I Thursday, May 6, 1971 S. Viets criticize news bries I By The Associated Press U.S. STEEL CORP., the nation's biggest steelmakers, yester- day boosted by 6% per cent prices on products used to make a wide variety of consumer items, including automobiles and ap- pliances. There was no immediate adoption of the new price scales by other major producers as has been customary. However, some said they were reviewing the company's announcement. U.S. Steel is an industry price pacesetter. u SECRETARY OF STATE William Rogers met a hard bar- gaining line yesterday in Cairo and reports from Israel indicat- ed an equally tough posture awaited him there. An Egyptian spokesman said Rogers' talks with Egyptian lead- ers were pointing "definitely toward peace" in the Middle East, but added: "We shall not make concessions." In Jerusalem, Premier Golda Meir declared: "If we have to say no, we shall say no . . . even to our friends." She referred to the likelihood that Rogers will press Israel to withdraw from Arab territory captured in the 1967 Mideast war. UNDER A MANTLE of secrecy, the Air Force rocketed a spy satellite into space yesterday to monitor Russian and Red Chi- nese missile tests and to provide almost instant alert of a long- range rocket attack. The 1,800-pound superspy would sound a 30-minute warning of such an attack. This is double the 15 minutes that present radar systems give U.S. forces to prepare antimissile defenses and to launch bombers and missiles in retaliation. PRESIDENT NIXON asked Congress yesterday to set up an independent Legal Services Corp. He said it is designed to make federal legal help for the poor "immune to political pressures." The quasi-public agency, similar to the Public Broadcasting Corp., would take over a service - which Nixon said is "surround- ed by controversy" - provided by the Office of Economic Oppor- tunity for the past six years. Under Nixon's plan, those lawyers given fulltime grants would not be permitted to engage in outside law practice and they would be limited in lobbying activities. GOV. RONALD REAGAN said yesterday that someone broke the law by leaking word that he didn't have to pay any state in- come tax for 1970. The report that Reagan didn't have to pay state income tax was first broadcast by a college radio station. On Tuesday Reagan told newsmen he couldn't remember if he had to pay. His office later disclosed the governor paid no state tax because of offsetting business losses in the 1970 tax year. The losses were not specified. LEGISLATION REQUIRING the nation's 80 million motor vehicles to undergo a yearly inspection to see whether they meet air pollution standards will be introduced in the Senate today. The proposal, drafted by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff (D-Conn.), comes as an amendment to a pending bill to require all cars to have a yearly safety check. -ssociaeress A SOUTH VIETNAMESE soldier steals a few moments of soli- tude to write a letter atop a sandbagged position on Firebase 6. WORST IN 2 YEARS: Money crisis hits Europe shelling SAIGON (M- South Viet- nam charged yesterday that North Vietnamese t r o o p s have switched tactics a n d are shelling civilian centers in order to avoid casualties they might suffer in attacks against defended military positions. The government advanced this theory amid a general lull in ground fighting but an increase in B52 bomber raids against the much battered northeast corner of South Vietnam and in sen- sitive sectors of Laos. The government lodged a pro- test with the International Con- trol Commission against "in- tensified a n d indiscriminate" shellings by North Vietnamese forces of civilian centers. The B52 stratofortress mis- sions - equal to the two pre- vious days together - were flown against North Vietna- mese positions in the extreme northern part of South Vietnam along the Laotian frontier. Other B52 bombers continued the sustained pounding of the Ho Chi Minh trail. i _ FRANKFURT, Germany (A ) - Massive selling of the dol- lar forced several government banks of Europe to stop buying American currency yesterday and s e n t money experts into consultations on ways to check Europe's g r o w i n g monetary crisis. The Continent's worst money crisis since 1969 made the dol- lar the one currency that prac- tically no one wanted at present exchange rates. Speculators were betting on a - - - - decision that would allow the mark and other currencies to move up in ratio to the dollar to temporarily ease the situation. That was why .they were swap- ping dollars for other curren- cies, principally the mark. 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