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Show r. iweSwiw $!& BEipfiroiil.'li,ig Bit ; 0' Cr , Our Phone Numbers News, News Tips Home Delivery 371 NO. 80 U M"h VHj a A-- r 'j. 10c -- - larr' - - -" - ' -- ' - ' ?( y wAyy . 7. ' . v' - s'j,' i'.V'S, - -- - f' & NEWSPAPER " M & AV'Tl'C i- - 'AAvAI?, t ' ' ;t I - ,0 i- V W -- O. - t O 'A VV fi 4 v A?r '.v (.fe A A PRAGUE (UPI) The Soviet Union has informed Czechoslovakia that Soviet troops will suppress any future demonstrations but will not be used during the present crisis if the nation remains calm, informed sources said today. Government sources said the warning of a return to military anti-Russi- SM- A?V T 1 V'l Ch-r- ,. S; - c )! iV t? 1 t Kxr a - Jr ! 'S, .j 'JTXi v u r 3 t W, ov V f4y t tr ' - a, 4 $v 1 r K Primary workers gather during buffet reception in the new Salt Palace Exhibit Hall. - Conference To Open On Friday President David 1 J A change fin the Primary Association program will be O. McKays message to the members of the Church and to the world will . highlight the . opening session of the 139th Annual General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints Friday morning on Temple Square, ; President McKay will preside at the conference and expects to attend as many meetings as Ms health will permit His son, Robert R. McKay,' is scheduled to read the Presidents opening message. Conference sessions win be at 10 am. and 2 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday. : Church The leader will be assisted by his counselors, President Hugh B. Brown, President N. Eldon Joseph Tanner, President Fielding Smith, President Thorpe B. Isaacson and President Alvin R. Dyer. BEGINS MTH TEAS : . y . . ; J - President McKay, the oldest leader the Church has ever will be starting his 64th year as a General Authority of die Church. He was sustained an apostle April 8, 1906. He has attended all of the General Conferences since then except the two in 1921 When he was on a world tour pf the missions, and the four when he between 1922-2served as president of the Mission. A The sessions of conference Will be broadcast over both radio and television throughout the world, lad, ; 4, , ; 39 RADIO STATIONS radio stations J3 states will broadcast con-ference sessions in English. translation broad- Spanish .easts will be carried over sta L'tions in western America, Mexico and Central America. South American countries will receive the conference broadcast via satellite. Radio New York Worldwide will air tiie conference throughout the world in four languages, Eng-lisGerman, Portuguese and .Spanish. Some session of conference e will be telecast over 193 PRES. McKAY, Page A--4 Thirty-pin- e h, sta-Se- Today's Thought Ths whole life of w&n Uhuta point of time; let us enjoy it, therefore , while it lasts, and not ' spend it to no purpose. Plutarch . felt in ah stake and wards of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints during the eiisuing year. President La Verne W1 Parmley announced during the general session of the association Wednesday: in the Tabernacle, , One of the major changes will be that Primary presidencies no longer will be known as partners, Mrs. Parmley , ' ; told members. , "This change comes so you will be used to the new program by the feu of 1970 when ft real revisions nr made, Mri, Parmley explained, . Members of Primary presidencies previously have been able to choose which groups they would supervise, but now IKE'S STORY the duties of each have been : ,specifically drawn. Presidents Will have charge of Trail Builders, Cub Scouts and ' secretaries. First counselors will have jurisdiction, over Skylet-Pilotmusic,. Childrens Friend and Penny Pardde.- Second counselors win supervise Lihoma girls, - inservice teaching, sacrament meeting and reverence programs. Mrs. ; Parmley explained that the partners program presented problems, especial, ly in small branch Primaries where members of. the presl-denc- y were also the only teachers In the Primary, Tbe theme for next yeari reverence program was also announced this week. My Heavenly Father expects me to be reverent, will be the concept developed in the three-minu- weekly rever- te ence demonstrations. i a new pioneer for wards suggested program and branches in July was explained, The play tells of. the hardships of pioneer children and helps children understand the challenges these children faced. While the story is told, chil-- d r e n dramatize . various pioneer situations. A new songbook anad inser-vic- e teaching manual were also announced. The former, a book of SO new songs, will be ready for use by September. It was prepared by the general musio committee of the Church and muriq committees . of die Primary and Sunday School general Ixjards. When were through changing in this world, then were really through, said In : addition, Biography Due Soon A memorial biography former President Dwight Eisenhower will be published within about three weeks and orders are being accepted now through the Deseret News. Publishers of the book, entitled Eisenhower! Ameri- can Hero, are the same as those who brought Deseret News readers tf book, .Four Days, following the death of Local friends wanted them to come to a quiet reception! in town after the services, but Mrs, Eisenhower was not up to another round of handshakes and nervous smiles from people she scarcely knew. : friends A few received aboard the train, another trip Down in the railroad yards, to the grave, and then the a n emotionally , depleted train headed eest with the family; aboard. It was due widow sat disconsolate and alback in Washington about 8 most unpsrceivlng, , am. EST Friday. Then Mrs. Ibli WM the brutal par! of Eisenhowers first thought . mourning fee Mamie Eisea-- 1 nild ' be for her brother-- ; bower when the emotional ' courage faded and she was left to the stark aftermath wlille the rest of the world went on after having been stilled for a few moments for a man President Nixon called an authentic hero. Calif. The Eisenhower burial PALM SPRINGS, Confronted by an Wednesday was a model of (UPI) military decorum. Only one unruly army of 20,000 students a sharp and assorted hippies, the hathing went wrong wind kept disturbing the flag rassed police force of an the former presidents cas- this normally tranquil excluket during funeral services on sive resort town today the steps 0! the Eisenhower invoked a mutual aid pact communiLibrary: with surrounding : It Was this same Hag, folded ties. into a compact triangle before About 200 officers from the casket was loweiyd into nearly every city in Riverside its vault, that Mamie clutched County and a squad of Marine to the folds of her black fur military police were on duty coat as she walked tearfully today and more were or. the and unsteadily from the tiny way. The reinforcements were chapel on the strong arm of her son, John D. Eisenhower, called to handle the biggest Then riie and the family, Easter vacation influx in a some of the grandchildren decade. Groups of eoJorfuHy-gatbe- d sobbing, drove back to the funeral train which bad brought youths set up camp on nearly them from Washington. every square foot of laws ; United Press International and American Heritage have combined to bring to readers 144 pages of text and pictures covering the story of Eisenhowers early life, his long military, and public career, and his retirement years. It will include coverage of tills state funeral which was Wednesday when the five-sta- r general and 34th President of the United was laid to rest in the email ferm town of Abilene, Kan. Special contributors to the book include Dr. Milton Eisenhower; Edgsr Eisenhower; Admiral Arthur W. Radford; Generals Mark Clark Omar Bradley and S.L.A. Marshall; Viscount Montgomery and many other wartime and peacetime associates of the man called B:e. Orders may be sent to Reader Service Dept., Deseret News, P.O. Box 1257, Salt Lake City, Utah 84110. Cost Is 3. Delivery will be made as aooa at the bock is published. Reds Violate Brezhnev promised in a teleto phone call Wednesday Chechoslovak party chief Alexander Dubcek that the Red Army would not be called out in the current crisis "as long as nothing new happens, party sources said. DUBCEK HANGS ON The sources said some of the 21 member s of the Czechoslovak party presidium demanded at an emergency meeting Tuesday that Dubcek resign, but the majority supported him. Brezhnev, in the telephone conversation, gave his approval to restrictions imposed by the Czechoslovak government Including full press censorship, broadened secret police use at eavesdropping deMrs. Parley as she announced vices and r rmy reinforcement of tiie police, the party the changes. .. ' Tbe day's activities conclud- sources said. - ed with the annual buffet din- . NO CHANGES ner and reception which, this - The presidium was said to year, was held at the partially have agreed there would be no personnel changes, apparcompleted Salt Palace, Many of the guests came ently meaning that progresdirectly to the Palace from sive Josef Smrkovsky will the Tabernacle and waited alretain his party and governmost two hours in line until ment posts despite publlo critreception doors opened at 6 icism by the presidium. p.m. Dubcek will address the naMany of them, no doubt, tion tonight over radio and wished they were in the on the present pollt-ietelevirion shoes of Mrs. parmley and situation, It was her' counselors, Leone W. announced. and C. Lucile Doxey Reading. NOT PUBLISHED The three had prepared for The formal note has not their three-hou- r task of greet, ing Primary workers by don- been published, but word of it ning comfortable bouse slip- spread through tire already nervous dty. Scary rumors pers. Its about time you got spread among the populace, indicating the fear and tenyour feet on the ground, joked one of the visitors to sion brought by the Soviet See PRIMARY on Page A--4 warring. The news agency CTK was moved to deny reports that leader popular Communist Alexander Dubcek was no longer in power. Some Czechoslovaks told newsmen of unsubstatiated rumors that Soviet troops were moving back into frague. One hotel manager repeated a false politistory that 1 cians seized Prague radio. The sources said the note Dr, Milton S. Elsenwas delivered Wednesday by hower, who could not come to Vladimir Semyonov, the Sothe funeral because of illness. viet Deputy Foregin Minister After seeing Milton Eisen- who came to Prague Monday hower either at Walter Reed demonafter wild Army Hospital where Ike died strations last weekend. last Friday, or going to MiAccording to the sources, ltons Baltimore home for a the note said: visit, the widow of the couThe Czechoslovak governntrys 34th president would ment must offer a firm guarmake plans to go to Belgium. antee that no further incidents Her son Jolm, the new UJ5. of the kind which occurred Ambassador to Belgium, and last weekend after the Czehis family plamed to leave choslovaks beat the Soviet nashortly for the post to which tional team in hockey will be he was appointed by Nixon. repeated. al n ABILENE, KAN.: (UPI) -Minutes after they laid Dwight D. Elsenhower to rest in the story dignity of his Place of Meditation, prairie disc were back jockeys playing Top Forty and Abilene police were broadcasting helpful hints to motorists on how to get out of town, an AND LAOS Faces Stark Aftermath . completed force came in a stiff So- viet protest note delivered Wednesday. Soviet Communist party leader Leonid I. Ike Now At Rest, Mamie Memorial 1969 3, ' W $ tr THURSDAY, APRIL . .W TA'(Ma 7 V r?Vx i 1; Av ' I ?'sJ,' ss? ,V ,S S - ?. FIRST WEST'S MOUNTAIN THE t - t 0 -52- SALT LAKE CSTY, UTAH $ - 524-284- Information 5 Sports Scores 1-3535 Clctscified Ads Only Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South 24-4445 78 PAGES - 24-4400 -5- 524-444- B-1- 4. cl Jnt V ffjaimfei6yiiyiwfiiui Sunshine Gfuerally fair tonight and Friday, with increasing cLrjds Friday. Daytime highs in the mid 50s. Lows tonight in the 30s. Details, weather map on Page VOL, ' ' it: iaiitfairiMprfiangM Bnf'h Cambodia , U.S. Charges - if the United added that States pursues its war of aggression and continues to nourish the illusion of imposing its neocolonialism in South Vietnam, the conversations whether they be official or Vietnam. private, public or secret will be able to lead to no The U.S. declaration was settlement r made by Ambassador Law' rence Walsh, deputy UA ne- ' The people of ' South Vietnam, ho said, f'eaxmot. gotiator, 'kt the Hth session of the Vietnam peace hope for a lasting peace to talks. The meeting mce more long as North Vietnam conconsisted of an exchange of tinues to violate its internaso king as charges between the two sides tional obligations without any sign of progress. this infiltration from North Vietnam continues and so The spokesman for the Viet. long as North Vietnam refusCongs National liberation es to respect international deFront denied the talks had marcation lines and internaproduced any gains since they tional boundaries. began. He said that reports of cunning progressonwere the part of treachery BULLETIN President Nixons administra- PARIS (AP) The United States charged North Vietnam today with violating the sovereignty of Laos and Cambodia by using them for transportation routes and operating bases in attacks on South , full-sca- I k ' , tion. WASHINGTON (AP) The Federal Reserve Board ased s double header dose of its strongest monetary restraint medicine Thursday, ordering both an increase In the discount rate and an increase in the level of reserves that must be held by many of the nations banks. The Increase in the discount rate the interest the Federal Reserve System banks charge on loans to other had been expected banks but thehike on the reserves requirement, n much more drastic step, was more surprising. Walsh, speaking in the absence of Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, pressed once more for a mutual withdrawal of troops but the North Vietnamese and the Front insisted on their previous demands for an unconditional withdrawal of U.S. and allied forces. The exchanges also touched on proposals for private talks, but North Vietnam and the Front continued to criticize the offers without actually rejecting them. North Vietnams Xnan Thuy said the choice of forms was not the question. Ht in-la- Inside The News n SECTION A National, Foreign, 3, 5, 8, 9, 13 4, City, Regional 14-2- 0 Editorial Pages Speaking of Politics Our Man Jones 10, 11 11 11 11 Music Theater -- SECTION Cty, Regional .l, SECTION Womens Pages 14-2- 2 10-1- 2 C 6, 7, 1-- SECTION D 20, B 6-- 2 4 13, 14 14 Comics TV Highlights Obituaries Weather Map Action Ads Sports 3 Financial 10-1- 3 6, 7 iaster Army invades Palm Springs . 55-m- , in town. Others holed up in Canyon, Tahqultz nearby where the movie Lost Horizon vas filmed. They jammed the main street, Palm Canyon Boulevard, and taunted policemen patrollng the fancy specialty shops and department stores that line fee sidewalks. At least 280 youths have been arrested since the vanguard of vacationers hit town Friday. Most were booked for liquor violations, on charges of drug possession or indecent exposure. Police Chief Robert White a new called the invaders breed different from the college and high school students who usually descend on the town during Easter. it confrontations with police, Theyre uho announced a "firm but Theyre fair policy in dealing with One police lieutenant put more bluntly. he said. smelly. You can see them coming and you can smell them coming. We still have fee school kids, said Capt. Dale Thompson, but we also have been with confronted hippies, yippies and whatever, with hair, beards, dirty long clothes, bare feet, bedrolls and knapsacks. They number In the 20,000 figure. One youth, asked why he came, seemed to sum up the feelings of many. "Its where dli.y, - There are groovy its and chicks, rock concerts freaky groups. Many of the arrests came after taunting, bottle throwing at. what they called the "hard core, rowdy, hoctigan element responsible for the trouble. But there were serious incidents. Wednesday night a gang of youths took over a gas station and began breaking windows and wrecking equipment Police arriving on the scene were met by two rifle shots fired from inside the station. Two bystanders were wounded. One, Richard Bradford, 17, Venice, Calif., was flown to Riverside in serious condition with a bullet lodged near bis heart Lena Maw, 20, Palm City, Calif., was treated for a ' grazing wound. The invaders were rousted by tear. gas. It was not immediately apparent who fired the rifle. One girl was raped. Many cases of burned and cut feet were treated at Desert Hospital in Pqlm Springs. Pol-k- skirmished Wedneswith about 8,000 hippies when groups of them tried to crash the gate of a rock concert at Angel Stadium, spring training site of the California baseball Angels day night , team. Inside, an orderly crowd of 12,000 listened to fee sounds of groups such as Canned Heat and Black Pearl. Outside, about 2G0 police officers ducked flying soft ririak about bottles and beer cant. I i i- . 4 : ! |