Show v v — ' — — -- v ' r t! 1 1 - I ! a St f Fbr 4 "4 For Classified Phone : Other Tribune departments: Islews Information 363-151- 1: 3557512: scores 3557511: other departments I Salt Vol 196 No 5 363-152- 5 1 t' y 521-353- 5 i i (147-t- kii rek- N' It lit 1 -' 1 1111 Utah—Thursday Morning —October 19' 1967 Lake City t ! 1 1 Clearly Crili I i Salt Lake City and Utah — Partly cloudy to lair twine winds at times and cooler Weather map is on Page C-- 5 Prim Ten Cepis i I t House Cuts $7 Billion Off Budget 11 -- ' 1 i :' :— ''- ::: i 1 k en -- i '': ' ! '' ' s A ' i A : ':' M: 41 ''' ii ' 444 ''''"—'—'''' ' i ' s i epprts:Fr9111Venvis': lieat of 536 temés: - k - ' tl ! ' Z11 - fli- ' ' ' ' :‘' ' ' ''' - t : b i ' I i' ° -- 4''f' :: !t t 1 S t' V 1 ''9' ' " t ' Al ''' ' !i '! ' ' '- :--: : z - ''-' :i: -- 'i': : '''' i ''' ' ':! :' I :' ''i : ' ''"-:':- : - '' ': - ' - f k ' -- "'t: 1- 2 3 1c ' ' - t li''7: -- " - :'' '''' - '' 1 - —':A ' ' '' :' t ' I' - I ::'' 'r!'' !: Y - 1 -- — ' ' ' ':: - ' i' ' ''- "' : ' 'S:'' ' ' ' ' ':' ::- !'i - ''' " 7 '' ii '' ' ' 4 ' l — :''' 7 '' 4 - -- ' '' i - - i 1 I I tj 1 " - - 4 - I I ' -- ' ' - -: ' ! :- 1 - - - ' 4 $ Goes to Senate Lth The bill nOw goes to the Senate which Is expected to modify sharply if not delete the limitations This would leave the6 issue to be fought out in a Senate-Hous- e lkisscwoAr4:4 ‘4se:atow44 1 4 ek I '' ' ' - s z !f41-- ' t - "' ' rat' ! ''IX— - 'P':-''1'-- ' a 42 t A ! 44 0 it144 g a T 44 &AA' At - " : ' 4 c' ' i c' Seattle police drag away Ann ter one of seven arrested frOm Se Fet- I ! ' h'160 fi e7 At 1 ' JAAi-- g lective Service office after part of nationwide antidraft effort - Violence Flares in Protests At Wisconsin U Oakland By United Press International s broke up by War and antidraft demonstrators Wednesday at the University of Wisconsin and an Oakland Calif Induction Police sit-in- Center About 63 persons were injured at Madison Wis when police in waded into 150 the Commerce Building of the university campus A few protesters were arrested g of a scheduled weeklong nationwide round of protests against the war and the draft There were demonstrations at several other cities — including Chicago Los Angeles Seattle and Buffalo NY — but nme erupted into violence like those at Madison and Oakland day Protest Napalm Maker arm-locke- d Police Forms Wedge s of helmeted At Oakland police swept through an estimated 2500 flying-wedge- perchanting demonstrators "Sixty-fivsons including five juveniles were taken e boosting the three-da- y arrest total at the northern California Induction center to 212 The outbreaks punctuated the third into custody University of Wisconsin sit-i- n was against job interviews by rep resentatives of Dow Chemical Co maker of napalm for the Vietnam War A Dow spokesman said that despite the out- protest company recruiters had no plans leave the campus "We feel making napalm for the government is our duty" the spokesman said Students were led from the building with blood streaming from their heads after police moved in on them when they break leaving peacefully students fought back pummeling police with their fists and tossing rocks shoes and other objects at the offi- Many 6 Police retaliated with tear gas that crowd at bay In Seattle seven were arrested when in front of they participated in a sit-iSelective Service headquarters The sit-ifollowed picketing of the Seattle Army Induction Center cers kept the n Sell Los Angeles Times Writer WASHINGTON — House Investigators Wednesday blistered the Army for action that "borders on criminal negligence" in its handling of the controversial rifle program Weapons malfunctions which may have cost US lives in Vietnam a special insaid were vestigating subcommittee caused mostly by using different bullets than the rifle was built to use The Army insisted on the different ammunition even though studies showed it caused jams By Ted M-1- 6 'At Least Unethical' The subcommittee also criticized Maj Cen Nelson M Lynde Jr chief of the Army Weapons Command when the ma- 6 procurement contract was for going to work for the rifle manufacturers when he retired from the Army Lynde's conduct the subcommittee said was at least unethical" The special three-maArmed Services Subcommittee was created last May 3 to Investigate reports of trouble with the The group lightweight was headed by Rep Richard 'chord and included Reps Speedy O and William G Bray (R Long (D-L- jor first M-1- Eigned Special Forces troops But it was adopted as a standard weapon for all combat troops in Vietnam in December 1965 at the specific request of Gen William C American commander Westmoreland there The subcommittee report made it clear that the was by itself a good and reliable weapon suited to the type of combat In Southeast Asia But reliability was badly affected by the Army's choice of ammunition the the subcommittee said As designed weapon was to use a bullet with (improved military rifle) powder similar to the charge in commercial sporting ammunition M-1- 6 M-1- 6 (D-M- a) Specific Request 6 invented in 1957 was origiThe nally purchased only for airborne and A1-1- On the Inside Page Page Business Classified Comics Sears Sect C4-1- 3 Society 84 Sports Star Gazer A4 Television 84849 8 Foreign National 10b tuaries v Theater Cl Washington ' 84 Ball 0Awed WbIoftft0ft00 Oa ftr Editor's Note: This is the Ilth of a series of team of reporters of els New York articies by Times on the first 50 years of Soviet rule in Rue Vs to be commemorated on Nov 7 By Ada Louise lituctable New York Times Architecture Critic March In LA score pickets marched at the Los Angeles Induction Center One man was arrested on a disturbing the peace charge when he allegedly became abusive to police after they tagged his car in a no parking zone In Chicago there was shoving and squabbling when police forced a group of protesting women out of the entrance of a loop induction center Some women booed when one arriving inductee shout ed: "I'm ready to go fight in Vietnam I'll serve my country" Two short skirts improvised pencils and eye makeup ingeniously from east European drawing The Kind Launched June of The visitor who comes to world a planned society half cized and a see the kind has built in century bringing the well publl- crumbling construction drab vistas finds new 20- - and skyscrapers rising dramatically along l‘loscaw's main avenues Close by churches and historic buildings are being restored with patience and quantities of shimmering gold leaf Beyond the skyscrapers and the treasures of the Kremlin the characteristic bare In umber-tone- of This year's girls wore beehive hairdos may artificial colors tentatively Soviet Cosmonaut Pavel R Popovich that predictect after this breakthrough men will fly to k'enus through he added that no target date could be set for this also said the question Popovich remains open of whether life exists on Venus Ile said other sp3ceships will be post with image of - Napoleonic streets of the 1820's their small classic buildings finished plaster wait quietly for demolition Rugged late - 19th - century Russo - Baroque structures that put eon d rage See I Column 5 2 ' I N ‘ I 4400 't — It ( a? f s'l - ' 1: e -- ' 'f 4' ''' ' si - T) —1t I: s t ' tt ' 4- ' c ''0-- ' ' By Edwin Q White Associated Press Writer SAIGON — A US Air Force fighter bomber shot down a MIG interceptor above Hanoi on Wednesday while other American warplanes pounded Haiphong and its outskirts and ranged close to Red China for a second straight day US military headquarters said Thursday In South Vietnam US B52 bombers and artillery rained explosives Wednesday Into suspected enemy positions in jungles northwest of Saigon after a day long battle between American and Viet Cong Infantrymen that took a heavy toll on both sides An Air Force F105 Thunderchief pilot brought down the challenging MIGI7 with 20mm cannon fire while his fellow pilots bombed a railroad bypass bridge only 19 miles northwest of Hanoi Bomb Boat Yard Simultaneously Navy pilots from aircraft carriers in the Gulf of Tonkin returned to Haiphong to bomb the Lach Tray boat yard 17 miles southwest of the center of the port city and a huge army barracks compound three miles southeast of Haiphong's center Both targets were hit previously in raids earlier this month ventional Victorians to shame exist too on sufferance in the relentless reconstruction of the city Apartments On Moscow's outskirts now 230000 new apartments are completed annually In the southwest district where a sea of walk-up- s was begun 15 shabby five-storyears ago as part of the clty's planned y buildings are the curresidential neighborhoods that ring the central city rise like a scaleless white mirage out of the expansion standard The new green fields A visitor this year found all the crumbling construction and drab vistas as ad- flat vertised But there were also some startling breakthroughs What has been achieved for the 50th anniversary is the industrialization of See '- ' ' ' - ' -- - ' '0- '' ! '''' - '"-- - : 1 ' 0 r-- ' 1 f '' '''''' )I ' iC ' :°'''''" ''"- 4 1 s 4 t 4 ' ' ' ''' : ' 1 ' ''''' ' - °' g ' " i k 1' - ' 1 - a 11 ' ' ' '' s' t f - '' 44 rage £4 Column 1 Idr J ' ' ' t 101 $ ' 4 i ) - 1 " - k i —Associated Press Wirephote This symbol with USSR gold national emblem and Soviet flag were Plane Downs N 'Viet Bombers Lash Haiphong Area rent ' r : g ' ' : 'cki AF 2:10C01 New ' - ':'- 11 The spaceship launched June 12 reached the atmosphere of the planet-- 50 million miles away — early Wednesday and released its instruments in a separate package It braked itself then put out a parachute For the next 90 minutes it floated down the 15 miles toward Venus' surface sending back data through radio signals The temperature rose from 104 degrees at the start of the descent to five times that at the end Pressure rose to 15 times that on the earth Soviet Astronomer Vita ly Bronshtein said in an interview with the official news agency Tass that communications with the instruments "are being maintained" He predicted that they will provide "plenty of new information" After the first report the Venus 4 feat of World The 50th anniversary of the Russian revolution began with one of Moscow's loveliest springs Hedges of lilacs faced the Bolshoi Theater tulips were fluorescent in the Alexander Gardens and parks turned jungle green This year the food displays in store windows were imaginative and rnore there were fancy shoes costplentiful ume jewelry and enough flashy consumer goods to make the streetscape less 841-- 9 A-2- 4 information relayed to earth Venus to be atmosphere extremely hot — up to 536 degrees — and made up almost entirely of carbon dioxide which the earth 's living creatures cannot breathe The feat with the unmanned Venus 4 spaceship was a big prestige boost for Russia's space program which suffered a tragic setback April 24 when cosmonaut Vladimir M Komarov was killed in the crash of Soyuz L It was also a big leap forward for the Soviet Union in the space race with the United States Official announcements described the Venus 4 flight this way: New Skyser pers Offer Drama M-1- 6 high-veloci- n - equip-carrie- Open 11 Russia Today n to gather more information provided the Soviet Union with the first significant space SUCCPSS since Its predecessor Venus 3 reached the planet This was the first manmade object to reach Venus but it failed to radio back anything because oft an d malfunction Both Venus 3 and Venus 4 the hammer and sickle emblem of the Communist state to the planet This country started the race to Venus on Feb 12 1961 The United States joined in and in 1962 got hack the first radio Information about the planet from Mariner 4 Venus The MIG that was shot down was the 86th Communist interceptor claimed by US pilots for the war as against 26 American planes downed in combat It was the first MIG downed in more than a month Russell Pilots litiler Credited with the kill was Maj Donald M Russell 35 of Westbrook Maine a Thailand - based Air Force Thunder-chie- f pilot Russell bagged the NIG his first while fellow pilots assaulted the previously hit Dal Lot railroad bypass bridge 19 miles northeast of Hanoi and reported they wrecked the structure which already had one span down from earlier raids Other Air Force pilots streaked to within 22 miles of Communist China to bomb the Lang Dang railroad siding 64 miles northeast of Hanoi Pilots claimed they destroyed or damaged 20 boxcars in the attack and inflicted 11 cuts on the rail line Air Force pilots also bombed the main northeast rail line connecting Hanoi with China at points 39 and 50 miles northeast of Hanoi No Fresh Contacts There was no word of any fresh contacts in the jungles 40 miles above Saigon where US 1st Division infantrymen clashed with a main force Viet Cong regiment Tuesday GIs said they were ambushed the generals called the battle a meeting engagement The Americans killed at least 103 of the Communists but lost 58 dead and 61 wounded Two widely known officers Lt Col Terry Allen Jr 38 and Maj Don V Raeder 32 most valuable player on the Army's 1955 football team were among the American dead Allen's fattier commanded the 1st Division the Big Red One in Tunisia and IL hill 10 Sicily In World with instruments parachuted on I Venus from unmanned spaceship GOP Viet Stand to balked at Action Probers Say Army 'Borders Criminal Negligence' 111-1- The a sent there The Press Wirepholo sit-i- n —Associated question Rematon showed ' ' was hailed both here and abroad The Soviet government congratulated the designers of the spaceship calling its success "a most important contribution to world science" and saying this was a wonderful present for the coming 50th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution Extremely Hot : ! :3:' - - :' ':':"? — MOSCOW The Soviet Union achieved another historic space breakWednesday by dropping on through Venus instruments that radioed back the first information ever received from that planet's surface The data indicated Venus temperature was hot enough to melt metal US space leaders awaiting Thursday's flyby of Venus by the American Mariner 5 spacecraft called the Soviet soft landing of an instrument package on d the planet "an accomplishment any nation can be proud of" Venus 4 the 2438pound vehicle that carried the instruments to Venus "burned itself to ashes" in the planet's atmosphere after letting go its payload the Soviet news agency Tass reported cloud-shroude- 75 ' - ''''''g'-- ''''? -:' - ':' '" t- ' ' ' '' ' f! : - I1 0- t-- '' - :' ' :11 ' : - v - ' - : :"1: ''- - i'Ai it i ' :: ' ' '- ---- ' ' -- 4 e 7 ' ' '' - (' — r ' 1 i ' i'' ' ' " ' :1 - '' iI' By John Vey land Associated Press Writer -- a — t -1 - '''' ' 1 One would require that spending this ear be held at the levels of the previous year — except for outlays In connection with the Vietnam war and certain other specified activities This provision was sponsored by Rep Jamie L Whitten Added to it was another limitation that was backed solidly by Republicans headed by Rep Frank T Bow of Ohio It would set what Bow called an absolute ceiling of 1315 billion dollars on spending this year — a cut of not less than 5 billion dollars but estimated by some Democrats to be much higher Whitten told the his measure would mean about a cut ' i ' Spending This Year : ' i 4 i - - i il A ' A 7- : ' " v ci ' ' '' § t !"::1: ::: ' 'f 1 ' ' : : 4 r 1: t re ! L:1 11 ': I t Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON — The House Wednesday night passed a bill designed to cut government spending an estimated 7 billion dollars in the year ending June O The vote was 253 - 143 Fighting to hold down proposed cuts In President Johnson's budget administration supporters were defeated again and again in a complex struggle that ended with Republicans and southern Democra ts triumphant Nailed into a measure to continue emergent- y financing for departments whose appropriations are still pencling — and ‘vhich will be out of money next Monday unless Congress acts — were two mascive spending limitations t' ': $ 1: I ' - f - ric By Edmond LeBreton conference The House debated the bill for hours amended It extensivelythen combined Whitten and Bow measures Exempted from the limitation to 1967 spending levels as the bill finally was approved would be activities connected with the Vietnam war military pay and veterans' benefits Interest on the national debt highways Social Security welfare and medicar0 programs Authorized to Exempt The President would be authorized to exempt essential work by the Post Office and the Internal Revenue Service The spending limits would apply in all other agencies legislative and judicial as Well as executive The House added by amendment some specific limitations: As long as it continues on month to month allocations the Office of Economic Opportunity which runs the poverty program would be held to spending at an annual rate of $1200000000 It is now authorized a rate of nearly 11700000000 and Mr Johnson asked for an appropriation of about 2 billion dollars Similarly foreign aid would be held to a spending level while on a monthly basis - 44 War Marines The only engagement of any size was reported in the northern end of the country in northernmost Quang Tri Province where US spokesmen said 10 Marines were killed and 19 were wounded not casual tieS were Communist known US headquarters said The US Command said the Communists inflicted most of the casualties when they hit a rear guard platoon of Marines as a company of Leathernecks moved through a thickly jungled area eight miles southwest of Quang Tri City the provincial capital Spurs White House Message By Walter Mears Associated Press Writer ABOARD BS INDEPENDENCE — A private White House communication urging Democrats to work on Republican Govs James A Rhodes of Ohio and John H Chafee of Rhode Island for support of a Vietnam war resolution fell into Republican hands Wednesday Goy Ronald Reagan of California received a copy of a cablegram from W Marvin Watson presidential assistant to former Goy Price Daniel of Texas list-lu- g in detail previous GOP suppott of similar resolutions Oppose Viet Resolution The Republican governors caucusing on this cruise to the National Governors' Conference had agreed unanimously earlier in the day to oppose bringing before the members the resolution scheduled to be offered by Utah's Gov Calvin L Rampton endorsing President Johnson's course in Vietnam ' Reacting quickly the White House messaged Daniel the administration's new liaison roan with the governors filling him in on the record of the Republican governors in recent years in upholding Johnson's basic policies in fighting Communist aggression in Vietnam The Watson message noted that Rhodes had offered a Vietnam support resolution at a White House meeting of governors with the President on March 12 1964 and had supported a similar statement of the governors on July 4 I 1 - 1966 - Did All on Own a "lie (Rhodes) did all of this on his without prompting from anyone" Watson told Daniel "He should be asked whether he is now running out on his former position" The message added that Chafee had said during the current conference that the President "waved around such documents for political purposes" "Governor Chafee should be asked when the President ever did such 'a thing" Watkins advised Daniel r - owl) f 1 ' 3 11 Jj :? 1 i r - Töday's Chuckle ' 1 1 season's television Is so bad that youngsters are going back to their homeThis work : 11! 71 1 |