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Show Home Delivery, Call Tribune Phones 521-281- 0 Information, Scores, Womens, News and Kdltorial, Sports, Promotion, Magazine, 521-450- 1; 524-450- Advertising departments Classified ads, General display, Retail display, 521-353- 524-454- 5; t 521-457- 524-458- 1. - x ; 5; 524-451- 524-270- 524-286- 521-452- 3 w A a- it? - 4 , lUklt,S ?', uecry .A. M a aid on Beirut ! Airport Ruin Still Smolder From Surprise Air Attack U.S., Russians Condemn Aet In U.jV. Decree By William N. Oatis Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - The Unit- ed States and the Soviet Union strongly condemned Israel before the Security Council Sunday night for its commando attack against Beirut International Airport. U.S. Ambassador J. R. Wiggins and Soviet Ambassador Jacob A. Malik the isiaeli Satin da j night raid at an urgent lv called council meeting. Lebanon called on the "n-ci- l to impose sanctions against Isiael, which defended the raid as retaliation for a Palestine commando attack on an Israeli airliner in Athens. r After a discussion, the council adjourned until 9 p.m. EST Monday. Wiggins called the Saturday night Israeli attack a most regrettable Israeli action which my government strongly By Dennis Neeld Associated Press Writer Widely conBEIRUT, LEBANON demned for the commando attack that destroyed the bulk of Lebanon's civil airlines Ileet, Isiael sent two jets on reconnaissance flights Sunday ovpr the still smoldering wreckage at Beiruts International Airport. Low passes by the scouting planes s'irred panic at the airport for the sec oml time in 12 hours. Lebanese troops dived for cover. There was no reaction from antiaircraft guns or from Lebanese fighters, based 40 miles away at Rawak. The jets sped off after making two quick runs. A British Overseas Airways Corp. air- - liner had taken off and passengers were cheeking in for Pan American and Dutch KLM flights when the Israeli pilots show ed up to assess the damage wrought in the lightning raid Saturday night. Thirteen planes lay demolished These wcie three Comets, two a Boeing 707, a VC10 and a Viscount belonging to Lebanon's Middle East Airlines: two Coronados and a DC7 of the Lebanon International Airlines; and a DCfi and a DC4 of Trans Meditert ranean Airlines, a freight carrier. ; A spokesman estimated the damage to the Middle East Airlines craft alone at $35 million, covered by insurance with British companies. He said MEA would continue operations with its four remaining planes, including a Boeing 707, and charter others to replace those lost. Cara--velle- s, two-hou- condemns. Associated iv This a of the earth greeted astronauts as tney rounded the moon after first orbit, Surface fea- - Prei Wirephot tures in foreground are on eastern edge of moon as seen from Earth. Earth sunset bisects Africa. Moon Photos Spectacular Lunar Crew Back Home 3y Edward It. Delong United Press International HOUSTON -heroes received a tumultuous welcome home Sunday, spent a few hours with their families and then took a look at the spectacular still photographs and movies they shot of the SPACE America's CENTER, moon-orbitin- miles out, the blue ball of From earth stood out in remarkable detail. I'm surprised they had the movie camera set up, said Paul Haney, chief at the Manned Spacecraft spokesman Center. They were pretty busy then, but theyie a lot more alert than most crews. In another sequence, Apollo 8 swept across the arid craters and mountains of the moon and did a tight pirouette half turn to line its antenna up with earth. Some 69 miles up, small new craters stood out brightly. The larger, older lunar features were duller. g lunar surface wasteland. Only a few hours after astronauts Frank Borman, James Lovell and William Anders glimpsed their own handiwork, the space agency released the photographs and 100 feet of movie film to the public. The movies were the most dramatic r, since those shot of America's first the late Ed White, as he floated outside his Gemini 4 capsule in June, Chides 'Outrageous Disregard He said the Thursday attack on an Israeli airliner at the Athens airport was an outrageous disregard of the laws of but no evidence had been pronations. duced to show that the Lebanese government was responsible. Soviet Ambassador Jacob A. Malik joined in the condemnation, but blamed the United States for encouraging Israel in her alleged aggression. He noted that Wiggins had taken what he called a new turn in U.S. policy by condemning Israel. Britain's Sir Leslie Glass expressed his countrys profound concern at the dangerous events in the Middle East and the terrifying trend. The French delegate, Claude Chayet, deplored the Israeli action. Irges Speedy Condemnation Malik not only insisted on speedy condemnation ol Isiael but asserted that the council must require Israel to punish those who took part in the Beirut attack. Lebanons permanent U.N. delegate, See Page 2, Column 1 space-walke- 1965. half-millio- n Shoot Entire Globe One sequence swept tom across the entire after Apollo 8 blasted moon at almost 25,000 from top to botglobe moments out toward the miles per hour. Associated Apollo 8 photo ing view of West Press Wire photo gives strikHemisphere. Brinks Revises Loss Estimates To $800,000 in Truck Holdup A Brink's Express BOSTON (AP) official revised upwards Sunday 1o $800,000 tne probable total loot in the rol ery of a Brinks armored truck Saturday by two daring and swift bandits. Felix A. Savage Jr., said after a daylong audit of the ledger In which money pickups were entered by the armored truck crew, that he believed the bulk of the loot was in cash, with the remainder in checks. He gave no breakdown. Earlier reports put the loot at $500,000. Detectives meanwhile scoured Boston's underworld seeking clues to the robbery, the 13th of a money express truck in Eastern Massachusetts since 1930. Savage said the key used by thp robbers to gain entrance to the truck was not issued by Brink's. The FBI concentrated on examination of flip key, the only firm clue picked up at the scene of the robbery. The robbers used the key to enter the truck where one guard was left while two other truck men took a coffee break in a nearby cafeteria Saturday night. The robbery was carried out in a matter of minutes in the crowded north end area of Boston, only four blocks from the building where Drinks was nibbed of $1,219,218 Jan. 17, 1950, in what was at the time the nation's largest cash roll-lcr- '. Ricnard E. Haines, 43, or Towkslmrj, was on guard in the truck, while the other two truckmen, John Gillespie, 50, and Joseph Kelly, 44, both of Boston, had coffee in a nearby cafeteria. The truck was amiss the street from the Union Oyster House, a well known Boston eating place just off the crowded market district. Earth Its Your Turn To End Stall, Allies Tell Reds wave-hoppin- Red-berete- d Yellowish Gray In color, the moon's surface appeared to be yellowish-gray- , just like the wet the astronauts described beach sand from their epic adventure to the moon and back. A sequence shot through Lovell's sextant, w hicli he used to guide Apollo 8 on mile voyage with pinpoint its accuracy, showes a violent red earth as he saw' it through the filter he used to keep the light from blinding him during navigation sightings. The space agency said more photographs and movies would be released Monday. One still shot showed the earth far away in the background and the moon in the foreground, a view' men had never seen before. Remember the shot from Gemini 7 (which Borman and Lovell flew In 1965) with the earth in the foreground and the said Haney. moon In flip background, Well, here's the reverse. U.S. Criticizes Attack The U.S. Embassy in Beirut Issued a strong statement deploring the attack, and saying the U.S. government cannot the Israeli understand or condone action. The statement said American Ambassador Dwight Porter and Yafi discussed ways of assisting Lebanon to restore its commercial airfleet through possible action of the U.S. government, American airlines, plane manufacturers and financial circles. New York Times Service The Israeli commandos, flying in The North Vietnamese and PARIS rewere helicopters, struck with teams Viet Cong negotiating all foreign ported to be consulting with each other pinpoint precision. Avoiding and explofirebombs craft, planted Allied they and with Hanoi Sunday following intimations that they ought to make the sives in plane after plane of the Lebanese lines and left them gutted shells and next move to break the long procedural heaps of tortured metal. For a mile, the in talks here. the peace impasse The Sough Vietnamese delegation was airport apron was a pattern of fire. Israel announced the raid was a reunderstood to be awaiting new instrucprisal for an Arab guerrilla attack with tions from Saigon. South Vietnamese officials here and in explosives and gunfire on an Israeli El A1 airliner at Athens Airport Thursday, Saigon are being told by their American in which an Israeli passenger was killed. counterparts that public opinion in ilia U.S. is growing increasingly impatient Regime Denies Complicity with the delays in Paris, and tends to The two guerrillas held in Athens blame South Vietnams intransigence for it. The Saigon government has insisted were Palestine refugees who had beeu that the Viet Cong team must not be living in Lebanese camps. The governseated in a manner that would Indicate ment here has denied complicity. equality in status with it. Tight security was clamped belatedly riot There were no known direct communi- on the airport Sunday. cations between U.S. and North Vietnampolice cordoned off the citys downtown Jewish quarter, ti.e home of some 3,000 ese delegates here during the weekend, Jews. and no meetings are scheduled. A source close to the Communist side said Sunday that Hanois representatives here were interested to hear from Cyrus R. Vance, the deputy head of the U.S. delegation, whether any new ideas were developed in his consultations with RichPresident Johnson, President-elec- t ard M. Nixon and other American officials last week. When someone makes a trip, he always brings something new with him, the source said. (Copyright) Monday's Forecast Salt Lake City and northern Utah Snow flurries and colder. Southern Utah Partly cloudy and colder. Weather map is on Page B-1- Extra security guards were posted around the American Embassy against possible reaction from Arab extremists, who blame the United States for every Israeli success. Beirut Airport, whose runways lie parallel to the Mediterranean, is a crossroads for Middle East air traffic and Lebanons fleet of v 'rimers was second to none in the Arab sph .. An MEA Boeing 707 stood in front of the airport terminal waiting to take olf See Page 4, Column 1 in Background The earth hung like a blue ball In the background of this picture, about the size of a quarter, its brownish continents almost obscured by fluffy white clouds. A color shot showed the crater 80 miles in diameter, and located just east of the Sea of Fertility on the righthand edge of the moons face. This was one of the landmarks Apollo 8 See Tage 2. Column 1 Lan-gren- Today's Chuckle Vocational counselor to young man: Your vocational aptitude test indicates that jour best opportunities exist wheie jour fattier holds an influential position. Pass Those Memories Around... By Alton Blakeslee Associated Press Writer The mysterious faculty DALLAS of memory apiioars to be encoded in molecules in the brain, new experiments show. The evidence comes in findings that what one animal learns can otten be transferred to the brain of another animal through an extract of bruin lissue. Further, differences now aie being found in the size of chemistry of the molecules that transfer different kinds of specific information or lessons learned by the animals. The new studies probing into memory were described Sunday to the American Association of for the Advancement Science by Drs. Georges Ungar and Ejnar J. Fjerdingstad of Baylor University College of Medicine. Dr. Ungar reported experiments with 2,810 animals, mostly rats, which normally prefer darkness to light. They were given electric shocks to make them fearful of entering a dark box. Extracts from their brains were injected into mice. These mice spent an average time of 63 seconds in the dark box, compared with 118 seconds by mice given extracts from brain of rats not trained to nvo'd the dark. Each testing period lasted 180 seconds. The extracts varied in potency, and some results were negative. But 53 per cent gave full effect and 38 percent had a weak effect. Dr. Ungar said. The stress of the electric shocks was not a factor, he said. It is therefore probable that the extracts contain some highly specific information encoded in molecular structure, he said. Extracts from rrts trained to avoid the dark did not affect recipients tested for another kind of avoidance problem, of strpping down from a platform, and t vice-vers- Four secific transfer factors now are being isolated and purified, and they show diflerences in size or In susceptibility to being inactivated by enezymes, Dr. lnhar said. ; runm ja'nWvffwni AisoJated Pr Apollo 8 photo of moon crater (ioclenius picks up the prominent rille that crosses its rim. The trio 1 Wirphot of clustered craters are Magehtaens, Mageihaens A and Colombo A. Goclenius is about 40 miie across. A A |