, Calif. take 2 Tarzan Revival: fiction.310
    A new book, ''Tarzan Lives,'' contends that Burroughs was
not writing fiction at all. And Esquire magazine published
an article this year that purported to be an interview with
the real Tarzan, Lord Greystoke. In the books, Tarzan was
an English peer raised by the apes and given the name Tarzan,
meaning ''white skin'' in the language of the great anthropoid
apes.
    The myth of Tarzan, the escapism and Burroughs' concept of
a man living at peace with nature apparently are striking
a responsive chord around the world.
    ''The only explanation I can give is that he's the man we'd
all like to be,'' said Hodes. ''He's become a myth rather
than superman because we know we can never be superman. But
there is absolutely nothing in Burroughs' concept that couldn't
be.
    ''And a lot of kids today are trying to be like that. Not
just kids. People are trying to get away from it, finding
a new meaning for civilization and living in accordance with
the laws of nature.
    ''Tarzan never tried to change nature to fit his desires.
He looked for his own place. That's what's happening
to a lot of people today.''
    Danton Burroughs, 28-year-old grandson of the writer, said,
''I envy Tarzan. His freedom and the romantic figure that he
is. And the acute command of his senses.''
    Hulbert Burroughs said, ''My dad always told me he got the
idea from the Romulus and Remuy legend. But he told other
people he was influenced by Rudyard Kipling's 'Jungle Book.'
    ''But what he basically was interested in was how the son
of a well-educated lord and lady of England would be raised
by the apes. He wanted to see the effect of inheritance and
environment.''
    END ADV AMS MON NOV. 6, SENT Nov 2
    
2254pES 11-02


************************************************************


323
 McGovern-Heckler 160
    BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (AP) - Sen. George McGovern told off
a youthful heckler Thursday.
    At an airport appearance here, a youth wearing a windbreaker with
several Nixon buttons on it crowded close to the airport fence as
McGovern walked along shaking hands in the crowd. As the candidate
approached, the youngster said to McGovern, ''He will beat you so
bad that you'll wish you'd never left South Dakota.''
    Saul Kohler of Newhouse Newspapers, who wrote a pool report for
other newsmen, said McGovern then beckoned to the youngster, saying:
''I've got a secret for you.'' And as the heckler leaned forward to
hear, McGovern said softly into his ear, ''Kiss my ass.''
    As McGovern continued down the line shaking hands, the young
man recoiled in surprise and, according to McGovern press
secretary Richard Dougherty, exclaimed: ''He said a profanity!''
    Dougherty confirmed that McGovern and the youth exchanged comments,
but the press secretary said he did not hear McGovern's remark.
    
2248pES 11-02


************************************************************


322
  $ADV 06
    ADV AMS MON NOV. 6
    Tarzan 430 two takes total 740
    With Wirephoto
By JERRY BUCK
Associated Press Writer
    TARZANA, Calif. (AP) - Tarzan is 60 years old and going stronger
than ever.
    The Edgar Rice Burroughs creation of the ape man is in the
midst of a rivival that started in France, spread to other
European countries, to Japan, and back to the United States.
    New reprints of the 26 Tarzan books in 16 languages, an art
book edition of ''Tarzan of the Apes,'' comic strips, merchandising,
toys and advertising gimmicks will push the royalty payments
to Burroughs' heirs to several million dollars this year.
In addition, numerous magazines are published by Tarzan cultists.
    The 1972 income will be the highest ever since the first
Tarzan book in 1912, said Bob Hodes, general manager of Edgar
Rice Burroughs, Inc., located in a section of Los Angeles
named for the ape man in 1930.
    The company is housed in an old Spanish-style building Burroughs
built on the 550-acre Tarzana Ranch - since broken up - and is
controlled by his children, John Coleman Burroughs, Hulbert
Burroughs and Joan Burroughs Pierce, and a grandson, Danton
Burroughs. The copyright would have expired in 1968, but Congress,
in the process of reviving the Copyright Act, has extended
all copyrights.
    Not only is the myth of Tarzan undergoing a revival, but
Burroughs himself is being elevated to a critical position
he never enjoyed before his death in 1950.
    In his lifetime Burroughs was regarded as a pulp writer of
escapism, and many libraries banned his books. Hulbert Burroughs
said, ''During the important years of his life when he was
writing, Dad had the hell panned out of him by the critics.
He never took himself seriously, but I felt the things the
critics said hurt him.''
    But critics are beginning to find new meaning in his works.
Some French critics have compared Tarzan to Rousseau's concept
of ''the natural man.'' The works of Burne Hogarth, who drew
the Tarzan comic strip from 1937 to the mid-50s and was the
artist for the new art book, have been displayed at the Museum
of Decorative Arts at the Louvre in Paris.
    Burroughs also is being taken seriously as a writer of science
fiction books. Sam Moscowitz, writing in his book, ''Under
the Moons of Mars,'' the original title of Burroughs' ''A
Princess of Mars,'' said Burroughs humanized science fiction,
brought story-telling qualities to it and turned it away from
the ''flashing light'' school of science fiction.
    More
    
2245pES 11-02


324
  $ADV 06
    ADV AMS MON NOV. 6
    TARZANA, Calif. take 2 Tarzan Revival: fiction.310
    A new book, ''Tarzan Lives,'' contends that Burroughs was
not writing fiction at all. And Esquire magazine published
an article this year that purported to be an interview with
the real Tarzan, Lord Greystoke. In the books, Tarzan was
an English peer raised by the apes and given the name Tarzan,
meaning ''white skin'' in the language of the great anthropoid
apes.
    The myth of Tarzan, the escapism and Burroughs' concept of
a man living at peace with nature apparently are striking
a responsive chord around the world.
    ''The only explanation I can give is that he's the man we'd
all like to be,'' said Hodes. ''He's become a myth rather
than superman because we know we can never be superman. But
there is absolutely nothing in Burroughs' concept that couldn't
be.
    ''And a lot of kids today are trying to be like that. Not
just kids. People are trying to get away from it, finding
a new meaning for civilization and living in accordance with
the laws of nature.
    ''Tarzan never tried to change nature to fit his desires.
He looked for his own place. That's what's happening
to a lot of people today.''
    Danton Burroughs, 28-year-old grandson of the writer, said,
''I envy Tarzan. His freedom and the romantic figure that he
is. And the acute command of his senses.''
    Hulbert Burroughs said, ''My dad always told me he got the
idea from the Romulus and Remuy legend. But he told other
people he was influenced by Rudyard Kipling's 'Jungle Book.'
    ''But what he basically was interested in was how the son
of a well-educated lord and lady of England would be raised
by the apes. He wanted to see the effect of inheritance and
environment.''
    END ADV AMS MON NOV. 6, SENT Nov 2
    
2254pES 11-02


************************************************************


321
 Telegraph Editors:
    Sunday Editors:
    OTTAWA Canada 4th NL insert should carry the number a319 - not
a505. a505 should be considered blank.
    The AP
    
2238pES 11-02


************************************************************


507
  $ADV 05
AGENCIES AND RADIO OUT
Adv Sun AMs Nov. 5
LOS ANGELES Take 3: Listening Post: Watts: desk. 320.

    ''If McGovern has anything going for him in the black community,
it's the issues. He articulates the issues which the blacks are
concerned about. They like to think their candidate is a guy on
whom they can naturally rely, not a guy they're worried about.
McGovern's going to win in Watts. The only question is . . .''
    Dymally hesitated. ''The only question is whether they're
going to get out the vote.''
    Many blacks in Watts are too discouraged to vote, conceded
Addie Bass, 61, office manager at McGovern-Shriver headquarters
next door to the ABC Pawn Shop.
    The result has been the least active postprimary Democratic
campaign Ted Watkins has seen in 30 years in Watts.
    ''Because of the lack of effort here by Democrats,'' Watkins
predicted, ''we're going to find a larger percentage of this
community voting Republican. Out of a possible 85 to 90 per cent
Democratic vote, I think the Republicans will cut it down into the
70s, and it wouldn't surprise me if it's way down into the high
60s.''
    Nixon coordinator Richard Allen, 39, and a resident of affluent
View Park, has conceded Watts to the Democrats, short of any
development that might arouse black emotions in favor of the
President. Ending the war, he agreed, would not be enough.
    ''We'll have a significant increase in Republican votes in
Watts over 1968,'' he said.
    Murphy Hawkins, 35, who works in a paper mill and preaches
at the Good Shepherd Church of God in Christ, won't be among
them. Although he considers it voting for ''the lesser of two
evils,'' he will cast his ballot for George McGovern.
    He is the kind of black whom Johnny Morgan, the Watts McGovern
coordinator, is counting on.
    ''As Watts goes, though,'' Morgan said, ''the nation doesn't
go. And that's the problem.''
    End Adv Sun AMs Nov. 5, Sent Nov. 2
    
2231pES 11-02


************************************************************


506
  $ADV 05
AGENCIES AND RADIO OUT
ADV SUN AMS NOV. 5
LOS ANGELES TAKE 2: Listening Post: Watts: riot 400
    ''So why vote?'' asked Louis Norris, 27, black, father of two, his
chin covered with a half-inch stubble he hadn't shaved since he'd
been out of work. ''If I did vote, I'd take a chance on McGovern.
But it'd be a chance. Nixon, you know where he's at. Even if you
don't like it, you know where he's at. But McGovern, you don't.''
    With his friends, Clarence Dyas, 25, who works at the Watts
Health Center, and Bucky Jones, 23, who has one child and no
job, Norris pooled $1.10 and crossed Charcoal Alley to a liquor
store and bought a bottle of cold white wine.
    Because white police, feared and hated, patrol 103rd Street, the
trio walked over to some shade near the back of the health center.
    ''You askin' who Watts is gonna vote for?'' asked Dyas. ''That's
like askin' what size of foot you want us to have on our necks
- a 7 1/2 or an 8.'' He paused. ''Width B.''
    They laughed, traded an open-palmed soul slap.
    Across 103rd Street and a few doors west, Johnny Morgan, 31, black
mustache, muttonchops and McGovern-Shriver campaign coordinator for
Watts, thumbed through the latest registration lists.
    They showed 70,566 voters in the 55th Assembly District,
represented by Leon Ralph, 40, a black Democrat, running
unopposed for a fourth term. Morgan, who is Ralph's administrative
assistant, counted 10 Democrats for every Republican in the
district - including all of Watts. The district voted for Adlai
Stevenson, John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson - and Hubert Humphrey
against Richard Nixon by 45,046 to 6,692, or more than 6
to 1 in 1986.
    ''Solidly Democratic,'' beamed Morgan. ''I can count the
Republicans in Watts on one hand.
    Even if the President ends the war?
    ''The war's not that big of an issue down here.''Neither,
for that matter, is Watergate, nor the wheat deal, nor Red
China, nor Russia, nor defense spending, nor disarmament,
nor amnesty. ''How do you explain those things to people in
Watts?'' asked Marshall Lowe, managing editor of the Los Angeles
Sentinel, a black weekly that won't endorse either candidate.
    Jobs, said Ted Watkins, 49, are the big issue in Watts.
    On the issues, said Mervyn Dymally, a Democrat and California's
only black state senator, ''McGovern is dead right.''
    Dymally, whose district includes half of Watts, abandoned
his leather chair and walked slowly around the end of his desk.
    MORE
    
2226pES 11-02


507
  $ADV 05
AGENCIES AND RADIO OUT
Adv Sun AMs Nov. 5
LOS ANGELES Take 3: Listening Post: Watts: desk. 320.

    ''If McGovern has anything going for him in the black community,
it's the issues. He articulates the issues which the blacks are
concerned about. They like to think their candidate is a guy on
whom they can naturally rely, not a guy they're worried about.
McGovern's going to win in Watts. The only question is . . .''
    Dymally hesitated. ''The only question is whether they're
going to get out the vote.''
    Many blacks in Watts are too discouraged to vote, conceded
Addie Bass, 61, office manager at McGovern-Shriver headquarters
next door to the ABC Pawn Shop.
    The result has been the least active postprimary Democratic
campaign Ted Watkins has seen in 30 years in Watts.
    ''Because of the lack of effort here by Democrats,'' Watkins
predicted, ''we're going to find a larger percentage of this
community voting Republican. Out of a possible 85 to 90 per cent
Democratic vote, I think the Republicans will cut it down into the
70s, and it wouldn't surprise me if it's way down into the high
60s.''
    Nixon coordinator Richard Allen, 39, and a resident of affluent
View Park, has conceded Watts to the Democrats, short of any
development that might arouse black emotions in favor of the
President. Ending the war, he agreed, would not be enough.
    ''We'll have a significant increase in Republican votes in
Watts over 1968,'' he said.
    Murphy Hawkins, 35, who works in a paper mill and preaches
at the Good Shepherd Church of God in Christ, won't be among
them. Although he considers it voting for ''the lesser of two
evils,'' he will cast his ballot for George McGovern.
    He is the kind of black whom Johnny Morgan, the Watts McGovern
coordinator, is counting on.
    ''As Watts goes, though,'' Morgan said, ''the nation doesn't
go. And that's the problem.''
    End Adv Sun AMs Nov. 5, Sent Nov. 2
    
2231pES 11-02


************************************************************


505
 Canada Insert
    OTTAWA-Canada 4th NL A311 insert after 7th graf: years.
    Robert Stanfield, the Conservative leader, sharply criticized
Trudeau's decision.
    ''Mr. Trudeau made it clear tonight the arrogant desire of
his government to hang on to power,'' Stanfield said. ''He
is treating the election result as simply another opinion
poll in the hope he can somehow get away with it.''
    Trudeau, 8th graf
    
2218pES 11-02


************************************************************


318
 Bodies 2nd NL, Precede Ukiah a264-265
    MARTINEZ, Calif. (AP) - Seven men, including four Hell's Angels
already in custody, were named Thursday in a murder complaint in the
slayings of two Georgia motorcycle riders whose decomposed
bodies were unearthed on an isolated Mendocino County ranch
owned by two former Hell's Angels.
    The complaint filed in West Contra Costa County Municipal
Court listed two counts of murder against Edward Junior Carter,
24, and William John Moran, 38, and one count of being accessories
to murder against Chester ''Festus'' Green, 29, and William
Mark ''Zorro'' Mitten, 32. All four, identified as Hell's Angels
from Contra Costa County, wore leg irons and were shackled
to one another during their arraignment.
    Green and Mitten were held on $100,000 bail each. Carter
and Moran were held without bail.
    The complaint also listed double murder counts against Paul
Francis Mumm,26, of Berkeley; Rollin Boyd Crane, 29, and Richard
Allen Barker, 28.
    A nationwide all points bulletin by the Contra Costa County
sheriff's office said Crane and Barker are members of the
Richmond Hell's Angels but gave no further details on Mumm.
    Contra Costa County Dist. Atty. William O'Malley would not
reveal what evidence led to the complaint but said, ''Our
information indicates the victims were killed in the unincorporated
area near Richmond along San Francisco Bay.''
    Friends: 3rd graf deleting 10th graf: Hell's x x x  County.
    
2217pES 11-02


************************************************************


288
 URGENT
    Chile NL
By BRUCE HANDLER
Associated Press Writer
    SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - President Salvador Allende named two
generals and an admiral to the Chilean Cabinet on Thursday night
in an effort to return order to the country after nearly a
month of strikes and demonstrations against the leftist government.
    The key appointment was that of the army commander in chief,
Gen. Carlos Prats, to the post of interior minister. This
makes Prats, 57, the No. 2 man in the government and head of
Chile's internal security forces. The South American country
of 10 million people has no vice president.
    Rear Adm. Ismael Huerta became public works minister, and
Air Force Gen. Claudio Sepulveda was picked as mining minister.
The other seats in the 15-man Cabinet went to civilians, many
of whom had been in ministerial-level jobs before the entire
Cabinet resigned Tuesday.
    The Cabinet retained a left-wing orientation and, as before,
included Communists and Socialists. Allende has pledged to
lead Chile ''down the road to socialism'' but through Chile's
long-standing democratic processes.
    The Chilean military has a tradition of neutrality in politics
and the three officers appointed to the Cabinet are not known
party members.
    Allende has been in his most serious political dilemma since
taking office two years ago. The elevation of military officers
to the Cabinet was seen as a way to placate anti-Marxists,
at least until next March's nationwide congressional elections.
    The president acknowledged in a nationwide radio broadcast
Thursday night that some of his opponents had ''partly succeeded
in stopping the country's forward march.'' He said they resorted
to violence and sabotage.
    An army general previously served briefly as mining minister
under Allende. But Chile's last two presidents - Eduardo Frei,
a Christian Democrat, and Jorge Alessandri, a Conservative
Independent - never had military men in their cabinets.
    A wave of strikes, street demonstrations and bombings of
power poles and railroad tracks has plagued Chile since Oct.
10. Allende said the conflicts have cost the country more
than $100 million in lost tax revenues and lowered production
of goods.
    The strikes of truckers, shop owners and others have crippled
the economy, which already was suffering from inflation,
insufficient production and a lack of foreign currency reserves for
needed imports.
    Frei, one of the country's most popular political figures,
said Thursday he will run for the Senate. He told party leaders
he didn't want to be a candidate but that ''when so many Chileans
are compromising their security and their daily bread to defend
their ideas . . . it was impossible for me to refuse.''
    Frei was president from 1964 to 1970. The constitution prevented
him from running for another term in 1970, when Allende, a
Marxist-Socialist, was elected.

    
2006pED 11-02


************************************************************


287
 Indochina INSERT
    SAIGON Indochina Rdp Bjt NL a214-215, INSERT after 16th
graf: present form.

    Canada offered to serve in a limited peace-keeping role in
Vietnam once a cease-fire is achieved, but said it wants to
avoid a long-term commitment until the shape of a peace settlement
has been worked out.
    Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp said the Canadian role would
not necessarily involve sending soldiers to Vietnam, but he
did not rule out such a move.

    The U.S. Command: 17th graf.
    
1955pED 11-02


************************************************************


284
  $ADV 04
Adv Sat AMs Nov. 4
SAIGON Take 2 War Family: piece.''

    Now, she noted, the house is falling apart. The roof is supported
by the walls of adjoining houses
BUST IT
    
1936pED 11-02


************************************************************


283
  $ADV 04
ADV SAT AMS NOV. 4
War Family 400 Two Takes Total 570
With Wirephoto
By EDITH M. LEDERER
Associated Press Writer
    SAIGON (AP) - Every night in her termite-ridden shack Vo
Thi Hai burns three sticks of incense on a family altar - one
for each of three sons killed in the Vietnam war.
    Though they will never return, she says the prospect of peace
makes her very happy because other mothers will be spared
her anguish.
    Sparrow-like Mrs. Hai began her nightly ritual in 1968 when
her eldest son, Huynh Van Tho, a soldier in South Vietnam's
rangers, was killed during the Tet offensive.
    For three years, there was only one incense pot on the plastic
cloth with blue and red flowers that covers the wooden altar.
Only Tho's picture hung on the wall.
    Then, in 1971, Huynh Van Muon, a paratrooper, was killed
during a fire fight in Laos. Mrs. Hai put a second, smaller
incense pot on the altar, and Muon's picture on the rickety wall.
    Three months ago, Huynh Van Tho, a marine, died in the battle
for Quang Tri. Now his picture, too, hangs on the wall.
    ''Though my sons have died, others may live and peace would
make everyone very happy,'' she said. ''Things would be better
for me if the oldest sons had not been killed, because they
would have helped to support me.
    ''The way things are now, I have nobody to rely on. So peace will
be better for most other people. For me, life will just go on.''
    Huynh Van Phuoc, a policeman and father of the three boys, died of
intestinal trouble 13 years ago. The only surviving child from that
marriage, a boy of 15, is studying to be a motorcycle repairman.
    To support him, three other sons and a 10-month-old daughter
from two other liaisons, Mrs. Hai counts on the married man
now living with her. She also received $35 every three months
from the government for the first two sons killed - and a few
dollars from occasional fortune-telling.
    The three younger sons - an 11-year-old and twins of 8 - are
in school. One twin has a crippled leg.
    ''I am 47 years old,'' Mrs. Hai said, ''and over 20 years ago
I had a house in Bien Hoa. The Viet Cong set my house on fire so
I had to move to a piece of deserted vacant land in Saigon.''
    Pointing to the rows of dilapidated homes and hundreds of
cars and motorcycles racing by on a main thoroughfare at the
end of the alley, she said: ''This place here was muddy land.
I put up a tent and then I built the house piece by piece.''
    MORE
    
1936pED 11-02


284
  $ADV 04
Adv Sat AMs Nov. 4
SAIGON Take 2 War Family: piece.''

    Now, she noted, the house is falling apart. The roof is supported
by the walls of adjoining houses
BUST IT
    
1936pED 11-02


************************************************************


282
  $ADV 04
Adv Sat AMs Nov. 4
Puerto Rico 380
By GEORGE ARFELD
Associated Press Writer
    SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP) - Puerto Ricans don't vote for president, but
they have their own election Tuesday. It is likely to influence
indirectly the island's future ties with the United States.
    The main vote is for governor. The basic undercurrent of the
sizzling campaign is status. That is the word used here to cover
three possible relationships with Washington.
    One is continuance of the current kind of autonomy known as
commonwealth, under which Puerto Ricans manage their own affairs,
are subject to U.S. conscription, and get U.S. food stamps.
    The others are transformation of the island into the 51st
state of the Union, Congress willing, or full-fledged independence.
    It seems to be nip and tuck between a party that likes commonwealth
and one that favors statehood.
    Luis A. Ferre, 68, the first proponent of statehood to be elected
governor, seeks a second term. He heads the New Progressive party.
    His main foe is Rafael Hernandez Colon, at 36 the political
heir of former Gov. Luis Munoz Marin, cofounder of the Popular
Democratic party and architect of the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico. This party ruled for 28 years until losing to Ferre in 1968.
    Both parties have slugged it out in an expensive campaign. U.S.
election experts and local advertising agencies have played
significant roles. Media managers speak of an election year bonanza
in paid advertising. News releases seem to place more importance on
discrediting a candidate by uncovering peccadilloes and hitting a$han focusing on the causes of Puerto Rico's
social and economic ailments.
    Most of the electorate is against statehood, according to
a 1967 plebiscite. Ferre's party has stressed that he is running
for governor, and that only a plebiscite can modify Puerto
Rico's status. The governor's political enemies declare Ferre
will use his office to further the cause of statehood.
    Ferre in 1968 took 43 1/2 per cent of votes cast, running up a lead of
only 2 1/2 percentage points. A rift played a major part in the Popular
Democrats' defeat then - a rump faction polled 12 per cent of the
vote.
    Given no chance of putting a man into Government House is
the fiery Puerto Rico Independence party. It wants to establish
a Socialist republic and oust U.S. business interests.
    End Adv Sat AMs Nov. 4 sent Nov. 2
    
1929pED 11-02


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281
 Inflation 230
    LONDON (AP) - Prime Minister Edward Heath's talks with labor
union and industry leaders on curbing severe inflation broke
down Thursday night, sharpening the nation's economic crisis.
    Heath said chiefs of the Trades Union Congress, which represents
10 million workers, were unable to agree to proposals from
government and industry in the talks at No. 10 Downing Street,
the prime minister's residence.
    ''I am immensely sorry it was not possible to reach agreement,''
Heath said.
    Inflation has been a major cause of the decline of the pound
sterling in world money markets.
    Heath hinted he may be forced to impose statutory wage and price
controls now that a system of voluntary restraint seems ruled out.
    Vic Feather, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress,
told newsmen: ''The TUC is dismayed to find that the government
is inflexibly resistant to suggestions that firm controls
should be exercised on the prices of essential commodities.''
    The talks ended after 6 1/2 hours, the last of a series of crucial
meetings aimed at combating inflation.
    Heath had proposed that the unions agree to hold down pay
raises to a maximum of two pounds a week - about $4.80.
    But he said the labor leaders insisted earnings must rise
by around 3.40 pounds - just over $8.
    
1921pED 11-02


************************************************************


280
 Amin 260
    KAMPALA Uganda (AP) - President Idi Amin announced on Thursday
night that all Asians remaining here after his Nov. 8 expulsion
deadline must leave the cities and go and live in villages.
    In what was officially described as a new policy statement,
Amin said: ''Those Asians who claim to be Ugandan citizens
must go to the villages and mix up with the other Ugandans.''
    He said they would have to stay with Ugandan Africans ''whether
they like it or not.''
    Amin explained further that he wanted everything in Uganda
to be under black African control within the next few years.
    He told managers of state-owned hotels that ''in a few years''
he wants Uganda to become ''an example to other African countries,
with everything in the country completely controlled by blacks.''
    In another statement, Amin announced the banning of two
foreign-owned air charter firms, which he said had been transporting
tourists to Uganda but allowing them to pay their bills outside the
country.
    Amin said the two firms, Caspair and Multi-Aviation Services,
must cease operating in Uganda immediately.
    He said the banning of the two firms was a step toward the
establishment of a national airline here, and explained:
''Uganda now wants to master everything.''
    Also banned was a Uganda-owned monthly newspaper, which Amin
said had been ''writing very bad reports about Ugandan soldiers
and the government.'' It is the first newspaper banned here
since Amin came to power in January, 1971.
    
1917pED 11-02


************************************************************


276
 Animals
    AMES, Iowa (AP) - No need for campaigning and voter registration
drives in one precinct here - all the residents are pigs, of the
animal variety.
    Election officials Thursday blamed a quirk in new legislative
districting for the extraordinary population. Mrs. Dorothy Elliott,
Story County auditor, said a physical inspection of the fourth
precinct disclosed that only hogs reside in the 15-acre precinct.
    The area houses the Experimental Animal Production Area, part of
the National Animal Disease Laboratory complex.
    ''It used to have a house that was occupied,'' said Mrs.
Elliott, ''but that's gone now.''
    
1857pED 11-02


************************************************************