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Show INDEX aN Amusements Classified Comics Editorial Page Obituaries B 27-31 % 3 4 Society Sports 1-21 $1 Stocks WEATHER Sunny with high 90-95, probability of showers near zero; in southwest Idaho,clear, with increasing clouds and highs 80-85; southeast Idaho, mostly fair with temperaturein the 80s. 1B "PROVO,UTAH, ‘UTAH, SUNDAY, JU! JUNE220,19 1971 VOL. 49, NO, 2 $2.50 50PER MONTH -— PRICE 20 CENTS Court Denies Injunction; Halts Series Until Appeal Red Gunners N.Y. Times PoundString Case in New Step Of Viet Bases ! APOLLO1 PRIMECREW (ketrght) Col i Cavid R. Scott, Ma; . Alfred M. Worden, and Lt. Col. James B. Irwin, hold thejeir mission insignia shortly after a press conference in which they announced that they had named vour”and their moon lending eee” Apollo 15 is set for blastoff July ‘LaunchSet July 26 Apollo 15 Astros Name Spacecraft ‘Endeavour’ eit SPACE CENTER, Houston parallel to help name their ue )—Apollo 15’s astronauts will journey to the moon next _ month in a spaceship <.amed gland to the : “Endeavour” in honor of an 18th Century British explorer Pacific in 1768 on what Scott and land in a craft called called the first real scientific ion, / “Faleon’’ for the Air Force Scott said Falcon was selectmascot. Mission Commander David R. ed for the four-legged moon Scott said that Apollo 15 “is lander because “we are an all probabiy the most significant Air Force crew and we’re very » scientific exploration ever proud we’re all Air Force.” mounted” and because of that Apollo 15 is scheduled for he, Alfred M. Worden and launch from Cape Kennedy July James B. Irwin searched the 26 toward a northern lunar ed on three sides by history books to look for a Mayors, County Officials Outline Financial Needs _ Before Legislative Panel SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) — | Utah mayors and county comhave outlined the fi— needs of local government to a special legislative committee appointed by Gov. ~ Calvin L. Rampton to study the the steep Apennine Mountains and cut on the west by a gorge 1,000 feet deep. “T expect it to be very, vay ive,” Scott said in last meeting with news aoe before launch. “To be in an area in which you can look in one direction and see 15,000 feet of mountain and in another direction a canyon almost a mile across and 1,000 feet deep, that’s got to be something.” MacFarlane said Ogden city employees have had no pay The tall umbilical tower next raises in two years. In ‘the ‘0 the Apollo 15 spacecraft at same time federal employes pe Kennedy was hit by |headed by Sen. Dixie Leavitt, cent, “And we lose our police officers to just about every other city in the state, except Salt Tic ec ein fe Uh LakeCity,” he said. At =meeting here Friday CommissionerHarrison voiced & Lake City and Ogden support for a half-cent increase ona . in the cales tax, local option as a means of solvthe ing city problems. He said it would be a fair tax. Property taxes and service charges on sewer and garbage “416 million law enforcement are notfair, he said, members of the committee who program. : Harrison blamed the city’s suggested the service taxes as a possible solution. Utah County Commissioner which is expected to cut the Stanley Roberts said Utah councity out of $250,000 in per cap- ty officials also favor the halfinaid from varioys sources. cent propsal but not if cityOgden Assistant Mayor Karl county services have to be con0. Mac Farlane said the prob- aenee it ie _ lem “is thought of as a Logan “‘in pretSalt Lake City problem — but y Good shape now” according it’s not.” to Mayor Richard Chambers, He said the Ogden budget but he said it may not be in problem is critical because a several years, week and Scott said he was concerned at the time abcut possible electrical damage to the ship’s delicate systems. Coupons allowing our readers Swimming in the pools starts at free or reduced-cost en- 10am. » tertainment and Extra pages of coupons will be available in the Herald offices Monday on a very limited basis. will be given out acto the number in each : party,and no coupons will be resort near % sponsored Be sure to watch Monday’s Herald for another page of year. coupons, and ask neighbors not Rides, games and special planning to attend Tuesday’s activities will be scheduled activities to save their copy of throughout the per so you'll have opens. addi coupons, 7 the capital. More than 50 rockets and mortars slammed into South Vietnamese outposts dotting the southern fringes of the DMZ’s eastern sector, military cpokesmen said. They said nine of the Shooting Flares On Suez Canal gunners fired on two Egyptian warplanes which buzzed their positions on the northern sector of the Suez Canal Saturday in eee violation oythe Middle cease-fire, military But he said a detailed, system by system check has turned up no evidence of damage and “we have every confidence in the world that if there are any problems they wt be detected and correc- YORK (UPI)—U.S. Gurfein,in an historic decision on freedom of information, refused Saturday to grant the Justice Department an injunction prohibitiug The New York Times from publishing articles based on a secret Pentagon study of the Vietn.m War. The judge did, however, restrain the Times from continuing the series of dispatches which was helted reported. The shellings followed early morning rocket attacks on Da Nang, South Vietnam’s second biggestcity, and on theairfield at Quang Ngai, 318 miles northeast of Saigon. Communists fired three 122mm rockets into Da Nang, killing onecivilian and wounding fowr others, but military spokesmer said none of the rockets hit the big U.S. air base there. Three 122mm_ rockets also hit the Quang Ngai airfield, causing “light” casualties among the South Vietnamese, spokesmen said. Northwest of Quang Ngai a Appeals Judge Irving R. Kaufman extended the restraining order until noon Monday when the case will be heard by polae judges of the second U.S. DISTRICT COURT Judge Murray I. Gurfein talks to newsmen after he turned down Justice Department request for injunction to stop New York Times from publishing secret Pentagon documents, Howeve!rt, he continued a temporary restraining order, giving the Justice Department time to appeal his decision. U.S. Army helicopter gunship, accidentally Vietnamese civilian and ie ing 15 as pes a was returning to base for repairs, ee ‘spokesmen said Satur- on his Judge Panel Restrains Post From Proceeding ov ground action Saturday, (Continued on Page 4) Ninth Child With Its Viet Series Dies in Australia GOPLashes 1) Members of the committee, have had raises of about 17 per lightning four times earlier this | the 19th day of heavy fighting for the swampy area east of NEW District Court Judge MurrayI. 240mm rockets were fired at the bases, but no South Vietnamese casualties were ‘WASHINGTON (UPI) —The Washington Post said Saturda; it would not ask the Supreme Court ‘“‘at this time” to pion in Tel Avi said. overturn a lower court order Nohits were reported on the temporarily forbi the aeSoviet-built Sukhoi-7 SYDNEY (UPI) — Richard ito publish more stories srt6hoarse te mon Brodrick, the last survivor of record 67 hours on the moon on a secret Pentagon nine infants born last Sunday to bony on Vietnam. and use an electric car to an Australian housewife, died A three-judge panel of the St atalduume on _cng three excursions lasting a total U.S. Court of Appeals issued of 20 hours. Worden will remain in lunar orbit using a new set the RoyalWena ‘Rospltal of instruments to map rugged said Richard, six inches long areas of the moon inaccessible eee weighingoo u can to man. sudde “T don’t think you've ever large number of the city’s res- seen an attenpt by man to idents are federal employees, gather so much data in such a andthe federal installations are short time and from such a far prae environment,” Scott not part of the tax base. 4 Saratoga Da y Coupons a In Today's N ewspaper SAIGON (UPI) —Communist gunners pounded a string of South Vietnamese bases near the Demilitarized Zone Saturday with rockets and mortars, including big Soviet - made 40mm rockets. But the Communists failed to disrupt a massive Armed Forces Day parade through Saigon. Cambodian troops on the offensive in marshland near Phnom Penh clashed with mmunist forces Saturday in the temporary restraining order shortly after midnight Friday at the request of the Justice Eada which oneMe articles could Separate injury” to Us. 17-page opinion, Gurfein’s first as a federal judge, he said: “... In the last analysis it is not merely the opinion of the editorial writer information so that the public will be informed about the governmentandits actions,” The government had contended that stories, which first appeared on oa 13, had current military and danas plansandintelligence operations and (had) jeopardized our international relations.” But Gurfein re; U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell denied the government’s request five hours earlier, but the appeals panel — on a 2 to 1 decision —reversed Gesell’s ruling and instructed him to hold a new hearing on . the case Monday. Roger A. Clark, an attorney representing the Post, said in a Hours earlier, doctors had statementthat “we are prepar- the general embarrassment issued their most optimistic ing to litigate the matter fully that filows from any securit report yet, saying Richard was before the district court anc Ce able to consume nearly enough are not appealing to the eee) orally to maintain his WASHINGTON (UPI) —- Supreme Court at this time.” ° nutritional needs. Bythe timethe a] panel Republican National Chairman Richard was the smallest of Robert J. Dole accused the Truce the nonuplets, two of them Kennedy-Johnson adstillborn boys, born last Sunday ministrations Saturdayof “‘eight Sal y’s papercontai to Mrs. Geraldine Brodrick, 29, years of escalation and secondarticle in the series. overnors wife of Leonard Brodrick,32, a deception”in Southeast Asia, on his ea me decision k V rs Israel and Egypt. meat wholesaler and member the basis of “destructively reacl “ost, presses Egyptian Vice Premier and of one of Australia’s prioneer oice irresponsible” disclosures in were stopped immediately as See Information Minister Abdelfamilies, The New York Times. newspaper officials sought cla- “QMAHA, Neb. (UPI) — A Kader Hatem. accused Israel of rification of the court's order. more powerful voice in national making a fuss” over the The Brodricks’ two previous After a week of high-level As soon as it was learned that srab guerrilla bazooka attack children, girls aged four and Republican silence on the the court had permitted conti- party affairs and a stronger on an oil tanker to divert five, had been born by contents of a secret Pentagon nued publication of the story if ied on agricultural policies were the chief items of study of U.S. involvement in attention from the main issue caesarean section. it was not altered, the Press in the Middle East —israel’s The nonuplets were the first Vietnam published in the run resumed and the article conversation Saturday at a caucus of Democratic goverTimes, Dele delivered twin refusal to withdraw from Arab on record. nors and National Chairman blasts at the Democrats and at was carried in all editions. territories captured in the 1967 The story said Johnson Lawrence F.O'Brien. “sensation-seeking newspapers” war. at a GOP fund-raising dinner at administration officials had The governors were expected “almost no expectation” that to announcethat the first step Hot Springs, Ark. Dole, a senator from Kansas, the many pauses in U.S. toward a stronger voice in said that “from apolitical bombing of North Vietnam party affairs would be selection sandpont, I welcome the between 1965 and 1968 would of a former governor to serve as liaison between the goverTimes stories.” But he said the lead to peace negotiations. nors and the national commitKEYBISCAYNE,Fla. (UPI) Timesin publishing classified It said portions of the secret —President Nixon Friday gave diplomatic documents had “‘en- Pentagon study also showed tee. his most optimistic assessment dangered the sanctity’ of that the administration intend- O'Brien hadearlier promised yet on the fate of his domestic negotiations on Soviet-American ed to use the lulls to reduce for such a liaison man office space at the national policies in the Democratic- arms control, the Middle East, domestic and foreign criticism headquartersin Washington. controlled Congress. Berlin and a Vietnam settle- of its policy in Vietnam. The man named as liaison He “flatly predicted” that mentitself. both revenue sharing and Politically, he said, the Times The Post said other do- was expected to be former Gov. welfare reform, the two chief articles “‘will makeit complete- cuments in the 47-volume Robert McNair of South Carolithrusts of his ‘New American ly obvious who is to blame for Pentagon study outlined how na, whose term ended in Revolution,” would be passed in getting us into this war, for administration strategists Janu ary. the current Congress, and he escalatingit, for starting the planned to use the bombing Gov. Robert Scott of North said at least a start would be bombing, for sending in more pauses asa “‘ratchet” to reduce Carolina said the governors made on his program to than half a million troops and tension and then increase it in should start “giving more streamline the federal bureauc- ... ee deceiving the American an effort to “crack the enemy’s attention to agricultural polire.” racy. resistance to negotiations.” OutAgainst Press, Demos yds ine te appease Democratic eae G Nixon Optimistic‘ OnFate of His Domestic Policies So. Viets Display Military Might in Parade > BS REUNITED WITE HER PARENTS after having been abducted from an Omaha hospital, four-day-old Michala Goetz left the hospital for the second timeSat , this time for home. Michala, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ] Goetz, was taken from thehospital Friday by a woman while the nurse on duty was away from herstation cen Michala was located after a frantic two-city sea SAIGON (UPI) —South Vietnam’s biggest military parade in history went off without incident Saturday but a fireworks display later caused panicky Saigon residents to dive for cover. Security precautions against the possibility of Communist terrorism were so stringent that most Saigon residents could not even get to the downtown area to view the three-hour display of military power and liad to watch it on television or notatall. Thirty thousand police, troops and militiamen guarded the center of Saigon during the Armed Forces Day parade but there was no sign of the sabotage that had been predictWhen high-explosive _fireworks burst over the Saigon River, rattling windows about 9:30 p.m., residents ran from homes, bars and restau- ¢ rants into the streets and others threw themselves to the floor. Forei; vers called foreign news media offices to ask if the city was under attack. The last shelling attack of Saigon was six months ago. In one bar, an American soldier shouted directions while bargirls screained and patrons tried to get out. dhe parade was the first in the capital since Nov. 1, 1967, when Communist gunners fired mortars and rockets into a National Day parade, with some of the shells landing within yards of the reviewing stand, The South Vietnamese troops were joined in Saturday's parade by small contingents from the United States, Korea, Australia, Thailand and New d. Deputy Ambassador Sarauel (Continued On Page 7) |