OCR Text |
Show 4. 4 a The Salt Lake Tribune, Wednesday August 11, 1965 U.N. Finance Baltic Coming to End, U.S. Gives Up Efforts, Officials Say Accidental The Chance . . . Nil A-Bla- st? - ' under which ho votes were tak- - administration is on the manner en during the last assembly ses- in which the United States sion. Because of. .this, pext to no should signify that it has given 1 WASHINGTON IhelUnited business was done. .. up the fight. States twiH give up its long fight s Not Accurate Little Chance to get the Sbvfat Union to contriissued a statemeht Goldberg here Officials believe the that bute Ao peacekeeping operations that the' United of the United Nations, according decision of avoida showdown calling reports would drop its insistence to reliable official sources here. has undermined a'ny chance of States on enforcing Article 19 not acThis policy shift is to- be pubnew ma- curate. a rallying licly announced next Monday. jority at the 20th assembly ses- - He added that the question Finance Speech sion, which opens Sept. 21. It is was still being discussed and At that time, Arthur J. Gold- - believed that the United States that the U.S. position will be berg, the new U.S. represents-- j could, at best, fight only a rear-tiv- e fexplained fully and clearly when at the United Nations will guard action against the Soviet the committee of 33 convenes on ' com- right to vote. address a special fAug. 16. The discussion current the! in has been (Copyright) that mittee studying the question Of delinquent asBy Richard Eder New York Times Writer L Ark., Titan site Tuesday was appalling enough without further Washington Post Writer Fifty-thre- e men 4 The complications. WASHINGTON died when a diesel generator ex. chances of either a nuclear caught fire, and nearly all of the plosion or an accidental missile large civilian work crew in the firing are believed, by officials silo were smothered. , and scientists to be very close to Elaborate Precautions zero. The disaster at the Searcy, But - elaborate precautions have been designed to prevent even worse accidents. The general idea has been to make both the firing of a missile and the detonation of a warhead extremely complicated business. No single failure can fire the missile or the warhead, and the probability of the whole series of safeguards failing at once Continued From Page fine r" By HowardMargolis - - anti-Sovi- - A.F, Probes Disaster in Missile Silo -- yi sessments. The Soviet Union and its allies and several other countries have refused to contribute to peacekeeping operations in the Congo ahd the Middle East, , ' after learning 'investigation Monday night that the workmen were unaccounted for and presumed trapped inside the silo. Wood said most of the victims apparently suffocated.' The fire probably burned 'less than an hour, he said. But up to 12 hours later smoke j was still billowing in the silo. A The silo is covered at ground n ; level by a door, which 'moves laterally on rails. The door was closed. fc - - NoVote No Single Button contended that the arrears of the objecting members had built up past the point at which, according to Article 19 of the charter, those countries were no longer entitled to vote in the General Othei On the missile, for example, there is no single button to be pushed, but a series of steps with the most criticat oner requiring cooperative efforts by at least two men. On the warheads, the electronic circuit that carries the pulse needed to' simultaneously detonate all the primer charges, is interrupted by repeatedly switches, which must be closed ' for the triggering pulse to get 750-to- No Oxygen through. The increasing amount of Silo Has smoke forced air out of the silo, . carried as arrears stands at n Asioclated Ex-Cuba- 't -- I V ci s 1 X i Panel Okelis LB J Choices Admits Slaying 5 on Ship n - Continued From Page One Guprd cutter. One was on deck, bunks two in their below. Mrs. Raul Garcia, wife of the ship's owner, said the dead were Aldrick Hinds, the first mate; Jose Abad, the chief engineer, and Antonio Former, a seaman. blood-staine- d Body Missing Burywaise said he had seen the ships. Spanish captain, Rogelio Diaz, lying dead on the bridge, but Diaz body was not found. The Coast Guard presumed he was dumped overboard. Besides the captain, the other crewmen officially unaccounted for are Gerald Davison, the cook, and Franco Salomon, the they went overboard one way or the other. . The question of whether the United States, Panama or the State of Florida would prosecute the case of the Seven Seas was unanswered. The ship is of Panamanian registry, but its owner is an American. There also was a possibility it was Floridas case, if the crimes were committed within the three-mil- e limit of the WASHINGTON (AP) The states shoreline.. Judiciary Committee Where Committed Tuesday gave its approval for President Johnsons old friend An investigation is currently Abe Fortas to don the robes of a under way in an effort to deterSupreme Court justice. mine whether the alleged murokehed also nomination the It ders were committed within the of Thurgood Marshall to be the territorial waters of the United voice before governments legal and until that question the Supreme Court, the solicitor second engineers," both Hondur- States, has been settled I cannot say general. ans. anything more about jurisdicFinal confirmation of the two There isnt any evidence that tion, State Department Press men must come by action of the their bodies are still aboard, al- Officer Robert J. McCloskey full Senate, a step usually conthough we havent completed a said fa Washington. sidered a formality after com- search of the ship, Cmdr. Wahl McCloskey declined to say mittee approval. said. whether the United States would Fortas, 55, one of the capitals Who Prosecutes? seek jurisdiction if the crime ocmost successful attorneys, has curred outside U.S. waters. been a friend of the President However, there is a possibilisince both were young men in ty because theres five feet of Burywaise who emerged from government fa the early days of water in the bilge that we his hiding place when the vessel Franklin D. Roosevelts New havent pumped out. If we cant was boarded by a Coast Guard Deal. find them in the ship, it means party Sunday, said he saw Ramirez shoot the first mate to death in his bunk, then found the captain dead on the bridge. Senate Project Costs Skyrocket t i ft I r i- Moholes in Los Angeles . Times Service WASHINGTON Project Mo- iole to drill a hole.through the earths crust fa in serious, trouble due to skyrocketing costs. , I There fa a finite chance the ambitious effort will be canceled ; Jjecause cost estimates have ris-je- n 50 per cent in the 'last year to more than 100 million dollars, according to Dr. Leland J. director of the National Science Foundation. Reviews Project ; An intensive review of the ' project fa under way by the foundation, responsible for the effort government-funde- d t A decision on the projects future fa expected in a month or co, Haworth said Tuesday in an . interview. The scientific project seeks to Heard That Is Hole-Finan- cial, sample the earths mantle which lies under the crust,; Since the crust fa thinnest under the oceans rather than under' the ' continents, the drilling would .be done at sea from a giant floating platform. Site to Pacific Surveys have found the mantle closest and most accessible at a spot more than 100 miles off Hawaii fa the Pacific, and fiie site has been tentatively chosen for the drilling which was to begin late this decade. However, anticipated .costs have risen markedly fa recent months, Haworth said. This is largely but not wholly due to unexpectedly high bids submitted last month by prospective builders of the . platform. gfibunr $bf Salt fake ' 143 South Main Dial 363-15- Press Wirephoto immigration office Tuesday in Miami. Officials say Ramirez shot and killed five on cargo ship. Roberto Ramirez, former Cuban fisherman, Is handcuffed to border patrolman as be leaves ' Power Fails The power failed and, with the I huge door above closed, the tube was filled with darkness. Lay tsaid he groped his way around he found the launch tube-un- til the door to the tunnel leading to Zthe access room. It was horrible, he said J from a hospital bed. 1 could Jhear men screamng and crying. was yelling Help Somebody me! God, help me! I couldnt Jsee him fa the dark. Hubert A. Saunders, 59, of .Conway, the other survivor, was J working above the door to the rtunnel when the smoke burst laround him. He dropped down iand ran into the tunnel, he said. 1 I Got Out The birj (the missile) was in the gun barrel and so was I, so I got out of there, launders said. j Lay, a summer laborer on the project, suffered burns of the Ihead, arms and legs. He was listed fa satisfactory condition here. 28 million dollars. The missile silo is covered iand oxygen that remained was with seven-todoors.Tf someconsumed by the fire, Wood - nations The sum charged to the Soviet Union arrears is $72,236,000, of which $21,600,000 would be for this year. The total of the sums Doors how the missile were fired accisaid. dentally,. . it almost certainly an was airtight could not It nearly get out, and absolutely compartment, he said. could not get out withA- Two of the civilians escaped certainly out smashing the warhead and by fleeing through an under- - guidance system. ground tunnel that connects the If, as has happened,-bomb is t launch silo, an access room and on a that plane crashes, the control center the three crash can detonate one or the more chambers of every Titan II of the that force primer charges I complex. the pieces of the nuclear materiOne of the survivors, al together. Gary Wayne Lay of Clinton, But this will not detonate the said he saw the fire flash into bomb. All the primer the tube. Smoke billowed after have to be detonated charges at the ilt. same instant to do that . Instead of running about . 20 million dollars, the four bids on the vessel range from $29,900,000 to 45 million dollars. Outfitting the platform also mil, be more expensive than expected, so the fully equipped vessel now fa expected to cost 75 million dollars instead of 50 million dollars; Haworth said. Higher Costs, , Finally, by the time the drill reached the mantle fa the early 1970s, the cost would be more than 100 million dollars instead of the 72 million dollars projected last year, he said. Haworth pointed out that the affair. project is not a one-shThe equipped platform would be a facility with a lifetime for scientific exploration work. More than one hole into the mantle would be drilled. ot 3 Shots The short, slight Burywaise said he left the crew quarters about 10:15 Saturday night to the. .muggy .heat, that disturbed his sleep. When I was walking out of the room this fellow Roberto was coming out of the kitchen, he said. Roberto had a pistol in his hand. He was walking very fast. He began to shoot. I ran. I heard three shots,-- ! wanted to let the captain know what was going on. I ran up to the bridge. Then I found the captain. He was lying crisscross on the floor. I touched him. He was Africa. last year, the Throughout United States lobbied vigorously to obtain a General Assembly majority for compelling the Soviet Uunion- to pay or lose its vote. U.N. Majority r j - i Burywaise bolted aft and hid, trembling with fear, in the chain locker. There he stayed until the afternoon of the next, day, when he heard the whistle of the Coast Guard cutter Shoalwater. I am lucky to be alive, El-wi- n said. Refuse to Pay Other countries that have refused to contribute to the peace- keeping operations are Czechos- lovakia, Byelorussia, the Ukra- Poland, Cuba, Rumania, Hungary, Albania, France and Although the majority 'wag believed to have been available, some U.S. officials contended that to force the matter would disrupt the U.N. This argument prevailed. The 4Jnited States agreed to avoid a showdown; and a complicated formula was adopted Variety of Reactions Greet Jdfinson Briefing on Viet - greement methods, certain WASHINGTON (AP) A White House briefing on Viet Nam Tuesday caused one House leader to say there is reason for cautious optimism. . But! Sen. Wayne Morse employed, gress backs Johnsons course. Kearns-Trlbun- Kearns-Trlbun- w hnHm, Utdmi draka. ft While yooVe here ffcrotffla tboveoads robot story fabric i tf yorrie of UI $24.00. Salt M. UPHOLSTERY 5 1318 S. State, 486-134- -i The Tribune la a member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all local news printed In this newspaper as weU as all A.P. news dispatches. Member Audit Bureau of Morsesharply attacked the .) ' e, lcts-Sout- , Cdh-gre- Y v With only 6 weeks of warm weather left, should you air condition your Education Council Disad-jvantage- Children. Why not? six weeks of blessed relief from heat this sumahead in your lifetime! summers all the and for mer air conditioning is designed to For the cooling unit of gas whole-hous- e last a lifetime . . . and to save you money year after year7Not only is the d less than an electric cenoperating cost of a gas air conditioner tral unit, but you save on replacement parts and servicing. Theres no expensive compressor to replace, and should your gas cooling unit need . servicing we will do it for you FREE.' air conditioning, and be ready So start now to enjoy gas whole-hous- e for the fitst hot days of next summer. Start right now to enjoy For complete information nd FREE estimate on whole-hous- e gas air conditioning, please call us. MOUNTAIN FUEL SUPPLY COMPANY tfauA&l Gad. Svwiu-- t 0 : dead. PresiWASHINGTON (AP) dent Johnson Tuesday added Louis Bruno, superintendent of public instruction for the state of Washington, to the National d Council on Education of Con- over-al- l briefing he attended with other senators, Monday night as an an pinned exhibition label on the discus- of how the can be unpleasant sions with congressional leaders evaded and the failures- igJohnson President and his nored.. by , top advisers. The Oregon Democrat has Fair Statement long "been one of the most vocal Still another congressional critics of 'the U.S. position in power, Senate Republican Lead- Viet Nam. er Everett M. Dirksen of IlliIts Remarkable nois, said President Johnsons is It a remarkable thing, . contention .that Congress gener-to lie" Morse told the Senate, poli-inViet his Nam ally supports House to to able .White the up go cies was a "fair statement of periodically and hear howibings the cautious optimism phrase are improving whenneweach visit step the was used by Democratic Majori- is occasioned by a United States has had to take in of Oklahoty Leader Carl Albert ma after a third of the House order to stabilize a deteriorating was briefed Tuesday morning on situation. Morse, saying the President Viet Nam. ' Speaker John W. McCormack was trying to make the course 6f Massachusetts agreed with fa Viet Nam palatable to through the briefing prohim. cess, criticized Gen. Maxwell D. Backs Course Taylor, retiring ambassador lo A " few hours later, Dirksen Saigon, and Secretary of Deheld A news conference to say fense Robert S. McNamara. ; The Taylor concept of fighthis soundings of Congress showed it is in substantial ing insurgencies has totally agreement with the Presidents failed in Viet Nam, under his Morse on Viet Nam, adding guidance and direction, policy that while there might be disa said. one-thir- Established AprU 15, 1871, Issued a every tnomlng by the Corporation, Salt Lake City. Utah. Entered at the post office at Salt Lake City: aa second class mstter under act of March 8, .1879. All unsoUclted articles, manuscripts, letters and picture sent to The Salt Lake Tribune are sent e at the owner's rlBk and Corporation assumes no responslbUlty for their custody or . return. by carrier Subscription rates dally and Sunday S3 .25 per month, a year In advance $27.00; by mau In Utah. Idaho, Nevada, Wyoming daUy and Sunday, payable In advance, per month 82.35; elsewhere In the United States per month 32.25, 6 months $12.00, 1 year with some he is V |