Show - p 591-353- I I 1 1 - For Classified Phone ' I 1 i 5 4 Other Tribune departments: N'ews infotmation 355-75scores other departrrwnts 5 I 355-751- 1: 1 - A Chilling Thought A tio f ot - 1 ' ''''- ' Salt Lake City Utah—Friday Morning —January I ' t to) i urns Nevada eak All 19 Is le Lambasts NC tt liiii:thi PI United Press International Ice and snow hobbled transportation triggered major power failures and slowed the pace of business and industry Thursday in the Southeast's worst storm of the winter North Carolina was hardest hit by the 1 --- By Morton L Saltzman after its pilot radioed at 1:50 pm Wednesday that icing conditions were Associated Press Writer forcing him down below the level BArrLE MOUNTAIN NEV — Two searchers struggled up a snowy mountain and into a perilous ravine Thursday where they found the hulk of a crashed Marine transport plane The recovery of bodies was halted by darkness The Marine base at Quantico Va said the craft carried 19 Marines and Navy men The searchers said all aboard were dead The plane crashed in a blizzard Wednesday afternoon near the Mt Tobin It is the peak of 9978-foo- t highest point in the desolate northeastern Nevada area 32 miles southwest of Battle The C54 was en route to Seattle Wash from Buckley Air Field in Denver which reported 18 men aboard It was on a Western tour from Quantico Marine Base in Virginia Quantico said 20 Marines were on the flight Denver said none left there The wreckage was found at dawn Thursay after the blizzard subsided A Navy helicopter carrying a paramedic team hovered over the wreckage Sheriff George Schwin of Lander See Page 8 Column 4 y four-engi- ' Mountain 1 Mod Bodies of 4 sit 000 i014-- 1 ' ort - kl 4- 4 ' w- ao- ' '0' ' kiii4-4- ' 4 0' ' 4 CORNING IOWA (AP)—The Nation al Farmers Organization pledging "no price no product i on" Thursday launched another campaign to boost agricultural prices by withholding farm products from market Initial target is grain to be followed at later dates by withholding aetions on meat milk and other farm commodities President Oren Lee Staley said the action "is designed to shut down the American agricultural plant until our members get a fair price for their products" Project The militant farm group sometimes called "the angry young men of agriculture" said iit is urging its members in On the Inside Page Editorials Foreign National National Obituaries 0 Society 4 Sports Star Gazer Television B-5- 4 C-- 4 8-- 4 Theaters A4919-2- 0 Washington i et s : 1:::::-- cities so t mailI is 500 s serve next-da- y Tribune Washington Bureau WASHINTON — Postmaster Lawrence F O'Brien Thursday listed Utah post offices as participating in the developin g airlift network In addition to the Postal Center at Salt Lake City Utah now in the network are Cedar and Vernal O'Brien said "The present mail facility Lake City Municipal Airport met enlarged" the postmaster "In addition to a large area provisions need to be ability to exchange carriers and to double the dock provided for motor vehicle ' oyt dwIt rrht ':::::':::::i:::::l::: '':--' '"I "10 - ‘ 41 -'- 762! 0 Pw- ' - t s ' 4 ' s a ' ilr '' :' ' ' k 0 -- -- - 0 4 ' ''''141 ' $ - oc (4 ' ' ''' k 4' e 5 $ i p dt 1 : I 4 i- 4 t 1 4 ' k 40 0 '' 1 ! 1 e'i ''''' ''' - M ) ''' ' 1 4 - ' ”- -- 'tt 0 '' '"' '' "--' p- -t -I - ' g 1 - ' w w le ' ‘ - '- ' ''' - 4- ' - a -0 4210 d4 PI Aw 14-- V 1 4 4e4S A A -- ' ' 1- It' '1' k p 44" 11 - s : - ' 4 "1: l ct - -- ' 'k ' 4' s' 19 : r' I ' "I l'' ''''4 1' '''' ' ' ' 4- ' ''' - " fitioélk - ?- 4 r e fr t'! -- z ' 4 ' ' - - I - 0411t - - ' ' 1 el 11 1: 04 t i 2 ' iP' I I Nev reported finding 11 bodies in the snow but are searching for more Plane crashed Wednesday am By Victor L Simpson gency room Associated Press Writer JERSEY crrY NJ — One rapid transit commuter train slammed into another at the start of the evening rush ns hour Thursday injuring about 200 and delaying thousands more There were no reports of deaths but five of the injured were regarded as critically hurt "I heard a big sound and then every- per-So- thing went blank" said Gilbert Rodriquez 46 of the Bronx NY a passenger on one train Injured jammed the basement emer states to stop selling grain as the beginning step The NFO conducted six previous withholding actions major ones in livestock in 1962 and 1964 and on milk last March The boycotts resulted in some violence Tons of milk were dumped in fields and streets as part of the milk action - The NFO claimed some success in each action but processors discounted the claims 30 Claim Some Success Staley said previous actions have forced processors to recognize the NFO as bargaining agent for its members and resulted in some increase in prices "The prices have always been higher after an action than they were before" he said Although the NFO claims It has members in 30 states the actual membership number is kept secret "This enables us to bargain with processors from a post thin of strength" said Staley farmers in all Staley said states involved are being asked to join in the last boycott "to protect their interests I believe the support will be Twenty-eig- Estimate by Doctor — Dr Clifford Blasi director of emergency facilities estimated more than 200 injured were brought in Most were re- leased after examination and treatment He said five were critical The hospital administrator Theodore Austin said 50 stretcher cases were brought in These were carried in near d zero weather along tracks for 300 yards Rodriquez said he was in a train which was stopped behind another of the trains waiting to enter the subway-styl- e Jersey City station City from Newark Rescuers braved cold to carry stretchers 300 yards along the track and up a steep metal stairway into a department store where first aid headquarters was set up Many of the casualties with blood Many walked to receive treatment Noting that Bydgoszcz was not in one the seven regions off limits to American officials the spokesman said that the US Government "both here and in Washington has protested this flagrant of ti NI Just e i' s 6 c: ' y m ii 4 i rot ' ' N A 1 - 50 '60"-':- " 0 14 - --s P I ' '' k re s t ' ''''t -::i t :- 101 - 1 4 ("' v ' f F èk1- - 0 i i i4" 1 2 - Jo Eit I 7 ' II Today's Chuckle t iluvLsa He said instructions calling in connection with the for action have been issued to all members specific Chairman of the board at an office is meeting: "The day of the over Now — does everybody agree?" yes-ma- To Strengthen ' 1 In another development the US Command announced that Red gunners had fired four Soviet-buisurface-to-ai- r missiles at raiding US B52 bombers over the DMZ The command said none of the bombers was damaged It was the fourth reported attempt since last September to shoot down the bombers over the frontier between North and South Vietnam Site of Firing Headquarters said the missiles were fired Thursday morning during a strike on suspected Communist artillery sites and troop concentrations in the northern part of the DMZ four miles northwest of the US Marines' Con 'Mien outpost s US streaked in to attack the missile sites but there was no ' immediate damage assessment To replace the US Marines moving northward a brigade of South Korean marines began moving into positions south of Da Nang The movement of the US 5th Marine regiment gives the Leathernecks three additional maneuver battalions — highly mobile units not tied down to static defensive positions—to operate in the critinorthernmost area where the allies face a threat from 25000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops The activity in northern South Vietnam came as strategists sized up a week of hot action which reflected an intensification in the ground war due in some degree to revived Communist quests for the initiative said Thursday that 466 Spokesmen allies including 184 Americans — about the recent average — died last week in combat compared with a record 2868 i - 1 '' tlVe'N i''''' : f i-0- ) 7:-te's"--) 0— v I'T ' ) L Ii - e deaths saw 1967 190 allied dead Americans Enemy losses were put at 626 dead including 67 that week Likely Mission 4 r: ' treli 4lii) c--- - The focus of the latest Marine movements are South Vietnam's two northern'provinces ) fLia 'A Quang Fri—which fronts the DMZ — and Thua Thien just below Quang Tn The three additjonal Marine battalions likely will augment two battalions in - :47 1 L - '''''t I1' t " 454 t - '1 - —Assoc AgNi Vietnamese woman gestures to express herself when advised V In contrast the first week of January (3''''ø-:::c7 l' Communist '''' w I e'o- ' ' Dozed Off Robert Ferrara 26 of the Bronx said he had just dozed off "when all of a sudden I was thrown against the seat in front of me" He suffered a bruised finger 28 Manhattan Fulastino Morales said he was thrown to the floor by the impact lie said he also had dozed and awakened to hear people screaming in the train s t :hter':r71 transportation Some were stranded in Hoboken the first stop after the trains cross the Hudson River in a tunnel i fighter-bomber- Third Train This - t Regiment Rolls searched" snow-covere- He said a third train hit the rear of the one he was on He said the impact knocked him unconscious and when he 'awoke "many people were on the floor all yelling" He was taken to the hospital with back and neck injuries The accident halted service on the line which hauls 100000 commuters a day between New York and New Jersey for an hour Commuters who normally ride the electric cars to connect with other trains and buses at Jersey City and Newark were forced to wait for service to resume or seek alternate means of t lt The American spokesman added that Metzger — and presumably Jefferson although his name was not mentioned — was "detained against his will" for 11 hours "denied permission to telephone the American Embassy and forcibly The trains were bound for New York City Medical ht ' Associated Press Writer SAIGON — A US Marine regiment of about 4000 men is moving from south of Da Nang to bolster allied defenses along the Demilitarized Zone US officers disclosed Friday hment" non-NF- e 4 at the Jersey extra doctors were called in to help two regular physicians treat injured Center i By Edwin Q White said A US Embassy spokesman however that Metzger was "apprehended at gunpoint by military personnel" in the north central city of Bydgoszcz on Jan 4 while "walking along a major thoroughfare past a military establis- NJ Cot0iiiiitéiiTif'4iii:11tiittiAi'0i6iiH Ci101ihijii1- 203 tiè1Thöti04iid diplomatic DMZ Defenses The Polish news agency charged that both attaches were "caught by military guards while taking photographs of an unidentified important military objective The agency said they were arrested when they refused to hand over a camera and tried to escape —Associated Press Wirephoto Rescuers who reached the wreckage of this Marine transport which crashed southwest of Battle Mount- - of The Polish account did not mention the location of the incident Instead the Polish news agency accused the two attaches of trying "not to be identified" and "keeping secret their diplomatic status" Once the attaches' identity cards issued by the Polish foreign ministry were found they were released the agency said (Copyright) 'Caught 1 norm acknowledged " practice" y d ? es4 -- 1 : tcsit4214 zIti : P ''''' He characterized the actions of the Polish authorities as "contrary to every As for the Canadian Lt Col Kenneth I Jefferson the foreign ministry "firmly protested his inadmissible activities" and warned that "other measures were being considered" the agency added The Canadian embassy said that Jefferson had left last Sunday on a leave 7 - 1 i 4 4 -- "- - ' 44 A i24'' 4"A)0 - - - 412)' '1 ' i Atiffe'' 0- -- - ' k '' '54 4 il! 4 4 sp ' v 1 Against Diplomatic Practice The Army artillery officer who has served here since May 1966 is expected to leave Poland on Sunday two days before the time limit set by the Polish foreign ministry Ifr45fretg"a 121 diplomatic officer" since 1963 t :4 4 I '1 ''''''' efi 0 4' 4--: ' " violation of the immunity 61an American Ordered expelled was Lt Col Edward H Metzger Jr who thus became the seventh American military attache to be declared persona non grata in Poland "" A I ' r : of v ''''" ' 4 ' a ig r "':--'- )' " - s1 4 4 0 ' ' ' 40 '' - 4 0 A 1' 1 t : Jonathan Randal New York Times Writer WARSAW — Poland has ordered the expulsion of the United States military attache "for intelligence activities" and is considering action against the Canadian military attache the Polish Pap news agency announced Thursday 40 is o V 4 ttk- - " ' edlltiq' ''''1' e "' - k0 ' t 40 t' '''' dr 4 ' - ) 4 e'i '''''' ' - 4 7 ' By - :( 44 s r Tr -- -- - ' 4 4" N 4 Ode 1 - 34' ' ' ' 1 -"-- AV't t10'--- A - " 'a- 7 - ' 1' '''-'- e4rtv-‘1- ' ' ' ' ''''"' tt:Aitt'lt-- : i s --4 4 -- f'''"4 t or:W4 - ' Z 1 1 4' ' 1 4 4 - 14 44!P sr 4 6' xIte'a ' l'''W-""r'- - --0- 4 "' - - 'Pi -- p 0 4 is t 44 - t 14 '' 10 " s " 4 A' - 14 4 ' ''''' '' - 4- ' 11' 547 1 ' ' —1 I( - f - Farmers Threatening Boycotts To Get Better Price Structure B- - f ' "' 7 e P 14' 2 7- N 4 t 11' d - L- - 0 1 - short time" 9 :-- vfl 4444- - - - -- Ti:s '' ' ' '' '''' - - ' ' p ' '4 rItivilt 4 it - " 'Pn !" '4 40e : ‘""a " - V15- - 5Niv ENGLAND MISSENDEN (AP) — Pub keeper Dennis Campbell said Thursday he was dumbfounded and speechless when a clerk from the Lloyd's bank branch next door asked for a loan to keep the bank in business But Campbell opened his safe and gave the embarrassed clerk 400 pounds — $960 so be could cash checks for customers lined up at tellers' windows The bank has wets of 65 million pounds but bank Manager Race Godfrey said the employes who had the strongroom keys were snowed in at home With the bank's assets literally frozen Godfrey said the loan from Campbell "was Just a question of tiding us over for a Business Classified Comics :: Poland Grabs 'Spy' lusts US Attache 41 - '' GREAT Page - ‘i 1 '4' p is ' ' 4 ft114!:l' 5 $ i' " - " 11 w - ' - bk s - i ' 410'p ' t ' A - nal after flying over the wreck which level was at the 8600-foo- t The nose the wings and the tail section look like they are still attached to the- fuselage It was burned completely" The plane crashed within an hour Bank Stilt Fluid With Pub's Aid ' tt ' 1 totr ''I ' T's- - iwanson and Corbridge confirined earlier aerial observation that the craft was virtually intact but burned out on the plane was "Everything ' charred and the black stood out against 30 State Ut ' I s ' '" 1 -4 4"-- ) - 5s Wally Swanson and Gene Corbridge of the Bureau of Land Management who first spotted the wreck shortly after dawn reached the spot at 12:50 pm and radioed back that there were "no survivors Everything is burned to a crisp — except the tail" on foot men hours two took six the It to cover three miles up the mountain and into the ravine near the top where the blackened Ihulk lay Forced down by heavy icing on its had crashed on its belly nplane backward into the de- pwriesngssl'on t i nto flames tphhect1:grh iatephsenrowof "thseaiNdevMaadrailySntaNteewlotourn: p 'p -' Itt- '''' ‘ i4 ' ' ' pt ' ' A " -4- 4 A6S - io 1 - -- - 11 '4 1 - ' 114I )E: ' "' ) ' ) Black Stands Out - - - ttirt- soy k f- I "-t- '- w Os ''1 "i0" flor4 v K ' ' " i I r 4 4 o 1 The Navy ordered three high altitude helicopters from the El Toro Marine base in southern California to Mt Tobin to begin rescue operations Friday morning I -4 - r ‘ 4 ' sty 4' Burned to a Crisp t '''"' I ' t4 l'"4 '" ter 1 - - t e 1 first-cles- six-ce- first-clas- 11 i The rugged climbers who reached the ' tragic scene radioed back that they had 'found 11 bodies and were sure all others were there in the snow They planned to camp all night on the mountain and resume searching Friday They speculated that it might be necessary to remove the bodies by helicop- i ' I has interconnected per cent of all six-ce- first-clas- n Ice and treelimbs knocked out electric lines in a 604thile-wid- e belt of North Carolina The city of Dunn was Newsman John virtually paralyzed Thomas reported so many trees were broken by ice the scene resembled the aftermath of Hurricane Hazel In 1954 ft Because of shifting transportation patterns 'O'Brient said nearly half of the first class letters are already going by air O'Brien said the purchase of a airmail stamp "guarantees" it a plane reservation A stamp means the letter is on stand-bO'Brient told a press conference "with an excellent chance of getting a seat on an airplane" Although The priority mail system would cost the department revenue — since nobody would buy airmail stamps— O'Brien said that wouldn't be a problem He said that better handling methods and the use of ZIP code meant the department could move mail at less cost Last year the postmaster general said only 14 cities had a major airlift facility But now the department says it Washington Post Writer WASHINGTON-- - The Post Office Des and partment plans to merge airmail into a single "priority mail" category which would guarantee overnight delivery of most letters If Congress approves the priorityt mail would go into effect next year It would cost six cents the same as the s rate All letters would present be moved by the fastest transportation available — and those going more than 200 miles would all go by air Postmaster General Lawrence F O'Brien said he would ask the next Congress for permission to make the change Meantime he said the department will build or complete additional mail handling facilities in 44 major cities at f - By Mike Causey storm that swept the southland It was plastered by up to 14 inches of snow and a sheath of ice that paralyzed most transportation closed almost all schools in the state and left thousands of homes and businesses without power Schools closed in more than 30 Virginia counties Some South Carolina textile plants suspended operations and others operated at partial capacity t En Route to Seattle I i 10000-foo- Siitoodi-- 6c!Cent - Salt Lake City and Utah — Generally falr wIth temperatures remaining quitel cold Weather map ison Page 0 Price Ten Cents Postal- aline Trans ort Dixie Storm Ice Snow Hobble A ' – 190 12 rfP r' )4" AT 4111 ' & ' 1 1 - I 1 4) Vol 196 No 90 363-152- a 1 1 - ) iv ' 363-151- ' '' a4 : : 1 ' 'died Preis Wirephoto by interpreter she and the boy would have to ante their home N Thua Thien The new lineup now would look this way: 10 US Marine battalions in Quang Tri five in Thua Thien Province four in Quang Nam Province — where n is located — and 15 US Army and five Korean battalions in the lower provinces of Quang Tin and Quang Ngai aNg tth g - |