Show — Tribune Phones b 0 Ilome Delivery Advertising departments — 521-2S4- Classified ads General display Retail display 521-353- 5 521-270- I :t '41 Vol Sat Lake City Utah 199 No 131 a- — 0:4g441w44--7cv!et 'tit - itie 17 tk 1- s s' i since the 1967 war The Israelis said one of their planes was missing after the aerial battles and ground attacks on both sines of the Suez Canal The Israeli pilot wts seen parachuting into Egyptian territory Thursday's action which began with an Egyptian raid across the northern end of the canal was seen here as Cairo's response to the Israeli assault Tuesday against Egyptian coastal positions Time after time the Egyptian attack bombers and fighters streaked across the canal ceasefire line They began at 9 am but it wasn't until an hour after dark that the Israelis could assess the toll The hitting reported Egyptians antiaircraft batteries munition dumps radar installations supply depots and command posts in northern Sinai The report said riso that Egyptian planes "destroyed military vehicles behind the lines killing soldiers in them" The communique said all Egyptian planes returned to their bases except one which was also presumably hit by antiaircraft fire six-da- y 0'''''1-47-- 7 1-:- q Pi ileof all-da- y (i L:: 44ee' ''' 1 -- - '''' ' ii() z t ' ' Tit2 ' l' sk': :01 c ''rAs' li ''''' 1 r te k tip:— tfl Price Ten Cents ttse II I! 0 01!ttt ' 3 il 1 - ''"'"'"A 940 :413- ::: 4:ir1"- 4: -- t -1 -- 'I :alt& ' fot:2::' t ' 0 i 1I - ' 4:4':::::::1" :: 4-- -- 4 s s face-to-fac- e -4‘ '') r- 4) q k i ge 0 i C f''! e I H 4r A 1--!': ‘t Kl W4 41 ' t:I: P 15rrrTr In:41tW:'":XT :::: ! ::0':4::? -- :'':'i:'iM'AA014:':'r:':ifi '::T: ''' ': '''4V: POt itt:IirTir'' 40 ''::::'5!!1744:::::: '4&4 H'::::V:"&:!' 'ft' (rNnt: ':A '1 ''': 7: 3t r 1 Conversation t: ( A :11:4:- :: t'"::i6t-k:::- '' P ' 1:: t '1 i5 ::::::: A'' k f : ':: ' : I: i L''''''"171JIN I rs i' ':N ' I : t:'V ‘ :4 li :' ' 1 ' ' ri ' iininiEk:1: ' ''': :' ' r ' ': —Associated Press Wirep hot° Pen si v e I y touch the sadly a young girl reaches out to casket of the late Sen Dirksen after graveside se rvic es in Pekin Marigolds Dirksen's favorite adorn the casket Everett M There was no indication of the source initiative for the visits to Peking of either the Soviets or the Romanian dele gations The presumption that Nosygin had gone all the ‘‘ay back to Soviet sod bp fore proceeding to Peking suggested that the Chinese decision to meet with him l one made in the Chinese was a capital after Kosygin already had depart ed from Hanoi Kosygin last visited Peking in DM at nen the Vietnam war was a moment growing in intensity lie had been in too Hanoi then and visited Peking See Page 2 Column 2 high-leve- Nixon Mapping Speech at UN Assembly Called Useful By Frank Cormier "The two sides opevly explained their positions and held a conversation useful for both sides" said the Tass announcement Pekipg's official New China News Agency distributed in Tokyo a report saying Chou and Kosygin hod "a frank conversation" NCNA said the meeting took place at Peking's airport when Kosygin was "passing through" on his way home from Hanoi The Chinese statement came more than six hours after Radio Moscow reported the meeting d ':: '‘: - 1 - b2:k- f:: ::::::: p ' 1- 1'::' s:::: '1:t 4 4::(7AN t :'' '' ' '''S'XH ::::1 NsioiA'‘) - T4 i It ' 1 En-la- En-la- 4 i '''' i meeting of the two powers in four years The official Soviet news agency Tass revealed the conference saying Alexei N Kosygin and Chou i had "useful" talks but giving no clue to the substance The meeting biought a brief hiatus in the violent denunciations that the two giant neighbors have been trading in disputes over borders and the direction of Communist ideology The Soviet leader had been in North Vietnam to attend the funeral of President Ho Chi 'Ninth and this made his stop in Peking the more intriguing to observers Chou i could have met him in Hanoi but left there in advance of the funeral in what appeared to be a studied effort to avoid a meeting with Kosygin How the Peking visit was arranged was not explained Tass said only that the two met by "mXual agreement" J Romanian Croup Arrives The Kosygin stop coincided with the delarrival in Peking of a egation from Communist Romania headed by Premier Ion Cheorghe Maurer which also attended the Ho funeral in Hanoi This seemed likely to arouse speculation that the Romanians who have e steered a neutral course in the feud were trying to mediate some of the major differences between the two big Communist powers There was no indication in the announcements however that the Romanians sat in on the conversations between Chou and Kosygin or had any role in arranging the meeting' Only a day before the Peking meeting the Soviet press launched a new campaign accusing China of delaying the start of talks on frontier disputes which have caused military clashes along the e border long Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON — President Nixon announced Thursday on the eve of a major Vietnam policy review that he will fly to New York next week to addi ess the United Nations General Assembly Outing his Sept 18 trip to UN headquarters Mr Nixon is expected to confer privately with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko a key figure in mufti' lug efforts by Washington officials to initiate a closer dialogue with the Soviet Union on limitation of strategic arms the Middle East and — hopefully—Vietnam peace efforts Center of Remarks three-memb- 'Mighty Man Answer Call' US Halts B52s In 'Gesture' to Dirksen Buried in Illinois HO'S Successors SAIGON (AP) — The US Command suspended B52 bombing raids across South Vietnam Friday in a new peace initiative military sources said "It is a gesture of a po litical move" said one source "There is a new leadership in Hanoi" Earlier in the hours after the end of the Viet Cong ceasefire for the funeral of Ho Chi Mini the big bombers had dropped a million pounds of explosives on various targets inside the country truce they stayed During the three-daaway from Vietnam and instead bombed infiltration trails through eastern Laos No 1352 missions were reported Thursday night or Friday Asked why a US Command spokesman said: "We report missions as they are flown We don't comment beyond that" A Pentagon spokesman in Washington said he didn't know of any planned bombing lull in Vietnam y enemy shellings were reported early Friday following 39 attacks on bases and towns the previous night Twenty-nin- e Back to Normal Commenting on the ground war a field officer said: "We're back to normal We're after the enemy again We're going into areas where we've had reports of movements or bunkers" ceasefire proDuring the claimed by the Viet Gong to mourn North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh US ground forces had adopted a defensive stance firing only when fired upon Renewed fighting was reported northwest of Saigon and in the An Hoa area 24 miles south of Da Nang where US Marines killed 20 env - V soldiers in four separate battles at a cost of one Marine killed and 17 wounded US 25th Infantry Division soldiers and South Vietnamese paratroopers killed another 49 enemy soldiers in a r battle 53 miles northwest of Saigon on the slopes of Black Virgin Mount a in US To Understand Fditor's Note! This Is the sixth article In a series excerpted from "Between Parent and Teenager" by Dr Haim G Ginott Copyright 199 by Dr Heim G Ginott Reprinted by permission of The Macmillan Co eistributed by Newsday Specials By Dr Haim G anott Daniel age 14 came home raving road: "'The dumb bus driver Smitty called me a stupid idiot three times! '"' he pushed And me too" Mr After Brief Military Rites PEKIN ILL (AP) — Sen Everett McKinley Dirksen was buried with military honors Thursday in Pekin his native central Illinois town where he began a career of politics and statesmanship that spanned four decades The brief ceremony was attended by Vice President Spiro T Agnew more than 40 senators and Cabinet members Thousands of persons ringed the cemetery on the hot sunny day for a glimpse of the flag draped casket bearing the body of the Illinois Republican who died Sunday in Washington Brought by Jets The simple graveside service led by the Rev Edward L R Elson Senate chaplain capped four days of tribute to the Republican Senate leader Five presidential jets brought home Dirksen's body about an hour before the funeral Accompanying the body were the widow Louella her daughter Dan-ic- e Sen Howard and her Baker They sat in the front row as the Rev Mr Elson eulogized Dirksen "The last march has ended a mighty man now answers roll call His battles are fought his victories are won" The Rev Ralph Cordes pastor of the Second Reformed Church of Pekin which Dirksen attended as a youth followed Elson and said "We give thanks almighty God that as of old Thou seek a and Thou enman to build a wall abled him to build it well" s6n-inla- Today's Chuckle A usurer is a man who takes much interest in his business Dirksen an artillery observer in saWorld War I received a three-volle-y lute from a rifle team This was followed by taps The honor guard of two soldiers two sailors two Marines a Coast Guardsman and an airman folded the flag in the military triangle fashion and handed it to Army Lt Gen B P Mock who presented it to Mrs Dirksen with a salute The band played "America the Beautiful" and the family left the cemetery Vice President Agnew stood near the seated mourners The huge Senate delegation which included majority leader Mike Mansfield Edmund M Muskie Gordon Allot Edward M Kennedy Barr Goldwater and Charles H Percy Dirksen's Illinois colleague stood in a seven-memb- semicircle Among Mourners Gov Richard Ogilvie of Illinois and Chicago Mayor Richard J Daley were gathered with Defense Secretary Melvin R Laird Treasury Secretary David M Kennedy and Labor Secretary George P Shultz near the green canopy that covered Dirksen's bier and the family mem- bers seated nearby Sen Margaret Chase Smith of Maine ended the tribute to Dirksen by placing on his casket a single marigold the flower which Dirksen had championed as the national flower He had waged a friendly rivalry with Mrs Smith who favored the rose The five presidential jets carrying coffin Agnew and Dirksen's a host of Cabinet members and congressional leaders landed at Greater Peoria Airport in Peoria About 100 members of a state tion waited at the landing strip and hundreds more watched from a distance flag-drape- d Soviet-Chines- Soviet-Chines- Both Sides Le Veil Accusations The Russians accused the Chinese of deliberate and almost daily border provocations The Chinese in turn have been roundly denouncing Soviet policies daily in press attacks and broadcasts The Tass announcement said the Peking meeting was attended on the Soviet side by Konstantin Katushev a secretary of the Soviet Communist Party Central Committee and Mikhail Yasnov a vice president of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet or parliament They had accompanied Kosygin to Hanoi Tass said on the Chinese side with Chou were Li Hsiennien and Hsien n both vice premiers Le Hsiennien also had been in Hanoi to head a Fu-chi- On the Inside Page Business ClasAlled Comies C4 Editorials Foreign Football National Obituaries Page Sports II 8 B4--7 Star Gazer B-- Television C-- 6 2 Theaters 0 0 funeral of the Stops Over in Peking ii:"6: 44 substitute delegation to the after Chou's departure — The Soviet and Chinete premiers held a surprise meeting Thursday in Peking — the first high-leve- l o' '''"t t''' is 5 524-458- MOSCOW 411: '' 4ro1rs0P-A- - 14 ir 0 :: Needs Parent Valentine Washington Women's Youth B- -I A4-- 9 -3 Fridays Foreca4 Salt Lake City and Utah — Fair with little temperature change Weat!er map is on Page 0 In announcing Nixon's major speech at the 24th annual General Assembly White House press secretary Ronald L Ziegler cautioned against speculation that Vietnam would be at the center of Nixon's remarks Vietnam is very much in the Washing- ton forefront now with Nixon summoning his principal advisers from Washington Vietnam and Paris for a lengthy Cabinet Room review Friday of the entire Vietnamese situation said "There will be no Ziegler announcement directly following this meeting" He added that any decisions reached by the panel will be disclosed "as our policy proceeds" He said it would be incorrect to antici— pate that the conference would focus on Nixon's delayed decision regarding future withdrawals of US troops from South Vietnam He said the conferees will not focus on any one item top-lev- Remains in Capital In from Saigon for the meeting are Ambassador Elsworth Bunker and Gen Creighton W Abrams the top US commander in the war zone Flying here from Honolulu are Adm John S McCain commander in chief of the Pacific Philip Habib senior member of the US negotiating team at the Paris peace talks remained in the capital after a stay of several days in order to be present Washington officials sitting in on the session will' include Vice President Spiro T Agnew Secretary of State William P Rogers Secretary of Defense Melvin R Laird di re c tor Richard Helms of the Central Intelligence Agency Atty Gen John N Mitchell Gen Earle G Wheeler chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Henry A Kissinger Nixon's special assistant for national security affairs Ziegler said he did not know what Nixon will talk about in his UN speech Neither could he say how long the chief executive will remain in New York Asked whether Nixon would take the occasion to confer with Gromyko Ziegler said "We have no schedule for the President up there" But he conceded "He may be meeting with some rep esentatives of other countries" five-hou- ' US r thing to provoke him What did you do? DANIEL: Noth I was lug just Dr Ginott I know MOTHER: you ard I know Mr Smith fic!'s a nice man I'm sure he didn't mean to hurt you He must Look Chapter 6 $ the Child's The Parent Defelpw Attorne 1 have been tired It's I ' r t :: i:' Child in Trouble 1 1 4 it vv:r5- 1' s OP16 '''-- :The Teen Between full of At this top of his care about ' z e!! In- 524-15- 0 524-454- Associated Press Writer 77 ::: six-da- y 1?us 1969 11 M' 41!t - Arab-Israe- talking t4ti kto I 4 There was some speculation that the repeated Egyptian forays were mounted — despite the reported growing losses — to mollify Egyptian military men stung by Israel's unopposed land sea and air operation across the Gulf of Suez These observers thought that while both the coastal attack and the aerial activity represented a general military escalation in the area there was still no Immediate threat of a general war Thursday's aerial losses represented a record high in the long history of jet combat Twice before seven Egyptian jets were downed in a single day but there has been nothing like Thursday's reported toll except for the war first day of the The Israelis des7ribed the Egyptian : See Page 2 Column I wouldn't push you without a reason You must have done some- ” :::: -- I AAilk a 'g' I Record Losses Smith P i I-to- Another Egyptian report said that at 10:15 am Israeli planes fried to attack Egyptian coast guard posts on the western shore of the Gulf of Suez in the region of Zaafarana and Ras Choukeir but were driven off by antiaircraft fire By late afternoon the Israeli lad taken the offensive and ere conducting their own forays into Egyptian territory It was on' one of these raids that the Israeli plane was lost More than 100 planes were in the air during the day A senior general staff officer said Thursday night that "they had 60 or 70 and we had dozens" The day was marked also by Israeli air attacks against two sites in Jordan one south of the Sea of Galilee and the other near Salt said to contain Arab commando bases All the Israeli planes were reported to have returned safely Informed opinion here saw the activities as unlikely to change the strategic balance between Israel and the United Arab Republic MOTHER: --1 14) i!t ' '''' 1 :: 'Israelis Driven Off' - -- 141: '! : o I Aikkl44 —3t2 r—TI '"''ti hi fighter-bombe- fr°1("'''s --- Av-4A f Ar"t 3 --I 4tvviti'' N 2""1""& 0 1 uss Chinese e iers old Surprise P Hey I t WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen Lee said Thursday the Welfare Department notified him of a $282652 Head Start grant for the Central Ozark Economic Opportunity Corp of West Plains Mont "We have Rocky Mountains in Montana but no Ozarks" Metcalf telephoned back "We have a Plains We have no West Plains but maybe we could create one to accept the $282632" calf Iv 524-284- Scores 21 Womens News Sports 524 411 Promotion Drama Magazine 1 514-450- By John Bausman Israeli military officials that their reported Thursday and ground units downed 11 Egyptian jets in the fiercest aerial activity between Israeli and Arab forces - U nil 1 524-450- 521-457- 0 — Friday Morning — September Out of Range Ey James Feron New York Times Writer fighter-bomber- (10 AY1 formation 521-2S6- 1 Israelis Nail 11 Jets In Egypt Air Duel JERUSALEM e 1 Battles Astride Suez I I Tribune Phones Home Delivery not easy to drive a wild kids point Daniel exploded At the voice he yelled: "'You don't me at alt You always defend See rage 21 Column 2 Loses To US losses were two killed and seven wounded with government casualties described as light with no fatalities The battle broke out on the southern face of Black Virgin Mountain a 3000-foo- t peak near the Cambodian border about 50 miles northwest of Saigon A division spokesman said about 60 enemy troops were spotted at the foot of the mountain at midmorning The allies attacked with armored combat assault vehicles blasting at the enemy with 50caliber machine guns The enemy ithdrew at about 2 pm US casualties were described slight Government losses were not reported About 20 miles to the south other elements of the 25th Division discovered the bodies of 23 North Vietnamese soldiers killed by artillery shortly after the cease-fir- e ended Creaky National Capitol's Got Back to Wall By John Beck ler Associate I Press Writer WASHINGTON — Jet planes and helicopters have been ordered not to fly over the Capitol for fear their vibrations might came its deteriorating west wall to collapse The ban on overflights was disclosed in testimony leleased Thursday by the House Appropriations Committee as it approved a request for planning funds to start a rebuilding project Capitol architect J George Stewart said he worries every time he hears an airplane in the vicinity "I worry especially during an occasion such as the state funeral for the late President Eisenhower when leaders of all branches of the government were concentrated in the Capitol and when many thousands of our citizens passed through the building" he told the committee "Just think of what would result if during such a period the west section should or even collapse partially collapse" The condition of the west wall even disturbs the sleep of Rep George W Anchairman of the subcomdrews mittee that conducted the hearing on Stewart's request for S2 million in planning money Andrews saki that as he lay awake during a recent severe thunderstorm- - "I couldn't help but think what might happen if the vibrations were so great that the underpinning of certain sections of this Capitol might be shaken" Andrews said if the thousands of tourists who visit the Capitol each day were condition they probably aware would avoid the area Andrews' concern was based on testimony by Marion E Campioli assistant architect of the Capitol who unlike Stewart is a professional architect Stewart is a former congressman and :andscape engineer Campioli said the old west wall last remaining exterior portion of the original Capitol is beyond restoration An entirely new west front built as much as 88 feet outside the present one is needed to remove the threat of collapse he said Ile said the project which would add of-t- he one-tim- e space for 100 congressional offices a half dozen restaurants and several committee rooms would take more than four years to complete Campioli's testimony failed to still criticism of the project by the American Francis LethInstitute of Architects bridge an AIA vice president who also appeared at the hearing repeated the orthe ganizations VieW that restoration existing Avail is preferable to the extension recommended by Stewart and Cam- I pioll -Pe said the AIA believes the preservation of this most important landmark of American history and architectui e is uf more lasting value to the nation than the additional space tlat will be gained by- the proposed remoeeling" ) - I t t I t 1 |