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JANUARY 11, 1972 THE PRESIDENT HAS SEEN Major stories this morning are:: The return of Sheik Mujibur Rahman to Bangladesh, his incredible reception, and his pledge that Bangladesh will remain totally free of Pakistan. Here at home, the inevitable occurred, when a Richmond Federal Judge ordered a merger of the white county school districts surrounding Richmond with the 70 per cent bc ack schools of Richmond. If upheld the rule could apply all over the country, merging subur- ban schools with city schools. The Hump is in it again for 1972, announcing in Philadelphia; he got wide publicity for his announcement; he sees it as a neces- sary stop-Muskie maneuver. While he would have preferred to move later on, he felt, says the press, that unless hemoved now, Big Ed would wrap it up in the early primaries. In Baton Rouge a shoot-out resulted in the death of two white deputies, to young blacks and the wounding of 34 proop people. A ***** racial clash, which the Governor blamed on a "bunch of maniacs." Some one is going to have egg on his face; today, the author of the Hughes Biography contends that the voice heard over the phone by six members of the national press, a voice which identified itself as Howard Hughes for millions on the tube, was not Hughes but a phony Author claims his "authobiography" is authentic. RAbroad, Chen Yi is dead; Mao Tse-tung attends funeral; the Japanese envoy warns that RN cozying up to Peking could unravel the mutual security treaty with Japan; and the Seventh Fleet leaves the Indian Ocean for the China Sea.