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Show I 3? Tribune Phones Home Delivery, 5212840; Advertising departments Classified ads, General display, Retail display, IMtt 521-353- 5; 524-270- 1; 524-2S6- 1. Vol. 201, No. 96 Salt Lake City. Utah Sunday Morning Tribune Phones Information, Scores, Womens, News ami Editorial . Promotion, Sports, Magazine, 524-450- 524-i50- 1; 524-452- 1; 0; 524-454- 5; 524-451- 19, 1970 July 1; 524-458- 521-457- Price Twenty Five Cents -- 1. Nixon Tells Congress: Stay Within Budget By Janies M. Naughton New York Times Writer - ed. Continue lo Volley Egyptians Down Israeli Jet Over Missile Site chat with J. Keith Melville and Gunn McKay, who will compete in primary for first district bid. Congress Rivals Deadlock At Utah Democrat Parley By Douglas L. Paiker Tribune Political Editor United Press International Israeli warplanes struck across three n fi onts Saturday but lost another r on in raids Egypts jet d antiaircraft missile bases on the Suez Canal. Ground fighting also was reported on the Jordanian and Lebatwo-ma- fighter-bombe- f The two contenders for the First Congressional District nomination struggled to a virtual standoff Saturday at the state Democratic convention in the Salt Soviet-supplie- nese borders. In Cairo, meantime, President Gamal Abdei Nasser began briefing top Egyptian officials on his talks in Moscow. A disjoint communique on the cussions said the Soviets pledged continuing support to the Arabs while backing efforts toward a political settlement in the Middle East conflict. two-wee- k Go to Great lengths Egyptian government sources said the Kremlin is prepared to go to great lengths to seek a peaceful solution before opting for any military showdown along the Suez Canal, They said the Russians will hold more discussions shortly with the United States on their recent peace initiatives and might come up .with a compromise proposal for submission to the other Big Four powers. It was the 58th consecutive day of raids by Israeli warplanes against Egyptian antiaircraft missile baes and other military targets along the canal. said An Israeli military spokesman the jet was hit during strikes at missile .sites in the central sector and the two crewmen were seen parachuting into Egyptian territory. He did not say whethd er the plane was shot down by SAM2 or SAM3 missiles or by conventional antiaircraft fire. It was the fourth jet lost over Egypt since June 30 when the Israelis said Egypt installed a new SAM2 and SAM3 complex, starting 15 miles west of the canal and covering 756 sMuare miles of the canal zone. Israeli reports said some of the missiles are manned by Soviet military personnel. Inside The Tribune Page Page Arts Obituaries Sports Star Gazer E-l--8 Classified Business Editorials Foreign 4 4 Health 5 National 13,17 7, 3 8 6 Television Theaters 7 Washington ,4 Womens Palace. The deadlock sends them into a Sept. 8 primary election. The voting climaxed the affair, whose keynote speaker, Sen. Harold E. Hughes of Iowa, draw a long standing ovation after accusing President Nixon of failure and deception. The student delegate bloc nearly 170 strong, concentiated Its efforts on the with success platform, alternating defeat. They gained a plank urging the adoption of an army by July, 1971; gained more amenable language in a plank on campus protests; and, although unsuccessful in obtaining stronger wording in the Indochina plank, they the major stimulus for the wording that was accepted. Utah Democrats went on record as urging the immediate withdrawal of all military personnel from Southeast Asia in such a way that it does not endanger their security . . . and that the military budget be reduced drastically. Primary foes for the Democratic congressional nomination in the first district will be J. Keith Melville. Brigham Young University Professor of political science and the 1966 nominee, W-l-- AND MORE . . . Full section of color comics. Home and Parade Magazines, Sears section. National Home Life offer. Sunday's Forecast Salt Lake City and Utah Partly cloudy with scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers. Weather map, Page all-da- y Initial reaction from Capitol Hill indicated that me Democratic-controlle- d Congress and the Republican administration would continue to volley for the upper hand in 1970 congressional campaigning, with the economy a major issue. Rep. Call Albert of Oklahoma, the House Democratic floor leader, said that President Mixons attack on Congress today was merely another effort to camouflage the disastrous economic policies of his administration. The voters will not fall for such obvious political gimmickry designed to disguise presidential neglect in such fields as health, education and housing, Albert said. Nixon urged Congress to view spending measures in terms of their over-aimpact on the budget, rather than as separate pieces of legislation for specific purposes. ll Irresponsible Spending This Is a time when the taxpayers of the United States will not tolerate irresponsible spending, he said. The President noted that he was willing to live with a ceiling of $2v,5.6 billion in federal spending during the 1971 fiscal year, an amount already more than $3 billion above the anticipated revenues. But he said that Congress, which imposed the ceiling on the administration, has made a travesty of this legislation by continuing to mandate spending that would exceed the limit, 1 now ask the Congress to establish a firm ceiling on total expenditures, said Nixon, a ceiling that would apply to the Congress as well as to the executive. Inflationary Pressures d See Page 2, Column 5 Nixon said that he did not object to a budget deficit, but that if it got too large it would renew inflationary pressures. At a White House briefing George P, Shultz, director of the Office of Management and Budget, said the point wras that we worked so hard to get here, lets not blow it. Todays Chuckle prize for being the laziest man in the world has to go to the fellow who sits and whittles with an electric knife. First Five Captured Previously .Vs usual, the spokesman in Tel Aviv did not identify the type of the plane shot e Phantom jet, down. But the the most powerful in Israels aerial arsenal. is one of the Israeli warplanes crew. manned by a The Israeli spokesman said Israeli jois also were in rction over Jordan and Lebanon, attacking Arab guerrilla bases in retaliation for attacks on border settlements. All planes returned sately. the spokesman said, but he gave no other U.S.-mad- two-ma- n o. g Ac coning o Paul McCracken, chaiiman ot the Presidents Council of Economic Advisers, future to hold the line on spending could pioduce a gap like the $25 billion del u it ot 19(18 He said that an acceptable deiuit would be one i ( (Copy light) Miniature Rail Holdup - SAN ANTONIO. TEX. (AP) Two masked men, one armed with a pistol, held up a miniature tram in a city park Saturdav dismay ing some passengers Ive Abortion? Women Say No, But Men Say Maybe Editor s Not e? This Is tnothor In writs of studios conducted bv Tht Salt Lakt Tribunt on lm teems Issues Utahns, porttnt Women of all ages adopted an antiabortion stand. Men, on the other hand, displayed a diversity of opinion, (please read across): By J. Roy Bardsley Salt Lake area wives frown on the idea of legalizing abortion in Utah. But husbands, particularly those in the middle age bracket, are not so sure it Isnt a wise idea. Since a bill was recently introduced into Congress to legalize abortion, the n of question was posed to a adults in Salt'Lake and Davis counties in Attitudes Toward Legalized Abortion : Un- - For Atsmst dtotfetf cross-sectio- this manner: "If you had a chance, would you vote for or against making abortion legal in Utah?" In total, the public is opposed, as evidenced by these results: Favor legalized abortion Oppose I'ndecld. u Total 37 54 9 100 leading role in whether legalized abortion was supported or opposed. LDS members, for example, opposed lawful abortion by nearly a margin, while residents fored it by slightly better than a ratio. The figures (read down) ; two-to-o- non-LD- S five-towo- a favorable response by North Vietnam and the Viet Cong as virtually nonexi- Taris talks. Nixons advisers visualize this planned maneuver as a test of Communist negotiating Intentions in the after-mat- h of their loss of supplv bases in Cambodia. Diplomatic officials rate the chance of I got a gun pointed at me, I do what told. One man wore a ski mask. His companions face was covered with a large scarf, Lucas said. "They told me, dont make a move! Lucas said. Thpn they started walking beside the train, he said. One stufted purses and billfolds in, a big white bag while the other held thfc gun on the passengers. Christian Berndt of Houston, Tex., vacationing here with his wife and twin boys, said he thought It was all a joke and refused to hand over his billfold. Then one of the grabbed me by the head and pushed me over, Berndt said. He said the man pointed a gun at his head. Then they came back to me and Im , who at first thought it was a put-oPolice said 30 of the 80 passengeis were robbed. The bandits spiang from a dump of bushes as the little train, onto which passengers simply stepped from the ground, chugged through a wooded area of Brackenridge Park. No one was injured but witnesses said one of the men choked a passenger and roughed up another who thought the holdup was a joke. Mock train robberies have been staged at the park several times to raise money for charity. Engineer Walter Lucas, 24, said the men struck at the busiest time of the day. "They were waiting right there, behind that clump of bushes," Lucas said, "one of them said, Stop, mister, and he had a gun pointed at my chest. And when grabbed my purse, Mrs. Berndt said. Mrs. Berndt said she lost about $25, several credit cards and checks. Police said a total of $500 may have been taken from the passengers. Hazard 4Not Population, But Where People Live Bv Ken W. Clawson Washington Post Writer WASHINGTON President Nixons national goals research staff and Saturday the problem of population giowtli lies not in numbers but where people will live. The country is iaige enough, it said, to aborb an increase well above the present estimated population of 205 million, but there is a danger of the population being concentrated in pockets mostly in the eastern, central and western areas. The report added that the issue is now whether we can feed and clothe a population of any size we can realistically envisage, or even supply it with the expanding amount of energy it may demand. Price 1 of Congestion rather that of whether a advanced and industrially piospeious nation wants, or can continue, to pay the price of congestion and lontamination that comes with our ovet-a- The report is predicated on the fact that America is in transition to A postindustrial society where services and the use of knowledge are of more concern than the production of goods. The report says the nation can attain a quality of life in addition to material wealth as long as the economy expands, but that choices must be made taking both factors .into account. Some of the factors working against this were seen as the short time frame in vv hich government operates and the perpetuation of the agricultural cycle in which many U.S. institutions function. Army at Ready In Tieup of English Ports LDS Favor legalized Oppose Undecided ... abortion 32 7 100 affluence." The report suggested stimulating growth in small cities and the creation of new cities to negate the forecasts of g urban congestion in a few LDS megalopoli. 50 The group coneluded that setting na37 tional goals requires continuing debate 13 on how best to utilize U.S wealth and reever-growin- 100 Last week it was proposed in Congress that massive amounts of federal funds be appropirated for a planned parenthood services program. While this particular poll focused on the aborton aspect of population control, a later study will explore local attitudes toward planned parenthood in general. This study was conducted and compiled by Bardsley & Haslaeher, Inc., a private research organization. The size of the sample was 503 personal interviews, which is sufficient to yield results with 4.4 percent, plus or minus, or those whicli would accure from a complete count of adults 'n Salt Lake and Davis Counties). sources. It set no goals itself but said the nation must balance its future growth and development by anticipating the consequences of its decisions now . Future-Oriente- Role d future-oriente- stent Nixon aides said, however, that withsome such diplomatic probe, the enemys response to such a major military development as the allied strikes in Cambodia could not be fully determined. need to switch the emphasis Nixon of his policy from military to diplomatic action also is considered obvious in view of the national opposition Mined up by his decision to send troops into Cambodia at the end of April. Bruce, 72, a former ambassador to out i Britain in the Johnson administration, Ambassador Elsworth Bunker, 76, US. envoy in South Vietnam, and Ambassador Philip C. Habib, 50, who has been flying to acting negotiator in Paris, Washington this weekend for one or more strategy meetings of the National Security Council beginning midafternoon Tuesday. State Department officials have been working for a week or more on what they call a range of options for Nixons decision. But White House inioimants indicated that the key propositions being polished for presidential consideration deal with the possibility of giving the Communists a voice in the exercise ot political power in South Vietnam as a means of bringing the war to an end. One way to uo this, width Loth Nixon and Secretary of State William P. Rogers have discussed as a principle of U.S. negotiating policy, would be to devise an election formula which would assure the CommunlMs or political positions commensurate with their military power m provinces of South Vietnam where they are dominant. Elections, ofncials neie say, could also reflect this Communist power in the national government. Another way which has been consid d ered at length by the government here would be to form a mixed regime in Saigon by offering the Communists an opportunity to participate m the government under conditions acceptable to the United Slates and South Vietnamese regimes. This would create an appearance of U.S. and South Vietnamese willingness if South Vietnam would m fact engage in to accept a coalition such a proposal government. But U.S. officials say the Communists have made it quite clear they would never join in a By Leslie Hay nes Reuters News Agency ' LONDON Troops were 'g ty Saturday, reading to move in . uains strike-bounports where thousands of tons of perishable food w ill rot if it is left there much longer. . d The queens proclamation declaring a state of emergency, issued on Thursday alter 47.000 longshoremen stopped work, gives the government authority to call on the army to keep essential service operating. The government was uiged to veer a ay from its concentration on programs lole to the broader, more as national policymaker. The goals staff, headed bv White House aide Garment, was appointed by President Nixon July 13. 1969. to define the elements ot a national growth policy with the hope that it would cause widespread debate over the future course of the nation and result in something of a consensu over direction to he taken. Nixon, Envoys Chart New Proposals for Paris Peace Conference President Nixon WASHINGTON w ill meet with his top Vietnamese strategists this week to work out fresh peace proposals for his new negotiator. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce, to offer in the ol $2112 billioi ll details. By John M. Hightower Associated Press Correspondent p - hi-- i, Texas Park Bandits Pull It The Utah Poll Soviet-supplie- two-ma- n used bv shortfalls In revenue collee-- t site b as the government is exper-ic- k c g now because of adjustment to u'it.-mt- ! itio'i measures. Nivcni also prodded Congress to act soon on administration proposals to tax leaded gasoline, speed up the collection of pst , . o,i j taps and increas-'ps titheiwisp, he said, reve-'niu II tar short of the Febiuaiy c 1 WASHINGTON President Nixon warned Congress Saturday of difficult and painful measures ahead if it persists in running up a budget deficit. The w arning, in a statement issued at the White House, raised the possibility of requests for tax increases, large spending cuts or vetoes of appropriation bills. White House officials said, houevei, that Nixon had not decided whether to veto a S4.4 billion education appiopna-tio- n bill passed this week by the House of Representatives. The measure, expected to win Senate approval, contains $453 million more than the President request- Utah Democratic nominees, from left, A. H. Bob Nance, Second District and Sen. Frank E. Moss The impact of ovn spending dining the fiscal year that began July would continue into the 1972 fiscal year, piodm-ina massive deluit, said the eoalition under President Nguyen Van Thieu and Vue President Nguyen Cao Ky. Food Leads Priorities At the moment the top priority is food. There is no question of any immediate shortage because the nation's larders are well stocked and there has been no widespread panic buying by hotise-i e Fcv the moment the fust emeigenry to be bulled is peiishable food lyong m the hold of .ships oi tiled up in waterfront wirehouse To nursier tin toed io distributor will be the troop.-- tirst task, but according to military souices they are unlikely to start until Monday or even Tuesday. Nearly all reports coming in from emeigency committees set up in the port by the Trade Ministry suggests that action can wait until after the weekend. Happier Outlook Although the government is determined to use its emergency powers to tne fullest extent necessary, some political quarters believe it would feel happier if the drafting of troops could be delayed until alter Parliament has given its backing Monday when the emergency mea- sures are debated. Thei e i unlikely to be any opposition in pnnciple from the Lc.bor Party. Its lradei. Harold Wilson, himself invoked the same emergency powers when as prim? minister in 1966 he was faced with a nationw ide strike by seamen. |