Show - -- - -- - - - -- 4L4uii:'-- ' '' '' - ' ' i i i I For Classified Phone 'eatbe 91 Other Tribune deltortnwilts: News inforrnittion 363-151- j55 7512 - scorcs itt- 4 a - 'Shine and Showers 1111 fs:tie Salt Lake City 'titti Utah 355 77511 Other dowirtniontc Not No 195 Salt Lake City I:tall—Monday 111 001Iher 2 Morning Centi Pelee Ten 967 1 -- - sunshino ‘ith levk' showevs near mounttins Welther map is on Pogo 2ti Considerable It ' I Inside Russia 1917-6- 7 Russia- Leads Vattiop- Play Squeeze NEW YORK (AP) — - Octet' tive Monso Morrow scored twice on the same play in a softball game of tletKtivcs against a Greenwich Village restau rant Morrow 'as on second base as a runnor lien he spotted four men rolling and lighting what appeared to be marijuana cigarettes When Detective Thomas McGuinness lined one to center Morrow raced home and continued right up into the stands and arrested the suspects tolshevik Ideals Trip on Reality Off-dut- y Peking CelebratiOr 1 Rio Heir Fires an seminar in Tiflis Islikoyan has seen Russia move from tiottom rank among European powers to the second in the world to the United States — industrially economically And in space and some areas of technology and science she may be the first Nlikoyan is retired now but his big Kremlin office Is the Fame he occupied as a member of the party's ruling Politburo and as a first depot) premier Now the sign on the door simply reacts: 1lember Presidium of the Supreme Soviet It is SP Editors Nofe: This iS the tirst of a series of by a !earn of reporters of the New York Times on the first 50 veers of Soviet rule in Ruson Nov sia to be comenemofa!ed ortiCles By Harrison E Salisbury NY Times Assistant Managing Editor We were one of the most backward of nations and now we are one of Ow most advanced" Sitting in his Kremlin office with the summer sun glancing through the window Anastas 1 Mikoyan member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party for 44 years thus summed up Bol shevik rule in Russia Probably no one in Moscow was in a better position to assess the 50 Bolshevik years that 1011 be celebrated Nov 7 than Mikoyan dapper and sparklinggyed despite his 71 years No one has stood so close so long to the fulcrum of Soviet first as one of the power as Mikoyan Caucasus the men from brought up young and later 10 11oscow in 1926 by Stalin after Stalin's death as the right-hanman of Nikita S Khrushchev Born the son of a poor Armenian village carpenter educated in the Armeni d Riot Police flail Students in Saigon Melee By Barry Kramer Associated PINS Writer - SAIGON Riot police using clubs and tear gas smashed an attempted antigovernment demonstration by about 200 university students Monday In the melee several American television correspondents were beaten by police The students were attempting to march on the national assembly as It was holding a tense final round on whether or not to throw out the election of Nguyen Van Thieu as president of South Vietnam Several Students were beaten until they were bloody One young girl wandered dazed alon ttee srree blood-staine- - Newsmen Roughed Up d - - roughed up two Columbia Broadcasting System television newsmen and a CBS cameraman beating them with clubs The cameraman Keith Kay was taken to the hospital with a possibly fractured shoulder blade Bert Quint a CBS newsman was bleeding slightly after having been hit by police clubs John Lawrence of CBS was also beaten but apparently suffered no serious injury The police also broke open a CBS movie camera and took the film Quint said the police turned on the newsmen after they photographed police girl Lawrence said beating a teen-ag"I've never seen the police as brutal with newsmen as they were today" Police e - Shouts to Men Witnesses said First District police chief Capt Kieu Cong Bi ordered his men to turn on the newsmen shouting to them in Vietnamese "The American reporters are responsible for this demonstration" He apparently meant that the students were demonstrating for the benefit of the American newsmen and cameramen After the scuffle police smashed windows and hurled tear gas at the Student Union building from which the students had started their aborted march It is about five blocks from the assembly building in downtown Saigon About 20 students were arrested The students have been protesting the Sept 3 national elections which they claim were rigged They staged a demonstration Saturday demonstration Before the latest attempt got under way a police officer asked the students not to march the only one on the lung ridor so inscribed Involve 25500 employes The employes are members of the United Auto Workers whose three-yea- r contract expired at midnight Sunday Some 17000 Caterpillar workeN are employed in the Peoria area Other plants and employes involved Include: I? 3200 Aurora Ill 2600 Decatur Davenport Iowa 350 York Pa 1000 125 and Caterpillar's Denver Colo Towmotor divisions in Cleveland totaling 4"4r 11 471 ') 11"7 I ) II 1 - ) reres r t!' - ' ' 1 ' "If -- T 't ' The ceremony was marked by the absence of President Liu Shao-ch- i The Soviet-lewalkout came alter Mao's heir apparent Marshal Lin Pia° renewed criticism of the Kremlin leadership A Tass dispatch from Peking called attacks Lin's remarks "rude and outbursts against the in Communist movement" A h 1 anti-Sovi- 1 1 1 I s f e - - ' I Aare f ' t ' - J- : ' ' ' t r! ' 7'N (--- t ' 10 - '1 l' t ' ''''" '" f ' TIP 'i I "! k- - ' ' ' 14 '''' '' "0 ' I 1 - ''' k ' It - ': 4 4 -k Later - 4 1 4 0e-- " ''' 4 a 2!40 iimA4tivA - - - A '" Nw' k 1 4 i ‘1 ' 41 - ' ''' 214- - N 4 4 fj lic " '1 : '- ' t : :641ZVultatabli slew ' - ' 1 )t ' ' : t ' 4 1 1 4 t ' 1 3 7 i : -- it Staff Photo by Ross Weiser —Tribune t i ' 1 '':: ' 6 : - 0 if - ' ' sessions Church Lofty spires of Salt Lake Temple provide backdrop for members touring Temple Square between (' ‘ v k ''' 1 ' 't i - ' 1 Vi 4osAtikttiaiiilb ' - - ‘ lk: Ar''''''P '' r t4c fO'' ' $ ' f- ' : - ' - A ' 1( t t : ' 't' ''' 1 '1t 1 4' ' i k Ai 'i N ' 1 k L k :t 4 i : 4 ' c ' Itk ‘' '' 1 - '15"''''- 1 k:-- ' ' t - ' ': T :k ' - '''' 1 - i 4 - ' - (lik 4tit g 7 ' - 5 v -4 ' - 1! i - it :' '4 A ii 1 a ' ' 1 4 1 ' r'r"- - - ('' ' A ''' - '' : 4 a kv 0 1 '' Following the Soviet delegation out of Peking's Tienanmen Square Nvere the representatives in Peking of Bulgaria llungary East Germany Mongolia Poland and Czechoslovakia the official Soviet news agency said The celebration marked the first public confirmation that President Liu had been removed from any effective control in Peking although he apparently still holds wide support in the countryside Liu as chief of state normally would have presided over the National Daycelebrations and did so last year even though Mao 73 chairman of the Chinese Communist party had launched a purge just two months berme to remove him from office 4 A e 4 ' " ' & 1 I 4:f t '" :'- 4 1 4 137th semiannual Conference of LDS Thousands attended conference sessions Make Home Life Radiate Purity Pres McKay Urges Conference - The state has not as Lenin forecast withered away The vision of a new "Soviet man" idealistic and humanitarian and the Utopia he foresaw of a world brotherhood of man is unfulfilled Young writers like Andrei Voznesensky and Yevgeny Yevtushenko berate the party iour y Slogans Remain Each day Pravda the party paper still publishes next to its name the slogan: "Workers of the World Unite" Nearly one third of the world is under See Page 4 Column I dent's message President N Eldon Tanner and counselors dent Hugh B Brown the OH Ism said Ty conference goers returning to their homes Pres McKay directed that they take with them the example of the Sav- Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints "The strength of the church lies in the purity of thought and lives of its members" the church leader said "For what the individual is that the aggregate is Pres McKay on the advice of his physician didn't attend the Sunday sesconference Ills sions of the three-da- y son Robert R McKay read the presi- for banality Some young Russians simply sneer at Within the Politiburo quarrels go on behind the scenes over what went IVIon g and what line should be followed back to the dream of 1917 conducted church's First Presidency final sessions President David O McKay Sunday urged church members to make their home life radiate purity in a concluding message to the LTIth semiannual General calm and in being controlled homes radiate what we are" he said- "No man of the church has a right to utter oaths in his home or cross words to his wife his children or his parents" Mils! Passions passions and temper will and harmony he advised of Control leave Control peace such to radiate to love commu- homes "Make your the neighborhood harmony nity beauties and loyalty Presiin the when "Strangers say: 'If that's the result of Mormon I think it's good' " Pres 1lcKay Other speakers during the afternoon session Included Marion G Romney Council of the Twelve Apostles: Franklin D Richards Bernard P Brockbank and Henry D ElRay L Christiansen Taylor all assistants to the Council of Twelve Apostles Mr Romney cited three sources as proof that God exists: 1 The orderliness of the universe 2 The testimony of wit nesses to whom God revealed Himself 3 The witness of the Holy Spirit "Myriads of people are persuaded by the universal order about them float there is a divine power a God presiding over and controlling the universe" he "Make your they see your home said s rotowofmi I A I :70mk AmA - r 5 i trie-- - i ''''11 4 - - v ' ic '4i 1 ' ' '''' ' tI ""'"'-- v'''''-- - ':-'- ' ' 'f t k : ''''' 1 - ': ' ''' 4 ' a141 i- - 1 Iii- A 1 ( t F9 ' 4 i rt tole w 4 t r— lo - ''' ' tr! - 4 tt tvoi :' i: ' ' 1 f - -n - r 4 c—- - -- - 4 e-- - ' ' --' - 0 --- $ f ! i I t - i y eN - f -f h i : f V '' - - -- - va 1 - k - 4 '1 ? ' i ' '''' ''' ' tl: ::-- !': ' ' r i I t ' - ' ' I '' I : '::tY'''i t: : '' ' '' A :)!::Ii'-''-':-sLi 7 ::' 'ia:''1't :' '' ''''' ''t t: - '):7 'ti ' - - ' '' ' ' "::" - - :I ''''-- i fi' '4 :4 ' ' It '1 '''" io -: :'? ''' ''' i ' '''' " ' ' : - 4t - 7 ' ' '''" '''''' 7i''':q' ii:14' ' l Jr- ? ' 4 ':' i 4 0 i 4 1 ' - i : ' - Novosly Women stand wearily in St Petersburg bread line In March 1917 before bpontaneous uprising that The contents of the speeches and de: scriptions of the celebrations came from Red Chinese news dispatches and broadcasts monitored in Tokyo There are only a handful of foreign correspondents in Peking most of them from Communist countries and their movements are sharply restrictcd The correspondent of the Japanese news agency Kyodo reported that Mao who had been rumored to be ailing appeared robust and healthy on the reviewing stand Thecorrespondeni said he had to watch the ceremonies from a distance through binoculars lie said Mao did not wave at the massive cheering crowd as he has done in the past but left that chore to Lin Piao and other leaders A Radio Peking broadcast said however Mao did wave at troops marching by the reviewing stand Just a few hours before the start of See Page 6 Column 5 On the Inside 'Mr Romney enu- Biblical testimony to See Page 7 Column 3 in rage Page Classified Comiei Editorials Foreign Health National Obituaries Thirty-thousan- ''' - ' for a new China Dispatches 27-3- 1 21 I111 8 15 6 - 27 Society Sports Star Gazer Television Theaters Valentine Washington I 3 -I 18-- 1 Wb 4 10 2-- 3 Just downstream from Dilatamoros' TEX BROWNSVILLE (AP)—The Rio Grande Rio Grande mustered its floodwaters to a however the crest of more than 17 feet Sunday and punctured a dirt levee late Saturday and forced the GOO persons living nearby to then gushed into the Gulf of Mexico—but not before a final scare that sent 600 flee Mexican officials said after a survey Mexican nationals scrambling for high that the levee could be repaired and that a when crumbled dirt levee ground no serious flooding occurred—but the The sister cities of Brownsville Tex and Matamoros Mexico which bore the momentary dash for safety was undersbrunt of Hurricane Beulab's fury when tandahle considering the river's surpshe struck land 11 days ago got off lightrise 'performance upstream persons left slid ly from the disastrous Bowling which at Matamoros during the weekend loa caused so much misery upstream and inland The skies were clear and blue lug only 1500 still being cared fur Sunfar cry from the torrential day officials said Sunday-r-' downpours of the hurricane "There appears to be no danger for any part of Brownsville due to flooding said when 114 the US Weather Bureau If you think tile average American porting that the river had cleated at wile can't take a joke take a loplc at the 1748 feet and by noon had inched dowfl i to 1746 feet average American-- husband' e 't -- 3-- - lied Rio Floodwaters Give Final Scare Before Surging Into Mexico Gulf r i ' (---- t 1 merated several ''' ' : -7- I : 0 To this questioning -' 't !''' ' ) I A c:- 74: t - - ! - )11' But Liu and his chief lieutenant party General Secretary Tong Jisiaopeog were not In the reviewing stand Liu 69 made his last public appear--on- ce at Mao's side in November at a Red Guard rally Lin Piao'who is Red China's defense minister as veil as No 2 roan hi he party spoke in place of Mao at the ceremony Red China "has never been so powerful as it is today" Lin declared lie claimed Maoists had routed Liu and his followers and their counterrevolution had "Collapsed On all fronts" (" 7 i '' J i ' ?' ' cr A -- - y :: ' - ' i!t — i Y ''This conclusion is correct and comforting but it is not enough" be added "The honest believing inquiring soul wants to know about the nature and personality of God - il:' 'i '2'- - - 4: 1 t ) '1 '? —- i - :' I r Its - :'' ' ' -- - I '' '' "' ' 11:- 7 1 ? ':" : ' 1E1 t ) k1:'-'- i Not in Reviewing Stand Comforting Conclusion - : - i4g "—' ' - - r F ' 4 11 ' i I 4 4 I 41"' - Istitoro':2 tru ' ' : v - ' ! t :1c vt ' : - 111' ''''' ' ' 3 1 '"'' 110as11111" 1 04 "4' 4 i o 4 I : i 1441P' 1 :r 'T ' 1'1' r t 1 ) --' ' I '' )' -t "' - - II i ' 2 : Itussians Follow i 44 4 '''' 4 i 1 x ''''‘''4' ' ' - i' t ii I ''' i i ' want r A - v - 1 1 11 1( : ' ' 42 3: J a'' 7'' ! t -I' --- - k ‘14 -- 4 ' f ' I 4 ' OP ' 4 1 i - t : ' - ) -'- '' i ' - 11111010 "1"ork '' ---4' --- ' I 4 1 1 4 — ' - 1 — il4 1 ' "k r I :' ' ' - ? 1 ' ' ' 4 "' - t i 1 : ' -- ' ' - r1- 4 4144 ' r -- 1 I f ' -'' : : - '''F e7: - r k if: ' IVS74 ' i ' I d a f Today's- Chuckle 1175 contract were reTalks cessed Saturday'night by federal mediators Ralph Baker of Peoria and Daniel Fitzpatrick of Washington 1 'z 4 re speak rrt'qlt ' ' E 7 ' 11 1 ' ' - Tse-tun- 4 trit444411 ' - oNN years have passes since the dramatic days of 1917 For 50 years uss la has been ruled as a Soviet state on the principles of what Lenin called the "dictatorship of the proletariat" — actually dictatorship by the ruling elite of the Communist Party The Soviet state has held not only the "commanding heights" of industry but all the means of production It manages every kind of economic enterprise from street vendors of ice cream cones to missile factories Yet the 'socialist order" of which Lenin spoke remains largely a I PEORIA ILL (UPI) --- A strike that would shut eight plants of the Caterpillar Tractor Co in five states began at 12:01 am Monday and Is expected to N- '' ' C - 50 mirage - ' 300-yea- Now v - - TOKYO — The Soviet Union led A ‘valkout of six of it Cotnmunist allies Sunday' from a massive celebration in Peking of the 18th anniversary of the Red lakeover of the Chinese mainlawl Mao reviewed half a million Red Guards and watched a military parade and a fireworks display but did not 14 t Probably no one has been more aware over the years than Mikoyan of the gap between Soviet promise and Soviet performance — a gap visible almost from the moment when 24 hours after having toppled Alexander Kerensity's provisional governmen t Lenin stepped before a cheering crowd at the Smolny Institute in Leningrad and said: "We will now proceed to construct the Socialist order" Lenin-othat night was celebrating the success of the Bolshevik seizure of overpower The actual revolution the throw of Czar Nicholas II and of the r reign of the House of Romanov occurred- the revious March unaided by Bolsheviks or any other organized group the product of a spontaneous uprising in the streets of Petrograd largely led by angry women tired of endless waits In the bread lines 50 Years Ey John Roderick Associated Press Writer t Proudly Mikoyan ticks off Soviet material gains — elimination of illiteracy improvement of life gains in housing culture education standard of living creature comforts Ile concedes that not everything has gone accoiding to plan that there have been short falls from the goals envisaged by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin when he launched his successful coup – d'etat on Nov 7 1917: By the strength of Mikoyan's reaffirmation of the doctrine of he shows concern for the fact that after 13 years the dark stain of Stalin's terror has not been entirely eradicated : Bogs Caterpillar ' ' Among Nlost Kremlin Tirade if )11 cor- d Reports Proudly : 8sPlant Walkout i from Soviolo overthrew the Czar It was such women IlOt the Bolsheviks who bparked the Russian Revolution vr 4 ' t - I |