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Tampa Bay Times du lieu suivant : St. Petersburg, Florida • 1

Publication:
Tampa Bay Timesi
Lieu:
St. Petersburg, Florida
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

LAST BUY 1972 FORDS AT 1971 ft. Pelf tBtoinj Early Fog Fair through Sunday with parly morning fog. High today In the upper 708. low tonight In tho upper 50. Winds varla-blu under 13 m.p.h.

Maps, data, rage 2-A. Sm Todai Saf Ad In Claulflcd GRANT FORD 2525-34fh St. No. AaV. Florida's Best Newspaper ST.

PETERSBURG, FLORIDA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1971 7 DAYS HOME DELIVERY 15c 10 CENTS A COPY Vol. 88-No. Ill 64 PAGES 4 i 4 3 2 1 mm A7on idl Up Spc worn r-n I If 1 i -1 1 VC A Iri r- 7 1 11 urii-i i'iIi hnrnur- AP -i WW Nixon Announces End Of Viet Combat Role Nixon And The Press Troop withdrawal rates will increase for two months, but a residual U.S. force may remain in the future to aid the South Vietnamese. Pay Board and Price Commission actions were pronounced 'very The FBI investigation of newsman Daniel Schorr, being checked for a possible Administration job, was termed clumsy by Nixon's press secretary.

WASHINGTON (IB President Nixon said Friday the U.S. troop withdrawal rate In Vietnam will be boosted by about one-half over the next two months, with 45,000 soldiers to be pulled out by Feb. The President told reporters the troop ceiling will be cut to 139,000 and he will make another announcement on further withdrawals before Feb. Nixon took office years ago with 540,000 U.S. troops in Vietnam.

ALTHOUGH the President covered a of including praising, his Pay Board and Price Commission for making realistic decisions, it was Vietnam that turned out to be the most notable development at an unscheduled news conference. In fact, the session with reporters took the place of a. more formal announcement Nixon had been expected to make on troop strength next week. In discussing the withdrawal rate, Nixon said half of the 45,000 troops coming out would be home by Christmas. He also repeated a statement he made Aug.

5 that the American ground combat role had ended in Vietnam. BY SAYING he would tell the nation of the next round of troop cuts in February, the President has quickened the announcement schedule. Previously he had made such announcements at wider Intervals. He said the new schedule is necessary because, with fewer Americans ft; v. 1 3fr Pay Lid Lifted For GIs, Poor, Federal Workers creases could be subject to possible rollback.

MEANWHILE the President's Pay Board and Price Commission issued their first legally binding regulations. Publication of the regulations in today's Federal Register means the wage and price freeze ends on schedule Sunday, allowing deferred raises to go into effect for billions of workers and setting rules aimed at holding price increases to 2.5 per cent a (See PHASE DT, 10-A) WASHINGTON ffl Servicemen, federal employes and the working poor were exempted from post-freeze wage controls Friday by the Cost of Living Council. Life insurance rates also will be allowed to rise without federal controls after the freeze period ends at 12:01 a.m. Sunday. The council further said the auto industry may, without advance approval, begin paying a scheduled wage increase and raise prices to match.

However, both in UPI in Vietnam, it is important to keep up strong leverage for negotiating purposes. Nixon said that there would be total withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Vietnam, including discontinuance of airpower and withdrawal of other U.S. forces in Southeast Asia supporting those in Vietnam, provided this is ar- All Together Again Mrs. Nora Ryerson cries with joy as she greets her son David Garland, 20, after a separation that lasted ID years.

A local newspaper arranged to help David find his real parents and this was effected Thursday. Mrs. Eycrson, who has had eight children, left him at a Chicago orphanage for safekeeping when he was only 1-year-old because of overpowering family trouble. His name was Elmer Ryerson before be was adopted by Thilip and Lee Garland at age 4. Mrs.

Ryerson claims she never gave permission for the adoption and protested in vain. (See TROOP PULLOUT, 10-A) 4 Yoblon Killer: ski Martin "a very cunning person." "HE THINKS he can fool you," Sprague said. "You acquit him and the next thing, he will be telling people how he conned and fooled the jury. Don't let him do that to you. "Don't let him make a suck 1 fa' WASHINGTON, Pa.

(UPI) A jury Friday found Au-bran W. Martin guilty of the murder of Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, his wife and daughter. The jury of seven women and five men deliberated for one hour and 23 minutes before the foreman, Frank Cos-tello, announced the verdict of guilty on first degree murder charges. MARTIN paled as the verdict was read.

He showed no other emotion, staring Senate Increases Tax Exemption, Benefits To Jobless Tlmt Wirt Strvlcts WASHINGTON The Senate went beyond what President Nixon asked and voted Friday to cut everybody's federal in-, come tax starting in 1972 by increasing the personal exemption to $800. The proposal was adopted by a 40-37 vote. It must be reconciled with a House bill that would increase the exemption to only $750, in line with Nixon's request. THE ADMINISTRATION contends the already big federal deficit will not permit any greater relief for individuals. The Senate also added to the bill on a 47 to 31 vote a program of extra unemployment compensation benefits in states with jobless totals of at least 6 per cent.

This, too, was opposed by the Administration on the grounds of cost. THE TAX AMENDMENT, sponsored by Sen. Vance Hartke, was adopted the death penalty in Pennsylvania the electric chair. Yablonski's two sons, Joseph Jr. and Kenneth, looked on, as the verdict was read.

Both seemed to sink a little in their seats, but neither showed any other signs of emotion. THERE WERE three counts to the conviction one for Yablonski, another for his wife and the third for their daughter. The penalty for a first degree murder conviction is death or life in prison. Special Prosecutor Richard Sprague, who termed Martin a "baby-faced killer," said in his summation that Martin is straight ahead. mmMUt, The same jury now will have to decide Martin's fate.

AUBRAN 'BUDDY' MARTIN They. will have to choose be-. said he was tricked tween life imprisonment and on the China "Takes Things Slowly While Learning U.N. Ropes er out of you." Defense attorney Mark Goldberg told the jury that "This is a case of credibility, reliability and believability; the credibility of two witnesses, Claude E. Vealey and Au-bran W.

Martin." VEALEY, 28, Cleveland, who confessed to the murders and implicated Martin, 23, and Paul E. Gilly, 37, both also of Cleveland, as the triggermen in the slayings. Vealey. was termed a "liar, a perjurer, a bounty hunter and a confessed killer" by Goldberg. He called Vealey's confession a "story from a sick, demented and criminally insane mind." "This is a story from a man who confessed that for $1,700 he killed three people," Goldberg told the jury.

MARTIN testified during the trial that he was "tricked" into believing he was on a mission to steal a $50,000 coin collection when he accompanied Gilly and Vealey to Yablonski's Clarksville, home Dec. 30, 1969. Yablonski, his wife and daughter were shot to death early on the following day. i i liiylifi today Ann Landers Bridge Business Classified Comics Crosswords DAY Section with votes of 38 Democrats and 2 Republicans. Opposed were 28 Republicans and 9 Democrats.

Both of Florida's senators, Lawton Chiles and Edward Gurney, voted against the tax cut. The exemption had been scheduled under current law to reach $750 for 1973 Income. The exemption for this year's income is now $650, but other provisions of the tax bill would raise it to $675. A taxpayer subtracts the exemption for himself and each of his dependents from his year's Income to calculate his taxable income. THE SENATE action woidd mean a tax cut of about $50 (See TAXES, 10-A) Editorial 6- 10-B 13-A 5-20-C 12-B 10- 5-12-B 16-A 10, 11-B 14, 15-A 12-B 12- 13- 4-C 11- A 7- 10-B 1-4-C 2-A but It would not be able to participate "as actively as it was expected of them." FRIDAY'S VISIT was preliminary to a ceremonial session of the assembly on Monday, when the delegation will formally take over the seats voted it Oct.

25. At the Monday session Diiao is expected to make his first U.N. speech after hearing a round of welcoming speeches from Malik and other delegates. Malik is foreign minister of Indonesia as well as assembly president. A U.S.

spokesman said that, at the moment, the United States has no plans to speak when (See CHINA, J-A) NEW YORK (Jl The People's Republic of China's top U.N. delegate said Friday that Peking's role in the current General Assembly will be restricted because of its unfamiliarity with the issues and the small size of its delegation. This word came as Chiao Kuan-hua, deputy foreign minister of the People's Republic, and Huang Hua, Peking's permanent U.N. representative, made their first visit to the headquarters of the world organization. A spokesman for Assembly President Adam Malik quoted Chiao as telling him his delegation would do its best to be represented in the main committees of the 131-nation assembly Entertainment Financial Horoscope Jumble Obituaries Outdoors People Radio-TV Sketches Sports Weather They're Fond Of Fidel Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro shakes hands Friday with admirers at Santiago's airport prior to leaving for a visit to Antofagasfa in northern Chile.

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