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Show ACROSS 4:C Wednesday EPA Says June 6 1979. THE HERALD. Provo, Utah—Page 39 ‘No Move’ On Bombs SALT UPI LAKE CITY The En- vironmental Protection Agency agreed today with Goy Scott Matheson that 900 lethal Weteye nervegas bombs should be destroyed at Rocky Mountain Arsenal in Denver rather than be flown to Utah The EPA letter also went to Armyofficials at ganizatior abbr 3 Sesame plant the arsenal where a pre- 24 Old salt Boxed bs Fairy tal pile 50Passpo ai tempered e 5 Former labor group (abbr 6 Sailor _, bureau (abt 47 Horseback pene 48 Unclothed edition 30 Summon 52 Give off fumes 55 Betrayer (s transfer inspection has turned up six bombs that leaking inside their led containers. te last year the EPA d if more than two leakers’” were found the transfer to Tooele Army Depot should be lled ‘A said the transfer which was to have begun next Monday should he haltedat least until a supplement to the environmental impact Statement is prepared which could take months The governor is scheduled to take his case for keeping the bombsout of Utah to the federal court in Salt Lake City STYLE Non-Aerosol Hair Spray argue for a temporary Unscented, Natural Wednesday. He will or pore Hold restraining order preventing the Army fromshipping the bombs to the depot The EPAsaid the fact that six bombs have been foundto be leaking shows “slow SURE ounces Antiperspirant 6 ounceregular or 6 ounce unscented $49 but progressive weld corrosion’’ and that additional handling and movement will likely promote’’ more of the bombsto leak in the same manner. Studying of Kennedy Film Leads to Girl’s Testimony DALLAS(UPI) — Although she was only 10, Rosemary Willis, who was running next to President Kennedy's motorcade in 1963, remembers seeing clearly “two figures’ on a railroad trestle as the shots that killed Kennedy Tang out. She saw the figures thefirst time the shots werefired, she said, and a second timein pictures received by the FBI within hours of the Nov. 22, 1963, assassination. But when FBIagents returned the pictures, she said. the figures were no longervisible. Miss Willis also said she saw a man behind ‘‘a lattice-type wall’’ and the “umbrella man’’ considered by some assassination researchers to have been the signal manforfiring the shots. Miss Willis’ testimony cameto light publicly 16 years after the assassination becauseof the efforts of California egager David Lui, who was studying st famousfilm of the assassnatn taken by Abraham Zapruder, as partof a 1975class project at a Beverly Hills, Calif., school. Lui said during his analysis of the film, he noticed a young girl running beside the motorcade cameto a sudden halt and looked up at the Texas School Book Depository from where the Warren Commission said Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone. fired the fatal shots. The story of how Lui eventually located Miss Willis, now 26, in 1975 was contained in a copyright story Sunday by the Los Angeles TimesSyndicate. Lui, now 19 and a college student, believes the relationship of the timing of Miss Willis’ actions in the Zapruder film demonstrates Oswald had enough timeto fire three shots at Kennedy. Manyconspiracy theories have been based on the premise that Oswald’s ri- fle could not have fired all the shots that hit the motorcade Miss Willis confirmed Lui's suspicion that it was the soundof a gun shotthat caused her to stop abruptly, but she said the sounds she heard from the book depository did not necessarily prove the killings were executed by 2 lone assassin. “I heard three shots and they all camefrom across the street from the direction of the book depository,’’ she said Mondayin an interview with UPI “Oswald wasupthereasclear as could be. I think he was up there on purpose to make people think he was the one “The sounds I heard came from the book depository but they weren't necessarily the shots that killed him Someone with a gun with a silencer could have been in the gutter where they later found shells, or on the railroad trestle or behind the wall.”’ Miss Willis’ father. Phil. agreed. saying, ‘‘There’s no doubt in our mind the final shot that blew his headoff did not come from the depository (located to the rear of the motorcade). His head blew up like a halo. The brains and matter wentto theleft and the rear.” Lobby Turns Store ST, LOUIS (UPI) — Thegilded lobby of the 53-year-old Loew’s State theater building built by Thomas White Lamb, designer of Madison Square Garden. has reopened as a clothing store. The 3,500-seat auditorium may be demolished for a parking lot The building has been nominated for placementon the National Register of Historic Places. If approved, the owners would beeligible for federal grants and tax incentives to refurbish the building. Win at Bridge Unusual One-Suit Squeeze —7 NORTH 0753 64 VAQIBT @ 862 AS WEST EAST @AKQ #109862 v.43 v2 @KJ1073 #176 95 #Q10982 SOUTH but South knows that West would have J4 ¥KJ1065 @AQ4 #K43 Vulnerable: East-West | Dealer: South | West North East South | The defense starts out with three round of spades. South ruffs the third one andhasto find a wayto avoid the loss of two diamondtricks. The basic play is to strip the hand and comedownto a four-card ending. West will have thrown one diamond and will still be holding K J 10 7 while East will be holding 9 5 and two black cards. North and South each hold one trump and three diamonds. If West holds K J 109 thereis an easy endplay, lv 26 34) Pass 44 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: #K and Alan Sontag Hereis an unusual play described by Paul Lukacs as a one-suit squeeze. thrown the jack-10 or nine to avoid that so South leads the last trump (high trump in dummy) and West must drop the jack or 10 to keep the seven spot. Now South leads dummy’s six. East must play the nine, whereupon South plays his queen and Westis caught in an end play due to the fact that dummy’s eight has become the second highest diamond. The play has only worked because East's one high diamond wasthenine. If East held the 10, West could hold K J 9 and the play of the 10 from East would kill all end plays (NEWPAPER ENTERPRISEASSN. ) (For a copy of JACOBY MODERN, send $1 to: ‘‘Win at Bridge,’’ care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.) SPA said there is a ‘significant risk to the environment and public safety” from the leaking bombs. “I’m pleased that another federal agency has realized the magnitude of the problem and is requesting the Armyto take the same action I am,"’ said Matheson EPAdoesnot have the power to halt the movement directly but can tecommend to the Council on Environmental (t 12-HOUR RELIEF Quality that the bombs either be demilitarized at Rocky Mountain Arsenal or that more studies be done on the proposed transfer to Utah. HEAD & SHOULDERS Shampoo 11 ouncelotion CONTAC Capsules 10’ $469 DENVER(UPI) — The Armycompletedits tests of nearly 900 Weteye nerve gas bombs and went through a dry run today ofits plannedflight next weekof the bombsto a storagearea in Utah. SCOPE Mouthwash 18 ounces $419 Art Whitney, a spokesman at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal, said technicians completed tests on the 806 ombs late Monday and found no additional Teaking bombs. Six leaking bombs were discovered during the recenttests. The remaining 890 ‘good’’ bombs are scheduled to be flown to Tooele Army Depot in Utah beginning Monday, although Utah Gov. Scott Mathesonis trying to stop the move. Whitney said the Army conducted a training exercise today in preparation for the transfer. Three pallets of inert bombs were taken from the arsenal. north of Denver, to Stapleton International Airport ane loaded on a C-141 cargo plane. They then were flown to Michaels Air Field at the Dugway Proving Ground. “The operation went very smooth,’’ said Whitney. ‘It was a training exercise for everyone — including MPs and equipment handlers."’ posed hand was sent to Weber State College for exaiitinaiion, He said a blood test should identify the handaseither human or animal. Mike Ingraham of Ogden found the hand after hepulled his pickup truck into in a car wash at 15th and Washington Blvd. It was lying on the floor Shampoo Ss @D 7 ounce tube ¢ TAME CremeRinse ii, =] Oily, Regular or 16 ounces qo Ria Men'sHalSp en's | ray Regul,Exeee : ent ounce e 69: EARTHBORN Shampoo Apricot, Avocado, Apple or Strawberry 12 ounce $439 |$439 SS motive Sa PIZ BUIN Suntan Lotions 4.25 ounces © $319 ODOR EATERS Regular All VASELINE Intensive Care Baby Products YourChoice! Vaseline 59: Ordered By Police said the partially decom- pak =" SHOULDERS Hand Tests OGDEN, Utah (UPI) — Ogden Police have ordered tests on a hand found in a car wash to determineif it is human or animal Lt. James D. Anderson HEAD & Extra Strength 12's... $1.37 Sale Prices Good through June 10, 1979 Wereserve the an to limit quantities sold at these special prices. 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