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The Sacramento Bee from Sacramento, California • 1

Location:
Sacramento, California
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SATURDAY MORNING A r)111) Ar too ti'o cisalciasza Vol 38507 Founded 1857 1 5c SACRAMENTO CALIFORNIA Saturday June 22 1974 tI1110 Tar Apart' "11 ecreet Kissinger Deals fith Russians Surface Nurses Walkout Begins 3rd Week ment as represented to the Congress" Government experts do not consider the additional Soviet advantage in numbers of missiles of military significance But the fact that the Nixon administration did not submit the secret understandings to Congress may be a violation of the Arms Control and Disarmament Act of 1961 Under the interim agreement the ceiling on missile launchers for the United States was set at 1710 and for the Soviet Union at 2358 The Americans were allowed 1054 land based missile launchers and 656 submarine launchers If Washington decided to retire 54 of its older land-based missiles it could build up to 710 submarine launchers At this point according to administration sources the first secret arrangement was made by Kissinger then presidential adviser for national security affairs At the Moscow summit before Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid I BrezhSee Page A6 Col 1 By Nancy Skelton we Bee Staff Writer VC The nurses strike against 42 North- till ern California hospitals moved into wz its third week today with no settlement in sight both sides report sp In Sacramento striking nurses at thi Kaiser Hospital pounded the pave- na ment in near-100 degree heat display- ari ing "Nurses Strike for patients' in Rights" placards and vowing not to be Pe "starved" back to work th While in San Francisco Burton White the chief negotiator for the sa California Nurses Association report- de ed "we're as far apart as we were be- ca fore the strike" As for the hospital side a spokes- ne man said "we are reviewing our respective positions" as CO The nurses have received extra ha bargaining power from the Teamsters Union which has announced its mem- kr tiers will not cross picket lines except be to deliver critical supplies Susan Harris spokeswoman for the Ile more than 250 RNs striking Kaiser in 1 Sacramento paused long enough se from her picketing duties to explain se "the main issue we're striking for se "It's so elementary I don't see why everyone can't understand it" said II( Ms Harris "We simply want to work cc as a team with the physician and administration in assessing the patients needs We don't want the doctor's job we the are in said ders as be not see no don't want the LVN's (Licensed Vocational Nurse) job we don't want administration's money We just want better care for our patients Ms Harris says her colleagues feel specialty nurses must be assigned to their special areas of expertise (coronary care intensive care etc) "We asking too for in-service training various specialties so that qualified people will be on hand to care for these critically ill people" "What it gets down to" Ms Harris "is that the doctor writes the or- and we know how they should be carried out and how much staff is needed to carry them out correctly "We feel we are not being treated educated people Medicine is becoming so sophisticated Everyday we have to know more and more We just want to be recognized for having the knowledge we are required to have to working here in the first place" Ms Harris says the striking RNs are asking to run the hospital just for "the input we feel we deserve in assessing the patient's care The doctor sees them for a matter of minutes we them the whole rest of the day" Ms Harris says CNA members have strike fund and are paying for the cost of the strike "out of our own pockets We're just dedicated that's See Page AG Col Nixon Gave Saciat An 'Old Chopper By Leslie Gelb New York Times News Service WASHINGTON Secretary of State Henry Kissinger without informing Congress made at least two secret arrangements with Soviet leaders in 1972 on the number of strategic nuclear missiles on each side administration officials said Friday The secret arrangements concerned the interim agreement expiring in 1977 that mutually limits offensive nuclear missile launchers It does not concern the treaty signed in Moscow at the same time in May 1972 that restricted defensive missile systons Kissinger according to sources gave private assurances to Soviet officials that the United States did not intend to build the maximum 'number of launchers permitted by the interim agreement The second arrangement made by Kissinger had the effect of allowing the Russians to build more launchers than Congress had been led to believe was permissible under the interim agreement This arrangement was disclosed to a Senate committee Thursday in closed session congressional Sources said by Paul Nitze who resigned last week as a member of the American negotiating team for the arms talks But the Congress has yet to be informed of the first arrangement Kissinger asked about Nitze's testimony before a Senate armed services subcommittee said that he had explained this matter to the subcommittee and it is based on "classified information" "That view must be based on a misapprehension of the negotiations by some of the witnesses" Sen Henry 3ackson D-Wash chairman of the subcommittee said "I don't think it will upset the balance of power but the numbers represent a substantial alteration of the agree Susan Harris Bee Photo Prosecutors Put Cover-Up Tally At 26 Persons per a Sikorsky VH3A S-61 was flown to Egypt aboard an airplane for Nixon's use The two Presidents went from Cairo to Alexandria by train stayed the night in the Mediterranean port city and returned to Cairo the next morning by helicopter Warren said that the twin-turbine craft which is sound-proofed and air-conditioned is more than 12 years old and "was in the process of being rotated out" of the presidential fleet Agency for International Development officials declined to discuss the transfer of the helicopter but the only aid money for Egypt in the 1974 budget is $87 million for assistance in clearing the Suez Canal The administration has requested $275 million for aid to Egypt in the 1975 fiscal year which begins July 1 and if this money is voted it could cover the gift of the chopper it was believed here By Carroll Kilpatrick Times-Pear News Service WASHINGTON In addition to his promise to sell a nuclear reactor to Egypt President Richard Nixon presented President Anwar Sadat with a $2 million helicopter from the presidential fleet the White House confirmed Friday Deputy press secretary Gerald Warren said the helicopter an Army craft used by the President during his Egyptian trip last week was given to the Egyptian government under a government-to-government arrangement Officials were loath to explain how the gift was arranged or whether it was a spur of the moment decision on Nixon's part after he and Sadat flew on the craft from Alexandria to Cairo That was the only use Nixon made of a helicopter while on his tour of five Middle East countries The chop Crowd Jeers Delays Vote On Tahoe Building Plan By Lesley Oelsner New York Times News Service WASHINGTON Special Watergate prosecutors have decided that at least 26 persons ranging from President Richard Nixon to the original Watergate burglars conspired to cover up the Watergate break-in a number of sources disclosed Friday Seven of the alleged coconspirators were indicted this spring This morning sources said prosecutors gave defense counsel in the cover-up case a list of 19 unindicted co-conspirators Nixon's name was on the list as previously reported since the grand jury investigating the cover-up voted to name him as an unindicted coconspirator In addition several sources said' the list included Herbert Ka lmback the President's personal lawyer John Dean III the President's former counsel Jeb Stuart Magruder deputy director of the Committee to reelect the President and various other former campaign aides It also includes the names of the See Page A6 Col 1 persons was on hand when the hearing opened in the gymnasium of the Tahoe City High School About 500 remained for the close It was one of the largest public hearings ever held at Tahoe City and attracted mostly South Tahoe residents involved in construction or real estate fields A reported 250 real estate and insurance offices in the area closed to allow their personnel to attend the hearing Irving Christensen a concrete worker drew applause when he declared that in his opinion most conservationists who support the proposal display an attitude of "I've got mine screw you" Although generally orderly the crowd noisily booed supporters of the proposed plan including representatives of the Sierra Club and the League to Save Lake Tahoe At one point the chairman threatened to close the hearing unless "this yelling jeering and intimidation" came to an end McCiatchv Newspapers Service TAHOE an all-day public hearing yesterday the Califon nia-Tahoe Regional Planning Agency postponed for three weeks a decision on a controversial proposal to Impose stricter building standards "It would be hypocritical to vote now" said board member Gerald Poznanovich of Santa Rosa a co-author of the proposal He asked each board member to return to a July 12 hearing at Tahoe City with suggestions on the plan The land-use plan would impose stricter environmental controls on new building projects larger than single-family homes Opponents claim the plan would create a moratorium on building Conservationists argue it would save the lake from further de- terioration Before recessing a 3 to 3 tie vote to table the plan was broken by Board Chairman Gordon Hooper who voted to keep it alive A crowd of approximately 1700 'Twos 04 Bad Day For Crooks CHICAGO (AP) A man armed with a watermelon robbed a bank of more than $11000 police said Stanley Glover 23 of Cleveland was held on federal bank robbery charges According to police he entered the Illinois State Bank of Chicago Thursday and said the bag he was carrying contained a bomb When he was seized later police found a partly eaten watermelon in the bag and $8970 Police said Glover threw some of the money into an alley and some into a snack shop where he asked patrons for help Glover had been free on bond after being arrested Wednesday night on charges of stealing 14 bottles of cough medicine ORLO VISTA Fla (AP) A clumsy thief who robbed a grocery market dropped a cash register on his foot during the heist and limped away with $40 in cash and a sore foot police say The store's manager Donald Leroy George told police that the store was closed and he was stocking merchandise Thursday evening when he heard a rock shatter a window George said he saw a young man dash into the store and grab the heavy cash register In his haste the man fumbled and dropped it on his foot He then grabbed a handful of cash and hobbled out the door Police soon arrested a suspect whom they found a block away nursing his foot and counting $40 in small change Game Winners Today's "Your Name's The Game" winners are on Page A7 State Drops Planned Freeway Along Lake Tahoe's West Shore the freeway The money will be used for more urgently needed highway projects The controversial west shore freeway proposal once included plans for a bridge at Emerald Bay opposed by conservationists and many Tahoe residents In making its decision the commission noted that financing is so limited it would probably be 20 years before a four-lane freeway could be built on the west shore route All plans for freeways along Routes 89 and 28 on the west shore of Lake Tahoe have been dropped by the State Highway Commission The abandoned route segments are generally between the future Highway 50 freeway at South Lake Tahoe in El Dorado County and Bunker Road near Tahoe City Placer County At a meeting in Santa Maria the commission authorized the State De partment of Transportation to sell rightsof-way previously acquired for WM110a111IIIMMIN In The Saturday Morning Bee World Sadat asks Nixon to curb Israeli raids A7 US Russ split on Yalta trip for Nixon AB Nation Teamster funds back proVixon group A2 Moss wins fund battle for oil antitrust suit B7 State Local Court order halts strike by SMUD workers A3 Park projects win battle of budget A5 4 4 "'t 4 4 Amusements A8-9 Bridge All Business And Finance A16-17 Classified Advertising 137-10 C2-16 Comics B6 Editorials A18 Horoscope B8 Politics By Rodda A5 Real Estate News Cl Religion A19 Scene Al2-13 Skelton Column Al2 Sports B1-5 Superior California News A3-4 Television And Radio A14 Vital Statistics B7 Weather A6 tt 4sItkg I tiko Today's Chuckle Weafher In the 24hour period ended last midnight the maximum was 98 and the minimum was 59 Relative humidity at 4 PM yesterday was 32 per cent Forecast: Fair and warm Detailed report Is on Page AG TV announcer: "Because of the following special program 'The Invisible Man' will not be seen tonight" 144 444 VorawAr 14 small vessels protested the craft's arrival Pro testers claim the ship was used as a floating pris on for opponents of the fascist regime which overthrew the Allende government last year The ship's crew received bad news earlier when Margo St James bead of Coyote a prostitutee union said her members would support the pro test by refusing to grant their favors to sailors from the ship AP Photo Shunned Ship The Chilean naval trainning ship Esmeralda re calved less than an enthusiastic welcome Friday at Alameda Naval Air Station when a flotilla of i.

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Pages Available:
4,934,316
Years Available:
1857-2024