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Show "Nine "in,y i yw,aSe Syy f$?9 Salt Lake City, I tah October 10, 1971 Sunday Morning Price Thirty-Fi- x e Cents Phase 2: Its Still Dimension X specifics as to what pay raises and price that are in conflict with interpretations increases may be permitted. given union officials earlier. Secretary of the Treasury John B. Meany and other union leaders conConnally followed up the next day with tended major elements of the new ecosome amplification but notably with what nomic policy are stacked in favor of amounted to a public plea, also on televibusiness. President George Senate Democratic Leader Mike Manssion, for AFL-CIMeatiy to accept appointment to the pro- field of Montana said Saturday, We c board to overposed ought to give the President every support see wages. we possibly can and forget politics. Mansfield told newsmen he hopes orMeany didnt say vts or no. Instead labor accepts Nixons invitation to ganized he called a mi iting for Tuesday of the on the planned Pay Board AFL-pExecutive Council and the participate that is to rule on proposed wage inheads of the independent United Auto creases. Workers and Teamsters Unions. He said Mansfield disagreed with Leonard it is to discuss what he called White Woodcock, the UAW president, who said House interpretations of the program Friday he would refuse to serve if the By Edmond LeBreton Associated Press Writer - President has dropped the other WASHINGTON Nixon his plan shoe for continued controls when the wage-pric- e and the refreeze ends Nov. 13 percussions still are sounding uncertainly through Ccngres" and the labor movement. And for the public the questions business-labor-publi- far ouinun.er answers. Meanwhile, the Cost of Living Council reported the Phase 1 freeze functioning well with overwhelming voluntary compl'ancc. Nixon gave the nation on television Thursday night the outline of his proposed new arrangements, rather than Rogers Hinting BALTIMORE, U.N. Bid Fails By Nicholas Damloff United Press International WASHINGTON Secretary of State William P. Rogers has cautioned foreign ministers that the United States might be forced by Congress to reduce its financial contributions to the United Nations if Nationalist China is expelled, State Department officials acknowledged Hugh disappointment ( .Ts rZ2fi: Associated Press Wlrephoto quarters. Standing are Army Chief of Staff Gen. Jose Herrera, left, Gen. Ferando Dubra. Argentinas President Alejandro Lanusse denounces conp attempt in address at army head- - l Revolt in Argentina Flops Without Shot Beiiiff Fired J cia and most of the 2,000 rebel troops at Azul. Took the Command By Simon Muller Reuters News Agency . ! - A rightwing : AZUL, ARGENTINA arfny revolt against President Alejandro Lanusse collapsed Saturday without a shot fired when tire last pockets of resistance surrendered to loyalist troops moving in to attack them. An army communique said lieutenant colonels Florentino Diaz Loza and Arman do Baldrich surrendered to the commander of army units closing in on them. . The announcement came only minutes after an earlier communique said units of the First Army Corps were preparing to attack a rebel armored column still holding out despite the surrender of revolt leader Col. Manuel Alejandro Gar- - Orioles Win, The BaltBALTIMORE, MD. (AP) imore Orioles got home Robinson, Merv Rettenmund and Don Buford and came from behind to defeat All the Facts, Pages D-- 5, i Garcia flew here from Buenos Aires Friday to take over leadership of the revolt after Diaz Loza and Baldrich ordered troops to take over radio stations in Azul and in the nearby town of to issue their call for Gen. Lanusse to step down. A senior Argentine air force officer was also arrested Saturday after hijacking an airliner to the western city of Mendoza in an attempt to join the revolt. Air force sources said Commodore Pio Matassi, returning from a trip to Europe in an Aerolineas Argentinas Boeing 707 bound for Buenos Aires, forced the pilot to land at Mendoza, 690 miles west of Buenos Aires, to shorten his trip to the nearby air force base at Villa Reynolds. Ola-varl- ia Gives Himself 5-- 3, In Series Opener runs from Frank G the Pittsburgh Pirates, Saturday in the opening game of the 1971 World Series. who won Dave McNally, a 21 games during the regular season, limited thp Pirates to three hits, one in each He retired 19 of the first three innings. consecutive batters from the third inning until an Oriole error put a Pirate on base with one out in the ninth. By J. Roy Bardsley The Utah public s.rongly favors industrial expansion throughout the slate. But, at the same time, a majority advocates holding the population at its present level. These i onfheting opinions were rendered by I 'tali residents in Salt a Lake Tubune ltnh poll on env i: factors. Asa Salt Lake contractor explained; fp But at Mendoza Matassi, commander of the Villa Reynolds base, heard that revolt by rebel garrisons in the the towns of Azul and Olvarria had collapsed and he gave himself up to an air force officer, the sources said. The sources said Matassi was known to share the revolt leaders opposition to Lanusse and planned to pledge the air bases support for the revolt. A government spokesman in Buenos Aires, 170 miles northeast of Azul, said the rebel army officers were being taken to an army penal establishment in neighboring La Pampi Province pending court Industrialize, Note This Is another It a .er.M ct Editor studlp of important D.us facing Utahns coh ducted by The Sait Lake Tribune General Assembly debate starts Oct. the China issue. Rogers is lobbying for votes for an American resolution proposing to seat Communist China and give it a seat on the Security Counr"' while retaining General Assembly membership for the Nationalist regime on Taiwan. Rogers was reported to have called attention to a growing feeling in Congress that U.S. moral and financial support for the United Nations should be if the Nationalists are expelled, as provided in a resolution sponsored by Communist Albania. martial. reMs described themselves as r lightwing Christian popular groups and said young army officers had lost faith in Lanusse who rose to power in March after toppling nationalist President Gen. Roberto Levingston. The Yes! Expect Close Vote State Department officials said they expected the China vote to be very, very, very close. As many as 30 of the United Nations 131 member nations have yet to decide how they will vote, officials said. Rogers has met 69 foreign ministers attending the General Assembly and plans to confer with about 20 more next week. Among other arguments Rogers is advancing in behalf of Nationalist China are these: If the Nationalists are expelled, it an uncomfoi table precwould create for expulsion of other member edent states. If Taiwan is expelled, such action might encourage Communist China to more against Taiwan by the use of force. It is a false argument to vote against the U.S. resolution merely to please the Peking government. The United States, after all, also is seeking to improve its relations with mainland China. Tribune Telephone Numbers, Page 2 A-- 27, a real boring and . . . In an interview with the Baltimore Sun, Vandervoort claimed the potential deterrent factor of the program is severely hampered by the ease with which the officers can be distinguished from ordinary passengers. Its obvious to anybody with any brains at all who we are, Vandervoort said. We sit next Jto the stairwell, one on earii ide. We never drink. And we are treated with obvious deference by the stewardesses and other airlines personnel. The stairwell reference was to Boeing 747 jumbo jets, but he Full Section Color Comics; Home Magazine; Pr.rade MagaEnvironment zine; National Home Life SecWoolwortb Section. tion; Section, Sunday's F orecast Salt Lake City and vicinity Fair, continued warm. Highs in 70s, lows near 43. No rain. Weather map, Page i - Los Angeles Times Service of ANGELES Unloading cargo ships in Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif., harbors got off to to h slow start Saturday as returning longshoremen milled about and waited d for machinery to start up LOS strike-boun- d quite a Asked whether other marshals shared his discontent, Vandervoort replied, You bet jour bippy. You should go down to Friendship Airport and talk to some of these guys." "We are told at training school that we will probably million miles without ever seeing a hijacker. That kind of lulls your edge," he said. Airlines occasionally bump a sky marshal from a heavily booked flight because of such percentages, Vandervoort added. The odds are so high that the airlines think it is tetter to have the money than the security coverage. This is their honfly-1- 2 est evaluation of the program," he said, claiming that the companies were cutting back on the use of marshals. - The AH along the West Coast, from San Diego to Seattle, about 15,000 members of the International Longshoremens and Warehousemens Union (ILWU) obeyed President Nixons invocation of the y strike. A Act, ending the total of 249 cargo ships were stranded in 24 West Coast ports. regularly appointments the court, which Taft-Hartl- But a speedy return to normal in Los Beach wrns balked by the Arfgeles-Lon- g of the Association of Machinists Government attorneys originally forgot to include the IAM in the federal court order ending the ILWU walkout and the oversight was not corrected until (IAM) Some Repcrt, Go Home About 1,500 ILWU members were reported back at work Saturday but went home because of the delay in preparations paused by the simultaneous IAM strike, which arose from a dispute with five stevedoring companies. The West Coast shutuown, which began June 30, cost an estimated $1.7 billion in losses. tlis of he .Vtiumgh nouilv three-fou- i public fed mme industiy is needed. Main made it crvstal clear that the environment should be protected against pollution. Devond providing a better economic Today's Chuckle Tnis is another in a senes of on current uffuiis sponsored by Tubune. The study was conducted by Bardsley and llusliuier, Inc., a private resenjeh organization. Sample for the study was GUO pcisonal interviews. regard-in- g possibleto now has two 101-da- ' Another Strike Balks Return White House declined to comment on the report, as it does again. some marked variations in attitudes by geographical aiea. Northern Utah, in paitieular, wants to maintain its present ecological balance. For example: (Read across) Favor Ke"p Coun tic's Industrial Population tell- the authorities "Frankly, youre told that if you dont like the program you can quit. So I quit. WASHINGTON Sen, Robert C. is among the names under Byrd, consideration for an appointment to the Supreme Court.- long-idle- base, there is a strong feeling that moie jobs would allow the youth of Utah to find work at home. On the growth issues, the opinions of husbands and wives pursued parallel paths, but men were more inclined to industrial expansion, while promote Then there was me absent-nnnde- d crook who pulled a gun on the bank er and said, Take me to Havana, upsets bit. By John Herbers New York Times Writer i rather two-fol- d refused to identify the flights to which marshals usually are assigned. I dont think that would be fair to the program, Vandervoort said. Vandervoorts at superior Friendship International Airport near Baltimore, John Buik, refused to comment. Gen. Benjamin O. Davis, assistant U!S. secretary of transportation, told the Sun that marshals have prevented a large number of possible hijackers from boarding airplanes and credited the program for a 70 percent drop in hijacking attempts during 1971. Davis declined to cite specific figures on the number of hijackings believed prevented by sky marshals. Vandervoort said he quit last month after about half a year on the job, mostly at Kennedy Airport in New York, because if you speak up about the conditions in the program, this For Supreme Court Seat industry and jobs, but to see an influx of outsiders. line are the response patterns on industrial and population growth: 72 Favor industrial growth Feel industry should be limited 25 Undecided 3 We need more ' - e, Starts Slowly On West Coast More Population, No! Say Utahns Id lute In Congress, some Democrats were saying the legislative branch should insist on a voice in shaping the future economic control system. Among others, Sen. William Prox-mirchairman of the Senate-Hous- e Economic Committee, said Congress should set limits on presidential power in any extension and insist on Senate confirmation of members of the key boards. Chairman Wright Patman, See Page 2, Column 1 Sen. Bvrd Possible Choice late Friday. Until machinery for unloading the ships could be readied by the IAM, the 2,860 local ILWU workers had little to do but .wait, while ships were gradually eased to the piers. Operations were expected to approach normal sometime Sunday. AND MORE circumstances extraordinary youve got to have that kind of leash, Mansfield said. Dock Unloading concurrent strike Inside The Tribune Vandervoort, . . 18 on M. . low priority. The officials emphasized that Rogers, In private conversations in the past week at New York, did not raise the possibility as a threat but rather as a congressional1 Lobbies for Votes A UP) said the program was . Saturday. problem facing the administration. MD. former sky marshal who quit the antihijack program says the marshals are easily spotted by passengers and occasionally bumped by airlines in favor of paying customers. t panels. In Marshal Calls It a Bore Ex-Sk- y At Aid Cut If Presidents Cost of Living Council has veto power over the wage and price vacancies. But high ministration adoffi-cia- ls confirmed BjTd was one of a number of persons under consideration for appointment to the court, both within the White House and in the Department of Justice. The possibility of a BjTd appointment was met with considerable surprise in Washington, because the senator has never practiced law and because he once was an organizer for the Ku Klux Klan. Civil rights leaders, however, said that while they personally would oppose Byra for the post the possibility of his nomination was not as remote as it might at first seem. iNi that to bring change to this country, to put the country back on the right course, by changing the membership of the court Previously, he said, the high court had usurped some of the duties of the Legislative Branch. Byrd voted for the two Nixon appoint- ments to the court that the Senate rejected Clement Haynsworth and G. Har- rold Carswell. Clarence Mitchell, Washington director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said that BjTd had a mixed record on civil rights in both the House and the Senate. He has voted for some civil rights measures and opposed others. MitcheU said he thought the senators Klan record would be his largest obstacle to confirmation, should the appointment be made. Bj-rwas an organizer for the Klan in the 1940s, but later denounced the Han. -- ' " (Copyright) Tribune to View It From LBJ Vantage Point Idea Has Merit Tliey pointed out that Bjrrd, who is assistant majority leader in the Senate, fyis connections with congressional good Democrats, has developed a close relationship with President Nixon and is currently pushing civil rights legislation a bill to strengthen enforcement powers of the' Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Byrd had no comment on the reports that his name was under consideration for the high court. in recent months, he has served as liaison between, the White House and congressional Democrats. Earlier this month it was Byrd who advised Rep. Richard H. Poff. that if he, Poff, accepted a nomination to the court his confirmation would face a long delay by liberal opposition. To Avoid Hassle A few hours later Poff withdrew his name from consideration, saying he wanted to avoid a long and divisive confirmation battle." Administru.ion sources characterized as too strong a story published in the Washington Daily News Saturday that Bvrd was President Nixons persond choice for the court seat heid by the late Justice Hugo Black, but they stressed that Bjrds name was among several being considered. Bvrd, who is 53 jears old, is knom as a conservative who has praised Nixons intention tc appoint "strict constructionists to the court. Last July, the senator said in an inter. view, I think the Presiler-- can do mote k I shall not seek the nomination for another term as your president. President Johnsons announcement on Sunday, March 31, 1968, fall like a bomb- shell on a startled nation. How did President Johnson feel about his decision? It was all over. The weight of the days and the weeks and the months had lilted, says the former President in his book The Vantage Point," portions of which will appear in series form in The Salt Lake Tribune. The exclusive, series will start rt Sunday, Oct. 17. The series is from a book that could only have been written by a president who has lived through some of the most crucial years of our lives. In the series. President Johnson tells about his historic civil rights demsio. And he tells about his search for peace and his failure to find it. Youll also read what led Bobby Kennedy to tell President Johnson, Your position is unselfish and courageous. I regret we have not had closer contact. On Vietnam, President Johnson says in his book: As I luok back, I think perhaps we tried too hard to spell out our honest desire for peace. Never once was there a clear sign that Ho Chi Minh had a genuine interest in bargaining. Fiesident Johnsons major decision during his five and years in the While House will unfold in the serialization. Watch for the first installment when it appeals Sunday, Oct, 17, in one-ha- lf SlK Jlalt uVIlntrt? . -- -- . |