Show '''d 'or - "71' gomwf7itge 11941 v smomoor gANorrs:t7rnirelveti - - : 7 ' - I 1 0 For Chos i lied Phone 11 r) I ''''' - Jim I Ii 3G3-1- 355-751- 2 I irtnk other derol 1 Vol - 21 4 70-- 4 1523 '16:1 - I'l dil 4ii I )043 Tribune &part nom t s : 11 Infornit oi st" t)res Other News ' ' 1 - er- 190 No 29 Salt alifIT' r - re 414 ' ' 4 I c---''- tigtv"Q A '44 A" Lake i f )t- 1 -- I''' II) It- 4 1 11 ii V Salt Lake Cify and 'Utah -- Conlinued miltt tempenttures under partly cloudy skies ‘N'otther map is on Page C-- J - LI' l 5 190 12 City rtnit—Sunday Morning—November Resort Weather P: 0A A 0 PrIce Tnenty Cents ty 1 ' irl lasaie-- t 4- s - - A- A- -- ' 1-7- -- i - : 1 - - ' ' ' ' c -- I- t - -- -- 14 "s t - ' I s ' r-4- '''' -- - I - I t ' ? - it ' ' I o r ' ' ' - 'ts - P NI " ' ' 1 ) I 1'4 ' 1-- i Li l ' 1LL 0 i' -1 j 0 ' ' 4 ! 0 - - ' ) '' A ' ' 4 - k ' - f - ' - - to' ' ' 0 1 r i i -- -- - - - ' ' ti On his ' -- 2 o ft i : ' k4' '' ' i 4 ' i ' s ' coast-to-eoa- President stallations —Associated Press Wireohoto tour of in- - Diego Calif greets and cheers wives of American sers icemen who are held prisoner in N Vietnam military before leaving San st Johnson Johnson Leads Natton ht Salifieto Veterans Press the nation's President Femme ' Johnson of Veterans led Day a new plea for Vietnam ob- with Saturday peace talks Appearing at early morning ceremonies on the flight deck the carrier Enterprise of San Diego ridr Johnson suggested a Vietnam parley on "a neutral ship on a neutral sea" Speaking to the ship's crew but addressing his remarks to North Vietnam's of - GIs Reds Lock -- 111 Bitter LTight At Close Range '''''" int-A- ' "I SAIGON A Few fighting e range erupted Saturday in the jungles of the central highlands and both US and North Vietnamese casualties mounted beyond the 500 mark In the y battle around Dak To About 1000 infantrymen and paratroopers from the US 4 th Infantry Division and the 173rd Airborne Brigade fought North iVetnamese forces in close-quartbattles less than five miles apart er Ileache Toll 83 After the fighting tapered off at nightfall 27 Americans had been counted dead and 243 wounded pushing the US casualty toll to 83 dead and 428 wounded Officers reported 103 North Vietnamese tmops were killed Saturday making a total of 521 for the 10 days of fighting by US count At dawn Sunday helicopters were still lifting out the wounded from three companies of the 1st Brigade of the 4th Infantry Division in the battle area about 270 miles north of Saigon The evacuation of the wounded was hampered by a continuous Communist mortar barrage Many of the Communists were reported killed from the lye American bombardment by tactical lighterbombers and big artillery guns Army rocket-firin- g helicopter gunships also raked the Communist positions mass Bastions Early Sunday gia-- t bombers joined for the thi in: the aerial bombardment unloading 300000 pounds of explosives on suspected North Vietnamese defensive positions Infiltration base and storage areas 1352 saturation straight day rd US officers Recounting the action saki that about 3® paratroopers from the into a tough 173rd Mrbome Brigade Communist force early in the day while on a sweep of an area 12 miles southwest of flak To Another 300 paratrooper reinforcements moved into the assault against the dug-i- North Vietnamese and also came under heavy small arms mortar and rocket attack Headquarters said several attacks and ran n Icounterattacks ' were mounted until the the Communist po-after seven hours of fighting The enemy broke contact and withdrew to the west and southv est towacd the Cambodian-Lao- s bordec area - - ‘ 4! ) ''1444 - 11 4 '44 44 k i f '' ' '' ' ''' -- - ot t ' ' ' I ' - ' '''3 - ' 4' i 4 ' ! - l' ' ''' ' ' ' 4''' '' ' - - I ' - 4' N 4 k - ' - i ' 44' ' ' ''' 1 - - ' ' t t I ' '' ' 4 1 4'-- ' who hat' e 1 Deputy A rally in New York's Union Square by two veterans' groups opposed to the Vietnam war drew a crowd of about 500 ' ' '' '''' 1 ' ? ' ' A jubilant crowd greets the Chief Executive at Force Base Va Saturday night near Langley Air— —Associated Press Wirephoto the end of his tour famous double- handshake He returns to the White House Sunday He gives his American Wqr Prisoners Displayed by Cong Drop From Sight After Freedom Is Promised 2 It Rainy In Chicago caused by a and rainy weather kept down crowds for Chicago's traditional parade on State Street It was estimated that fewer than 1000 took part with only five of an expected 21 marching unis observances inMidland Park NJ cluded a parachute jump by Gene FeeHad-Se- e ney 40 of White Plains NY and Page 2 Column 1 gasoline shortage strike Post Washington NJ Service PHNOM PENH CAMBODIA Three American of war promptly prisoners dropped from sight Saturday after a ceremony in which South Vietnam's National Liberation Front said they would be to the representative of an released American peace movement This raised such questions as when the three soldiers would return United States whose custody they and how - ' ' ' ''l Including a few hecklers It began about an hour after a ceremony by the Veter antis of Foreign Wars at the other end of the square Little Rock Ark billed i ts parade as supporting all veterans and servicemen around the world but not specifically in support of the Vietnam war About 3000 persons took part in that city's first Veterans Day parade in a decade and its largest since World War A loday An optimist a camera with to the Chuckle 9S II is a fisherman who takes him when he goes fishing 1961 Atfty'eAttlr-07a1-1115g1- 2 a economists large however mood these days This is ball season and the profes- sober the crystal sional soothsayers ahead into 1968 the after John F Kennedy took office as president of the United States the American economy hit bottom in its fourth major postwar recession During March business turned upward and measures of so far as the broad over-al- l economic activity are concerned — it hasn't stopped expanding since A record was set this month as the economy's climb entered its 81st month: Never before even during a major war has the economy been on a continuop 7 upgrade for so long month and By are in New York Times Writer February who arrived here Tuesday to accept the prisoners declined to clarify these questions Saturday evening Be said he was still "tiying to negotiate their release I can assure you that they will be home and well in the shortest possible time" Hayden told reporters that he would deliver the men to the proper US au- thorities since "they are still subject to American military discipline" An American legation has not functioned here since United tions were broken in are taking a look Disquieting Glance Ahead - Mostly they don't liere are examples: like what they see —William C Freund chief economist Prudential Insurance Co: "The of the Combined vate expansion spending is in public and pritoward an building unsustainable boom" —George W McKinney Jr vice presi- and economist of Irving Trust Co: ntde rela- States-Cambodi- 1965 The National Liberation Front announced the prisoners' Feir ampar: Erich Heinemann NEW YORK—In at the moment — and whether they have actually been liberated The representative of the US Peace Movement Thomas Tayden of Newark are in 60-01:ist- By t 4 ' c - c: 44 1 - - Lit Flame of Hope Roosevelt and Churchill he said met In the wardroom of the Augusta and lit a flame of hope in a charter which held that: Robert Sweet criticized people regard patriotic displays as "old truckers' t "It may only be a dream But it could so easily be salvation The United States follows the dream of peace so we include even the seas in our search For us the wardroom could readily be a conference room A neutral sea would be as good a meeting place as any "So long as two came to the meeting So long as both met halfway So long as one did not insist that the other walk on water and work a miracle alone" The President said these thoughts came upon him aboard the Enterprise because the ship reminded him of the cruiser Augusta in August 1941 and another time dark with war ' '' 'lc ' t - f :'' ''' I - ' 1 ' Q Includes &ell the Seas J ' ' t Fl Declaring again that "our statesmen will press the search for peace to the corners of our earth" Mr Johnson came up with the fresh thought "that the meeting ground could even be the sea" with the Atlantic Charter of 1941 as a pattern "Standing here" he said "specks between the vastness of ocean and heaven men might realize the ultimate smallness of their quarrels They just might come to see the waste of war amidst this wealth of God and nature "Somehow they might realize the infinity of pmmise that stretches outward like the sea could men only settle their differences and be free to explore it to- gether" he continued ' 1 ) N ' z 0 Charter Model Atlantic i ' "' 4 r The President stood in the slanting of an early morning sun streaming across the folded wings of fighting planes and spoke in a special Veterans Day service aboard the nuclear carrier Enterprise The ship was idling just off the coast near San southern California Diego 1 Mayor and routes No ' space US 1112s round i04 " clt rays i Hecklers York ceremonies New In at (Sunday)—Fierce ' ' of ' -- Aboard Ship neW ) ‘ ot It May' a shortage of that a 0440 the Unknown Soldier at al Cemetery near Washington Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul 11 Nitze said the United States is "ready to meet its responsibilities cost what it may "The totalitarian temptation is always to read into divergence of views a disloyalty to duty" said Nite" There is divergency of views in this Republic — and may there always be — but there is no disloyalty to duty" The Veterans of Foreign Wars voted to boycott the observance to protest a Pentagon order restricting burials in Ar- By Edwin Q White Associated Press Writer band-grenad- ? ‘ 4 At Services ' ' - I Stresses Peace ft11t - r- AA- t ' Arlington Nation- because - i 67- - - waves" 4140°" ceremonies close to the Tomb of In lington : What c) k( ci r & I'IN i liszf leaders he said "You have only to say the word for our quarrel to be buried beneath the waves" Throughout the country the day was marked by the traditional parades There were 6000 marchers in Boston 8000 in Birmingham Ala and 2000 in New York City 'Cost fa k) 741 gim Three senior American officials connected with the Vietnam effort will confer here text week with President Johnson They are Ellsworth Bunker US ambassador to South Vietnam who is already here Gen William C Westmoreland military commander in Vietnam and Robert Korner civilian chief of the US pacification effort The sources noted that Bunker had just completed his first six months In his See rage 2 Column 5 According to one source Ilanol's strategy now — as deduced from direct contacts and Intelligence analyses — is to pin down US forces in the northern part of South Vietnam to relieve pressure on the Viet Cong and hope if the cam eir— By Associated 7 a tl-- "Mendes-Francewill arise in the US political community iy Douglas B Cornell Plerril Mendes-Franc- e WaH the SocialAssociated Press Writer ist premier of France who was voted into power in the spring of 1954 with a naABOARD USS ENTERPRISE—Prec ident Johnson dramatically proposed tional mandate to negotiate an end to the from the flight dock of the world's largeighbyear war between the French forces and Indochinese nationalist and Com- - - est warship Saturday a meeting at sea in search of peace in Vietnam munist elements known as the Viet Minh in terms of the Navy he served in A peace agreement was signed at GeWorld War 11 Mr Johnson sent "a hail neva July 20 1954 after the Viet Minh across the seas" to Hanoi: had crushed a French garrison at Dien "Now hear this You force us to Bien rhu following a dramatic siege fight But you have only to say the word for our quarrel to be buried beneath the To Confer With Jolmson See Protracted Campaign ' two-da- y I (1-- be protracted paign can WASHINGTON — High administration stturces said Saturday that President Johnson's offer to meet with representatives of North Vietnam aboard a "netttral ship on a neutral sea" was a spontaneous gesture that did not reflect any new or secret peace move by Hanoi In fact one senior official comment- ed the North Vietnamese government has been "awfully negative" lately The sources Intimated that Hanoi recently had let the President know that it saw no reason to end the war at this stage and was determined to hold out in definitely in the hope that the attrition of its own combat manpower would prove less serloos than that suffered by the United States - " ' f P o il 0 - -- 70 ' ' r ' i : By Benjamin Welles New York Times Writer 1 o 41 1 t L - t0 J o - i L-)- : k i ori '' - -- CI 1' 6-- Officials Find N Viets Willing to Parley tt 1 NN ti 2 4 't -- - --74 a o No Evidence i 1 - t '" ‘i i ' e : v'i — 4 's 0 - -- - - -i t 4 1 0 oor-- -f 0 bd 0 irf q ‘ '' ' ' 4' ci 1 ''' l - - ' I e4 i i Ir '41 '': l ' i 11 t - 0 1 - t '--' ' ' ' — ' -- i- tI' '' ' i - ' t - impending re lease at its headquarters here The Viet Cong's political ann displayed two of the Men the third was never actually seen — he was said to be too sick to appear and was reportedly present elsewhere in the headquarters The prisoners displayed at Saturday's ceremony were Sgt Daniel Lee Pitzer of NC who was serving Spring Lake when the U S Special Forees in An Xuyen Province when he was captured in October 1963 and Sgt James Alex Jacka Special son Jr of Talcott WVa Forces medic taken captive in the same area last year Both men seemed healthy — - al T1VS átiti Cvaiii01 -- "I see the potential for an inserently unstable economic situation' one that could lead simultaneously to high unemployment and inflation" —Walter E 'load ley senior vice president and economist at Bank of America: "A growing inflationary psychology and a huge federal budget deficit will generate crosscurrents in the economy and strains in the financial markets:I Majority of Economists —Albert T Sommers vice president National Industrial Conference Board: "According to a majority of flonomisis it will take both fiscal and and economist AP tetotWoetnMAfFr —There shall be no territorial changes not In accord with the freely expressed wills of the people concerned —All nations trita4 have the right to dwell in safety within their own bounda ries living their lives In freedom from fear and want "Nations can meet on the seas to repeat the miracle" Mr Johnson said But if they meet It must be to build on the two central and timeless principles of the Atlantic Charter" The speech was a climactic spot in a whirlwind presidential tour that was Wt ing Mr Johnson across the continent and back In two days From the Enterprise he went ashore by helicopter shifted to a jet at North Island Naval Air Station and took off for See Page 2 Column 3 - rf On the Inside Art Music Books Page Page &slily 1V-1- 5 Star Gazer Bushiess !)" 5 Sports A'ys 11-- Tele ittion Editorials 1 Fore Nat'l Theaters Valentine Wash B-- 1 A4-- 5 9 1 A big Color Comic AND MORE Section This Week and Home Magazine 411 Job rbp Lie Ahead monetary restraint to preserve a reasonably orderly economy in 1968 and even with significant use of both sets of tools a substantial spiraling rise in prices and wages seems to lie ahead" Clearly the leitmotiv of the 1968 economic forecast is for a continued expansion that in fact appears likely to outstrip by Mr the ability of the economy to turn out goods and services so that substantial inflation will result Indeed something of a consensus seems to be developing among economic forecasters that the nation's total output of goods and services — the Gross National Product — will rise between 50 aud 60 billion dollars ii4xt year to a total record-breakin- — g (1) tcj( somewhere between dollars 840 and 850 billion t ! Higher Prices But there is also aco nsensus that something between a third and a half of the increase-wil- l represent higher prices and not a greater- voltunc of physical output The prime element of inflation in the present economic outlook is themassive— deficit in prospect for the federal budget and the excessive stimulus that this will apply to an already vigorous economy Freund of Prudential sums it up: "A tax Increase will be necessary to 2 Column 4 See INge 0 r '- - - : V |