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Show ilijioIHi1i r)M 'f H'lp iiij,(Tjl If lHlMH"iil'll 1.. A J.A. I 'll 11 Vol. 212. No y ;y if;i; Salt Lake City, Vtah March 28. Sunday Morning Price 197(i Thirty-fiv- t ents e America on Road to Recovery, F By I low a :'l Benedict Associated Prc.--s l C 'I Il, ,1 nlc, Call! President Kind i;i:su cam.i.iminiig in Ronald Reagan's homt sid Saturday that America is on ;Cc the in, ui to a new prosperity, 'and we .iic n"t about to take any detours now air eionomie recovery is going to be lull and complete and will be as heaitby as in the best years ol the Ford said at a luncheon ol the past. -- i stand not ljte lull-.il- M i; liie 1: days ol c.-- nieiit Wis winding up 'wo politnwng in Cohtornia after collect nit; about fnarit.iinti tor his cam pamn chest in fund raising meals f rid.iy in Sjn rancisco and Los Angeles - President said Saturday night he hopes Cuba and the Soviet Union pot the message that the United States will Kurd idly by if they ) in Ai rira attempt further on a brief . Crosse. campaign stop. Ford was asked at an airport news conference if Cuba and Russia were heeding recent U S. warn ings against intervention against the white minority regime in Rhodesia. "We have seen no further action they have taken which would be defined as adventurism, such as in .Angola." the At La Wix lare 8 President replied "1 hope that we have made it clear tha the United States would take appropriate actions against it." told . C ' what retaliatory action the I mted Stales might take, be replied. "1 .vould not want to speculate on what diplomatic or military action we might I hope they understood our take message and that it won't be required " Arriving at Ihe Fresno airport. Ford Asked primary wound up a .no; at his Southern alitonn.i hum,' .m went to Richmond. Yu mr .vOurd.-night speech lie plans a a! miiw address sometime this week reported be is ei conraged by his California organization a. id sod W'll In- m oud shape" tortile state s June ' primal He reiterated that Reagan is among a number ol Kepubln ans well qualified to serve as his vice presidential running mate if be gets tile nomination. ; . i The former Uaiiiornm governor tui.i reporters m Richmond. how ci tn.u he was having trouble lining up tune trom the major television networks Rut he added, "I think we'il be able to See Page 2, ( tdiunn Reagan, the former California governor who scored his first victory against Ford tu last week's North Carolina .W V 1 Strife Continues, Troops Refugee Camps in Lebanon Llias Antar Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon Palestinian refugee camps were shelled Saturday and 37 persons killed or wounded, a Palestinian spokesman said, as this embattled nation awaited the outcome of a trip to Syria by Moslem leader Kamal Juiiblatt. The refugee spokesman said the camps were shelled apparently by right-winChristian gunmen He did not identify the camps, nor did he divide the casualty toll into dead and injured Moslem gunmen in Beirut, mean Ry took control of the towering Starco olfiee center, for months hold by Christian Phalange militia. The occupation of the center further consolidated the Moslem grip on the battered downtown hotel area. Holed Up in Hilton Thu Phalangists are holed up in Beiruts unfinished Hilton Hotel and a Look Inside Winds Rip Areas black-and-whit- e easy-lo-rea- For Beauty I Utah's Scenic ! U dots and their Inends and relatives all over the world have (.me lo look upon lie annual Spring Salt Lake Tribune Scenic. Travel and Vacation Guide as a tradition. F. very one looks lorwaul to its publication Vnd the Bicentennial issue m vour s iMi 'liibuiie is the best yet. : i i ii !( 1 ( !ri)lt HEIGHTS. Share Findings Share vour findings with those in other states or lands. You can arrange through the newspaper's circulation department to have the edition sent anywhere. Lots of people in other aeas have come to expect the annual treat from friends or relatives in Utah, but there are many who would be delighted with a surprise gift You have all the rest of a relaxing Sunday to make up your mmd. tAll -- Teamsters me meeting this weekend across the country to vote on whether to authorize a strike that could cripple the nation's trucking industry. But industry and union officials are confident a strike can be averted be union's dun.iibb warehousemen and truckers, who transport an esti'I percent ol the country 's total manufactured goods, repor-lodlwere overwhelmingly rejecting ilic employers' latest olter. mated output 58 of Ibd strike Hie predicted despite iu1bori..tioii both industry and Teamsters sources were hope! ul a .settlement could be fashioned Indore the National Master F reight .Agreement expires at midnight Wednesday (citing Close' think we t e ge tting c lose, said an industry source And let's face it. the companies don't want a strike and neither does the union." I Labor Secretary W.J. Usery Jr. was expected to return for the final tluee days ol negotiations that have been m progress shut Feh. 10 at a suburban Chicago hotel After meeting with both sidos m Ihe dispute last Tuesday Usery . Totlav limbed as Ihurklt at bridge, a reluctant husband managed to extn-a' himself swiltly by looking at ins band and muttering ' Let's see. what have I got bore'' A ten of valentines, ai A of c lover:,, a nme ol arrowheads and a fourth to un- like Iv. His third visit to the bat gaining site as the government's top labor troub- leshooter underlines the Ford admimst ration's eoneern that a slrike could seriously upset the nation's economic recovery, while a hetty settlement might trigger new inflation. Steel Haulers Yule In other developments, some 5.000 members ol the Fraternal Association ol Steel Haulers were voting over ihe weekend on a policy set by national chairman William J Hill to continue t tiii king in event ol a Teamsters w aikout audition dissidents will. in the union led by Teamsters lor a Decent Contract also reaffirmed their position ol "no contract, no work and no extension." said national secretary Ken Pali. In TDC and UPSurge. representing United Parcel Service drivers, feat union leaders may "repeat the 1117.! sellout that cost us so dearly," Paif said. Negotiations on fundamental issues, at a standstill since Wednesday when some 000 let1 insters local officials lett the talks to arrange for he weekend ole. are scheduled to resume Monday. of the balloting will be availa bb at ilia tin.,- a union spokesman alii Mo, ilium ic'olvc b oLaimng next wee!, to union industry dnlereme-- will headed by Teamsters rank E EitMimnniis and William G M el i it y e. chiei negot lator tor l tu km g Employers Inc ho lTi-i-le- i nl it s hand-to-han- d t Nixon ai Lxil && Pressured In Ford vf $ ! f$ J f4sr. Mi. re than $200,000 damage was estimated trom tornadoes in Arkansas, where three persons were injured at Centerville and two in AViulle. Treated lor Injuries tour members of a family were lr ated for injuries from a twister that demolished a mobile home near McLinmra, 11!.. and trees, homes, and larm buiidmgs were wrecked by twisters near Eureka, near Quincy and in Montgomery County, all on Friday night. The National Weather Service said Saturday thunderstorms extended from Indiana through Kentucky and Tennessee to the Gulf of Mexico, and reached into Illinois and lower Michigan, where temperatures were expected to drop into the tbs or below after a day or two ol balmy weather Showers were loreeast for southern New England and in the Pacific Nortiiw est Victims of a bomb blast in dons Olympia Exhibition Selection? A VXws end oV WASHINGTON l AM) his presidency neared, KicVvard M. Nixon felt more and more unhappy about his choice ot Gerald R. Ford to be vice president and angrily sent back the pen he had used to sign Ford's nomination. The Washington Post re ported Saturday. "Here's the damn pen I signed Jerry Ford's nomination with." Nixon unquoted as saying when he sent the pen back to a White House aide. based on a new book The Post story bv Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein about the last days of Nixon's administsaid Nixon felt that he had ration been pressured into selecting Ford tor the vice presidency alter Spiro T Agnew was forced to resign. The Post did not elaborate on the pen incident or Nixon's feelings toward Ford First of 2 Installments The incident was among dozens ul fresh disclosures emerging trom the Woodward and Bern.siein bunk, "The Final Days." which depicts Nixon upset, drinking too much and even talking of suicide. The first of two installments from the book to appear in Newsweek had been made available Friday. The Post's story, reporting additional details from tic book, said Nixon bail not been really close to bis wile. Pat. since tiie early B)60s and by the final days was hardly speaking to her The First Lady also was drinking heavily, the account said The book said Whie House Chief ol Statf Gen. Alexander Haig, tearful that Nixon might attempt suicide, "ordered that all pills be denied the President and that all sleipmg pills and tranquilizers he already had be taken WASHINGTON - The A bomb concealed LONDON (APi trash bin exploded at a crowded London exhibition hall Saturday, in- in a juring ported 85 persons. Scotland Yard re "There were bleeding bodies lying all the floor," one witness said. "People were running and screaming to the exits and others just standing around crying." Anonymous telephone calls to British over miles of the Washington area, including its populous Maryland and Virginia suburbs. The next section, a stretch, is scheduled to open New Year's Dav. For Day One. Metrorail offered free rides and thousands tried to take advantage of the offer. Those who stood in line long enough vyere rewarded for their patience with e what should have been a ride but sometimes was more like 50 minutes or an hour. For now Washingtonians and the millions of Bicentennial visitors expected this year can descend on escalators for an almost noiseless trip from the downtown business section, past the Capitol, to the northeast section of the city. ; itty-bitt- na- y nine-mimtt- The section that opened for ness was 4.6 miles long. busi- Dilieials had expected lu.ooo free rulers lor the day, but by actual count 51,270 were clocked in Tiie Metrorail system, the most of all the world's subways. eventually will embrace Pit) exn-n.siv- j Scores were injured in blast. 85 Injured as Explosion Rocks Hall in London tion's capital got a subway Saturan one by most day metropolitan standards, but a subway nonetheless. (API ter are placed on stretchers, Lon- - Cen- - Washington Fete Opens First Stretch of Subway 1 -- ;t '.Ntv As T "It's a day of armed madness, a wide combat. ' a open hell of police spokesman said early in the day "The war is escalating hysterically in Beirut and the test of Lebanon." Mo. Enjoy it! threatened to move the talks Washington n settlement see ms j 1 d tornadoes Friday night, said, "It was on us before we knew anything." Described as a quarter-mil- e wide, the tornado left two dead, flipped cars around like toys and smashed homes. At least 67 persons were injured in the Spiro area, and damage was estimated at !f64.0(H) in Spiro and Murray Spur, a community three miles east. Another man died of injuries in a tornado at Talihina. Okla., and a fourth peii-ne- d in a mobile home at Sarcoxie. Ti iii kmi: hitifM 111. - -s Quarter-Mil- e Wide C. of E. Spiro, Okla., Mayor Meyer biggest sufferer of the towns hit by Teamsters Meet to Ballot Oil Strike Authorization ARLINGTON . Juiiblatt went to Damascus to the latest Syrian ettocts to stop the month-old civil war shooting in the The warfare between lettist Moslem and rightist Christians has already taken more than 1.1. non lives by modest official count Spring thunderstorms brought winds rain and dropping temperatures through a wide area East of the River Saturday. Skies Mississippi cleared in Oklahoma. Arkansas and Missouri, an area where tornadoes Friday night left four dead. Mississippi and Alabama reported storms, some severe, did widespread property damage during the nignt and early Saturday, and 12 persons suffered minor injuries in a tornado in the Magee area oi Mississippi. More than two inches of rain left flash flooding in the Mississippi Gulf Coast area. world. Empirt , Like everyone eUe, they aieuaitin-InJunblatt." said a police source rtdemng lo gunmen ol the two sides house-to-hous- & .-t ' United Press International world-famou- Splendor of M-- In Nation Syrian-impose- nearby structure, but the Moslems can easily cut their line of supply that runs east to the Christian neighborhood of Ashrafiyeh. Fighting also continued in a string of mountain resort towns to the east and northeast of Beirut. Spokesmen for both s Front it's fascinating color cover wdth a Bicentennial theme to the final story on a new New Mexico it is packed with eye pueblo, catching color and d photographs with informative, stories Go with the whole family today on a trip through your home state Utah's Uaiiy.ii'anris, exciting rivers to run. and dinosaur country in the northeastern part of tins scenic late. I.earn About Neighbors Learn more, too. about your s neighbors who make up the Intermour.tain Empire. Or travel far afield to New Orleans for jazz, to England for its traditions, to the color; d Greek island of Kos for all the charms of a distant adventure. And then, after you and yours have had a chance to thoroughly digest all the possibilities, make your vacation plans for the year as ciose as Sait Lake Citys canyons or as distant as the other side of the sides said it was mostly shelling from fixed position, with no appreciable advances on either side but several hit and-ruraids. Aside from the shelling of the Palestinian refugee camps, tile lust against them since the cease-lir- e broke down two weeks ago. there was a relativs easing of fighting after a e combat night of vicious in Beirut streets. 'Waiting for Jumblatt' Police said six persons were killed and 11 wounded during the days street battles, compared to Kb killed and 157 wounded in the hours before dawn while. , Within walking distance of its five stations are the White House, the Nation :! Portrait Gallery, the new FBI building and Ford's Theater, all tourist attractions. A subway for the capital was discussed 66 years ago by Treasury Department architect James K. Tavlor who said. 'T can think of no See Page 2. Column I news media attributed the bombing to extremists ol the Irish Republican Army A Scotland Yard spokesman said the bomber apparently aimed for maximum casualties by placing the device in a plastic trash container in : away ." a "do it yourself" section of the home products show at Olympia Center. About 15.006 persons attending the exhibition in the hall located at Earl's Court were evacuated. Investigators estimated the bomb contained about two pounds of explosives. Medical officials reported four persons lost limbs in the blast and 26 were hospitalized. Most ol the injured, including some children, were treated and released. Earlier police reports had put the number ol in pi red at xn First reports from tne hall m West London said a gas cvlmdor had exploded hut Scotland Yard later confirmed it w a- - a bomb explosion A coded warning sometimes given by Ihe Irish Republican Army was not ard received belorehand, a Scotland spokesman said But he added. "I don t know any others who are doing any bombing around he! e The British Broadcasting Corp. in London icportcd ieceiving a telephone call trom a man saying a group called the Irish Aolunteer Force, an IRA splinter group, was responsible for ther The Sunday Mirror news-patebombing m the northern city of Manchester said a man telephoned there and said the bombing w as committed by the Irish Brigade" of the IRAs Prov ision-aw mg The IRA i' campaigning to wrest Northern Ireland trom British rule ami police have blamed most of the seven bomb incident.' in England so far this month on the 11 One w lines- - at the ball said he ami See Page 2, C olumn A I Never Leave Alive? According to the book. Nixons soil m law David Eisenhower for months for Nixon "to go banana.' " R David eemed convinced added that Nixon would never leave the White Hou.se alive." The book a'so quoted Nixon's other Ed Uox. as telling Sen Robert P. Gnflin. R Mich., at outpoint: "The President was up wail.ii g the habs la-- t night, talk.ng to pictmvs ot tormer presidents gtv mg speeches and talking to the pit tin c - on the wad ' -- $ Inside Tin Tribune Tribune Telephone Numbers, Pae A-- 2 Page Arts 8 Business Classified Columnists t orn. Carrier Editorials Foreign Foreign lifestyle 2 National 5 U-- Page Nat 'I l 21 Obituaries Sports 0 3 StarGazer H B-- Television 2 17 H Theaters Valentine B-- l Washington . Full section of Color AM) MORE Comiev; Home and Parade M agazines; Secand Grand Central tions. .1. C. Penney Section; Sears Section; Sanka Coffee Coupon (Ofer: 7CMI Vpage Section . . Sim(lit. otTual I Cloudv salt Lake Citv and vicinity ch.mce ol now showers Weath cr detail.- - on Page C 22. will; a t |