| OCR Text |
Show f GOPs Split On Airing By Bernard Gwertzman New York Times Writer Bush Laudatory, Morton Critical o WASHINGTON An administration spokesman Sunday celled for a stop to the Senate's televised Watergate hear-jingbut the head of the Republican party praised them as one way of expos-- i ing the scandal. s, Interior Secretary and former Repub--! lican National Chairman Rogers C. B. Morton said the hearings are being turned into a dramatic production which casts suspicion on possibly innocent peo- - Related Stories A-- 5 States, June I? ' ,V A-- 6 pie and might make it more difficult to But the present GOP national chairman, George Bush, said middle-leve- l party leaders are being hurt the worst by the scandal. SAIGON (UP1) President Nguyen Van Thieus objections to provisions of the latest truce agreement worked out by Henry Kissinger and Le Due Tho blocked signing of the agreement in Paris. South sources said Vietnamese government Sunday. Urges Information want to see it cleaned up, he said. I feel the more information cut on this the better. The less appearance of. a coverup in any quarter, the better. We ' I cYfetY'-- ; 2 Bush said he thought it would help the President to hold a news conference on the subject, and predicted he would do Thieu refused to allow signing of the new Paris agreement at the last minu'e after the South Vietnamese president gave a careful reading of a section delineating zones of control, informed government sources said. so soon. the Face the snoke on NBCs Morton on CBSs Meet Nation. Senate The Watergate investigating committee already has unanimously rejected a request by special prosecutor Archibald Cox to postpone its public hearings for three months. Cox has now asked for a court order to prevent live radio and television news coverage of the hearings, which are set to resume Tuesday. U.S. Dist. Judge John J. Sirica is set to rule on Coxs .request the same day. The Gallup Poll published new figures indicating that the scandal still threatens in next to hurt Republican years midterm elections. office-seeke- Favor Demos 55 The poll showed 55 percent of those questioned felt themselves likely to vote for Democratic candidates for the House next year, 35 percent said they probably would vote Republican and 10 percent were undecided. The results were based on interviews with 2,356 persons taken last April and May. Bush pointed out that the results dont fully reflect reaction to President Nixon's April 30 speech to the nation, in which he denied any involvement on the wiretapping. And he noted that all the interviews were taken after Nixon's more recent May 22 statement, in which he made more detailed denials but also admitted ordering restnctions on FBIs original Column 1 See Page i A-- Inside The Tribune Tribune Telephone Numbers, Page A-- 2 Page Page Classified Columnists Comics Obituaries Sports 5 Star Gazer 3 Editorials 13 16 National B-- 6 All Theaters 4 Foreign Lifestyle A-1- 0 Television 4 Valentine Washington AND MORE . . . Day Supplement. B-- l Special Fa- Mondays Forecast Salt Lake City and vicinity High cloudiress, cooler. Highs in the lower 80s, Weather Map, Page lows .. Press Wirephoto the pad at Cape Kennedy. Satellite heads for moon orbit. e Delta rocket carryan ing Explorer satellite leaves three-stag- Thieu learned that his army would have to maintain a garrison of 30 men in a village to claim it as being under government control while the Viet Cong would be required to keep only six men in a similar village. Unfair Difference He refused to authorize New Explorer-Race- s - A CAPE KENNEDY, FLA.. (AP) new Explorer, satellite raced toward an orbit around the moon Sunday to record mysterious deep space radio signals which could reveal much about the early history of the universe. The Space Agencys last scheduled moon flight in the foreseeable future was on course to the moon, a quarter million miles away, after being thrust flawlessly away from Cape Kennedy by a three-stagDelta rocket. e reported the satellite, as on target and every- NASA officials 49, thing is going well. Lunar Orbit Plan outward journey, a After a ground station will trigger an onboard motor which is to slow the craft so it is captured by lunar gravity. Circling the moon at an altitude of 680 miles, the $11.1 million spacecraft is to make the most extensive study yet of signals from galactic and extragalactic radio sources and from the sun. earth and Jupiter. g radio astronAn earlier omy satellite, Explorer 38, produced valuable information on these sipals but its data often was clouded by background radio noise from earths magnetic field. Earth Noise Interferes The noise of earth drowned out up to re50 percent of the cosmic signals, scientist Robert Dr. Stone, project ported five-da- y earth-orbitin- Goddard Space the free thousands of Communist troops for guerrilla warfare while immobilizing tens of thousands of government troops. On battlefronts, a government military spokesman reported that two Communists were slain in a skirmish Satui day within eight miles of downtown Sai gon. There were no government casual ties, the spokesman said. However, an attack on a government position along the Central Coast, 310 miles northeast of Saigon, took a heavy government toll. In a battle which began early Saturday night and lasted until shortly before dawn Sunday, government rangers suffered four killed and 25 wounded. Communist casualties in the fighting two miles west of Mo Due were unknown, the spokesman said. would Toward Moon Orbit Explorer signing sources said, on the ground that the difference in garrison size was unfair. Military sources said such a requirement 9 for NASAs Center. thers 45-5- Associated A Flight While orbiting on the far side of the moon, he said, Explorer 49 will be isolated for long periods from the earth noise and thus be better able to record these bursts of energy, mostly generated by radiation sources in distant objects. Stone said the satellite was not designed to pick up radio communication from possible extraterrestrial beings. Our main purpose, he said, is to extend astronomical measurements to learn more about the physics of the universe. Morton Reveals Plans for Resources Unit Washington Post Service WASHINGTON fhe Nixon administration is readying a plan to streamline the nation's approach to natural resource management by creating a Cabinet level 'epartment of Energy and Natural Resources, Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton said Sunday. I'd- like to Morton, who admitted have the job of running the new department, said consolidation of government programs now spread through several departments would give the nation more a better return on bang for the buck the government effort in the whole energy and natural resource field . . . Morton said the Interior Department would be totally included in the new department Also included would be .he Forest Service, now in the Agriculture Department; the National Oeeaiiugiuphic and Atmospheric Administration, now in Commerce; and the planning arm of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers so that we get water resources consolidated. ... Bomb Sitting Four representatives of the Joint Military Team (JMT) continued their bomb sitting aboard a U.S. Air Force C130 transport piane on a parking ramp at Saigons Tan Son Nhut air base. Eight hours of talks between the chiefs of the United States, North and South four-part- y Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegations to the JMT failed to produce agreement on how to search a bag that exploded into n flame Friday during the Right. Seven persons, five of them South Vietnamese, plus an American crewman and a Communist officer, were injured by what U.S. Embassy spokesmen called a pyrotechnic device. Crewmen extinguished the names and the plane proceeded safely to Saigon Friday. Hanoi-Saigo- Todays Chuckle Two reasons why women dont wear last years gowns; They dont want to and they cant By Paul Recer Associdled Press nter - Clear SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON skies greeted the Skylab astronauts over the U.S. Midwest and Northeast Sunday and the orbiting tourists snapped scores of pictures. They also scrutinized urban develop-men- t and environmental problems using remote sensors. sharp-eyed We're getting a lot Great Lakes and in the of good pictures in New England Iran Expresses Concern for Russ Influence TEHRAN, IRAN 20th min- (AP)-T- he isterial council meeting of the Central Treaty Organization opened here Sunday against a backdrop of increased Iranian fears of Soviet influence in the Persian Gulf. In the face of mountstress often precipithat evidence ing tates physical as well as emotional illnesses, doctors are stepping up efforts to anticipate and head off the problem. conBut as was evident at a two-daference here on the effects of stressful life events, there is still such uncertainty about what kinds of changes In life cir: cumstances take their greatest toll in human health and which people are most likely to be affected by them. What is already apparent is that the death rate of widows and widowers is 10 times higher during the first year of bereavement than for others their age; that divorced persons have an illness rate 12 tynes higher than married per y zBSfc. e Delayed Ceasefire some ways, the situation was analagous to that of last October, when Thieus objections delayed a ceasefire agreement between Washington and Hanoi. But the official said that the latest problem was not of such cosmic dimensions. He stressed that the document See Page Column 1 In A-- sons in the year following divorce, and that up to 80 percent of serious physical illnesses seem to develop at a time when the victims feel helpless and hopeless. But even when these relationships are known, conference participants noted,, the way medical care systems are currently set up and the way physicians are trained ill equips them to recognize the effects of stress and to intervene when they do. Dr. Thomas H. Holmes, a psychiatrist, and his colleagues at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle, have devised a system to simplify the prediction and recognition of illness. Called the Social stress-relate-d Scale, it is a list of Rating Readjustment 43 life events that are associated with varying amounts of disruption in the average persons life. The scale was constructed by having hundreds of persons of different ages, cultures and walks of life rank the relative amount of adjustment necessitated by the various life events. Thus, death of spouse leads the list with a relative stress value of 100; marriage ranks seventh with a value of 50; retirement 10th with a value of 45; trouble with is 24th with a value of 29; vacation is 41st with a value of 13; and so forth. Holmes calls these stress values life Shah Message The proceedings began with a message from the Shah of Iran read by Prime Minister Amir Abass Hoveida. commented on Irans armaments program that he said was to provide security in the Porsian Gulf, through which more than 85 percent of the worlds oil exports pass. "The absence of an effective world order for guaranteeing the sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations makes it imperative for every country to remain fully alert and vigilant, the Shah said. Every country must rely, in the first instance, upon itself for the preservation of its vital interest, he added. The-Sha- h Formed In 1955 The CENTO alliance was formed in 1955 as the Baghdad Pact with the aim of preventing Soviet power from gaining the upper hand in the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean regions. Iran and Pakistan now are worried about military pacts signed by the Soviet Union with Iraq and India, their respective regional rivals. Iran is also concerned about the flow of Soviet and Chinese arms into the Persian Gulf states. The Shah has declared his ambition of becoming the dominant military power around the gulf, which Arabs call the Arab Gulf. change units. In studies dating back to the 1940's, Holmes has found, as have other researchers in the field, that a clustering of life events often precedes the onset of diseases. and makes it more susceptible to the laught of disease. His studies indicate that an accumulation of 200 or more life change units in a single year may be more disruption than a single individual can withstand, and a warning to lie low for awhile and possibly confer with a physician or counselor. that it is not the fact of stressful life changes but how the person reacts to them that makes the real difference in setting the stage for illness. One member of this school is Dr. Lawrence E. Hinkle Jr. of the Division of Human Ecology at Holmes said he had often advised a who was accumulating too many life change units in too short a time period to, for example, not retire, sell his house, buy a new home and move to Florida all in the same year. Hinkle told the conference that on the basis of studies beginning in 1952, he has concluded that some people who have many illnesses are particularly susceptible to the effects of life events, whereas others who have very little illness seem to be immune to the effects of stress. no Holmes, theory is that change matter whether is is for good or far bad is stressful to the biological organism J. Clear weather photographs of those areas were a continuing goal of Weitz and his crewmates, Charles Conrad Jr. and Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin. Clouds have obscured the northern part of the United Slates during much of their mission. Run Cut of Exterior Film Weitz said they had shot so many photographs Sunday of the earth 270 miles below that they ran out of special exterior film. They switched to another film and changed the settings on their cameras. The Skylab 1 trio also collected special photosensing data over the Midwest a photo run startduring a ing near Vancouver, B.C., and ending near the coast of Brazil. The astronauts turned on instruments which surveyed the urban growth of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Asheville, N.C. The cameras also will contribute information to a study of the environmental impact of the construction of Oakley the Reservoir in Illinois. During photo run, the instruments also surveyed the impact of practices in Indiana. ons- Others in the field, however, believe Cornell University Medical School. (Copyright) ,i 0 Solar Telescope Cameras Conrad and Weitz later operated a battery of solar telescope cameras, gathering unique data on the natural nuclear fusion occurring on the sun. Scientists hope these studies will help unlock techniques for tapping fusion energy' to aid mankind. Skylabs solar telescope is the first such manned instrument to study the sun above the atmosphere. At Cape Kennedy, Fla., meanwhile, engineers made final preparations for the roll out of the rocket which will launch the second team of Skylab astronauts on July 27. The Saturn IB which will launch Skylab 2 astronauts Alan L. Bean, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma was scheduled to be moved to the launch pad at 5 a.m. MDT Monday. mission, as is Skylab 2 is set for a y Skylab ber. 3 which will be launched in Octo- Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz Sunday were in the 17th day of a y mission. First for Last Package Kerwin noted that on Monday the crew will unload a package of supplies for the last time on Skylab. said Kerwin, is the Tomorrow, first day that we get to where we get to break out the last thing. Huh? said a confused Mission Control. said ConExactly what I thought, And I think I know what hes talking about. Mission Control laughed and Kerwin explained. Ill rephrase it, he said. Its the first time we do something for the last time. rad. Hey, okay, said Mission Control. Skylab is scheduled to splash dow n in the Pacific Ocean on June 22. In studying people who become ill, Holmes found that as the amount of re-- , cent life change units increased. patient said astronaut Paul strip-minin- g Foreign ministers of the member nations Britain, Iran, Pakistan and Turas well as Secretary of State Wikey lliam P. Rogers of the United States, will hold two days of closed-doo- r sessions. Washington, though it helped found the alliance and contributes heavily to its budget, is not formally a member. Do Life Change Units9 Feed Illnesses , Or Vice Versa? NEW YORK tionship with the Saigon government, officials were reluctant Sunday to criticize President Nguyen Van Thieu publicly. But in private they indicated that they reservations were thought his not this morning, Weitz. f By Jane E. Brody New York Times Writer so that the parties could reflect on the situation, the official said. Because of Washington's delicate rela- Thieu Blocks Clouds Pari Over U.S. Astro Shutterbugs Go Signing of New Accord Wild on Nice Sunday I think the prosecute guilty parties. court can get the facts out, he said. Bush 18 to 26. Document Ready The official acknowledged that a document aimed at facilitating the carrying out of the Vietnam ceasefire accord was ready for agreement by the various parties late last week, when Saigon registered new concern over possible interpretations of the agreement. When it became clear that a quick resolution to the new problems could not be achieved, Kissinger suggested a short recess At ,4 Press, Kissinger, President Nixon's adwser national security affairs, spoke by phone Sunday morning with the President, who was at Key Biscayne, Fla., the administration official said. He said Kissinger also discussed the Brezhnev visit with his staff and the Soviet ambassador, Anatoly F. Dobry nin. on WASHINGTON Henry A. Kissinger and Hanoi's chief negotiator, Le Due Tho, decided to break off their talks in Pans Saturday for a few days when "it became clear they could not quickly resolve the last minute reservations raised by Saigon to the proposed document on the Vietnam ceasefire strengthening agreement, an administration official said Sunday. The talks are due to resume early this week after Kissinger returns to Paris on Tuesday. He flew back to Washington last night to work on plans for the coming visit of Leonid 1 Brezhnev, the Soviet Communist party leader, to the United By Brooks Jackson Associated Press Water , Price Ten Cents 1973 am Talks will o Bolster Ceasefire O Of Inquiry I June It. Salt Lake City, Utah Monday Morning Vol. 207, No. 38 Change Hours The end of the mission will come about 7:40 a.m. MDT, hours earlier than originally planned. To compensate for the earlier hour. Mission Control made plans to turn around the sleep work cycle of the crew. Officials said later this week the crew will be going to bed and awakened earlier so their daily cycle will fit properly with the hours of work they facq just before splashdown. The crew has been getting up at 7 a.m. EDT and going to bed at midnight. The scheduled splashdown time was changed as a result of problems Skylab experienced earlier. A sun shield ripped off as the spaceship was launched on May 14. One solar power wing also was ripped away and another jammed. Loss of the shield caused Skylab to heat up. V i 1 |