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Show I wss S? mm T7I Sr'a Founded 1650 u ken Utah territory was knoun as the State of Deseret' SB fesSLaass VOL 383 NO, 103 42 PAGES 15 CENTS SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH U.S. halts retrieval of S. Viet aircraft TUESDAY, MAY Turn in all guns, cash, VC orders Saigon s i ubug Military Man Uomm'ttc-- i broadcast a dcrr.aii'i its List vi dm that rdl mildarv otfictrs and servicemen. policemen and all foi mer government workers res ister between May 8 and May 81 and tunt in all nwiu.y and V3rVM Thailand's Trims Minister Kukrit Franco demanded the Untied States halt removal of the planes which are also claimed by the new Viet Cong gov emmetit in Saigon as war booty. But a ne spoke the earner USS Midway was sailing out of Thai v. aters wi'h a load of them U.S. Embassy spokesman said Ambassador Edward E Masters had agreed to a temporary suspension' of tne removal of further places and added that it was norma practice for the Thai and U S governments to consult on ship and plane mov emer.ts in and out of the country . A The spokesman declined to make any comment on the whereabouts of the Midway or Kukni's statements, referring ail questions to Washington Hanoi ' limed Thailand tonight that it must bear the serious consequences for allow mg Smith Vietnamese military aircraft at U Tapao airbase to be taken to the United States. i the U.S launched an airlift of M Cambodian refugees to Camp Pendleton, Calif , tod iv that inei,0rsi iormer President sau Kiiam Khoy . Khoy took over from Lon No! on April 1. Meanwhile, , .. d previous in U w 0 In Washington The nation's largest wuik stoppage mav be close to an end as a tentative agreement has been reached to end an strike bv machinists agamst McDoui) Corp W .1. INery Jr , head ot the Federal Mediation and Com illation Service, announced the agreement after a live-da- y marathon bargaining meeting. A ratification ot 'he talks wavote will come Sunday. Main it amey. A simmering dispute over the next head of the Marine prompted the Corps ha genercorps two als to k for early retirement, military sources say. t reoorts. the Accuniin present cuiiuiiaudunl, Gi 1. Roilert Cushman J t., w), mid the assistant commandant, Gen. Earl Anderson, 55, have asked to retire eailv. and the Navy is reportedly ready to V y star-studde- Communist South Vietnam , vere numshment has bet n a euphemism for execution The coW appeared to he a move to reorganize the armed In fsiJ csv u nUrtf. r Vi nnv nuo v uvuwwu itoutit vii sunetiderwl to the Khmer Rouge ou April 17, told iiewsir.cn he would toe in America ad will nut go back t" Cambodia until tr.c re is freedom there. He was accompanied by his family, includuig nine adults and nine children FT. y Saigon Radio broadcast said he order must be strictly car-nsoat and that those who do not report by 2400 hours (midnight! May 31 but dehhcrately h.de will be severely punched Radio Haiv'i broadcast monitored in Smga-por- e to trsuport U1 cnid tbs An'.ncni planes from the airbase w as an act of plunder. A oday in the News forces and police in South Vietnam follow .ng the Communists victory. Its coincided sweeping u ... . ,1 v; v t V lut uni W mvuu namese soldiers to rtium 'ram ex.le abroad and wtih demands that Thailand return 129 American built planes flown there by Son'll Vietnamese Air Force refugees. With Saigon radio reports saying the city was returning to normal the Paris delegation of the Provisional Revolutionary d Government hoisted their red and blue Viet Cong Has over the stone mansion winch previously housed the South Vietnamese legation. Helped by a group of volun teers from the Vietnamese colony. they we.e Lila jr cU .wing up Combined UPf. AP aam.ti.t BANGKOK 'LTD The United States agreed today to susnend temporarily the lemma! of t.S warp Lines flown to Thailand by fleeing South Vietnamese air force pilots But the agrertun? came after the United States already had removed the most valuable jet planes METRO 6, 1975 See CONG on a-- A-- 8 President Ford last week nominated Lt. Gc.n Louis Wilson to be the new commandant over Cushmans Ford furious at critics of Jordans King Hus-ei- n. currently in the U.S . has negotiated an arms deai that will provide Hawk antuiireiiiti missiles aiid cther detense equipment, but U.S. officials say the deal does not represent a new commitment and will not shift the halance of power in the Mideast Hussein, meanwhile, said m a speech today that his country as well as Egy pt .and Syria arc eager to make peace with Israel resettlement Across the nation WASHINGTON (LTD President Ford today told Republican congressional leaders he is damn mad that tht re is some American resistance to the resettlement of Vietnamese refugees in the United States. Congressional leaders quoted Ford as saying the concept of the resettlement effort is morally right Tile Presidents views were relayed to reporters by Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott following a meeting President Ford is holding his first news todnv. TV session cooWpnee in more than a is scheduled to be telecast live by the three major networks at a: 30 p.m. MDT. nth , UPi It just burns me up. these great as saying. humanitarians. Now. they just turn heir bucks ford Using some of the strongest language of h's presidency, aiso told the meeting: We didii t do it with the Hungarians, we didn't do it with the Cubans, and we're not going to do it now. Scott smd that Ford thought n was shocking ana amazing that there would be opposition to the refugee A-- at photo Dade County, Fla., firemen and rescue workers pump air down a narrow irrigation well near Miami to keep onnunk for hole to be Mcbaef Srir1!, 2, r1:" him. Michael, whose well beside the to save dug the rescue, was survive did not disposable diapers 8 healthy and squirming when he was saved. His rroher, and brought Barbara, 20, couldn't afford a baby-sittMichael to the field where she picks beans for $8 a day. After the five-hoordeal she sobbed as a rescuer cried, "We got you, babe, come on!" er ur aims tax at makers of Bill ' for refugees 'Mini-governme- nt CAMP PENDLETON, Vietnamese refugees, under the direction of Khuong Huu mayor Dieu and with the blessing cf the U S. military, are setting miniup their own within the government military command at tins Marine base. Dieu, educated at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and former chairman of the Vietnamese Agricultural Development Bank, said a' a news conference Monday he and Uo other refugees would set up a nucleus of about 20 persons (TJPD who would coordinate the care of the evacuees. He said this would include the nuts and bolts sort of thing such as calling for a doctor when needed, getting families together and announcing new arrivals on the loudspeaker, A total of 16.0C3 refugees had been pioce.ssed through the camp by Monday night, with 5,819 processed out. About 3,373 persons arrived at the camp Monday, bringing the total at that tine to Associated Press Americans cut back on borrowing again in March, meaning they were were not meeting economists expectations they would buy the country out el recession. And sales reports showed that in April consumers were not meeting the expectations of American auto makers either. The report Monday that sales of American cars continued sputtering in Apnl, and accompanying increased sales of imports, gave foreign models a record 21.4 percent share of the U.S. car market. A year ago, imports accounted for only 11 percent of U.S. sales. But tiie economic news wasn't all downhill Monday. Alan Gicenspan, chairman of the Presidents Council of Economic Advisers, renewed his optimistic forecast for the economy. And the stock luarsei CUinPHl again ou what aitdijrsui jam Was optimism for the economys prospects. The TVw Jones industrial average rose 7.12 to 1 the Associa- n g Dieu, who headed the Viet- - Americans still aren't borrowing soo.is) Mor.aay. namese-Amenca- tion that operated the largest English language school in Saigon, was said to be plan-runlanguage schools in the camp, a post office and a Vietnamese newspaper Alongjwith Dieu, the would be headed by Nguyen Van Bong, secretary general of the Business and Professional Womens Association of Saigon and head of an association on planned parenthood, and Tran Quy Than, n Conn 11 University graduate and Saigon banker. A Marine spokesman said 10 504. T-- utiOO We got you, babe At California Marine base Calif A powerful spring storm which hit Utah on Monday has buried parts of the northern and central Rockies under heavy snow and sent an icy dull eastward into the adjacent Ida ms. Six to 12 inches of snow piled into the Rockies from southern Montanaa through Colorado This years college graduates are facing a depressed job market, and the condition will continue into the early 1980s, according to a Harvard study. Tne shortage of professional and management positions will persist until far fewer young people enroll in college, accoidiug to Prof. Pdchard Freeman, a Harvard economist, who presented his findings at a symposium conducted at the MdSaachdSetts Institute of Technology. G. Hatcher, the first black elected mayor of a northern city, faced a strong challenge today in major Gary, Indiana's municipal primary election, Hatcher, seeking the Democratic renommation tor a third term, is opposed by a fellow black, Dozier T. Allen Jr., a former Hatcher ally who has campaigned hard on a racial theme. The primary winner is virtually assured oi victory m tit.- general election m November. Rh-har- in the Cabinet Room with GOP leaders In a hearing before a House subcommittee on immtgraHon Monday, the touchy issue Of what the United States should do with the 130 AK) refugees that have fled South Vietnam got a thorough airing The administration asked Congress to spend $507 million for resettlement ot the retugecs. The hearing resumes today. It makes me damn mad, Scott quoted the President See FORD on the reoignations. accept also would handle interna! pmb lems of the refugees and help them deal with such U S. agencies as Immigration, Health, Education and Welfare and various volunteer placement groups. Were beginning to get organized into communities said Marine Capi. now, James Curd. Weve asked the Vietnamese to select spokesmen so we can work out any problem or special request Curd said arrangements were made for some of the women to help with the food. Panel trims $333 million from B1 bomber program - In a (AP) major setback for a big Pentagon WASHINGTON weapons program, the Senate Armed Services Committee cut $338.3 million in advance production funds from the Air Force B1 strategic bomber program. By a v ote of II to 3, the committee directed the Air Force not to buy items for use in manufacturing the huge planes, designed to replace the BT-bomber fleet. The vote came shortly after the House Armed Sendees Committee approved a $32 billion military weapons b.U Tb5 House committee rejected an amendment to admit women to military academies and matte tiii-t- eugioie 101 cuiuuac. The biii, approved, 32 to 6. is $3.7 billion below President Fords re- u f . Sacs and V. iratar . ... h and 1 ; development for the fiscal year starting July 1 three B1 test planes have already been built and a fourth is planned, a formal decision on whether to build a force of B5 bombers is not due from the Pentagon vitii next year. Although The Senate committee vote indicates increasing skepticism about whether, in an age of land and missiles, a fleet of strategic bombers is needed to deter any possible nuclear attack, gas-guzzl- ers Auto manufacturWASHINGTON (AP) ers would be required under a pending energy bill to pay a special tax on gasohne-guzzlin- g autos unless the average mileage of all their new cars meets certain standards. The provision was approved by the House Ways and Means Committee energy bill. Monday as part of an over-al- l The panel hopes to complete work on the bill this week and get it on the House floor before Congress begins its scheduled Memorial Day vacation May 22. The ta: provision would require that the average mileage r.i all new cars be at least 18 miles per gallon in the Ptts model year, 19 miles per gallon in the 1579 model year and 20 mi! s per gallon thereafter AU would be applied on the manufacturer for a cars hat faded to meet the gas consumption stondard On 1978 cats, the tax would begin at 2 percent of the wholesale price on cars getting 17 miles per gallon or less, and would rise to 5 percent on cars getting less than 15 miles a fuel-savin- g gallon. In 19i9, the tax would range from 2 to 6 percent and would a only to cars getting 18 miles to the gallon or less. By 1980 it would be 2 to 7 percent tor autos getting 19 miles or less to the gallon. The h'ghest rate each year would apply to cars getting less than 15 miles to the gallon. Tne House committee, however, rejected efforts o cut the Bl pTigram. spokesman for Armed Services Committee chairman John C, Biendeclined to describe the nis, liSililaoill S ill Uullfi, UUV sources provided details on tne vote. jsuviauru Wuuau BYt 89.000 barrels of gasoline a day in 1978, rising to 340,000 by 1985, by gradually subsisting r nftwn vltth artnmryKiIw fn? flO poor mileage. A Israeli government sources said today that Prune Minister Yitzhak Rabin may take a new Middle East peace proposal to Washington lor his talks with President Fold on June 11 and 12. Meanwhile, mere were r.vv reports of war preparation in the area. Two Jordanian newspapers accused Israel of massing troops and setting up rocket bases along the Jordan River while Israel' Dvu.uoC MTirt0 Shimon Peres told parliament that the Soviet Union is stepping up weapons aeuvcuco to Egypt Britains Pnnce Phiifip, visiting in Hong Kong with Queen Elizabeth II, was subjected to a bomb scare today as two suspicious packages wrere discovered in the entrance of Chinese University scheduled to be visited by Phillip. Police bomb experts, however, opened the packages later and found they contained two jam jars filled with water. The government information service later said ' the wfioie thing was a hoax. Sen. George McGovern, the 1972 Democratic presidential candidate, loured Havana today, saying he hoped the U S. will end its trade embargo against Cuba. The South Dakotan arrived Monday evening on a three-dafact finding visit to the Communist island nation. I have no powers to lift the embargo, McGovern told the Cubans, but open trade is in the interest of both countries. y Piep. Joe D. Waggonner Jr., sponsor of the provision, said his proposed mileage standards are ones the auto industry indicated it probably will meet. The auto industry's current mdeage average is about 18 miles a gallon Some committee members said the gas mileage requirement was too weak and that they will try to make it tougher dating House debate. sea-base- d Around the world - VYdgOltti 1 t Utf t f On Wall Street The stock market, searching NEW YORK (UPI) earlier for direction, moved lower today afternoon in heav y trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, off around 5 points at noon, was down 13.06 at 842 54 shortly before 3 P in. EOT. Decline' overtook advances. 721 among the 1 issues crossing the lape. (Complete New York, American lists on ,807 B-4- .) Spring lurks in the wings : , A clearing trend builds today with warmer ar.d sunny days due into the weekend Temperatures will rise to 60s and into 70s by Saturday. (See weather map on .) Business B4, 5 Living A14-1- 7 Comics B6 Our Man Jones A3 Comment Deaths A5 Sports 812 B8-1- TV Today Bl All an A3 Theater Forum A4 What's Doing Do-lt-M- A Information News lips Utile Leery 524-444- 5 5244409 HATPIM.OWY Sports scores Ombudsman Action Ads 52444i-- S tWYARg Advertising 524-2S- Home 364-862- 6 521 3525 SQFvP1 jbvery ranbtems (Call Monday through Saturday before I 0 8pm.) 524-234- B7 |