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Show Our Phone Numbers More Clouds 0 News, News Tips Home Delivery- 0 5 Information 5 Sports Scores 5 Classified Ads Only Editorial offices: 34 E. First South - 524-440- Variable high cloudiness tonight with some patches of fog. Increasing clouds Tuesday. Day time highs in the mid 40s. Details, weather map on Page 524-284- 524-444- 524-444- 521-353- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH B-1- 0. VOL. 371 no. 30 5 PAGES JANUARY MONDAY, The Mountain West's First Newspaper 10c 6, ; 1969 Nixon Puts Lodge At Talk Helm Signal To Hanoi: U.S. No Pushover By EUGENE V. RISHER goons NEW YORK (UPI) t Richard M. Nixons selection of Henry Cabot Lodge to head the American negotiating team President-elec- 'No Retreat From Commitment' In Paris should send a clear signal to Hanoi that the bargaining will be tough. Nixon has taken several steps both before and since his election to let North Vietnam know there will be no softening of the American position on Vietnam When he takes over. He repeatedly told his audien- ces during the campaign that Hanoi would not get a better deal from his administration and, during (lie week following his election at a joint news conference with President Johnson, he endorsed the way Johnson was handling the negotiations. NONE FLUNER But none of the signals could have been plainer than his appointment of Lodge as his bpecial representative and chief negotiator. The diplomat, as ambassador to Saigon, presided over the buildup of American strength in Vietnam and guided the U.S. effort there during three and a half of the most critical years in the conflict. They were years of unstinting support of the Saigon government. By M. DeMAR TEUSCHER Deseret News Political Editor Gov. Calvin L. Rampton today began his second term as ernment. Utah National Guard cannon thundered a Deseret Gov. Calvin L. Rampton takes second term oath from Utah Chief Justice J. Allan Crockett. Congressmen Wade Into 1st Session Russell Takes Oath In Senate WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Richard B. Russell, today was sworn in ., high noon. Also sworn in for a second term was Secy, of State Clyde L. Miller. He and Gov. Rampton were the only Democrats to survive the GOP sweep of top state offices in the 1968 election. Republicans replaced Democrats in the other three elective state offices. REPEATS PLEDGE LBJ Hopes For. Budget In Balance Talk Stalemate slow-pace- Still Palls Paris deep-throat- bal-gres- two-side- d com-mino- A-- confer-four-wa- y fantastic Suggestions For Better Utah Reader response to the Deseret News Goals for Utah 69 program has been large and gratifying and filled with intriguing ideas. Believing that Utahns during should have a practical and attainable goal toward which all could work during the coming year, the Deseret News has met with community leaders and also invited the public lo submit ideas. Response has come from all over tie state, and some suggestions have even come from non Utahns. 19 ad- mit the immortality of the human soul, the destruction of our xcorld trill not appear dreadful Charles Darwiil Biimiipi: salute as the ett of the Utah Supreme Court administered the oath to Gov. Rampton during tradition-fille- d ceremonies in the domed rotunda of the Capitol, beginning at News photo fey Howard C. Moor Among the many ideas offered, several stand out repetindicative that itively Utahns are concerned about common problems. These include: Improving the industrial climate and growth of the state; improving traffic and highway safety powering social and economic demands coming from all people. TIME IS NOW These problems ... are growrate. The ing at a breath-takintime for us to meet them is now not when tiiey have grown to unmanageable size not after the pressures created by these forces have rent and torn out our social structure in convulsive and destructive adjust-jment- s the governor said. In the past four yeans, Gov. Rampton asserted, the state has made good progress in stimulating economic growth, in opportunities creating new-joand increasing the level of fami- Robert C. Seamans Jr. A.F. secretary John H. Chafee . . . Navy secretary House-Senat- To those who fully 19-gu- n Democratic governor took the oath of office for the second time and swore to discharge the duties of my office with fidelity. Chief Justice J. Allan Crock- - Today's Thought Utahs 11th governor with an expanded commitment to provide better education, job opportunities, civil equality and more efficient gov- of the as president pro-teSenate. The post goes to the senator with the most servPropaganda organs of both Vernon B. Romney became ice seniority. the Viet Cong and the North Vgeneral, Sherman J. attorney elected in ietnamese repeatedly attacked WASHINGTON (AP) Russell, first A 91st men, Cabinet members and the President Johnson leaves office office as state auditook Preece 1933, succeeded Sen. Carl Lodge while he was in Saigon, Congress that leaders indicate President. Jan. 20. tor and Golden L. Allen was rehim' one who of as the characterizing is likely to take on the Hayden, the Senates first Along with its first deliberasworn in as state treasurer. Among chief architects of American ; o d order of business are pre. tion on legislative proposals this tired. ,v , . middlq-ot-the-- r J( Atty. Gen. Phil L". Hansen, aggression. character of the Eisenhower i n a u g uration hearings vd week, Congress takes up the Russell was flanked at the Auditor Sharp M. Larsen and His hard line position on Viet- years waded into the real work Nixons Cabinet nominees workaday business of making ceremony by Sen. George Treasurer Linn C. Baker were nam should please South Vie- of its first session today, D. Aiken of Vermont, the and the biennial effort to make committee assignments and fill on the stand as their successors tnamese President Nguyen Van After a e senior Republican. filibusters easier to cut off. ing party organization vacanjoint took the oath of office. Thieu, although during his days meeting to certify Richard M. Senate Democratic leaders cies. Also among the dignitaries in Saigon, Lodge was closer to Nixon as President-elec- t and de- also plan early work on the nuSenate the inaugural who watched Thieu's rival, Nguyen Cao Ky, bate a rare challenge to the clear nonproliferation treaty increased Republicans, expecting committee assignevents were three former Utah than to Thieu. Electoral College- - system, the held over from the last session ments to reflect their gains in governors Herbert B. Maw, J. Ky now heads the South Viet- House hoped to take up pro- although there appeared little November elections, began setLee and George D. Bracken namese delegation to Paris. posed pay raises for congress hope for ratification before ting up a GOP committee in Clyde. 3 OTHER MEMBERS party caucus to sift their candiJustice A. H. Ellett of the Sudates for committee posts. The president-elec- t announced Court also was given the preme But Chairman J. W. t, Lodges appointment along with NEW U.S. CHARGE oath of office at the state cerethree other top members of the wants to cut the monies. size of his key Fornegotiating team Sunday. He As Gov. Rampton finished his Relations cited Lodge's experience in Committee and eign oath, artillery pieces of the efforts are under way to trim WASHINGTON Vietnam and the seven years he (UPI) Utah National Guard started to back the Senate president Johnson told served as American ambassabark out the Committee as cratic dor in the United Nations as congressional leaders cannon salute tradiwelL can having produced the finest and that he he today hopes the chief execugiven tionally most pertinent qualities of expes Prospects that the 91st Con-- j present Congress with a tive of the state. rience for the difficult negowould see a period of anced budget for fiscal 1970. SWORN IN reassessment following years of Senate Democratic Leader tiating task. innovative social Alike Mansfield Johnson said legislation In his inaugural address, Gov, Ambassador Lodge has not reminiscent of former President also told the leaders he was Rampton declared that four As PARIS to note that career had a deeply (AP) regrets distinguished hopes only better In the political life of our coun- dimmed for an early end to the North Vietnam seems to have Dwight D. Eisenhowers admin- considering the future disposi-- j years ago he pledged was seen Sunday by tion of the 10 per cent income education, istration Unitthe rectalks also a opportunities, our all but job stalemate, distinguished peace categorically rejected try, ord in foreign affairs, Nixon ed States accused North Viet- proposals giving concrete form three ranking congressional fig- surtax but had not made a deci- - civil equality and more efficient uression. government. said of Lodge, who ran as his nam today of assuming of to the fact that this is a Senate Democratic Leader! beIt is a little difficult to make attitude conference. vice presidential running mate I can assure you there has decision in the process of been no retreat from these in the unsuccessful campaign of cause it had turned down a new He was referring to a news Mike Mansfield noted the volu-j- a Great Society and other transition, Mansfield said. U.S. proposal for settling the conference statement earlier by 1960. mitments I pledge today that Named as Lodge's deputy and procedural quarrels blocking Hanois spokesman here, that legislation passed during the) Johnson also said his last these commitments will be North Vietnam would not sit Kennedy and Johnson adminis- - budget message will forecast he declared See TALK on Page 2 ,hp conference. expanded, The charge from the United down at the peace table unless trations and pictured the 91st small surplus for the current States came amid signs that the jits ally, the National Liberation Congress tenure as a time to! fiscal year, j He said the final budget fig- reorganize. appointment of Henry Cabot Front, was given equal and I think perhaps we may ures for fiscal 1970, beginning' as the new U.S. chief dependent status, INSIDE THE after he is out of office representative here would mean! The Noith Vietnamese have have passed too much legisla- - July 1 no headway toward getting the' insisted that the peace are not yet completed and tion, spent too much money." NEWS I think it is that he would not be able to'ing talks started before, ence, when it begins, will be a Mansfield said. magnitudehat result "from Richard M. Nixons inaugura- fourparty affair. The U.S. view time to reorganize, tighten our send his budget message to Con- - tJie jmpjngement of technology is that peacemaking involves bells." tion as President Jan. 20. gress until shortly before he our societies, from an A spokesman for the U.S. del- "an allied side and a Com-- ! He was interviewed on CBSlleaves the White House onjexpanding population, from the Jan. 20. egation said the American team of "Face the Nation. advancement human knowledge and from the FAVORITE TARGET Term ... . - Service Aides SecWASHINGTON (AP) of Defense-designaMelvin R. Laird today named Rhode Island Gov. John H. Chafee to be secretary of the Navy and Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Robert C. Seamans Jr. to be secretary of the Air Force. In a surprise reappointment, Stanley R. Resor was nominated to stay on as secretary of the Army. The nominations must be confirmed by the Senate. All three men appeared before newsmen at a news conference held by Laird. It was the second round of defense high-levappointments made by the new defense chief for the Nixon Administration. retary te el over a Rhode Island sales tax issue. Chafee was defeated by Democrat Frank R. Licht in the November election. Seamans has served at Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a teacher and project manager for 14 years and has held posts in the National Aeronautics and Space tion Administration. Laird said Seamans has a background in science and understands the problem of space technology today. Seamans succeeds Air Force Secretary Harold fine Brown, No. 2 Job Filled Earlier Laird had selected In Agriculture multimilDavid Packard, lionaire head of a California electronics firm, to be his No. 2 man in the Defense Department as deputy secretary. hafee, 46, loaves office as Island of Rhode governor Tuesday. He succeeds Paul R. Ignatius, who has been civilian head of the Navy since September 1967. Laird smilingly said Chafee, ran into a a former Marine, little difficulty in the last elec PresidenNEW YORK (AP) Nixon announced today that he will nominate J. Phil Campbell Jr., Georgias commissioner of agriculture and a Democrat turned Republican, to be undersecretary . of agriculture. Nixons decison was relayed to newsmen by Clifford Harden, secretary of agriculture designate. t-elect RUSS SPACE PROBE g ly income. A BEGINNING However, this effort has just begun and must be continued, he warned. We cannot assume that new! business enterprises will flow into our state without our making an effort to encourage them. We must aggressively seek to build our economic base. We must not forget for a moment See GOV. RAATON, Page A--4 Shot For Venus an The Soviet Union launched MOSCOW (AP) unmanned spaceship Sunday on a journey . with a soft landing on that it hopes will end in Venus. The official news agency Tass said the Venus 5 vehicle was photographed 90.000 miles front earth by an observatory near Alma Ata, Kazakhstan. It said the photographs were sent to Moscow and the quality of the pictures is good. Tass said Venus 5 would continue atmospheric studies begun by the Soviet spacecraft Venus 4, which made a soft planet Oct. 18, 1967. Venus 4 landing on the showed the planet to be hot and inhospitable, relaying temperatures of up to 536 degrees Fahrenheit in an atmosphere consisting almost entirely of carbon monoxide. Venus 5, weighing about tons, was first put into earth orbit and then launched into outer space from a position over Africa. Stressing the difficulty of a Venus shot, a Tass science commentator wrote : It would be much easier for a marksman to solve the problem of hitting a flying honeybee front the window of a moving motorcar. However, great experience of interplanetary flights of automatic stations has been accumulated by the Soviet Union." , mid-Ma- cloud-covere- y d , |