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A woman proprieter tries to salvage some
following an explosion in the U.N. bookstore
a local newspaper and radio station later
estimated at $5,000.
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by. Michael S. Barrett
United Press International
CAIRO Agriculture Secretary Earl
Butz signed a $36.5 million agreement with
the Egyptian government Sunday under
which .the United States will ship Egypt
200,000 tons of wheat or wheat flour during
the coming year in addition to 100,000 tons
of grain already pledged.
The shipments will be paid for in Egyptian
currency that in turn will be slated for U.S.
foreign aid projects., , , , t ; (j (r
"In the 7eaifs'"aiie1adV!tooa' "productive1
capacity must be built up in the developing
nations," Butz told newsmen at the
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UPI Utephoto
of the reading material from the rubble
in Los Angeles. An anonymous caller to
tied the incident to the PLO. Damage Is
s VH 1 nnnilS
Egyptian agreememt
: additional U.S. wheat
ceremony. This is the real opportunity to
increase the productive capacity of the
world." ,
He said, "We have only a limited supply of
aid. The world has only a limited supply of
aid. We have a limited supply of foodstuffs
right now. I think all of us must be very
careful to be sure every ton reaches the area
of real need."
Butz told Egyptian Foreign Trade
Minister Fathi Ahmed Matbuli, who signed
the aereement for EevDt. that the United
States, wanted to. extend short, supplies of
mted. to-extend short supplies of.-
tftrcntlcaT world "needs between
wheat m
now and next June and July when ample
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United Press International
LOS ANGELES A bomb explosion
damaged the United Nations Association
book store and information center early
Sunday. A caller later told a newspaper and
a radio station the blast was related to the
Palestine Liberation Organization.
Police said the bomb went off shortly
before 3 a.m. at the book store in the
Wilshire district and caused about $5,000
damage to the store. It also blew out plate
glass windows in three nearby businesses.
Investigators said a young male caller
telephoned the Los Angeles Times
switchboard and radio station KFWB, an all
news station, but they were not able to
interpret whether the bombing was a
warning to, or from the PLO.
There were no injuries in the blast, police
said. The area was virtually deserted at the
time.
In each instance, the caller signed off with
the words, "never again," a slogan used in the
past by the Jewish Defense League.
One police source said the blast had the
intensity of from 15 to 20 sticks of dynamite,
but officers could not immediately
determine the type of explosive.
Some bomb fragments were recovered
from the store.
Shortly after the blast, the Los Angeles
Times switchboard received a call from a
man who said: "The United Nations office at
3722 W. 8th St. (the wrong address) was hit
and it is a thank you message from the PLO.
The message is for letting them address the
United Nations ... never again."
The correct address, 3522 W. 8th St., is
supplies again become available.
"Hopefully after eight months the supply
situation will ease," he said. "There is a
genuine commitment in the United States, in
my own Department of Agriculture and by
our farmers to do the very best we can in the
months ahead."
He said fertilizer production would help
solve the food crisis and plants were under
construction in Arab oil-producing
countries, in the United States and elsewhere
to siphon off wasted natural gas to reduce
nitrogen by W76,dding jfeat wohet
f ertilizer-produolng fneatotashaW
phosphate, were in ample supply.
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two blocks away.
Minutes after that call, Melissa
Townsend, news assistant at KFWB,
received a call from a man who said there
had been a bombing at the UN store and it
was a "thank you note from the PLO to the
UN. Never again."
The explosion caused structural damage'
to the store and damage to furniture inside.
It also blew out the front windows of a cafe
and two nearby stores.
There was no warning before the
bombing, police said.
74 sugar crop
below estimate
by Cheryl Arvidson
United Press International
WASHINGTON With sugar prices
already soaring, the Agriculture Department
reported Sunday that the 1974-75 worldwide
crop has fallen about 2 million tons below
estimates and will barely meet estimated
demand.
Department experts predicted the new
sugar crop would reach 81.1 million metric
tons, compared with current consumption
estimates of 81 million tons.
The report comes at a time when sugar
prices are hitting record levels almost daily.
The government has announced it will
investigate sugar prices and the margins of
major domestic suppliers.
According to the new forecasts, beet sugar
production was expected to be down about
1.4 million tons from 1973-74 levels. Cane
sugar output, however, should rise by about
2 miliion tons, leaving a net increase of
600,000 tons only 1 per cent over last
year's record crop.
The Agriculture Department's Foreign
Agricultural Service said world sugar
consumption should also set a new record
this year, but high prices will slow the rate of
increase.
Although consumption estimates are
about 2 per cent higher than in 1974, experts
said there is already some evidence of per
capita reductions in sugar consumption in
the United States, some Western European
nations and Japan.
The report said Brazil, South Africa,
Australia and Poland will have larger crops
during the current production year. Cuba's
odut4onWlrlsbemewhat larger,
faftfceughS theCf?p has-beerv. affected by
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U.N. plans tightest guard ever
for PLO leader's appearance
by Kenneth J. Braddick
United Press International
UNITED NATIONS The
United Nations will be under the
tightest guard of its 29 years when
Palestine guerrilla leader Yasser
Arafat appears before the General
Assembly this week.
Not even the stormy visits in 1960
of Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev
and Cuba's Fidel Castro created the
giant security headache that
American and United Nations
officials said confronted them with
the expected arrival of Arafat's
Palestine Liberation Organization
delegation.
The bombing Sunday of a United
Nations bookstore in Los Angeles,
followed by an anonymous telephone
caller who cited the Jewish Defense
League slogan, "Never again," points
up the problem.
With only three days to the start
Wednesday of the General Assembly
debate on Palestine, U.S. and PLO
officials said they still had not been
able to agree on where the
Palestinians will stay for the seven
day session.
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American officials coordinating
complex security arrangements
among the 230-man U.N. police
force, New York City poice and at
least three federaTagencies said they
still are pressing fiie Palestinians to
make their temporary home at a
military garrison or Governor's
Island Coast Guard station off the
southern tip of Manhattan.
Saadat Hassan, head of the PLO
office in New York, said the United
Nations has failed to provide the
Palestinians with quarters where they
can meet diplomats and reporters.
"We are ready to set up tents at the
U.N. grounds and stay in them," he
said.
Buildings around the 38-story
U.N. Secretariat and the adjoining
General Assembly hall on the banks
of the East River in midtown
Manhattan were checked out by
police. Sharpshooters will be
stationed at strategic points to guard
against sniper attacks, officials said.
A 40-story office-hotel building
under construction directly across
First Avenue from U.N.
headquarters will be completely
covered for the occasion, they said.
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ARTEMIS
P.O. Box 7238
Lexington, Ky. 40502
BOOK STORES
Co., 1608 Pacific Ave.,
Ca. S0291
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