Show For Classified I'llone r91 "5r tgake t' Other Tribune departments: News information 2 scores 363-151- 1 355-751- 355-751- 1 other departments 36:3-152- Vol- - 5 UK No Salt Lake City ttah—ThuNtlay 19 (011 Morning—November jjjj U1 0 Homes j iL4 Burn in Vfoos-- I A 41 (Thursday) — Viet Cong guerrillas seized a South Vietnamese hamlet in the coastikl lowlands early Thursday and burned down more than 300 homes military spokesmen said The guerrillas then launched a mortar attack on government district headquarters with mortars set up inside the burning hamlet Nearly 200 miles ot the south Com- ' : - 4 The Communists kept up the mortar barrages from midnight until dawn in the five-darunning battle that has cost them at least 369 dead by US reports 'i 'i y i? 1 The predawn invasion of Dal Doc hamlet and the mortaring of the district headquarters nearby came after a guerrilla force of unknown size captured a small bridge leading into the hamlet then marched in from the south and west The hamlet is about 360 miles northeast of Saigon and about midway between US Marine headquarters at Da Nang and the US Army America Division headquarters at Chu Lai about 23 miles distant from each The ground war lapsed into scattered small contacts and foul weather was cutting into the intensified American air raids on North Vietnam's heartland as President Nguyen Van 'rhieu's new government settled down to business 4 - 4 ' t ! Nts 1 ' 4 z 4 —Associated Prime Minister Harold Wilson chats with his Foreign Secretary Presa Wireohoto George Brown right who is under fire for attack on British publisher Exchange Verbal Attacks Saw Cannons Fire Britain Reels to Repercussions Of Brown Publisher Dispute By William H Stoneman Chicago Daily News Writer LONDON — Britain is rocking to the repercussions of a row between Foreign Secretary George Alfred Brown and multimillionaire publisher Lord Thomson before a full audience at the Hotel Savoy in London Tuesday night Brown who is known for his unortho doic and undignified behavior at dinners cocktail parties and other social occasions pulled his latest act before a group of important American and British businessmen who were being entertained by Thomson at dinner Brown was the guest of honor and was scheduled to bore his fellow guests with a stodgy speech about Britain's efforts to join the European Common Humphrey Visit In Asia Stirs Demonstrations Market The occasion suddenly came alive when he made an attack on his host and the Sunday Times which Thomson owns for printing a series of articles about the British spy Kim Philby Brown indicated that they had revealed dangerous information to the KUALA LUMPUR MALAYSIA (AP) — Vice President Hubert H Humphrey neer from wartorn Vietnam to normally tranquil Malaysia Wednesday for a three-da- y visit that has touched off a demonstrations flurry of Apparently unknown to Huniptun his effigy was lynched by a mob of leftist Chinese youths in Penang City in the north Hundreds of demonstrators paraded in Kuala Lumpur and in some of the capital's suburbs with banners in Malay Chinese and English reading: "Humphrey get out" nor editorial Ivriters or columnists have had access to the cables from 110 cowttries and the men who are responsible for planning of the most intricate Russians - East President Johnson said he would be less than frank il he did not concede Ellsappointment at congressional inaction on his bill to boost taxes — a step he labeled as vital to fighting Inflation and holding rates "Some of us think it is about time we stopped giving the Russians a head start on what we are doing and—my dear boy — I ask you and the Sunday Times to take this into account and for Cod's sake stop" he shouted Brown's temper had been touched off by a joke about himself and his public behavior told by Thomson in his introduction of the speaker This referred to a fictional George Brown whose doctor advised him to give up smoking drinking and women if he wanted to live to be a hundred The point of the story was that Brown might not live to be 100 but that if he didn't it would seem like 100 years ''Everybody here who has heard the Jokes you presume to tell about me" Brown told Thomson at the beginning of his own remarks "knows that on occasion if pushed you would break your word And you bloody well did" he added using a word not ordinarily used here in polite society but which Brown utters with reckless abandon Nobody seemed to know the basis of Brown's charge that Thomson had broSee Page 2 Column 2 - Although Congress seems to have given up on a tax increase Mr Johnson wasn't doing so at this point But neither was he predicting success for his proposed 10 per cent income tax surcharge "We have to watt and see" he said The President told reporters under that the people are con- questioning corned about Vietnam and don't know what to expect of Congress and the ture This he said has been reflected in the behavior of the stork market Mr Johnson said he did not know when the bell would ring to close the present congresskinal session hot sakt hoped it would not come until the mem- bers have "faced up to some of the sinportant problems that confront to" Ile particularly deplored such thingi as cuts in the model cities and rent supplement programs Tales Exception With respect to Vietnam Mr Johnson took vigorous exception to the idea that be had changed from a policy statement In his 1964 presidential campaign that American boys were not going to be used to do the job Asians could do "There hasn't been any change in policy" he said He said there was only a change in one sentence of a speech he made Ile said that we have always said that we didn't want any American boys doing what Asian boys should — and he was using the "we" to refer to himself What he said (luring the campaign President Johnson added "did not imply then and does not imply now that we would not do all that is needed to deter Editor's Note: This is the Seth a series of articles by a team of reporters of the New York Times on the first 50 years of Soviet ruts - in Russia to be commemorated On Nov: 7 g 1PeOgOeOoo000000A0011WW10Ola1000A000i0d1A) airport The demonstrations however were on a much smaller scale than the violent protests that left one dead and several injured during President Johnson's visit here on his Southeast Asian tour one year ago By Robert Lipsyle New York Times Writer In start 50 years from nearly a standing the Soviet Union has increased to 50 mil sports participation from lion and has become a leading athletic power In the world From the- - ranks of 1984 its organized physical culturists will A visitor to the Soviet Union sees spring the teams to beat in the 1968 sport begin in earnest when he stands on -- — Olympic Games a misty windswept bluff overlooking the There are no professional teams In Gulf of Vinland the Soviet Union to skim the athletic ( ' A dozen boys damp-facecream no factions struggling for control and claim over a lumpy cinof amateur sports A central system derfield scrabbling to kick a brown ball 1 500 Welcomes Humphrey - spends more than $2200000000 annually to fulfill an axiom attributed to Lenin that a nation cannot be strong unless it is strong in sports Even now a year before the world meets in Mexico city Soviet Olympians are honing their talents in competitions throughout the world as Individuals and as members of national teams But Soviet officials will say that preparation for next October's Olympics began many years ago even as youngsters right now are being groomed for the Olympics of d - red-knee- d t a —Associated Press Houston Mayor Louie Welch tells Senate panel techniques used by aggression" At one point Mr Johnson was asked for his assessment on what peace demonstrations have done to the American cause and how they have affected Hanoi policy Urges Introspection The President said he would hope anyone who has some peace plan would engage in introspection and ask himself If what he was going to say would contribute to solving the problem If it would he said the person had the right to say it "As far as I am aware" the Presi Wimps-rot- his city to deal with ram silo lence at hearing In Washing-tot Houston 'Gambled and Won' Negro Tells Riot Study Panel By Walter It Mears Associated Press Writer -- tions can be passed on to these groups as to who is responsible for what at the local level" be said become frustrated easily 'People when they feel they are being given the runaround" Welch testified as the Sea ate permanent investigations subcommittee opened its inquiry into recent vie: lence that flared through some American WASHINGTON — A Houston poverty worker testified Wednesday his Texas city "gambled and won" when the most militant Negroes in town — including two men indicted in the slaying of a policeman — were hired in a federally fi nanced summer job program Samuel L Price a Negro and a deputy director of the Harris County Community Action Association told a Senate subcommittee investigating riots the program—called Project Go—was hastily created after a fatal outburst of gunfire at Texas Southern University The policeman was killed May 16 by sniper fire from a dormitory at the state's largest Negro college cities Seven Polsonnt4rrs Plot to Collect Life Insurance? Recruit Most Militant On the Inside Page Business Classified Comics Editorials Foreign Page Society Sports D-7- Price said 3 B-- 2 Star Gillet B-- 2 Al Television B-- 3 Theaters 9 National Valentine 9 Wash Obituaries AND MORE '1 Grand Central tion G Sugar House Days in Sec tion A B-- 1 D-6- Sports Become Mania to Soviets No arrests were reported though police had to fire several rounds of tear gas to disperse an unruly banner-wavingroup of 70 which demonstrated near Humphrey's motorcade route from the c down what he called galloping Interest Russia Today No Arrests Reported ye Isn't Giving Up Parade Goes Well militarily and economically" Humphrey wound up his visit to Vietnam by looking in on coastal bases at Da Nang and Chu Lai Then he flew to Kuala Lumpur Malaysia House Cabinet Room which also pro duced some presidential chiding of mem hers of Congress and others who are criti cal of his Vietnam policy In addition Mr Johnson denied he had reversed his policy since the 1964 presidential campaign when he said he was against sending Americans to Viet nam to do a Job Asians could do The conference swung back and forthfrom domestic matters and legislative programs and Congress to war in the said he had read statements of of Congress "but neither they dangerous and comprehensive have ever taken" Mr Johnson said without any elabo ration he didn't think those who talk of -snow" and "phonies" help the Marines in the DMZ or contribute to solving the rroblerns Americans so earnestly seek to solve President Johnson said he thought if the American people could read the See rage 3 forum rki detailed steps Iar Keep Up Barragel "I saw the firing of cannons and I could see a destroyer offshore" Humphrey told newsmen The vice president said he is convinced "There has been genuine progress In every area in Vietnam" He said he would carry home this message: "If the American people unite in determination to see this through without complaint we will shorten this war" "I think we are winning this struggle" he said "I don't say it is won but -- - we are winning it in terms of politics lie members These appraisals came from a sur- prise news conference in the White 4 : wrong" progress" 1 munist troops refusing to give up despite staggering losses launched mortar and light ground assaults early Thursday on US 1st Infantry Division positions an American Special Forces camp and a Vietnamese district headquarters all near the Cambodian border high-flyin- g on 'there have been no great unexpected developments that have come from people on the outside who have busily engaged in finding out what is — President Johnson WASHINGTON conceded Wednesday things "are not going as well as we would like" in Congress But he said he is optimistic about Vietnam and "I believe we are making i I A big National Day parade in Saigon went off smoothly despite fears of a fresh Communist attack on the heels of the mortar shelling of the Independence Palace's grounds Tuesday night Last year the Viet Cong shelled the parade killing eight persons and wounding 45 Vice President Hubert IL Humphrey surveyed the battleground along the Demilitarized Zone from a lumbering CI18 transport flying at a quarter-mil- e altitude between the effective range of enemy machine guns and missiles US Marine outposts there are the main allied shield against a North Vietnamese invasion dent went By Douglas B Cornell Associated Press Writer 4 SAIGON Lights d ey By Robert Tuckman Associated Press Writer Deputy Prime Minister Tun Abdul Razak welcomed Humphrey En route to the city they repeatedly heard explosions resembling gunshots But these were from firecrackers going off as Malaysia's large Indian community celebrated the Deepavall Festival of 1 - Guerrillas Seize Hamlet as Base -- Cits-1---Viot----HGt111- S Colig Push — 6 - 3-0- - Lake City and Utah — Colder snow In north and east mountainous regions Weather map is on Page D-Salt rriee Ten rentg 190 2 Snow John Show at a splintery wooden goal They might be small boys at play anywhere except for their intensity and their silence From a corner of the field a middle-age- d man studies them relentlessly lie has been watching them since January when they trooped to a drafty gymnasium owned by a trade union sports society called Sparta Beneath crimson banners that read "Mass and quality is the slogan of Soviet sport" and "Glory to the Communist Party" the boys had been examined by doctors interviewed by teachers and handed soccer balls There were 512 boys in January the oldest 16 the youngest 10 By late March cinder there were 100 ready for-th- e field The middle-ageman divided themn into groups by age The See Page 16 Column d - - ARCADIA MA (AP) — A father's plan to collect $14000 in life insurance led to the fatal poisonings of seven young children DeSoto County Sheriff Frank and poverty officials conscious13'I set )out to recruit the most militant of Houston's Negroes for Project Go put ng them to work at $140 to $2 an hour on recreation civic improvement and si liar sobs "how did it work out?" asked Sen Jacob K City Javits Cline chard Wednesday beCline told a news conference lieved that James Richardson the fa ther was "motivated by a remtmeration for life insurance The cause of death was from eating something which con he ) "Perfectly well" Price replied 'We gambled and won Houston did not tamed parathion" blow" But Price said the conservative element in Houston forced the poverty Five Other Death The sheriff said Richardson told him that five more of his children by a forzner marriage had died in Jacksonville over an undisclosed time period Cline said he would gn to Jacksonville Tlitirsday to look into the deaths Richardson a itinfrant fruit picker and his wife Annie Mae 29 were held in the county jail on 4c hild neglect charges pending the outcome of a coroner's inquest Thursday Cline and County Judge Cordon hays told newsmen they felt they had enough evidence "to file murder charges against Richardson" but said State Atty Frank Schaub preferred to convene a coroner's jury program to fire the two men under indictment He identified the two as Floyd Nicholas and Trazawell Franklin both students at the university Forced to Fire "They did not turn out to be bad said "We were redirecting" them But Washington forced us to kick them out" Earlier Wednesday Houston Mayor Louie Welch testified that blaming city hall for racial rioting is a misconception that can add to Negro frustration and produce riots help NVelch said the idea that a mayor's e can deal with all problems confronting a city "only leads to rising expectations that cannot be met" This he added can itself produce destructive out- apples" Price - Reason for Jury John Treadwell Schaub's assistant said the state would have a stronger case if Richardson were indicted on information gathered by the inquest jury rather than on 2 charge brought by the sheriff "The coroner's jury can bind him breaks "With the federal government setting so many policies and actually sponsoring commercials on television aimed at helping minority groups severe misconcep over for grand (Richardson) jury action" Treadwell said "It only takes probable cause if the sheriff wants to and that's not a take out a warrant —stmng case" Advertisement in a Wisconsin paper Mr and Mrs Richardson's seven chi"Wanted clean-livincold dairy helper If ldren died last week after eating lunch from a pot which Cline said the you drink gamble or eat margarine don't apply" victims "licked clean" ' Today's Chuckle g - --- a |