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Show -- m Partly cloudy with te fiOtoTO.Lm-sii- Details on Page VOL. B-- 378, 91 Lack Of 52 PAGES Jobs off ing fare wel- instead GAZA (AP) The oldest man in the Arab Gaza Strip, Ouda Suleiman, who survived four wars and 104 years of existence in this harsh desert center, has died in a traffic accident, police reported today. Suleiman was hit by a car as he hobbled across a street in Gaza city Sunday night, police said. The dri'er was arrested. Born in 1868, Suleiman witnessed the fight between the Bntish and the Turks in World War I and the three wars between Israel and the Arab states. lack of jobs. High taxes was listed by 13 per cent as the greatest problem, while lack of industry, low wages and the high cost of living were next. somewhat contradictory thoughts were expressed by ques- Ltahns in answer to the tion: As of today what would you say is, the main problem facing people living in Utah today? The opinion poll, conducted exclusively for the Deseret News by Joe B. Williams Research. Elmwood, Neb., disclosed that the no. 1 problem in the minds of Utahns is the unemployment. Of about 780 persons inter- iewed, 28 per cent singled out , He left a considerable number of children, grandchildren and great grandchildren, but we don't know how many. a city official said ... 122 Years Of Service In WASHINGTON (UPI) -I- ts adjournment plans snagged by a dispute with President Nixon over a $250 billion ceiling on federal spending, the 92d gress slowed to a near Con- stand- still today. The Senate met briefly and the House didn't convene at all. authority to make cuts but Congress wants to dictate where and how he an cut and the dispute kept the legislators from quitting Saturday night and getting hack hopie to campaign v Y United Press International t 9 ' ' x 7 George McGovern today returned to the campaign after a day of rest, while President Nixon following a day as a the resumed campaigner duties of the presidency. Jarred by the latest polls which showed him unable to gain significantly on Nixon. .McGovern pleged in prepared remarks for defense and aero- - President Thanks POW Unit WASHINGTON ( U P I ) President Nixon made an unscheduled visit to a convention of families of American POWs today and promised that under no circumstances would the men be abandoned. sider We cannot leave their to the good will of enemy, Nixon said. fate the Nixon said that negotiations aimed at ending the war had over the very intensive been past year, but he declined to give any specifics for fear that might jeopardize success of and because the negotiations I w'ould not want to raise false hopes. Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon-schinegotiator on Vietnam, had been expected to address the gathering at the Statler Hilton Hotel of the National League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia. But NLxon told the meeting Kissinhe decided to ger because he wanted the opportunity to thank the organization for supporting his policies in Southeast Asia. pre-em- The Senate met briefly this morning, passed one routine bill, then recessed for four Several added such asides as. It is who you know not what you know, to get a job See PROBLEMS on Page A-- 8 FRANCISCO (UPI)-T- he author of a new book about presidential aide Henry Kissinger describes him as a sort of gunslinger type of that is diplomat professional new to American politics. f , Kissinger hired out to Nelson Rockefeller in 1908 to gun down Richard Nixon for the presidential nomination. author-attorne- Charles y Ash- man said Sunday. He failed to stop Nixon, but then joined him as trouble-shoote- a for-hir- e r. De Gaulle the Berlin Wall, i h House-passe- resolu- d The House measure, but space labor leaders to pump the economy to create jobs in the earliest days, of his administration. McGovern said his proposal to cut defense spending by $32 billion over three years would not create mass unemployment, and said that there were more jobs to be found in peace than in w ar. The President also revealed that Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst would make public today the first comprehensive report ever compiled on federal law enforcement and criminal justice assistance activities. In a statement accompanyreview of Jus-Sc- e ing the POLITICS. Page e A-- 8 Red China, Vietnam ... Kissinger handles them all. So he has moved up in the Nixon administration to become the most powerful number two man in the lustory of the United States. England, France and some other countries have had diplomats who were professionals and continued to represent their country through numerous changes in goxernmenl. But the brilliant Henry the first of this Kissmger the United sort 'gunslinger' States has ever had 1972 16, The t conference committee chairman, Sen. Russell B. said administraLong, tion spokesmen who sat in on the negotiating indicated they would be willing to try the lower spending ceiling provisions. However, there was no immediate White House reaction to this. The Senate planned to take up today a compromise bill that would provide sweeping increases in Social Security program' but which would abandon welfare Nixons reform proposals. approved the ran into heavy where Senate, t i t i t i Court Rejects Viet War $10 billion into arrest. it the in going Nixon said he would ask the next Congress to require stiff mandatory sentences for heroin traffickers and to amend other federal statutes so as to keep those peddlers of death off our streets after their 8 salaries. year. Challenge, WASHINGTON (UPI) -- The vote Supreme Court in a today rejected one more in a long series of legal chhalenges that the Vietnam war was unconstitutional. 7--2 Justices William O. Douglas and William J. Brennan Jr. dissented vigorously, saying no declaration of war had been made by Congress and that the question realiy was the constitutionality dential war. Nick Sandberg of BLM, left; Kenneth Ross and Larry Farnsworth of Utah Department of Wildlife Resources, check damage caused by oil spill along banks of San Juan River. Big cleanup is underway. Crews Begin Oil Skimming FARMS. San Juan A helicopter airlift carried in bulldozers and other heavy equipment to this remote area along the San Juan River Sunday and work crew s began today to remove a oil spill from the river. PIUTE County 38,000-gallo- n . and Log foam booms across the river where it enters Lake Powell and were holding back a mass stretched of bris. driftwood and crane and two carrying helicopters A de- After all the debris has been will straw be dumped into the oil slick to soak up as much as possible. The helicopters will skim the water anil pick up the oil and straw National Park Service officials estimated that the cleancould take up operation many weeks and might not be completely finished until after the runolf next spring. The oil spill ocurred a week ago when a pipeline of the Texas-NeMexico Pipeline Co. ruptured and sent the oil flowing into an irrigation ditch which funneled it into the San Juan River. The oil moved nearly 140 miles to the mouth of Lake Powell w here booms stretched across the river held the ml remoud. bucket-carryin- g h bucket- began removing the debris today huge crater has been gouged cut above the water line of the river and the debi is will be dumped into it and be either burned or treated with chemicals. A and associated debris. One boom broke under the weight, but another farther downstream held. Early estimates put the oil spill at 168,000 gallons, but a company official said Sunday that only 916 barrels were a total of 38,492 galspilled lons. Asnman said he even considHave ered using the title, for his Brain, Will Travel, book on Kissinger. Instead, the book has just been published by Lyle Stuart, Inc., of Secaucus, N.J., as Kissinger: The Adventures of Super-Kraut. Ashman said m an interview he was astonished while writing and researching his book that so many of the people he talked to had forgotten that Kissingers job at the 1968 Republican convention was to stop Nixon. At one point, an optimistic Kissinger actually told friends from Harvard that he felt they had stopped Nixon and Rockefeller would get the nomination, Ashman writes. Buried in the press reports of Rockefeller's announcement on May 3, 1968, when he talked about the Vietnam war and domestic rwi ihlurv.s a WHS suggestion that the president of the United States should visit Red China," writes Ashman. telephone d poles lashed together with steel cable ar.J appears to be with holding the slick leakage. according to a Texas-NeMexico very-littl- Mexico crews alhave begun working their way downriver from the spill area, cleaning the bunks of the river by hand. Where the river was enclosed canyons, the walls are streaked w ith oil. However, some 4t miles of the winding mer is inaccessible at this time of year and cleaning will be delayed until the spring runoff washes Texas-Ne- ready one of Ins new foreign affairs advisers ... none other than Henry Kissinger. Ashman uses a light in his study of approach Kissinger, dwelling on his life in Germany before immigrating to America, his rise to power within the Nixon administration well- and his publicized dates with some of the world's sexiest women. In fact he uses somewhat of a gunslinger approach in his dealings with women," say s. An aerial inspection of the lake Sunday showed no signs of od. The flights were made by the Coast Guard which was called in to help with the spill operation. Some wind, rain and thunderstorms moved over the area early today, slowing operations. Generators and lighting equipment have been flown into the site to allow workers to proceed even after dark. Workers at the scene represented the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Park Service, the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S Geological Survey, the Bureau of Reclamation a.id the Coast Guard, which has set up a communications network. Costs of the cleanup operation will be borne by Texas-Mexie- Pipeline Co. Today's Thought a presi- t company-spokesman- Ash-nu- This idea had come from the banks next spring. National Park Service officials said. The boom across the river holding the gooey mess of debris and oil is constructed of burlap-wrappe- of The Court acted in a ease where three Californians who claimed Congress illegally delegated its war declaration powers to the President in 1961. It takes the vote of four justices to place a case on the Courts docket for a hearing and an ultimate formal decision. In another action, the Court declined to hear an appeal of an antiwar group against the use by the government of the 1917 Trading with the Enemy-Acto prevent the distribution of unsolicited material mailed the group from North Vietnam In other major actions, the Court: CRANE, COPTERS ON SITE Kissinger Tog: 'Gunslinger7 Diplomat SAN a Regular appropriations bills for the aid program have failed to pass. The House returns Tuesday to consider a compromise proposal to provide increases in the Social Security program but to abandon Nixons welfare reform proposals. Under the rules, the Senate may not act on such compromises until the House has done so. both houses stayed in session until early Sunday trying to finish the work of the 92nd Congress. They failed, and the Senate will resume its deliberations today, while House members iil come back to work Tuesday. Nixon has asked for the unprecedented authority to cut any program to stay within the $250 billion limit. He has argued the authority is necessary if the federal government is to avoid a tax increase next com- In a paid, political speech broadcast from his Camp David mountain retreat. Nixon proposed that wherever more money, more manpower, or more teeth in the laws are needed to maintain our momentum in the war against drugs and crime. I w ill do e erything in my power to provide them." 5 opponents argued granting the to the President authority would surrender Congress' constitutional mandate to control government purse strings. Negotiators for the Houm and Senate have worked out a compromise which still must be acted upon by both houses It would prohilnt Nixon from cutting any program more than 20 percent, and it also wouid exclude from the ceiling Social Security and veterans benefits, unemployment compensation, Medicare and Medicaid, welfare, military' and civil service and railroad retirement pensions, and judicial tion to continue foreign aid at present levels. High employment is our main problem and we have low wages. We need more industry to make more jobs." After delivering the speech in Los Angeles, McGovern was flying to Texas in the next phase of his bid to defeat Nixon next month. Despite Gallup and Time magazine polls showing that McGovern trimmed the Presidents lead, the South Dakotan was still about 30 points behind. Nixon was back at the White House to watch the adjournment proceedings of tile 92nd Congress after delivering a radio address Sunday in which lie declared that he had brought "crime and anarchy to a standstill. 524-444- .....524-444- pk. hours. The Senate Appropriations Committee met to con- Nixon Purrs, McG Pings x 0 524-284- 0 OCTOBER MONDAY, v S 524-440- Spending The President wants blanket Other problems, in order of their importance, were: drugs, crime, pollution, LDS domination, public attitude, education, polities and politicians, ecology, welfare, housing, population grow til, state liquor laws, poor roads, problems of the elderly. There were several ments in the above vein. 4 Solons Drag War? No, Car of working. These Mountain West's First Newspaper Oc OLD MAN DIES Heads List, Utahns Feel Not enough jobs . , . too many people working for the too many liv- 1 . News Tips Circulation Information Sports Scores SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH NO. ' Our Phone Numbers E D Shower Power 0T. ' o Refused to delay a lower court's order calling for busing of about 14,000 public school students in Memphis next January, and also refused to speed up consideration of a busing case from Richmond, Va. Pending full appeals procedure, blocked a lower court ruling which struck down Connecticuts abortion law as unconstitutional. State authorities argued that if a delay was not granted, the state would be left without any laws to protect the lives of its unborn children at any stage of their development." YORK (UPI) -Prices moved lower in slow trading Monday on the New York Stock Exchange. NEW Dow I i Refused to allow the conservative American Party to bring directly to the Supreme Court a lawsuit against 17 states and the District of Columbia which have barred the party from their Nov. 7 election ballots. Declined to interfere with lower court ruling that newspapers are subject to the 1968 Fair Housing Act ban on publication of racially discriminatory' real estate or housing a advertisements. Declined to review lower court rulings from Ohio which exempted the auto insurance business from fedeial antiUusl laws on grounds the state exercises regulatory powers the in field. Agreed to hear a Georgia to decide whether the 1965 Voting Rights Act protecting political rights of racial minorities applies to state legislative reapportionme nts. At issue was the right of the Justice Department to veto such reapportionment in Georgia and other states with past records of low voter participatcase ion. Let stand lower rulings that it is constitutional for persons entenng U.S. courthouses to be subjected to searches for guns and explosives. George Barrett, a Nashville lawyer, challenged the practice which has been in effect in numerous instances since june 15, 1971. INSIDE THE NEWS SECTION A National, Foreign 1. 2, 4, 6. 12 Theater TODAY'S STOCKS The 7-- 2 Jones Industrial City, Regional Editorial Pages SECTION B City, Regional Our Man Jones Financial Obituaries Action Ads Average was off 4.06 to 926.40 Weather Map around 1 oclock. Declines SECTION C held a 740 to 501 advantage World of Women rvrV MUI14IIVVO UlllUUg Comics issues across the tape. Volume TV Highlights totaled 6,310,000 shares comCity, Regional pared with 8,460,000 Friday SECTION It New York and (See complete Sports American exchange quotations 11 13, 16 2 J5 :.l5 14, 6, 20 I 4, 5 6 9 7 3 1 The things taught in schools and colleges are not an education, but the means of education. Ralph Waldo Emerson ) on B-- 4 City, Regional ) 1 4,5 6 7, 8 7 8 4 |