OCR Text |
Show DESERET 2A NEWS, Tuesday, JanucnoJ, 973 1 People No Bypass Columnist Says S. Viets Will Topple Within Year TALLAHASSEE, FLA. Columnist JacI: An(UPI) derson said Monday night the Pentagon has secret intelligence reports forecasting an end to the Vietnam cease-firin u military coup that will e topple the Thieu regime within a year. Anderson, addressing Florida State University students, said he will publish the contents of the joint chiefs of staff estimates pretty soon. He said he has not personally read the two classified documents, but that an unidentified source has informed him of their contents. The joint chiefs of staff, in their secret estimates, have declared that they expect a breakdown in the cease-fir- e and the ultimate Communist of South Vietnam, said Anderson. If the joint take-ove- r staffed toy the farthest Bruce Blumenthal, 21, a Temple University student, won the contest, which featured a live child. Cherie Troylen, 19, also a Temple student, was until she was disqualifrunning a close second ied for breaking a major rule. She got carried away and touched the child. child-insulti- Confirmed chiefs of staff are correct in He said Pentagon estimates their estimate, the North Viet- last fall said that Thieu would namese will win. fall within weeks if the United Pulitzer States did not give him masthe Anderson, author of the na- sive artillery and air support. column syndicated tionally He said resumption of Washington Merry-Go-Roun- the bombingthat in December was wliich appears in the Deseret News, said that a final effort to strike some the United States delayed the blows against the north and buy another year for Presicurrent peace accord three months and renewed bombing dent Thieu. of the North Vietnamese in a "That was the reason for final effort to prnish the Com- the three months delay, the munists and bolster President only reason, he said. Thieu. Anderson said that more reWeve obtained a very tenuous peace a peace with cent military intelligence redishonor a military setback ports, made in preparation for the truce agreement signed and a diplomatic debacle, We could last weekend, say that the said Anderson. have signed it (the peace Communists are planning to accord) Oct. 31; the truce we expand the power basej they could have signed Oct. 31 is now hold in South Vietnam, very little different than the and ultimately take over the government. one we signed Saturday. Views Combined Wire Sendees Four doctors who treated former President Lyndon B. Johnson for heart ailments said today they decided against performing coronary bypass surgery on Johnson because of extensive heart damage and a seriously diseased colon. The doctors said an autopsy of the former President's body confirmed their diagnosis that the colon was extensively sickened with deverticulitis. His heart had suffered damage in his April, 1972 attack. prize-winnin- g d, Walt W. Rostow, foreign policy adviser to the late President Johnson and considered the architect of Johnsons Vietnam policy, says the terms of the A. Stevens of the New York Appellate Division shakes hands with Edward of President Nixon, after Finch Cox, Cox was admitted to the state bar. Coxs wife Tricia was on hand to observe the ceremony. Cox, a first lieutenant in the Army Reserve, now will report to Ft. Benning for six months of active duty. Cox plans to join a Wall Street law firm following his active duty service. Tony Boyle's annual pension as former president of the United Mine Workers has been cut from $50,000 to $16,000 by the unions International Executive Board. Boyles successor, Arnold Miller, said the pension cut n by abolishing a special $2 million fund set up for union officers in 1960. Under the action, former Secretary-Treasure- r John Owens annual pension was trimmed from $40,000 to $13,000. Shackamaxon - legedly has shot four policemen in the past week. No one is going to rest until these men are arrested and brought to trial, Mayor John V. Lindsay said Monday. He promised to speed up deployment of 3,150 new street patrolmen to meet the crisis. :3 Executed - CHICAGO (UFI) Three black men were found shot to death today with their hands tied behind their backs in a sealed apartment. Police said they could not determine a motive for what they termed the execution-styl- e slayings. Police said each man had been shot once in the back of the head. The three had apparently occupied the apartment without the owners consent. Arson Charged N.J. PLEASANTVILLE, ( A young resident of a (AP) rest home has been arrested and charged with murder and arson in connection with a fire in which 10 elderly residents of the home died. $12 billion in approemployment of 6 per cent or more fell by one to 44 this priated funds. Now that a Vietnam cease- month, the fewest since Janufire has been signed, the issue ary, 1971, when there were 40. A Labor is the sharpest dispute beDepartment report tween the Capitol and the said Monday New Orleans had been removed from the list. White House. Five smaller areas also were removed from the sub antial Nixon Told LB J unemployment list but one was added, dropping the total Presitex. austin, (UPI) dent nixon telephoned former to 826, the lowest since last President Lyndon B. Johnson March. - SHINGTON (UPI) The Cost of Living Council will start hearings next week on price increases for home heating oil. Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz told the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee Monday that the Internal Revenue Service should have the first findings of its investigation into oil price increases by the eend of next week. - An NEW YORK (AP) Argentine national described by the federal government as the biggest narcotics trafficker ever brought to justice in the United States has been sentenced to 20 years in prison and fined $20,000. NX Auguste Joseph Ricord was the kingpin of an international ring responsible for routing a ton of heroin into the United States annually, the government charged. LAKE CITY, UTAH E. First South Advertising ond Circulation 143 S. Main St. Soil Loke City, Utah 841 10 Established June IS, 1850. Published eoch evening. Second doss postage paid at Salt Loke City, Utah. The Deseret News Publishing Com oony assumes no resoonsibihty for manuscripts and photographs contributed. Photographs ond articles may be reprinted only with written permission given in advance. CARRIER DELIVERY RATES S 2.25 (doily only) $13.50 Six months (doily only) $27.00 One year (daily only) One month (doily ond Sunday) $ 3.50 Six months (daily and Sunday) $21 00 $42.00 One year (daily and Sunday) MAIL DELIVERY RATES mo. $3.53 Doily (Sunday bv carrier) $2 50 mo. Daily only 00 $4 Doily and Sunday 6 mo. $4 00 Soturdav only 34 ear 1 6 Church News only Meanwhile, on the island of workers Heimaey, salvage waded knee deep through mud, ducking falling ash, to save what belongings they could find in the homes of islanders who fled one week ago when the volcano erupted. The Helgafjell volcano there erupted last Tuesday after 5,000 years and poured tons of lava and ash over homes. Nobody Paid . Attention and Pierre F. CHICAGO (UPI) Gene E. Lyles Robinson always talked about the dangers of their hometown, but few of their friends at new Buffalo High School paid attention. new-foun- d Heading hearings by a SenThe boys parents had moved ate judiciary subcommittee is th black cousins Sen. Sam J. Ervin, chief sponsor of the bill tc to Union Pier, Mich., several because they didnt give Congress authority to re- years ago verse a presidential refusal tc want the boys growing up in Chicagos south side ghetto. spend an appropriated sum. This weekend, the boys paid a visit to '.heir old neighborhood Jo attend a surprise birthday party for a girl friend. Today, Gene is dead and Pierre is in critical condiBy government standards, a both shot in the head ton of heroin translates into tion Sunday night as they waited enough to supply 49,000 addicts for a train to take them home for an entire year hence the to Union Pier. comparison by the judge to Police today were trying to the war casualties. determine if the youths were Ricord fled his native France after World War II shot for resisting a holdup at the station or by one of the and went to South America citys many street gangs. where he allegedly established the heroin operation. He was Their luggage and wallet were arrested in Paraguay and intact. flown to the United States where he underwent trial last December and was convicted by a jury after three hours of deliberations. yqgs I r - Auguste J. Ricord . . . gets 20 years U.S. Dist. Court Judge John Cannella, who gave him the maximum sentence Monday, declared: This is not an addict who is being sentenced or a pusher who made a few sales. This is a very large quantity of narcotics. The end product from the mortality and suffering reprobaDly would equal the cent figures for the Vietnam war casualties. ics. Ricords Herbert lawyer, Handman, pleaded for leniency for his diabetic client because of his age, health, family and the lack of a harsh prior record of conviction. After the sentencing, Ricord, who has been held in lieu of million bail, was returned to the Manhattan federal detention center. He has 10 days in which to file an appeal. The recommendations came as the Food and Drug Administration began reviewing a petition from the Health Research Group of Washington, a Ralph Nader-backeorganization which asked the FDA to stop certifying the substance. d In both cases the critics cited studies which purported to show that animals fed the dye suffered impaired reproduction and increased infant moitality. "How do you get away with breaking all the rules around here!" Ceremonies Welcome New Pentagon Chief WASHINGTON (UPI) -Eliot chaok over as President Nixons second defense secretary today, being welcomed as the Pentagons new chief in a colorful ceremony featuring an honor guard from the five services arrayed freshly dye. grass A salute, fired by the same black cannon that last week boomed a final arewell n to Lyndon B. Johnson, rev- erberated across the Pentagon parade ground in the weather. Richardson said nothing during the ceremony but looked ill at ease. At one point, he extended his hand tow ard the generals and admirals of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, then withdrew it as he realized it was not yet time for handshakes. arch-backe- d Richardsons predecessor, Melvin R. Laird, was not present. He already was on a round of family reunions, ful CbrdvuA filling a promise made to his wife when he became secretary at the outset of the first Nixon Administration. Richardson was confirmed by the senate Monday, 88 to 1, and arrived at the Pentagon today with his commission from President Nixon in his pocket. Richardson will probably go through a formal swearing in ceremony at the White, House later, Pentagon officials said, but that is not necessary before assuming his new' post. The oath he took when he joined the Nixon Administration four years ago as undersecretary of state still applies, officials said. as you know your fine jeweler through gemologicai skills aided by instruments like our This reveals the inner beauty. Let us fully explain the fine the points of diamond value "four C's . . . color, clarity, cutting and carat weight. STORES MEMSfR AMt RICAN tniv. & GEM SOCIFTY L Like millions of others, you could be suffering from hypertension (high blood pressure) and not know it. This often secret killer causes heart attack, heart failure, stroke. Yet detecting it is easy, and it almost always can be successfully by diet or medication. One of 39 articles and features in the treated-- READERS DIGEST FEBRUARY ON SALE NOW. CLOSEOUTS D WILL CLOSE SOFA $28880 OUR NEW CLASSIC SAVE UP TO $30.00 ON BEAUTYREST CAPRI ORTHOPEDIC AIR- -. FLIGHT MATTRESS 12:00 NOON $98.00 NOTHING DOWN START PAYMENTS IN MAY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31 FOR INVENTORY 901 79 SOUTH MAIN Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 UTAH'S OLDEST FRIGIDAIRE AND ZENITH DEALER 4 NINE-FOO- T CRESCENT-SHAPE- LOVE SEAT D 4 1 8880 QUILTED SOFA SAVE UP TO $40 ON CLOSE-- J MAYTAG WASHERS AND OUT J J' DRYERS DURING THIS SALE MAYTAG, JEWELRY Away to prevent DOWNTOWN AND COTTONWOOD ... In The Health Research Group petition said very recent Russian tests showed .that female animals fed the dye suffered increased fetal deaths, impaired milk production and a still born rate of one in seven; male animals, it added, suffered reduced life, movement and resistance of sperm. The dye is the most widely used food coloring in the nation. It shows up in soft drinks such as cherry and strawberry and gelatin desserts, candy, baked goods, chewing gum, ice cream and pet food. Until the FDA acts, women, especially pregnant women, should be warned against using products which contain the dye, according to Sidney Wolfe, a physician associated with the Health Research Group. fkcutk. SETS Hour diamond One FDA official said new information has been coming in continuously since September, including results of tests the FDA itself has been making on animals and the results of a new Russian study. It was a study from the Soviet Union in 1970 that originally brought the dye into question. MONTH-EN- $1.5 JMW:, Last July 4 the FDA proposed that limits be placed on the amount of dye in food products, and allowed a period of time for comment on the idea. That time period expired last September and no final decision has yet been announced. Another cabinet selection of Nixons Peter J. Brennan to be labor secretary, is expected to be confirmed by the Senate Wednesday. He was approved unanimously Monday by the Senate Labor Committee. AT $6.50 $2 00 $3.50 odvonce. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations. Soturdov only ond Church News moil outside carrier delivery area on with green sprayed year mail subscriptions ore payable 1 All mo. 4 i ' Consumer Reports Magazine in its new issue published a lengthy report on the substance called Red Dye No. 2 and recommended that it be banned until a complete study can be made. Johannesson told an emergency session of parliament that prefabricated houses and money were most needed. Open Campaign WASHINGTON (UPI) Senate Democrats today opened a campaign to gain veto power over refusal by President Nixon to spend money appropriated by Congress. Administration spokesmen said it was a case of the President using common sense to avoid spending that could result in tax increases. A controversial red dye, used in WASHINGTON (UPI) everything from lipstick to soft drinks and pill coatings, was under attack today from two fronts which claim it may represent a threat to human reproduction. -PREYKJAVIK (UPI) Minister Olafur Johan-nesso- n appealed to the world Monday to help the homeless victims of the island volcano Helgafjell start a new life on the Iceland mainland. first-degr- Oil Price Probe FDA BAN URGED Widely Used Dye Labeled A Threat Drug Trafficker Sentenced SALT d, dog-kicki- rime Juror two-stor- Editoriol Office, e, Society, a group of civic boost- ers which does not tolerate any jokes about the city the comedian loathed most. There were several other rontests based on Fields favorite dislikes. Craig Rini, 21, won the contest in which the object is to boot a MARMADUKE Iceland Asks For World Aid before Johnson died and told him of the Vietnam cease-fir- e Summoned agreement, Johnsons widow said Monday. FAIRFIELD, Calif. (AP) -A juror who says she regrets so said Johnson Bird Lady many friends had said they voting for conviction of Juan were sorry her husband did Corona on mass murder not live to hear Nixons tele- charges and a matron accused vised announcement one week of influencing the verdict have ago of the peace agreement, been ordered to testify on a that she wanted to let them defense motion for a new trial. Juror Naomi Underwood know he did not die without knowing the long war was and matron Georgia Wallis were directed Monday to apcoming to an end. before Judge Richard "I think his friends should pear Patton on Feb. 5, the day Patbe told that fate was kind, ton has set for sentencing the Mrs. Johnson said. Lyndon farm labor condid know that peace had tractor on 25 counts of come. murder. wood-fram- DESERET NEWS li withheld Harry Kemp, 22, of Baltimore, was arrested by the state police crime squad Monday following the blaze that the destroyed In Jobless e structure. He was Dip one of six residents and two WASHINGTON (UPI) -employes who escaped the The number of major labor blaze. markets with substantial un Asst. U. S. Atty. Walter Phillips placed a $600 million yearly price tag on the heroin sent from France through South America. Ricord, 63, had been convicted of conspiracy to smuggle hundreds of pounds of narcot- - ... Actor Ludwig Stossel, 89, famous for his portrayal of That Little Old Winemaker Me in a television commercial, died Monday in Hollywood. Lt. Gen. Yaakov Dori, 73, Israels first military chief of staff and commander of war the armed forces during the Arab-Israeof 1948, died Monday in Haifa. Joseph W. 83, a retired foreign service officer who assisted Cordell Hull when the secretary of state summoned Japanese envoys after the attack on Pearl Harbor, died Monday in Fair-fielConn. Despite a severe case of stage fright which made him wet his pants, Patrick Patrick 10, beat 10 others in Philadelphia Monday to win a contest for the best imitation of W. C. Fields. His victory came at a party sponsored by the W. A. pen-sio- HunNEW YORK (UPI) dreds of plainclothesmen and detectives working extra shifts have joined the hunt for one woman and five men suspected of being members of a black militant group that al- Deaths Trouble, But He Won UMW Cuts Pensions en- courage North Vietnam to take over Southeast Asia. The men be in Hanoi will watching closely to see if our attention falls off rapidly after we get our prisoners Rostow said Rostow, back, now a lecturer at the University of Texas in Austin. Judge Harold Businessman John Fell Stevenson, of Woodside, Calif., son of the late U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Adlai Stevenson, will marry Elizabeth Flood in June. It will be the second marriage for Stevenson, a land investor and conservationist w'ho was divorced in 1971, and the first marriage for Miss Flood, a teacher. N.Y Tracks 6 Suspects could cease-fir- e Adlai's Son To Wed U.S. SCENE Cease-Fir- e SBLn )omer ALL SOFAS WE DELIVER BUT YOU jansen 1,1j HAUL AND SAVE EVEN MORE |