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Show INDEX ? HEATHER SI Amusements Classified Comics Editorial Page Obituaries Society Sports Stocks VOL Fair and a little warmer today, with temperatures is the lew 40g. SI Probability o! measurable snow decreasing to zero. Utah at a whole, generally fair and a little wanner. Highs In the upper 30s and 40s. SO I 15-1- 1 3 22 PROVO, UTAH, SUNDAY, MARCH 48, NO. 40 14, 1971 $2.50 PER MONTH - PRICE Around the World Strategy fcr U.S. VIENNA (UPI)-T- he the to Strategic delegation arms Limitation Talks (SALT), which resume Monday, has brought instructions from President Nixon to reject the Soviet to limit Union's proposal nuclear arms curbs to anti-- Explorer Satellite In Orbit CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)-T- he nation's 43rd Explorer satellite sped into a distant on a $12.4 orbit Saturday million mission to find out more about earth's space environment and the seeting radiation, solar gases and magnetic forces out there. CHICAGO According to the sources, the American delegation will press instead for a "mis." of curbs on offensive as well as defensive rockets. SALT, considered among the crucial super power negotiations, began in Nov. 1969 in Helsinki, continued in April 1970 in Vienna and again in Helsinki last November. The fourth round will open Monday amid guarded hopes if not for some progress, concrete agreements. Gerard C. Smith, chief American negotiator, arrived with his aides Friday, saving the significant stage" despite "significant differences" between the U.S. and Soviet ideas. The Russian delegation ar- rives Sunday, against the background of a recent warning from Moscow it will not permit "one sided advantages" for the United States. "This is a fairly complete remote laboratory that I think is going to give a very good picture of what's going on," said Dr. Frank B. McDonald, chief scientist for the spacecraft known as IMP for NEW DELHI (UPI)--An atInterplanetary Monitoring Plat- tack on Prime Minister Mira form. Gandhi by the chief justice of The craft was India's Supreme Court Saturday sounded the bell for what may reported speeding away from earth on a path that appeared develop into a battle fcr close to the planned orbit supremacy between parliament and the judiciary. designed to take it 121,000 miles Chief Justice S.M. Sikri, in a out every four days. It was in Chandigarh, blunt expected to take tracking warned speech Mrs. Gandhi and her stations many hours to plot the party that the government's precise trajectory. are circumscribed by powers indicate data "Preliminary constitution. He the country's all spacecraft systems are accused Mrs. Gandhi and her operating as planned," reported Jeremiah J. Madden, assistant supporters of trying to under mine the judiciary. priject manager. "If all goes There was an ominous silence be should IMP fully well, Mrs. Gandhi's New Confrom 28 days." operational in about Explorer 43 was launched on gress party, its difficult mission at 11 ajn. EST by a new type Delta rocket. SAIGON Municipal Elections In France PARIS (UPI)-Nati- onal Gaul-li- st leaders prepared Saturday for municipal elections that will provide their first test of grass roots popularity since the death of Gen. Charles de Gaulle. The list of candidates for 522,000 city, town and village posts at stake in Sunday's first round of municipal elections included 36 government ministers, 191 senators and 379 deputies. Almost 30 million voters were registered to go to the polls to elect local officials to run their communities for the next seven years. It was the first nationwide electoral test in France since the election of President Georges Pompidou in June 1969, and the first faced by the Gaullists since the death of De Gaule last November. The polling also was seen as a test for the legislative elections to renew the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies due in 1973. Since the departure of De Gaulle from power, strains have been showing among the various factions of the gaullist majority elected in the 1968 landslide. Wednesday. The Frenchmen were identified as Jean-PierMartelli, 36, and Robert Leca, 43. They named the fugitive as Carlo Albertini. re New Minority t ry ri. t L, " "it Oslo Regime 'OSLO Trygve Bratteli announced Saturday formation of a new minority Labor government, crisis precipending an itated by differences over whether Norway should join the European Common Market. y Bratteli, leader of the Labor party, was asked by King Olav V Wednesday to form a new government to coalireplace the center-righ- t tion of Pei Borteu. Sentenced In - MONTREAL (UPI) Paul Rose, an admitted Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ) The Truth! By CARL RIBLET JR. More dictionaries are sold today than ever before, which does not mean, however, that more dictionaries are used. After all, you have to know how to spell In order to find a word in the dictionary and, teachers tell us, it is appalling how many pupils can't spell -t. STACKED UP AT Landing Zone Ham Nghl near Khe Sanh, American support base for me Laotian operation, U.S. helicopeters ferry in supplies. Military sources reported the S. Vietnamese were making maximum use of American helicopters in a new stage of the Laos incursion emphasizing air mobility and avoiding direct confrontation with strong North Vietnamese forces. (UPI Telepboto by Tosbio Sakal) Governor Figures in Overtones From Utah Legislative Session SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Gov. Calvin L. Rampton just seemed to pop up at the wrong times during the regular session of the 39th Legislature, and the chief executive continued to plague the House and senate even in adjournment. Rampton said that there will be a special session on reapportionment, which must take place by October or November, and he chided the Senate for its refusal to pass a $4.1 million Mine Occupation, Tax on Kennecott Copper Corp. So, the Democratic governor looked as if he were having the last laugh in the bitterly contested fight over the Mine Occupation Tax, which his lieutenants managed to push through the House. The special session, which high leadership sources were predict- governorship and the undoubted political acumen of the present noted on both sides occupant of the aisle in every discussion on the subject may combine to make Gov. Rampton the near final interpreter of the success or failure of the 39th session. It will be the governor who has the authority to call a special session and to frame the issues for discussion. The final arguments may come before the people in the November, 1972, election when the governorship itself and control of both houses will be at stake. What some regard as the opening round in the 1972 campaign with the governor's began remarks to both houses before the sine die adjournment came make it bitingly clear, it is apparent that the special session, to hid mind, comes about because of the Senate's failure to act on reapportionment. If there are financial overtones to the special session, the blame might also be laid at the door of the upper house which not only rejected the Mine Occupation Tax, but shook the governors control of his party there. Rampton lost three Democratic senators on the mine vote, and would have lost more had he not addressed a personally Democratic caucus, and told them he would regard a negative vote as a challenge to his party n and cannot be a sanctuary from the law" and that university administrators must be ready to meet violence immediately, and outside using campus police "to necessary." Dr. Clark the full Kerr, extent former Chancellor of the University of California, ai.J Chairman of the Carnegie Commission, released the report at a news conference on the eve of the National Conference of Education, which opens in Chicago Sunday. The report, signed by Kerr and 17 other prominent educators, business and profes- - Solon Says RussQuit Missiles WASHINGTON (UPI) -Se- nate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said Saturday Soviet troops have been withdrawn from Egyptian missile sites along the Suez Canal. Meeting with newsmen in his office, Mansfield said Egyptians were now manning the Surface-to-A- ir Missle (SAM) sites along leadership. House Speaker Richard elaborated on Howe, 1 shortly after a.m. Friday. While the governor did not the governor's thinking after adjournment when he said that the "greatest disappointment ing over three weeks ago the session was that the during to some but denying privately, other published sources, may budget we passed will have to be funded in part from the proalso have financial overtones. perty tax increase, which the The Joint Appropriations ComSenate could have avoided. mittee did not take the gover"I suspect," Howe added, nor's budget and cut it. Sen. the governor will have "that Wallace H. Gardner, United International Press By to present when the issues other and the cludrman, Fork, Egypt's semiofficial newspaRep. D. Leon Reese, per Al Ahram said Saturday session is called." But, the added that added $4.1 million to that unless Israel pledges speaker emphatically the governor's total with both complete withdrawal from all financial issues will not be House and Senate approving the occupied Arab territory the among those discussed. The speaker said that he was $531.1 million Appropriations Bill Middle East will be plunged without debate late Thursday. into a new war "whose victims disappointed "that we weren't to do something about reRampton said during a Friday will not only be the countries of able apportionment. afternoon news conference that mis area." Howe said that there "seemed the Senate's failure to pass the At the same time, Prime (Continued on Page 11) graduated mine occupation tax Minister Golda Meir said in an would mean an increase in the interview with the Times of property tax of between 1.5 and London that Israel will not give 2.2 mills. up Egypt's Sharm The governor said this in- Syria's Golan Heights, Jordan's By United Press International In 177G it took 29 days for crease, on top of the existing 7.2 East Jerusalem or the Gaza mill property tax, would almost Strip. As for Jordan's West news of the adoption of the restore the tax rate to the 9.7 Bank, she said a new Declaration of Independence to mills when he took office in 1965. border must be travel from Philadelphia to The power and prestige of the negotiated. Charleston, S.C. Mideast War stimulate negotiations between Egypt and Israel. "It could indicate a Soviet drawback in a degree based on a recognition of the tinderbox situation which exists in the area," Mansfield said. He also cited news reports that Soviet pilots no longer were flying Egyptian planes. The presence of 12,000 to 15,000 Russian troops in Egypt has been a major factor in the reluctance of Israel and the United States to make concessions to produce a peaceful settlement. " 1L HAFEZ General Is New Syria President DAMASCUS (UPI)-- Lt. Gen. Hafez was officially declared President of Syria after winning a Saturday national referendum with 99.2 per cent of the vote. He was informed of his victory at a noon ceremony, and he drove to the national palace amid shouts of "Hafez! general will be sworn into office Sunday at a session of Turkey (UPI)-Mili- tary commanders who forced Premier Suleyman government to resign kept up pressi?e on civilian politicians Saturday by stationing tanks on Ankara's outskirts and staging maneuvers close to the capital. Witnesses said about 50 tanks moved into strategic positions along five major highways d "unexplainably reason to believe will they remain that way. The commission said the nation in the past 10 years has been in greater turmoil than at any time since the period of the Civil War more than a century ago. The report said the "overwhelming majority of campuse. are peaceful nearly all the time," and estimated that "not more than 1 per cent" of students have participated in the disorders. Agreement WASHINGTON (UPI)-S- en. Charles H. Percy, proposed Saturday a sweeping arms control agreement between the United States and the for Soviet Union, calling all antiballistic dismantling missile and multiple warhead systems. Percy released a speech be will deliver in the Senate L, Monday urging the Nixon administration to make major in its bargaining changes position at the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) in Vienna. He said the United States should propose: A total ban on the ABM, rather than limiting the defensive missile to Moscow and Washington national command said. ry By RANDALL L GREEN Congressman K. Gunn McKay of Utah's First Congressional District was in Utah County Saturday and met with several community leaders Congressman McKay's support in helping to qualify the Provo Airport for designation as an air- freight terminal or as an alternate to the Salt Lake City and airport He was also extended a Chamber of Commerce officials at the Provo Chamber of Commerce office at 2 p.m. One purpose of his visit was to get some indication of how residents feel about vital issues and to answer questions about his position on questions that come up in the House of Representatives. Chamber officers solicited personal invitation to the Utah County Aviation Day Air Show which is scheduled for May 1. In casual conversation, Congressman McKay touched on a number of vital issues, including the environment, the economy, education, and the 1972 presidential election. He said he was glad to learn that the Utah State Highway Department had responded to enof the proddings vironmentalists and were taking precautions to prevent undue damage to the Provo Canyon in building of a new highway. that the same thing is happening with the controversial SST. There are those who are against such things under any condition, he said, but the SST has been redesigned and modified until it is no more He-sai- serious an environmental problem than the 747. All the opponents have to fight, against now is the expense of the project which is not really an environmental issue, he stated. "My feeling has always been that we don't retreat from technology; we control it, and use it to control and protect the environment." MCKAY, right, chats with Gordon Bullock, of the Provo Chamber of Commerce, during a t visit in Utah County Saturday. REP. K. GUNN or unrest. been quiet" during the 1970-7- 1 school year, but that there is ni Rep. McKay Visits Provo, Airs Issues The military moves appeared aimed at consolidating the commanders' control over the country until the civilian politicians came up with a government to the military's There was no sign of disorder have multi-heade- wracked Turkey for six months. liking. Book Co. ll Kerr notsd in releasing the report that American campuses d an into Ankara. Jet muscle were staged elsewhere the skies in the country as military and patrolled civilian leaders sought a new above key military installations. government to replace the one The army &nd air force also that quit Friday under threat of staged maneuvers about 15 military takeover such as miles from the capital, using happened in 1960. American-supplieThe military commanders jets, armor guns and other said they wanted a government modern heavy weaponry. tough enough to cope with Diplomatic sources said simi- worsening social, economic and lar reminders of military political crises which have leading fighters McGraw-Hi- A freeze on all offensive and an the Peoples Council, then weapons systems deliver a major speech. agreement by the United States its multiple The Syrian strongman, who to dismantle took control in a bloodless coup independently-targeteNov. 13, previously served as vehicles (MIRV). The Soviets, who are further behind in prime minister. The referendum was the first MIRV development, would have in Syria in nine years and to agree to accept a ban on d represented the first time testing of their missiles. women were able to vote. Turk Commanders Put Pressure on Civilians ANKARA, y Hafez!" and applause, radio centers as the Soviets have Damascus said. proposed. "The Moscow ABM The radio said the should be dismantled," Percy Now You Know Israeli-Jordani- sional men, will be discussed by a panel of university educato" during the four-daChicago conference, Kerr said. It will be published next month by the Percy Asks Arms Curb qar-plan- es "jungle-buster- the canal and cUy Russian "advisers" wers present. He called the action a C significant step in the effort to Egypt Sounds Warning of Laporte Killing Isn't It "Bad spelling is the best spelling when it conforms to sound." Thomas Wharton Collena MARSEILLES, France (UPI) -- French police disclosed Saturday the seizure of 37.5 pounds of heroin destined for the United States and the arrest of two Frenchmen involved. U.S. Attorney General John N. Mitchell, in making a similar announcement in Washington, placed the retail value of the drug at S4 millioi , Police said a third suspect, an Italian, escaped when police raided a hotel room where the heroin was being transferred on e dropping bombs were reported Saturday to have cleared new landing zones in Laos that would place South Vietnamese troops closer to the North Vietnamese border than at any time since they opened a Laos offensive five weeks ago. The missions by big U.S. Air Force C130 Hercules transport planes carrying the parachute-droppe- d bombs, according to military sources, blasted at least three landing areas for helicopters out of the jungles north of Sepone, main target to date of the Laos campaign. Exact location of the new landing zones was not disclosed but military sources said they were well beyond northernmost positions now held by the 24,000-ma- n South Vietnamese task force which is trying to cut the Ho Chi Minn Trail-Ha- noi's military lifeline. (Continued on Page 4) Assails Gandhi Heroin Ring (UPI) U.S. 7.5-to- India Official 2 Nabbed In Cvne-gi- New Laos Landings Readied a "may reach talks (UPI)-T- he on Higher Commission Education Saturday called on and the nation's colleges universities to adopt a bill of rights and responsibilities to protect dissent and control disruption on their campuses. "Dissent must be protected, disruption must be ended," the commission said. The commission said that to achieve these goals, "repression must be prevented and unnecessary harshness by law enforcement officers must be avoided." But it said a campus "is not missile systems, diplomatic sources said Saturday. most F ovore Rights7 Talks SALT Off CISej)e U.S. Readies CENTS 20 president-elec- Congressman McKay said. Asked about the economic outlook for the immediate future, Congressman McKay indicated that while he would (Continued on Page 4) |