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Show , ..roorAnkovii, &cm- , ..; : imrst Summery 1 Fair tonight and Friday. Warmer. Daytime highs in the lower 80s. 1.,c,ws tonight near 50. Details, weather map on Page B4. ,211 zi tip 104 PAGES 10c WEST'S MOUNTAIN THE & .. r' - 11 TIATFW News, News Tips 5244400 Home Delivery ---524- -2840 Information Sports Scores ----524-4- 445 Classified Ads Only Editorial Offices-- 34 E. 1st South ---524-1- 415 521-353- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH V0'.. 371 NO. 110 - - Our Phone Numbers T Eiri3 miT71 ...al Val - - ---- '2t""- "W",111416661.1.';' 014 2tnig NEWSPAPER FIRST MAY THURSDAY, 5 1969 8, tMN,OIMMMMFNI 6.MmrsINIMENOEIMIONNOW) 1 '''' '''..., ''..,- - '. I" ' ''':: ' ....,'....., , ' ' , :. ' .. ,....,. ... ' .' ... - : ,,r,''- -' ' ;2 : ,' ..'.4'' ii 7 ." ; , :.". .. 1: ' 7.-- ' ... "; .." n : ' ' - - 1; !. , . '' , .: '';' ' tf,r.qo ' .: : :' '' .. :., ::::: 5.....,,14':, : q , ."'',' : -., ; ' ',..: .,F.:. '':- -, '' '',::''::.: ,:":.. ':.: '::'..::;,,,,..:,:.:.:.'il'::(.;, ';:. 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".r...t.,..,:.1 ' I .,.,..) - 1 ..t , ra), at 1: ' 2 ' e: ;..:.'..!':' 1 ;..... ,..:',.... .'-,- - .' I' ,, d .': N.. :., --2 , 1 4, , -- , ,:t ....ay,' t" t, )i ..L....; ; ' '''''''''''s ,,,,.... .';'.6. ...:........,, :. '., 'r. . t'' ?;,'. ..,:.. - '' ..,,..,.. . '"'. t ; ....' t '..1' Is ';',..Sit ,4 'A ,' '''":.: ;.... ,:.: 'tir t:47: - " h.:4.,.?.' ' ' ., '''.?''',i.f..,;".....';', l''''''' ,,4,,:,,,,,' : i , ?, , ,7!;11;17.0,,,4kr : : 1 '', ,,. ' li: 7:;,3:!? . ','. .1,.. .,,,. .1" .:,:....,...'..t...,. ; .'. j , 0 ..':...'....2, :4 t By DEXTER C. ELLIS Deseret News Staff Writer The Utah House of Rep. resentatives today killed any hopes of Salt Lake City for financial relief. the Wednesday afternoon, House had killed three mea sures designed to ease a fl nancial squeeze of Salt Lake and other cities. It nailed the lid on this decision today by refusing to reconsider HMO, the option sales tax Increase. The House did reconsider, but which again killed, would have authorized Salt Lake City to increase its tax levy by up to 34 mills. The present ceiling is 18.5 mills. third The L 1.:.',...,1:,';'. ' ... Z.r,7::!,. '''j...0:',..,.....' k 7.,:, i'l ,,:. ,, '''sF-'- i' , ;,' ,; ., ,,,. ' - r, ., ', ,.. , ' , ;.!E. '.,,, .4,,.. fr'- -- 't; -'- ' N :4.":F"'",.. ..1 '', ,I v ..,....., ' , , ,...,".. ''''''.......: - I t 2 ..,, ,,., , .... ...1, ;. - . . ' ' 10-Poi- .,,1 4:: '..' '''''' ...,...!".:' J, ' I : ' .! ' 1 4 , ' .. f ..it k ' .'t f 'Iii 4: ' '1 , i , . . 11;1' 7 Desrot , . ' 3 , ; - , t f xpo T.i.ditlf. , ...4 . ! By MAXtNE MARTZ ' Deseret News Staff Writer If the people can't go to the trains, then the trains will go to the people. And so they will during most of May as part of the . Golden Spike Centennial Celebration in Utah. They aren't the originals, of c ours e,, but authentically I refurbished replicas of the Central Pacific's Jupiter and the Union Pacific's Engine No. 119. which met nose to nose on that historic day 100 years ago at Promontory Summit. 1.1 PARIS (AP) News Colo' Photo by Ray S. Jortek - I , ':: - ' building today at City College as the New ' York, In c ol 20,000-stude- opened amid lege lingering reten- sions. and uniformed city policemen were stationed around and near the upper Manhattan campus to prevent a repeat of the bloody clash Wednesday between white and N.gro stuAbout plain-clothe- 75 card-playin- g used. The old equipment is owned police Wednesday and kept them on campus. About 100 demonstrators and 100 counter demonstrators faced each other amss Convent Avenue separated by contingents of police. The Negroes ran through Shepard Hall, smashing at least three classroom windows, ripping two fire extinguishers from a wall and open. hibit during its three-da- y stay In Salt Lake City May was Jacob C. Jensen, 91, 140 E. South Temple, a retired Union Pacific engineer. The old steam locomotives recalled for him the days in the when he worked Corinne area, making many runs from Salt Lake City to It throughout the 1.12. network. The Expo Train was on dis play today, in Brigham City and will move on to the Ogden railroad yards Friday. It will be open to visitors there from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily through next Tuesday. Next stop i Cedar City May then Milford May 17, Delta May 18, Nephi May 19, Provo May and Morgan, May 22. Stopping by to see the ex Butte. He explained - some of the features cf the old engines to Brett Petersen, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Petersen, 1002 E. 3825 South, who 14-1- was among hundreds of visitors to view the traveling exhibit. 20-2- 1, Ing the water valve of a fire-hohanging from a wall. The group fled as police entered the building. At Howard University in Washington, D.C., the faculty' has voted to close the school indefinitely as several dozen students continued to occupy six campus buildings demanding more control over faculty , hiring. There was A brief occupa. lion of the registrars office at the University of California at San Diego; counter demon. se staters threw eggs and tome. , toes at Duke University students protesting ROTC; and the faculty of Pratt Institute in New York struck over the school's anti. protest policies. Hoover's Not Retiring safe- Revenge is the abject pleasure of the sick mind. It is the work of 23rudence to prevent injury, and of a great mine, When done., not to revenge it. Francis Bacon Story unilateral withdrawal of allied forces and the overthrow of the legal and constitutional government of South Vietnam." Ambassador U.S. , Cabot Lodge Henry told reporters that the new proposals, since they dealt with political mat. ters, should be dealt with by the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front and the Saigon government. HARD TO TAG WASHINGTON (UPI) Edgar Hoover today emphatically squelched rumors he might retire as FBI director. Fe said he looks forward to many years more in office to meet the 'crisis" in American society. The Hoover observes his 45th anniversary Saturday as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, He declkied requests for an interview but answered by letter questions from United Press International. 4 "As May 10, DV, rolls around, I view the future with optimism," he said. '1 firmly believe that w a will meet the challenges ahead. And I look forward to many years of sharing in the efforts of law enforcement to make this a safer society." Hoover stressed in his letter to today he considers ''vtcious attacks on law enforcement ; have posed a crisis uri for our society." Hoover eighth now President serves his with as - t'- Ifbit ,,, A 14,11,,. pised an amendrwnt which would have required a vote of the eleciorate before Salt Lake City or other cities cold it.crease ita present tax levy.: Daniel S. Dennis, Rep. pe2trict Merchant. Lake, sue- cessfully argued that thie. would hamstring local government "flow can we expect our young people to respect government if we sit here and, run down local government officials?", Rep. Merchant asked. 25-4- 33-3- 6 lt Wednesday. It was preceded by an unusual procedure. Rep. Glen successThurston, fully proposed a motion that the Salt Lake City and County representatives be required to vote first, so the other rep. resentatives could gauge their sentiments on the bill. The result was 17 Salt Lake City and county representatives in favor of reconsideration and 10 opposed. Prior to the 2739 vote which killed The proposed was defeated. amendment Sev era! major fennel; remain to be dealt with by the House, however, including neighborhood redevelopment, a cchool teacher negotiations and a measure per. See TAX es Page A4 HB5, Rep. Gordon , A. Lake, pro Madsen, I lt Agnew Hits Anarchy, Reaps Cheers At Y. By IL DeMAR TEUSCHER much vigor and determination as he did his firstCalvin Coolidge. President Lyndon B. John. son paved the way for Hoover to continue in Mc as long as he wishespending some une:Tected conflict with a fu- ture President. At a nite House ceremony celebrating Hoover's 40th year in office, Johnson waived the , mandatory government retirement requirement of TO for Hoover saying, 'The nation cannot afford to lose yea," , , . ti.....;,.....,,,.:. , :,:.,.:,:k . ,.,, ...5 , dissent , , ...,. PROVO Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said today the , time has come "for America's colleges under siege to assert themselves in opposition to destructive ...,.... , , .,,,,,, ; ' . .5. .. t : , ,, ,.. .5 - -, .."4 , .,.. :,, ;,. , s, ::, 41,k,: l.,. ,,,,,, ':.':',,si - ...,.:.,e'? it :,.,,, , ii.1...,:.i. 0.... ..,4'..":;;.. '....0, .. ...,:,,,,.: , tii,.,,, , , ,,,-- ,,-- - '8::.: , - i' '..,,, , ' . 5.:5- ',. A. , anarchy." The tanned, trim vies president spoke to well over 12,000 cheering students in George Albert Smith Fieldhouse at Brigham Young University. Agnew said that if our sod. sty is to be defended from "perpetual violent assault," every institution must work together. AREAS OF DEFENSE He singled out the universities, the family, organized re. ligion, mass media, and bustness as areas in which defense of freedom must be , 4,.., :,- - ... . end !, , :!::., , '' I, '' - (1' ., ,...,,,., 4 :,,, ' ;,...,,. p,S,,-,.- (14 : '.1 - ... 9, , 4,.A ' , l'...1..':... :',.:VO:....:.......Y, .. N 7 .,,,;,. I ''''' :, '''. , , 4 f :.:','':.. 4tit,:.: t , ,,....';'..,:....,.':'......:.Z:,. 1 .1f.':,:...:..;:::....!, , "st: & I : ,:".4p ',,....: Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, Burton and Rep. Laurence top Republican dignitaries of the state attended the EYU appearance. The vice president speaks at 7 p.m. tonight g at a $25 a plate dinner in the Salt Palace Exposition Hall in Utah's capital. ' ! t....11,,,,.:..;...ek.,.::,,,,'t.::.....i.......t.... li .. ( fund-raisin- Asked whether he saw any movement toward progress toward peace, he replied. "It's very hard to character . he these meetings." The new plan was submit. ted to the Vietnam peace tioks at their 16th session by Tran Bun K:em, front representative, and quickly backed by North Vietnam's Xuan Thuy. After the session both said the United States and South Vietnam had reacted unfavo. rably during the rebuttal period. LAW, FREEDOM Agnew told the students that America has made social, economic and political progress without precedent, and has done this through freedom and constitutional law and order. "We have resisted every assault upon democracy by t o t alitarian forces from without," Agnew asserted. 'I ,' Vice President Spiro T. Agnew speaks out on youthful dissent during BYU talk. am confident our society will defend itself from attempts to impose absolutism or crea'A anarchy from within." Scanning the youthful faces in the packed fieldhouse, Agnew declared that "what we have witnessed in these past weeks on college cam. puses Is not mere delinquency or mere disruption." He said both words dismiss too lightly the grave implications of campus disorders end citizen reaction that is sweeping the country. He said we have "young See AGNEW on Page A4 CENTRAL POINT The central point of the NLF plan was establishment of a provisional coalition gov- ernment to arrange a general election and to rule South Vietnam oetween the time peace is attained and a constituent assembly is elected. This bad been rejected repeatedly by the Saigon government and the United States. The United States also had rejected previous for unilateral with- dents. Today's Thought The United States reacted cautiously, but South Viet, nam said the other side was persisting in demanding "The MimimiMmn d The only way to have ty is to have police," said CCNY President Buel G. Galiiher, who summoned the today A-1-4. Negroes Stage Hit- Run Attack on N.Y. Campus; Tensions Linger Ten young Negroes, including four girls. staged a hitend-run attack on a campus presented a peace plan, based mainly on previously rejected proposals but containing some new elements. Cong troop withdrawals. Page 10 By Associated Press The Viet - by Paramount Pictures and has been used- in nseveral movIes.r way loaned to Union Pacific by the movie studio and will be displayed 1)? :4) ''',:ta ct. k4;1,47,4, a considerable ereat. vote er margin than the it was killed by which of Deseret News Political Editor 't, -, ,116.0.0ri:gt,04 Known as the Union Pacific "Expo Train," the exhibit also features an museum car containing photographs of the old West, railroad artifacts, replica of an bar, a scene, and an exhibit of HO gauge models of every type engine Union Pacific has ever old-tim- e lt ideas. U.S., South Vietoam discuss The two engines and four other antique cars builtabout 1875 have been mounted on flatcars and will be pulled from town to town ht. Utah through May 22. rINNIps, , LI , move, but noted that financial relief to cities was one of the main reasons the governor called the special session. The move to reconsider HMO was defeated by a vote , 1 - , pic . U.S. Cautious i",i;." r4 HISTORY PAYS USA VISIT e Wednesday that no effort was made to reconsider it. Action on the tax measures this morning was preceded by a brief talk by House Speaker Lorin N. Pace, Ake in which he expressed disappointment at the accomplishments thus far during the four-da- y old special session. said was He everyone aware of the legislation coming up, and knew of its implications, yet "we avoided making up our minds. "When we make a decision, we fear the conseouences and move to reconsider," Pace said. "Our constituents expect us to make decisions and then live with the consequences." The motion to reconsider M310, the sales tax bill, was made by Rep. C. De Mont He said he Judd, was reluctant to make the nt Few New , 1 Jacob C. Jensen; 91, 140 E. South Temple, retired aP, engineer, shows Brett Petersen, 4. son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Petersen, 1002 E. 3825 South, replicas of Jupiter, No 119. c. ' Le '4a Peace Ean .. 4 :' -- 944'0 4,1 31 1.1 , - '1., ) , measure, authorizing wag so bad ly defeated . t tax cities to levy a 10 per cent income tax, H1314, ,., ..., ..,' 1 072 if Cong Offer ; ...rt al tc) in !..4'..,..'., 4,t . t . ,,A"41 ,...,,,,,,...."' '') i 47...,k 0..,..1....,0: '''' il t .:'!' i.:, ...,f 4 1. ,f ,..;icor ' .e'llogor's -.' , 1 ,,,i I , 4., ..1:.-ill- '''''''''b tk e 1.: 1 Ex - 1r, ,. : iiit'''' .40, . ,rf ' NO IP, 1 ,F:o ' '''il ':-':.- A ,t 4.4 '.:' ; e:';'. - !.1.."'h:',. ': 0,, i: , ,..- '::: ,,... ., "'. 1..' r:1; 40;0' , :: ''' .. 0 .,. , 1 c, J J T1 tt. , ' !,,f. ;', "',' ..::: ": :::. . .:44. ' ., - '::' ' : ' ,.; .. ; .: l', , .''., ::, l ::': : , ' : .'..;, ..!....!. I - '..,.''' ;;:: ::i :: " ' - 1., :;,:: : - ' ' :'1.,!,' ' -- '':',. ..,:;.. '' ': ".1,::::.... ::' .',','.-.- :' .,., 'Y'''' . 4 :', .:1.1.. .! :1. ;....1 , .' ,i ?.i'.; r ,.'. !. 4.,...,. ;: :; :'''':. ' ".:',- LI ,A b, &;,,lf r 1 g , '' ..?, 'it,' J.., ,1 C "N :, 41 ,.. .. 1 ,..' 0 Al demands drawal of U.S. troops. TIP SCALES in It might help, however, 'tipping the propaganda scales back again toward the Viet Cong and North Vietnam, which had been hurt consider. ably by the conciliatory moves in Washington and Saigon. The plan did not specifically Antion Vorth Vietnamese military forces, but it was clear that their withdrawal would be in a different category from those of the Unlied States and would be left up to the Vietnamese people themselves. The United States and South Vietnam have called for mutual withdrawal of North Vietnamese and allied forces. 4 Itiss,G.On. e..r,Ii )ia; 3.tilt...Hcili'll? A major LONDON (UPI) accident, possibly an air crash or a rocket test exploSion, could be the cause of the deaths of 10 Soviet generals in the past three weeks, diplomatic reports said today. The generals were mostly in Their fifties, with a few in their early t.e.xties. Several were directly connected with air defense and rocketry. In at least two cases, the army newspaper Red Star said the generals died in "tragic circumstances while performing their duties." Rai Star today announced the death of Lt. Gen. Yevgeny I. Smornov, 51, deputy chief of the central department of of Defense, the Ministry "after a short but grave ill- ness." ot these The - sequence deaths began jast over hNo weeks ago whea Red Star re. SECTION A Popov. 14, 8, 8, 13, 14 10, 11 Editorial Pages Speaking of Polities Our Man Jones 11 11 Music City, Regional 16-122-2- came the death Next announcement of Gen. Wien-ti- n Penkovsky, former cornmander-in-chief of the Far Eastern area and a deputy foreign minister. A week ago Red Star announced the death of Gen. An a t oly Kadomtsev, who "died tragically while per. forming his duties." He was 49 and was commander of the aviation section of Russia's air defense forces. Red Star also reported the "sudden death" of Lt. Gen. Alexander Dmitriyev, 58. He headed the political administration In the Caucasus mil- area. Another death was See GENERALS on Page NEWS National, Foreign ported the death "in tragic circumstances" of the former chief of the general staff of inf an tr y forces, Marikyan itary INSIDE THE A-- $ sEcnoN City, Regional Action Ado ---- 20, 28 B 1-4, A Obituaries Weather Map SECTION 8 C 112 Boat Show SECTION D Women's Pages SECTION E 1-- Sports TV Highlights Financial 7 8 Comics Theater SECTION 0 Grand Central SECTION S . Scots 4 |