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Show Truckers, Agree on 3- Year SHOWERS of rain or snow today with par- Contract > Idled tial clearing at times becoming partly cloudy, tonight and Thursday. Highs today_near 50 and Thursday in the lower 50s. Lows tonight in the high Trucks Roll Again 20s. Probability of precipitation 70 per cent today. came in the early WASHINGTON (UPI) —The TEL) fation’s major truckers and the morning hours after a marathon Teamsters Union reached tenta- bargaining session. tive agr it today on a new TEI ordered all 1,200 of the rucking companies it repretationwide contract. i ack into normal service hours, trucks idled for days by a lockout wererolling ds quickly as possible. By 10 a.m. EST, M.C. Benton, across the country again executive vice president of Agreement on a three-yéar eontract between the Teamsters McLiean. Trucking Co., and the yor of Winston-Salem, N.C., and Trucking Employers Inc said Everything's rolling. We're 3 Fined In are rolling out of here on the average of one a minute.” Accidental spokesmen indicated the indusViet Bombing weighing them in and the units | 94th YEAR; NO. 2 DAY, APRIL 12, 1967$200 PER MON7ri—10cPER COPY B=FROVO, U TAH COUNTY 19 Nations Open Urug uay Meet President Johnson Will Thai-Based Resumption of service was not as fast everywhere, but Superforts try would be mostly back normal by Thursday. Hit Enemy to Address Hemispheric Conference Thursday In some Texas terminals, the =k US. major holdup to getting the big SAIGON (UPI) By BRYCE MILLER military board today fined-and diesels on the road again was SAIGON-(UP]) —U.S. heavy grounded three Air Force unloading the freight on trucks |bombers bolstered by a new that had been sitting idle since “next door” airbase today for officers for careless! the truckers began the- lockout the fifth stra ight day smashed helped cause the wor: tal bombing of the Vietnam Sunday. Communist forces threatening The shutdown had stalled south Vietnam's northern prowar. truck service from San FrancisThe~ special board -of-inquiryj.¢0 to Boston, and when the end vinces. The jet B52 Stratofortresses said both human and me: , of the dispute came, the impact cal errors resulted in the killing was being felt both by which began operating from~a of .about 100 men, women and manufacturers facing parts Thailand airbase Sunday, poundchildren_and_the: wounding of shortages and stores: whose ed targets in the dense jungles |where North Vietnamese troops 175 more March2 atthe village shelves were being emptied. of Lang Vei. More than 100,000 teamsters |have been building up supplies The board investigated the were idled by the lockout, which and launching attacks of growing force. four officers who-manned the By MERRIMAN SMITH outsiders and then were ushered PUNTA DELESTE, Uruguay through a corridor of silver(UPI}-—President-Johnson-and+ helmeted-troops to their meet= 18 other hemisphere leaders ing hall. whizzed cordially through the Their host, Uruguayan Pres- preliminaries of their momen-| j ident Oscar D. conditions. which they_opened_their initial The government leaders, in Session at 11:06 a.m. (9:06 a.m, ‘ their motoreyele-escorted limou- gp) sines, rolled past police and national guardsmen sealing off It was’ an easy-going sessionz |the “San” Rafael Hotel from {informal »and__over— in minutes, at which the conferees |agreed speedily to organization- two F4C Phantom jet fighterthe automobile and other Before dawn, with the Stratobombers that bombed Lang Vei industries. forts -roaring overhead, one They found three of the four at TEI acted to lift the lockout Communist guerrilla band fault. after its negotiators reached sneaked ‘out of the green forests The board ruled the bombing and lobbed 30 to 40 mortar accidental. It ordered the trio to tentative agreement with the Fired 1900 forfeit half their pay for up to Details of the agreement were airbase at Chu Lai, The 20two months for carelessness. not made public. jminute barrage killed two | They also ordered the three CARRYING ON DOMESTIC business as usual at Punta Del Esta, Uruguay, residence, | Americans and wounded 45, grounded until another board Acting’ teamsters president | The Communists fled as| President Johnson signs resolution extending the no-strike provision of the National RailFrank E. Fitzsimmons, sitting tests their ability and decidés if |Marinés drove out to. silence) Way Labor Act today before continuing talks connected with hemispheric summit conferin for the jailed James R. they should fly again. it-and-1 ttack| ence. The resolution, passed by Congress and flown to Uruguay for Johnson's signature, | Names of the three were not Hoffa, said the settlement offer followed Thursday's stunning) Postpot nes a treatened Would have to be approved by released pending an appeal four-battalion attack on Quang | (Herald-UPI Telephoto) the union's 100-member national The board said faulty navigaTri City where the Communists tional equipment was partly to policy committee, then the stormed in and released about blame. a general membership. 250 prisoners from jail. The committee will probably Each Phantom carries two} The Stratoforts, which can men, a commander anda pilot.| vote on it Thursday, he said, carry upwards of 60,000 pounds and the membership would vote of: bombs each, concentrated jon it over the weekend, their attacks on a valley jutting TEI's lifting of the lockout into South Vietnam from the was. also. subject to approval by Laos border. The valley is a} higher authority, its executive By Measure midnight strike that would idle most of the nation’s rail traffic. LBJ Signs Congress Act Blocking Railroad Strike 5 Encouraged Fi major infil route, store-} quent business meetings. | They/will get into the major substapceof their talks —aimed at providing the economictools to end poverty in their area of | ° teamsters on a newcontract. shells into the giant U.S. Marine * Police Work al procedures for their subse Reds Have caused another 15,000 layoffs in Reetaney |anita Gestido, met tous summit meeting today in1 a themin a swift-moving receivsetting of severe security| ing line at the conclusion of WASHINGTON (UPI) —Pres-; C. Robert Roadley of the| Without it, the six |the world —in a round of 10- | Missiles | minute speeches starting this evening. Johnson does not plan to WASHINGTON (UPI) —Ap- speak until Thursday. proximately 1,900 surface-to-air | Before: meeting with his missiles (SAMS) have been counterparts at the San Rafael fired at U.S. planes Over) Hotel, Johnson continued the Communist North Vietnam 80/round of bilateral talks he far during the war, the Defense began at his beachfront villa Department said today. | Tuesday, Heheld brief morning The SAMS have shot down 37| sessions with Presidents Arthur U.S. aircraft, a spokesmansaid. |Costa e Silva of Brazil and That works out to about one|Gestido, of Uruguay. plaie downed for every 51| Police and national guards- missiles fired. men literally sealed off the About 500 U.S. aircraft have|hotel for the morning session | been lost in all over North|and allowed no.one but the | Vietnam. Ten of these were|presidents and their aides to unions!shot down by MIG fighter|enter. Theinitial session started policy cee ome house and guerrilla peru Johnson today signed a/National Mediation Board sent/would have been free to follow|planes, the rest by lbsoctper after 11 a.m. (9 a.m., Cait aa tt Friday, Communist attacks in the area! swiftly approved congressional|telegrams to the six unions and through on their threat to strike | batteries, |EST). ‘Tt was uncertain how long it|PTOVed 9° heavy that a year ago resolution blocking a nationwide|the railroads advising them at midnight tonight and idle 95] The last time the Pentagon| All newsmen and most staf Heatlodgrs aetna pee the U.S. Army Special Forces rail strike threatened for|Johnson had signed the resolu-\per cent of the nation’s rail/made public the number of|membersof the Organization of “Green Berets” abandoned a midnight, He warned he would/tion. He called on the unionsto|traffic, |SAMfirings was Aug. 17, 1966.American States (OAS), spon\trucking service throughout the string of outposts along thi € call on Congress again ifjcancel strike plans set | Johnson said that unless a|Then the estimated. total was|soring the historic conference WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. \nation, valley. railroads and unions failed to tonight and for the railroads to jeettlement is reached during the 443 and about 14 U.S. planes/assault on Latin America’s Frank E. Moss, D-Utah, co-| TEL leadérs cautioned that To the north, U.S. Marines maintain service. v= |had been lost to SAMs, That/perennial problem of poverty, sponsored legislation’ Tuesday| Chicago, where heavy layoffs in found scattered resistance Tues- |settle their dispute in the next After lawmakers overwhel-|' extension, “Congress will again would be a rate of one plane|were turned away. that would provide loans for; trucking-related industries were day. They killed 28 Communists jthree weeks. be required to help avoid the students interested in police) reported, could not expect’ and suffered one Leatherneck Johnson signed the resolution mingly approved the legislation| terrible consequences that destroyed for every 39 missiles) Bob Fleming, assistant press fired. jat Punta del Este, Uruguay, Tuesday, it was flown by jet| |secretary for President Johnwork. | immediate resumption of truck slain and three wounded. |where he is attending a courier plane to South America| would flow from a nationwide} The statistics may not be |son,said the United States news Eligible students would re-| service, rail strike.” Despite bad weather, Amerisummit for Johnson to sign, exactly comparable, but they|corp had beenallotted for seven ceive loans of $1,200 annually| In contrastto the rest of the can pilots managed to fly.78 | Although Johnson urged “both| suggest that North Vietnam’s| passes for entry into the up toa maximum of $4,800,jcountry, the work stoppage missions against trucks, barges, | Theresolution, which blocks a the carriers and the workers to| accuracy with the Soviet-built| building. More. than 2,000 with 10 years allowed for repay- |there involved localized team- trains and military targets in strike by six railroad shopcraft junions until May 3, zipped use every hour” of the added)SAM system has not improved newsmen are covering the ment. jsters strikes against truckers North Vietnam. time to. work out their and may have worsened. | summit. through Congressin little over In supporting the bill, Moss jnot affiliated with TEI, and was differences, no negotiations} The figures also reflect the| The tightened security measaid, “one of the most effect notthe result of a lockout, they In Saigon, South Vietnamese !94 hours after Johnson called were scheduled today Premier Nguyen Cao Ky issued for ‘it Monday. It was flown to and| build up of the SAM-network|sures apparently were ordered ways of combatting the rising\said. a statement saying he would Uruguay for his signature. representatives of both sides|during the two years of the| by the host Uruguayan govern crime rate in the United States| There was no reliable esti- agree to talk peace with North were leaving town; \Northern air war, and the| ment but details were not made is to_encourage more profes- mate of what share of the Vietnam. The statement was in Before signing it, the PresUndersecretary of Laborjincreased tempo of that war. | public, sionalism among the nation’s nation’s road freight was answer to a plea by Ceylon’s ident cautioned the railroads James Reynolds said talks! Regular U.S. bombing of the| Richard Schroeder of Washpolice departments.” | (See TRUCKERS, UNION,P.4) premier who called upon Hanoi and the unions that if they |would probably resume as soon|North began in February, 1965.| ington, OAS press coordinator, failed to reach accord in the 20and Saigon to settle their day-extension of the cooling-off SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) alas Johnson appointed a new set|In the first 171-2 months, 543)said he did not know who differences themselves. There period under the National |SAMs were fired. In the next ordered the blockade of the of mediators shortly. Declares Humphrey was no reply from North Railway Labor Act, he would 26-year-old Milford man injured in a mining accident at Fish The House vote on the|? 12 months, 1,357 were. fired. hotel conference site, tut added, Vietnam. again call on Congress to block Spring, Utah was reported in |resolution was 396 to 8. All the There are reported to be “T can’t do anything about it.” Allied spokesmen reported a strike. Johnson and the other pres“very critical” but improved] negative votes were cast by sporadic ground action in South |the area of Hanoi end dents, in perhaps the most condition today. at LDS Hos-|Dem ocrats, Vietnam, But they said U.S. Haiphong, and about 70 mobile important talks ever to take ital. ital. ‘The Senate vote was 81 to 1. sites. The Pentagon has never place warplanes flew 444 missions in between the United States Dee F, Gilliam was flown to} Sen. Thomas J. McIntyre, Dsupport of American troops, Salt Lake City Tuesday after) N.H., who castthe no vote, said! given the exact number. Each and its neighbors, had as their The planes reported killing at emergency treatment. at Dug-| he was protesting. “the use of site normally has six launchers. principal goal formation of a least 29 Communists, They also. U.S. fliers do not scoff at common market extending from NEW YORK (UPI) —Vice nam,” he said. “De Gaulle just hit a guerrilla band-- that way Proving Grounds, | congress in labor-management North Vietnam’s total air|the Straits of Magellan to the President Hubert H. Humphrey, disagrees, period. He doesn’t attacked Chu Lai where, besides An Army: helicopter was dis| defenses, including SAMs, M IGs|Rio Grande. in his first interview since his think we should be there.” patched from Dugway—60 miles | disputes. the humanlosses, the Marines Six Republican senators called'and regular ,antiaircraft. ‘hey This morning’s informal talks return from a two-week Eu- Humphrey said the groups of reported ‘“‘light” damage to ALGIERS (UPI) —An Air) north of Fish Springs—to the for prompt action to establish! describe cit as the most|were aimed at smoothing out ropean trip, said today most demonstrators he encountered— equipment and a C130 transport. Algerie DU4 carrying European scene of the accident. It trans- ermanent procedures for| sophisticated system this coun-|differences as to how that goal European government leaders some of whom threw eggs—did The spokesmen said the Viet tourists on a southern Algerian ported Gilliam to Dugway and/ hi andling similar labor disputes|try has ever encountered in}could best be achieved. support the U.S. position in not object to him personally. ‘Cong fled when ist Marine holiday slammedinto a Saraha then on to Salt Lake City for involving1the national interest, | combat. Johnson and the other presVietnam. But he admitted there Division units charged toward Desert mountain Tuesday night, surgery. He suffered head and idents were to meet informally Was “apprehension” | among “I doubt if ‘many of the the mortar sites in the jungle the airline announced today, back injuries in the accident, today and formally this evening demonstrators even knew my many young people. Dugway officials received near the base 350 miles Airline officials said in perhaps the most important Humphrey, who returned ‘to name before I came,”he told northeast of Saigon. persons were killed and four word of the accident by radio talks ever to take place between Washington Mondayafter visit- newsmen following the pro- Tt was the latest in a long survivors were found, two of communication from State Fish| the United States and its, ing seven nation in Europe, gram, “They were only a series of vain guerrilla attempts them critically injured. and Game employees at Fish| neighbors to the South. was interviewed on NBC-TV’s handful of people who represent cripple American airbases The plane carried 18 mem- Springs—in barren west-centr'al Jobnson planned to devote his “Today” program. tah. no one but themselves,” he which have done much to bers of a Swiss tourist group. morning to more of the hand~ Asked how Europeans feel added, calling them a well- harass guerrilla supply lines. The survivors, all flown to NEW YORK (UPI) —Adam,the vote in last November's (See PRESIDENT, Page 4) about U.S. involvement in organized minority of “Maoist In Saigon South Vietnamese hospital in Algiers, were two Clayton Powell was reelected|congressional election, when| C ” Vietnam, he said: (See THAI-BASED, Page 4) Frenchmen and two Swiss. Tuesday night to the seat|about 60,000 persons voted. But “There is apprehension denied him last month by the ‘Tuesday's turnout was disapamong many of the young House of Representatives. The pointing—32,418. people in particular but, most of turnout was small, but it was} (From his Bimini retreat in the governmentofficials support Harlem’s mandate to the 90th) the Bahamas, Powell issued a our position.” He said the SAN QUENTIN, Calif. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The governmentleaders were mindCongress to make room for its|statement thanking the people (UPI) — Aaron C. Mitchell U.S. Supreme Court has re-| favorite “‘baby.” of the “universal imporof Harlem for their support. was executed today in San ceived a petition for review of| Powell, who ran as an| (“The overwhelming vote Quentin Prison’s gas chamtance” of a U.S. commitment, the record of convicted slay- | absentee Democrat to succeed|deepens my faith in the people “Mostof the leaders, with the for slaying a Sacraithe coordination acts called for) Rep. Lorin Pace, R-Salt Lake, ‘er Darrell Devere Poulsen, himself, easily defeated \twoof my district and the ber exception of President Charles mento policeman. He died ‘economy and efficiency through| and Sen. Merrill Jenkins, D- Poulsen was. scheduled to die opponents, Mrs. Lucifle Picket/democratic process,” Powell at 10:16 a.m. PST. (See de Gaulle of France, fully agencies|consolidation, no mention of Ogden, objected to formally ap- Jan. 9 for the murder of an Williams, 50, a Republican, and! said. He said he had been Page 12 for detailed. earlier understand our role in Viettransferring funds into a com- proving any statute interpreta- ‘l-year-old American Fork baby Rev. Ervin F, Yearling, 38, alinvited to appear on three bined service is in the general tion by the executive branch. ‘sitter but a stay of. execution Baptist minister fielded by the!network television interview! story.) appropriation pill. ) It was not the committee's was granted Jan. 7 by Supreme Conservative party. |programs but said he had WASHINGTON (UPI) — Atty. Gen. Phil L, Hansen job to speak for-the entire Le- Court Associate Justice Byron Unofficial returns from all of| turned down the offers. One of Communist China's. . International R. White. the 214 polling places in the 18th) (“I must state as vigorously leading isaid it would be legal for a co- gislature, Pace said. The governor's suggestion ordinating council commissioner Sen, Ernest Mantes, D-Tooele, The petition was filed by Congressional District gavelas I can that there will be no was approved by the Legisla- to bill divisions within his argued that as a budget-audit 'Poulsen’s attorney William G. (Powell 27,900 votes to 4,091 for committee, the group was obli- Fowler who is the Mrs. Williams and 427 for press for services provided gated to comment on account- judgement of the Utah Su; Yearling. Powell had 86.3 per pictures under any circumstanmittee. . consolidation. ling methods fe ‘Court which refused to review) cent of the vote. ces until I-am advised by my became the first state to do so. Rampton explained that while Two committee members— the case. ¥ Powell received 74 par’ cent af attorneys,”he said), Milford Man Injured In Mine Mishap Most European Leaders Back U.S. WarPosition |more than. 10 fixed SAM sites in Plane Crash In Algeria Kills 35 Persons Harlem Voters’ Mandate: s Make Room for Rep. Powell Legislative Committee Approves Rampton Suggestion 6n Utah Consolidated Services [Now You Know cost Which sire’s Joint Budget-Audit Com-| ere Court Receives Petition In Poulsen Case Bulletin |