Show ' For Classified Phone (3bt jialiat rgw 91 4 Other Tribune departments: I News 353-751- 363-151- information 1 scores departments 2 other 355-751- 1 UN Hears Cries te brad i ikt stroyed - - ‘ tion dumps and 44tt" ' r t t Sides f ' t l They were t 1 1 i- - -- - ' - - 1 :' 's fe- '1 k t:: mary election - ) - run He'll -- I 1 Israeli sources said two refineries came under attack in Port Suez along with oil tanks capable of holding 550000 tons of oil The Egyptians said oil tanks were afire but made no mention of the refineries - Informants in Tel Aviv said flames the refinery comhigh plex which produces about SO per cent of Egypt's petroleum needs when UN See Page 18 Column 1 towered above Today's Chuckle is the greatest by a mouse Disneyland ever built people-tra- p - 1 ' r ti-- -- Bolds Mr i t ' ' rt‘1 e 1 ""'''' 2 t '' 'f 1 I i r 4 ‘ I - r ' I I '' N 14 j ' 1 '"0 t ! - ? ' l r ''‘' i ( t i $ : Louisi E - - E J Holley Incumbent Ilins Race Ey Lewis M Simons Associated Press Writer US — Wins SL ' - i ' Lane Completes Gam Commission Race Wa- August 10 aerial dogfight and blew up at least three t missile sites They reported the corn of and cratered out runway heavily mission It had been expected that three per cent or more of the US raiders would be lost As it turned out exuberant planners repxted not one plane was lost to the MIGs flak and missiles thrown up In defense of the base 9170-foo- rplanes nthbed out North Vietnam's largest air base Tuesday In the biggest single air strike of the war Pilots said they demolished the Phue Yen field 18 miles northwest of Hanoi previously a Pentagon - forbidden target In Wahington Pentagon officials said the coordinated strike by Air Force Navy anti Marine fliers was prompted by recently Increased aggressiveness by Communist MIGs US jets were challenged by 78 in September and the first half of October compared with 17 In Claim MIGs Pilots reported Wednesday they destroyed or damaged nine MIGs on the ground at Phue Yen In addition they shot one MIM1 out of the skies in an More Man 100 Jets American officer would not reveal exact number of Air Force Navy Marine jets scheduled for the raid It however more than 100 jets mostly from Air Force bases in Thailand & the and was US headquarters announced that two American jets were downed elsewhere In North Vietnam on Tuesday and that both pilots were rescued The Communists claimed they shot down nine planes captured some of the pilots and ' i00000161000OUMAkftMo00 lion immediately after the revolution was not altogether easy Many of Russia's IEditor's finest dancers were' out of the country on Nov 7 appearing with Diaghilev's Ballets Russ-e- s kOWW1010101P001a0P0A000ftA1004MM010640Pbft04 A few returned to Russia others who wanted to return were prevented by warI3y Clive Barnes time conditions New York Times Dance Critic Luckily Lenin insisted on the protecBallet is to Russia what whisky is to tion of the arts which would hencefoScotland — its most admired export But rward be for the proletariat Russian ballet unlike Scotch whisky is During the first years of the revolution the majority of the dancers stayed by no means a stable product Today Russian ballet is In a fascinatingly in Russia but among those who threw their lot in with the West were the most changeable strangely unpredictable conditiom notable of Russia's dancers choreograTo understand Soviet ballet one has phers and teachers They included to consider its Michel Fokine Anna Pavlova 'Tamara history Its posi This Is tha lath Of a series reporters of Tho New York Times 50 years of Soviet rola In Rassia For three-to-on- e Districts 207 of (Two Highest Qualify) J Bracken Lee Cannon D James Joseph N dance historians have given the impression that everyone who was anyone deserted Soviet ballet at this time but this is far from the case Fokine at that time the hero of everything Western progressive in Russian dance was of course a grievous loss but Fokine's elder Aleksandr Gorsky 'remained in Moscow The 1920s were the times of expert Column generated received 207 of (Four Slate of votes votes which primary re Walter H Sam Moll !I Robert E Buhler James A Lehman Jacob Westbrook Sherman D Grover Knorr Henry Frank W Willie H Rees Watson Ben tine 560 Vole 478 303 Johnson Solon !'7 778 Fred W Jess C Kone Ballot Analysis The four candidates obtaining primary nominations nabbed approximately 55 per cent of the vote for city commis sioners leaving the other 15 candidates Awaits Readers remainder Only other candidates for commissioner to appear in contention in the ballot counting were Fred P Conde service the 1 On the Inside A-1- 0 1 e 3 B-- B-1- 4 - i : - Reichert "- If you take the tops in political analysts reporters and stiff directors provide the latest in modern electronic computors and mix them carefully together you come up with the best in coverage of an election And that is what has been done for Tuesday's primary election The Salt Lake Tribune's entire staff and ability was turned loose on getting all the information and in cooperation with the Utah Election Service now pro Tribune readers 'ides with complete - :::: ":! cov- erage of the primary For example Salt Lake City's primary is reported on Page 1 Then on of the the inside on Pages El and E-first section are the results from Ogden Provo Murray AIidvale and Logan 2 Bountiful ' 1 UMA"s ported " "'" that guaranteed annual income will win overwheinting ratification and send 160000 strikers back to their jobs Voting continues through Wednesday If ratification prevails the union says workers will begin streaming back Thursday and Friday at Ford plants in 25 states across the country The strike against Ford enters its 49th day Wednesday and thus becomes seven weeks old Strikers have been living on strike benefits ranging from $20 to $30 a T' rrrlr?!!" 7"1' l' R1'"7!-- - :ro ' ) ry g eN - 7' qr week - -' f 101 Ford bargaining units supforecasts of the UAW leadership the new agreement carrying a 4 - 13147 114x8 6896 4164 3924 3145 3081 2263 2105 1887 1613 1410 1417 11'26 1009 "Jake" Gam Walter J Michelsen Fred P Conde Parker Robison Jr station owner and Parker Robison Jr sponsibility and alerted aircraft from former staff aide to the State Aeronautics three Air Force fighter wings in Thal Commission They received slightly more land The Marines from the big base at than 3000 votes unofficially with Mr margin Da Nang and Navy pilots from two car- Conde holding a in order of their candidates other The in Tonkin the Gulf of second riers got vote totals were Walter H Reichert strike orders Sam Moll Robert E Buhler James A In 'Ready Rooms' Lehman Jacob Westbrook Sherman D Grover Henry Knorr Frank W Rees The orders spelling out the precise Willie Watson Fred W Bentine Jess C 4 times armament and missions in the Kone and Solon Johnson raid were In secret "ready rooms" early Early Voting Flurry Tuesday An awesome weight of bombs was of early voters in several disA loaded aboard the planes—supersonic F4 tricts flurryindicated a better than normal had Phantoms F105 Thunderchiefs A4 Sky turnout for a city primary election alhawks ard F Crusaders Many carried though voting reports were erratic Some make districts whopping 3000 pounders that casting ballots were above previ craters freight Aerial reconnaissance photos taken just after the raid showed four 1'1IG21s four MIGI7s and one MIG15 were destroyed Or damaged on the field The leader of one of the strike forces Air Force Maj Carl F Funk 34 of 3-Year Mesa Ariz said: "We rolled in inverted and dove to the target We completely demolished It" DETROIT (AP) — Skilled tradesmen in the first three local unions to vote on the United Auto Workers' new three-yea- r contract with Ford Motor Co gave an exact majority for ratification Production workers in the first two Page Page locals to report gave overwhelming apBusiness Society proval Classified Sport4 Skilled tradesmen for the first time B4-- 5 Comics B4 Star Gazer hold veto power over any new vontract FAlitorials 6 Tele ision 18 TheateN and some of them made a Foreign A4-- 9 National Valentine strenuous bid to win rejection of the new Obituaries 6 one Monday Washington pact Fisticuffs broke out in demonstration it AND MORE 131g Furniture sec against night tion C Sears 16 Page Tabloid Section S First driblets from voting in the given Districts Lane Ronnow 210-vot- 55 Per Cent 207 Highest Qualify) George B Ca tmull Louis E Holley E J 11488 58G Early Poll in Ford UAW Locals Pact 240-Favors New Karsavina Vas lav Nijinsky (although In fact his career- - was already ended by madness) Adolf Bo im Pierre 'Vladimiroff Vera Trefilova Olga Preobrajenst4 Alexander Volinine and later Olga Spessivtseva See Page 4 was Holley to the Nemelka For Commissioner unofficial tally according was completed slightly more than two hours after the polls closed in the 207 voting districts Mr Cam who got 6896 votes unofficially maintained his lead for the third highest spot among the primary survivors throughout the evening tabulations But Mr Ronnow was locked in a nipand-tuck struggle with Walter R Michelson appliance distributorship owner The unofficial tally gave Mr Ronnow 4164 e votes a lead over Mr Michelsen's count Ronnow Eleetion Catmull Mr and 16931 10536 3538 Lawrence R Topham Hours 13117 Mayor 207 19 candidates sought the four to the municipal election the incumbents found no trouble Mr - Pentagon permision to strike the pre viously banned Phue Yen target came down Mo iiday The planning staff of the 7th Air Force commander Lt Gen William Momyer SL car-size- d Red Ballet Poises on Brink of Change Note! Edge about a Tally In 2 1 (t in Salt Lake City 3-- 1 Cannon held - US Fliers RA Out Largest North Red Airbase In Vietnam War's Biggest Single Bomb Strike (Wednesday) Race Of record ballot " I A George B ('atimill SI Commission Raeo SAIGON unoffi- Column 2 E-- 2 Tally ce actively campaign for the primary nomination drew 162 votes In the city commissioner race where '' a i Wins At-Glan- nominations 4 I I i i c I I! 1 i k' l See Page margin over Joseph N Nemelka retired police officer who garnered 3538 A votes in the unofficial tabulation fourth active challenger for mayor Lawrence R Tophann business office manager received 586 votes R R Badertscher listed on the ballot as a candidate for mayor but whotilidn't A' i ' ' I 1 "Irt '-- ta00"' ' f k ' 1 '' 12 of 19 vote 1 1 ! race contenders are newcomers seeking political office against the relatively well known incumbents Mayor Lee was the slate's governor for two consecutive terms Commissioner Holley was city auditor for 23 years be the candidates - t field of candidates In the city commissioner Mayor Lee polled 16931 cially about 6300 votes more than Mr Cannon former tourist and economic deBoth the candivelopment executive dates' votes comprised more than 80 per cent of the total vote for all mayoralty - Inside Russia by Lake County votes D James Cannon Salt Lake City mayoralty eamdiictor in Tuesday's primary balloting date is winner in Tuesday's pri- for reelection Nov 7 1 - rocket launchers Refineries prevailing opinion of observers experienced in city politics was that the incumbents would attain positions on the ballot against such a wide municipal Ron-no- seats Commission City Opinion record vote ' the 2 Salt the Lane A moderately' heavy tiaminit of voters went to the polls with the total vote slightly less than 32000 This was substantially more than the 19000 voters two years ago and the 20000-plu- s turnouts in 1961 and 1961 But the total was about 12000 under the 1959 ''N - J Bracken Lee is Mayor Trade Accusations Attack of and Brisk Voter Turnout I f ammuni- bank - The to ations on the municipal election ballot seeking - ' It a— I ! s charges of "new prernediated flagrant aggression" by Israel There was no word of casualties in Port Suez But Egypt already had evacuated about half the 250000 population because of tension along the ceasefire line - where the June war was halted with Is— raeli forces drawn up on the canal's east director two I'l ---- -d" Rerun' The UN Security Council was called into urgent session to consider Egypt's insurance agent Cam Prevailing by E J (Jake) accord-ju- g Inspection Department complete but unofficial vote tabulThe four candidates will appear Each ng joined Building - side accused the other of startIbattle A report from UN observers in the Middle East said Israeli initiated artillery fire on a Port Suez refinery Israel said it opened up on Port Suez only after Egyptians began firing from adjacent Port Ibrahim ballot ' 1 i 1 114 :' : ki 1 it A five election to qualify as candidates for mayor in the Nov 7 municipal election Th e incumbent commissioners Streets Commissioner George B Catmull and Parks Commissioner Louis E Holley handily won berths on the municipal -"- ---4 - s three Mayor J Bracken Lee and D JitnIPS far ouldistaneed their opponents Tuesday's Salt Lake City primary in i council fuel dumps 6 ous cotnparables and others below the normal percentage of registered voters In the last three Salt Lake City municipal primary elections a minority of the city's voters went to the polls to nominate candidates Before that the city marked its record primary vote of more than 44500 ballots in 1959 when Mayor Lee seeking his first term battled five contenders for the nomination Cannon Loit later Egyptian comsaid Egypt's gunners also de- four By Douglas L Parker Tribune Political Writer 1 J- t ( Israeli Ambassador Gideon Rafael retorted that Egypt was guilty of "maritime lawlessness" and deliberate "military escalation" in the sinking last Saturday of the Israeli destroyer Elath with the loss of 47 lives Quoting what he said was an Arab proverb that "those who light a fire cannot ask protection from the flames" Rafael declared : "Reciprocity is the very essence of the ceasefire" and without it "the whole system collapses" Soviet Ambassador Nikolal T Fedorenko urged the council to approve promptly a resolution condemning Israel for the Suez violence and demanding compensation to Egypt for damage caused munique a at Gam Ronnow Gain Spots On Commissioner Ballot 00 Maritime Lawlessness Tel Aviv Ten Cents Price I :!' 1 Egypt brought the Security Council into emergency session Tuesday night and bitterly claimed that Israel had launched an unprovoked "criminal act of aggression" aimed at destroying one of Egypt's most vitid industrial complexes "The city of Suez is at present in A flames" Ambassador Mohamed nied in AV 1 - York US Ambassador Arthur J Goldberg referred to Fedorenko's statement as a "midnight rerun of this stale record" and urged the council to "condemn any and all violations of the ceasefire" The council adjourned at 12:02 am EDT Wednesday until 11 am without voting on US and Soviet resolutions on the fighting Earlier the Egyptians claimed to have given as well as taken in the canal gun battle A Cairo communique claimed an Israeli Mirage jet was shot down and 10 tanks were destroyed but this was de- Salt Lake Ci ty and Ut Variable clotidiness but t rend toward clearing night Map on Page 'NP' 1967 3 ' on a huge refinery complex and Egypt charged the ports inhabited area was "almost demolished" As the growing crisis reached the UN Security Council the semiofficial Egyptian newspaper Al Abram repuded that several units of the Soviet fleet were on their way to Port Said at the north end of the canal The ships were believed part of a destroyer missile carrier and submarine force that left the port last Midnight eN1 t from hits a It"'" L By Assodated Press Israel dueled fiercely with and Egypt artillery and mortars across the southern end of the Suez Canal on Tuesday Egypt's Port Suez was reported blazing told the 11 ' Cavorting Clouds ly 411 r War Fires month In New 1 '1111"'‘:1 Lee nnon Grio'albEasy WinsCatmull Holley tittioate Slate Iii Fresh I g Salt Lake City Utah — Wednesday Morning —Ovtober Vol 196 No 363-152- 5 Suez Rages By Egypt (11111 -- "" - ' |