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Show Showers Possible DESERET Partly cloudy with chance of thundershowers tonight Daytime highs near 90. Lows tonight in the lower 60s. Details, weather map on Page B-- 3 7 2 NO. 42 0 News, News Tips Home Delivery Information 5 8 Sports Scores Classified Ads Only 5 Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South 524-440- 524-284- PAGES 4 6 10c MOUNTAIN THE WEST'S 0 524-444- ' 524-444521-353- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 4. VOL. Our Phone Numbers FRIDAY, JULY 25, NEWSPAPER FIRST 1969 , Mmra T mumiit T Ilk By MERRIMAN SMITH AG AN A, GUAM (UPI) President Nixon said Thursday night he would be willing to take part in a summit meeting with the Russians if it would help end the Vietnam war. The President told newsmen after his arrival on Guam from witnessing the splashdown of the Apollo 11 astronauts, that he thought summitry had not been particularly helpful in the past, but he would be willing to meet the leaders of the Soviet Union if it would help restore peace in Southeast Asia. Nixon was spending the night on this American out-- , post in the far Pacific before starting on the seven-natioswing to the Philippines. Indonesia, Thailand, India, Pakistan, Communist Romania and a brief stopoff in England en route home Aug. 3. 9,000 AT AIRPORT The President came to Guam and a cheerful welcome from an officially estimated 9,000 people at the airport after flying from the Apollo recovery carrier USS Hornet by way of Johnston Island. He landed on Guam at 4:23 11:23 p.m. p.m. MDT and was joined a Thursday few minutes later by his wife Pat, who flew in directly from Honolulu to join him for the trip. ; GROUNDS FOR SUMMIT ' After welcoming ceremonies, the President in a talk with newsmen posed several other possibilities for holding a summit meeting with the Soviet leaders: If such a conference could produce progress toward a more stable peace position in the Middle East. If the Russians are willing . to discuss realistic controls of n A Back on earth and under glass, astronauts Armstrong, Collins Order Now To Obtain Moon Book ABOARD USS HORNET Back from the moon (AP) but isolated from the world, the men of Apollo 11 today were pronounced in better condition than astronauts returning from previous flights. After 11 hours of examining the spacemen, Dr. William Carpenter said he found no of contamination evidence from the moon. Despite one mans minor ear inflammation, I think theyre in good shape, he said. - Russ Shpw Space Feat Live On TV - The (UPI) Soviet . Union showed the splashdown of Apollo 11 on television Thursday in its first live coverage- of any space : event. Western diplomatic sources said the unprecedented Soviet move was part of the current Kremlin attempt to improve relations with the United States. Some of the most generous praise came from the Soviet people as well as the government. It means we were lieaten said a fair and square, young Moscow man. He said he had hoped a Russian would be the first on the moon. Thank goodness theyre back! said a woman shopper hi Moscow. They have accomplished a wonderful feat. MOSCOW - Great In . The physician said Neil A. Armstrong, . Air Force Col. Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Collins showed less deterioration in heart and blood vessels than other Apollo men have had. He wasn't sure why. But he was sure that the inflammation in one of Arm 'News' To Print Moon Edition The fabulous moon trip and its effect on the life of man will be explained in a Moon Edition of the Deseret News Saturday. This Deseret News edition will contain a log of the flight and special articles by Hal Knight, Deseret News science writer, who was at Houston space headquarters during the entire moon flight of Apollo 11. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The. Washington Conventiqn Visitors Bureau has and named William P. Goodwill as of press and publici- ty. First Moon Rocks Arrive For Study CENTER, HOUSA prized package of moon rocks and dust arrived here today for the start of one cf historys great-- . est scientific investigations. Sealed securely in a white box, the first package of lunar samples gathered by the Apollo 11 astronauts touched down at a nearby air base and was driven under escort to scientists waiting to analyze them in a special lab at the Manned Space Center. Dr. Thomas Paine, administrator of the National and Space Adminis SPACE TON (UPI) Aero-aauti- tration, accompanied the first on their flight. No price tag has been placed on the lunar specimens gathered by astronauts Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin during their Buzz moonwalk Sunday but Paine ' samples he jokingly told newsmen thought they were worth $25 billion, more than all the gold we have at Fort Knox. A second box was en route in another plane, a precaution taken to avoid the loss of all of the approximately was not impor- Actually, tant. He said there may have been a buildup of fluid in the ear due to the pressures of and that the fluid was draining. The men will be under painstaking medical scrutiny for, 21 days due to the remote possibility they might have brought to earth some unknown and potentially dangerous germs from the moon. 60 pounds of moon samples should one plane crash. no one Orders for the Associated Press publication, Footprints on the Moon, are being ac- knows whether there are germs on the moon. Many scientists chances. 1 , Confined in a silvery quar--: antine trailer on the Hornet's hangar deck, the space heroes could barely see the world they had thrilled. But they did See MOON TRIO, Page 2 -WASHINGTON (UPI) will H. Humphrey seek the Senate seat Eugene J. McCarthy has decided to vacate next year, political aides of the former vice president said today. Humphreys return to the Senate as a Democrat from Minnesota would give him the forum he is thought to need to go after his party's presidential nomination again in 1972. Chances that the 1968 ' plunged off Des- News.- Preparation for e the volume is entering the final chapters following the successful mission " of Apollo 11. More than 150 full color photographs of Americas space efforts since the early 1960s will be published in the book, including photographs taken by the Apollo crew as well as rare pictures showing Russian ' launches. Cost for the book is $5 and delivery is expected by according to Associated Press officids. mid-Augu- Orders for the book are being accepted now. Send $5 in check or money order to on the Moon Footprints Book, Deseret News, P.O. Box 1257, Salt Lake City-- , Utah former vice president might have challenged and, severely beaten McCarthy in the Democratic- - Farmer-Labo- r party primary. But he added thai Humphrey was reluctant to do so because he feared his entry into the race would shatter the party he the - ; 84110. ' ' Sub Fires Missile ''-..- i i FLA. CAPE KENNEDY, A British submarine (UPI) submerged 30 miles off. the founded. . This source went on to say that Humphrey was very in Minnesota and popular predicted he would win to the Senate, where he served 16 years until 1964 when he became vice presi- dent. Florida, coast sent a Polaris missile "streaking 2,500 miles into the Atlantic Ocean Thursday. The missile was fired from the HMS Renown, which arrived two ago from its home port of ' Faslane, Scotland. , , Senator Kennedy meets press after court session. strategic arms. UNUSUAL MEETING was a highly unusual meeting between the chief executive and reporters lasting for approximately one hour. Newsmen were not permitted to quote him directly, but they were allowed to use- - his remarks in the third person. Nixon, said the primary thrust of his trip would be to develop an area of greater understanding as to the future of Americas role in Asia after settlement of the Vietnamese conflict. DOWN TO BUSINESS The President obviously was still filled with the drama and excitement of the splashdown and recovery of Americas moon men when he arrived at Agana Airport. But he quickly got down to the business ahead in his briefing. He had something going for him on this trip; the world reaction to the flight that put man on the moon. . It PLEADS GUILTY polit- Humphrey was in Yugoslavia near the end of a European tour, including a visit to Russia, and was not available for comment. His office said he would return to Washington Sunday. But his political confidants, who declined to be named, said there was no doubt he would run for the Senate after McCarthy announced Thursday in Minneapolis that he would not seek a third term. They also brushed off Humphreys own estimate that in 1972 he would be too old at 61 to make another bid for the Still Questions About Kennedy EDGARTOWN, presidency. One person close to both Humphrey and McCarthy said Today's Thought We cannot learn discipline by compulsion. Mahatma Gandhi y P. ad- ministration is determined to halt inflation, cautioned business and labor Friday against e wage and price big hikes. long-rang- as you can price goods out of the market, its passible to price labor out of the market too, Shultz told a news conference. Just His comments came at the same time the Labor Department reported that nearly 1.4 million workers won wage increases averaging more than 7 per cent a year in contract settlements the first half of this year. And the department reported two days ago that living costs were climbing at an annual rate of 6.4 per cent, swiftest rise since the Korean war. Shultz said he was particularly disturbed at what he called extraordinary wage hikes in the. construction industry, averaging some 15 per cent a year. Shultz said both unions and companies should take a hard at look President Nixons policy and realize that the economic situation could be quite different in that another year or two a they should consider this in labor negotiating contracts. Were not trying to tell them what to agree to, but I must say I have my reserva- n long-rang- e tions about these 15 per cent contracts, Shultz said. s If they make grossly erro-neoi- projections as companies and workers, there will be consequences they wont like," he added. The department said wage gains negotiated this year are running substantially above those last year. The report said wage and fringe benefit increases averaged 7.2 percent a year in key contract agreements covering construction, transportation, lumber, metal working, , and clothing industries. petroleum This compared with a 6.6 per cent average in 1968, the Bureau said. of MASS. two-mon- Schultz Cautions On Wage, Price Boosts Sec-retar- - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, leaving many questions unanswered, pleaded guilty today to a charge of leaving the scene of a fatal automobile accident. He was given a suspended jail sentence. The defendant will continue to be punished far beyond anything this court could impase, Dukes County (Uri) District WASHINGTON (AP) of Labor George Shultz, saying the Nixon ; I a M. Kennedy wooden bridge. The accident woman killed a 28:year-oi- d passenger and could put the Massachusetts senators ical future in jeopardy. the - eret HHH Will Seek Seat, Aides Say Hubert ' cepted how through doubt it. But the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis-tratio- n was taking no A-- Democratic standard bearer would get a second shot at the White House may have been enhanced last weekend when a car driven by Sen. Edward The Name Fits manager strongs ears Wire Pnoto and Aldrin flash smiles from quarantine aboard carrier Hornet. No Sign Of Moon Germs 3 Astros P Labor Statistics ; Judge James A. Boyle said. In suspending the minimum sentence which could be imposed on the charge, which is a misdemeanor in Massachusetts, the judge automatically placed Kennedy on probation for two months. Most first offenders in similar cases receive suspended sentences, court officials said. In Washington, a spokesman at the senator's office said Kennedy would make his first public statement from the family's Cape Cod compound. Kennedy, who was forced by poor weather to take the family boat to Marthas Vineyard, flew' back to the compound after the court appear- ance. By pleading guilty, Kennedy sidestepped the possibility of having to answer questions in court about circumstances surin accident the rounding which Mary Jo Kopechne, a Washington secretary, drowned when a car driven by the senator plunged Into a tidal pond on Chappaquiddick Island, which lies across a small channel from Martha's Vineyard Kennedy, 37, stood with his eyes cast down as the sus-pend- jail term was to the court, which announced was jammed with more than 150 newsmen and spectators. Kennedy and his wiffcJMt the courthouse at 9:12 a.m., -- accompanied by several state troopers. The senator paused on the top step of the front stairs and, grimly facing scores of reporters and spectators in front of him, said: See KENNEDY, Page A4 INSIDE THE NEWS SECTION A National, Foreign City, Regional Women's Pages Editorial Pages They're Your Schools Our Man Jones Music SECTION 10-1- 3 14, 15 -- 15 --- B City, Regional Obituaries Weather Map Action Ads SECTION 1-- 7 8, 9 -,- 1-4 4 C Young Americans "C 3 Comics 1 Theater 45-- 7 City, Regional SECTION D Sports Financial TV Highlights City, Regional 4 i 8 j .1-- 3 4, 5 .1.6 i7 |