OCR Text |
Show Vol. 207. No. Salt Lake City, 164 Utah' Tuesday (P record-breakin- 11 space station "Were coming home tomorrow." Bean and his crew mates. Jack U Loustna and Owen K. Garr.ott. spent Monday tidying up the orbiting laboratory and preparing it tor the sky lab 3 crew, which is scheduled to spend 3l days aboard the space station starting Nov. 230 11 1973 Price Ten I enls undock the command lab at 1 50 p m MDT Viter moving away trom the orbit ing labnratoiy. the astronauts will lire the poweitul service propulsion locket on the Apollo cratt This will slow them speed, cause them to tall liom mbit and stieak into the utmospheie tow aid the ocean Splashdown will come at 4 20 p ill lockets and module ftom cane lrah. which is miles south ol the splashdown point, becomes a hazard. Bean spotted the stoim nit the coast ol western Mexico on Monday and told Mission lontiol il was "a beautiiut liunicane o Stations Air Splashdown Channel 4 KITV Channel 2. KCP and KsL Channel 3, will all carry live coverage of the sky lab 2 splashdown be- ginning at 4 p.m. MDT, Tuesday. Bean. Ciainott and I.ousma will board their Vpollo command slnp Tuesday morning They will conduct a hot 1ie" test ol some steering Ocean OllKiuK said the large! may be moved to the northwest a number of miles if Hurri C'ulit The Sky lab 2 splashdown target is miles southwest of San Diego. September 23, Tidy Up for Return Record-Breaker- s SPACE CtNTLR. HULSTON Clean up. pack up and power down chores occupied the Sky lab 2 astronauts Monday as the spacemen prepared for their Tuesday splashdown and the end of the ail' voyage. Watch us today we get tin-- , tiling all put to bed." said Sky lab 2 Commander Alan L. Bean as the astronauts worked to close down the Morning . ui the Pacific Sky MDT will be tricky complex tor the astronauts. Two ol four steering rockets on the Vpollo spueeerult uie disabled The astronauts must lly the crult with only hu'f its steering power Oltictalx are conlident the spacemen can tly the crippled cratt to earth salely, but a rocket is poised at Pape Kennedy for a possible lescue mission y Colson .Hhiirt Minks To Demo By llartv 1 Rosenthal Associated Pi ess Wntei V. Howard Hum. WASHINGTON master spy. testitied Monthe day he had brought up seamy" chores he had perlormed tor the Into House m one lequest lor payment ol Ins post Watergate expenses But he denied the relerenee amounted lo blackmail and said he had never asked envelope, which he pul in a Hearings on TV - box The Senate Select Committee's gate hearings will be televised live oil MTV, Channel 2. beginning at 8 a.m. Tuesday. MUD, Channel 7. will also carry taped coverage of the hearings beginning at 8 p.m. Tuesday . Water- one-tim- e A I pul it to Mr. O Bricn that I had enin other acliv dies w Inch I be- gaged . lieve I desenbed as seamy activities tor the White House. Hunt said presidential clemency The convicted Watergate conspirator, a member of the White House unit that Daniel of the burglary conducted a Ellsberg's psychiatrist's ollice. added story m an new element to an otherwise colorless resumption ol the Senate Watergate hearings Knew in Advance Asked il that was not a threat, Hunt said No. sir. ott-tol- d He however, added, Ihercatter he received lie said turmer White House special counsel Charles IV. Colson knew in advance about the intelligence-gatherinol Democratplan that led lo the break-iic party headquarters Hunt had sworn eailier that he had no such knowledge about Colson. But he said Monday that his memory was relre&hed in dused-doo- r questioning by the committee counsel Samuel Dash Fiom that. Hunt said, he recalled a conversation with Colson in January 1972 where Colson indicated he was aware of " the over-al- l intelligence plan That would have been befoie the Jan 27 meeting in which G. Gordon Liddy tirst broached a nulhon-dolla- r intelligence plan to then Atty. Gen. John N Mitchell, Dash pointed out Hunt recently asked to withdraw his plea of guilty lo the charges stemming lrom the AAatergate break-m- , indicating in Ins motion that he believed Colson, among others, approved the plan Dash suggested that the move to withdraw the plea might have lnlluenced Hunt's change of testimony. Hunt said lus legal position does not depend on when Colson know of the intelligence plan Subdued Voice that $73,1)09 in soon a sealed the Senate healings resumed after recess, the crowds were still standing room only, but no one had to wait more than a few minutes to get in. The turnover was rapid as the questioning of Hunt proceeded slowly. Doing Great Job As a seven-wee- Two k ui Hunt's lour children Lisa I think were among the spectators lie's doing a great job, Lua said As Hunt testitied about his roles in the AAatergate and Ellsberg burglaries. ITesident Nixon's lawyers urged a teder-Se- e Page 2, Column 2 St. John, and By Watergate Panel g Nixon Lawyers Seek To Kill Tapes Plea n T Associated Press W.rcohoto Convicted Watergate figure E. Howard Hunt is greeted by his daughter, Lisa, and son. John. before Hunt returned to jail after testifying in Committee the Senate Watergate Washington. . Nixon Orders Living Cost Council To Prepare Gasoline Price Hike By Gaylord Shaw Associated Press nter WASHINGTON Presdent Nixon oi dered the Cost of Living Council on Monday to clear the way this week lor an utcrease ui retad gasoline paces. council spokesman said the prices probably will be allowed to increase later this week A "The couneil ceitamly wdl make etfnrt to meet the Presidents request and have a decision on this mutter as soon us possible. the spokesevery man said Retailers Spread Protest The President acted as spokesmen for gasoline retailers said scattered service station shutdowns may spread unless dealers get immediate relief from Phase price controls. The Cost of Living Council and its director, John T. Dunlop, have been a timetable which would have allowed the pi ice increase to go mtd effect Oct. 2. 4 But White House spokesman Gerald asked Dr L. Warren said the President Dunlop to expedite this matter ... and get the decision out this week " Dunlop responded Warren added 40 Percent Rise 2 World Bank Increases Aid to Poor Countries ' By Edwin L. Dale New York Times V - Jr nter Robert S. NAIROBI. KENYA McNamara, president of the World Bank, announced a lending program for poor countnes Monday, particularly SUO million rural stressing help for nearly been who have by ecobypassed people nomic growth. r The goal tor the World Bank's total lending, set by McNamara m his opening speech to the bank's annual meeting here, would represent a nse of 40 percent over the outlay in the last five years, which in turn was double the five years before that. . five-yea- Surpasses U.S. Tha annual aid program of the bank, Reformally the Internationa) Bank for now and construction Development, surpasses that of the United States the rural poor, McNamara desenbed the issue in these terms' The basic problem of poverty and growth in the developing world can be stated very simply. The growth is not equitably reaching the poor. And the poor are not significantly contributing to In highlighting ol the tunds of exhaustion, by the International Development Associasott loan subsidiary tion, the bank's whose funds to to the very poorest countnes with a population of more than one billion, many of them in Atrica The rich countnes have 'been negotiating tor nearly a year on a replenishment ol the International Development Association's funds, which must- - come from governments and hence taxpayers. The United States, largely because of increasing reluctance by Congress lo approve the money, has been the main holdout m reaching agreement McNamara disclosed publicly lor the tirst time Monday that agreement is near on a replenishment for three years amounting to $15 billion a year. nud-197- (Copynght) Todays Chuckle Husband to wife as they struggled over the budget. We should have saved during the recession so we could live " through this prospenty that lie would Cents a Gallon The presidential spokesman vv ould jut discuss how large the increase would be. but indie tons are that the council will allow a hike of one or two cents per gallon. Sen ice station uperutois who are staging the shutdowns contend they are unfairly squeezed by Phase 4 regulations Their ceding paces are computed under a complex formula which has forced them to absorb increases m the wholesale pace of gasoline The council, moving to allow a passthrough of higher wholesale costs, asked sen ice station operators on Sept. 14 to submit data on their costs and protits by Sept. 25. Dunlop said Oct. 2 had been targeted as the eitective date for a retail pace increase Wants Speedup to Warren. Nixon But, according relayed word through aides that he wanted the timetable speeded up in an effort to clear up whatever confusion remains in the price of gasoline. Warren skirted a question on whether Nixon wanted the service stations to stay open. The President would not attempt to counsel dealers on how to operate their individual stations, he said Meanwhile, Warren said Nixon is reviewing recommendations that he order a mandatory allocation .system for fuel this winter, but added. "No decision has been made " - President WASHINGTON (IP1) Nixons lawyers moved Monday to kill the Senate AAatergate Committee's bid lor some of his secret W hite House tapes, claiming that only the full Congress had authority to make such demands and only through tormal impeachment proceedings. The White House lawyers asked duel U S. District Judge Jonn J. Sirica m a the out bnef to throw committee's request on grounds that the panel had overstepped its power and that Stocks Roll Up 4th Big Gain P) market substantial voice, Testily mg m a subdued trequently conterrmg with Ins lawyer, the Watergate burglary plan and stood by a previous sworn altidavit that Colson inhad information only to the ov er-a- NEW YORK ( The stock rolled up its fourth gam in a row Monday, adding to one of its strongest rallies in months ll telligence program. Colson has denied having lore knowl- edge of AAatergate. but asked to be on excused trom Senate testimony grounds ot possible Hunt said that in March this yeai. a lew days betore he came up lor sentenc-mon Ins gudty plea m the Watergate Trial, he met with Paul OBneu, an attorney representing President Nixons committee. The Dow Jones average of 30 in8 bl points, on top ot a dustrials rose Market Detail Page 18 g advance last week, to reach a dose ol 936 71 Advancing issues outnumbered those deehnuig by about a 5-- 2 He said he spoke about lus legal bills, which then totaled S90.U00. and about his concern for the tuture ot his taniily the less developed countnes. Few Slave Benefited And lie cnticized the poor countnes for permitting a growing maldistnbution of income, as growth has benefitted mainly the upper 40 percent of the population and the allocation of public sen ices and investment funds has tended to strengthen rather than to offset this he trend. Only very few countries, said, have tried to do anything to provide a more equitable distnbution of the benefits of economic growth." McNamara aLo touched on a problem of immediate significance to the bank the imminent and Pa lending program f Big Board volume was Washington Post Service UNITED NATIONS Henry A Kissinger Monday recommitted the United States lo the original goals of the United My country seeks a Nations, saying. tiue peace, not simply an armistice. In his tirst formal speech as secrelaiy to ol state. sought Kissinger internationalize the detente he has been so instrumental in trying to establish among the superpowers It was a state - In the name of the Indian people I daini the nght of discovery and take possession of this land. I proclaim Sept 24 the Discovery of Italy Day." "Lucky Eagle." Adam Nordwall a professor at the University of California, was reciprocating what 43. H's wile walked at his side, wealing a fern green sweater and cream colored trousers Nordwall. a leader in the Amencaii Indian Movement, said his discovery was and possession taking ot Italy discovto Columbus similar basically ery of America and the ensuing claim to Amencan lands by European governnpnlii. He said oik Stock 19 49 million meiit lull ot the rhetoric of peace that so otten resounds through the cavernous halls oi the U.N general assembly But it was one that laced squdtely the disappointments with past pertormunce and sought new methods for future effectiveness Yet it brought no new initiatives lor solving the continuing crisis in the Middle East, perhaps the most burning issue before the U N who The new secretary ol state to lumseli as ptobably the world's most junior foieign minister" called for new guidelines for peacekeeping." so that till' organization can act swiftly, conlidently and eliectively in future enses " 9 Christopher Columbus did in 1492 With an Italian policeman standing at his right hand, he told newsmen his discovery and conquest was peace-tu- l A Kissinger Recommits U.S. To Original U.N. Goals Lucky Eagle Rights a Wrong - ROME (AP) Lucky Eagle, in his American Indian outfit as chief of the Chippewa tribe, alighted from a jumbo jet at Rome's airport, set foot on Italian soil, rested his spear on the tarmac and stated on the New shares. growth. McNamara was sharply cntical of the he mentioned only the ruh countnes for the gross United States by name aid total in them program for deficiency margin E change. He also put U S support behind a world food conlerence in 1974 under U.N auspices, to t'.scuxs ways to maintain adequate food supplies, and to harness the eftorts of all nations to meet the hunger and malnutrition resulting from natu- "Columbus heard rumors that there was a strange land across the water and in 1492 he sailed and eventually discov ered Ame. icu "What right d.d he have to discover a land which had been inhabited by the Indians lor tens ol thousands ol years'' "The same right I have to come to Italy now and proclaim the discovery As far as I know. of mis country W ha' Italy has never been discovered to have a for an awful thing country never been discovered'" lias jurisdiction over, what is " "essentially a political question The White House brief was filed m response to the suit brought by the commit' tee early last month alter Nixon ignored a subpoena for tape recordings ot some conversations which the President had with aides about Watergate. It was filed as the Senate committee resumed its public heunngs on the scandal alter a ekiecess no judge Request Before Courts 4 broader request fur the tapes by special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox now is before the U S Court of Appeals, with both the White House and Cox contesting a Sirica ruling that lie should be allowed to listen privately to the tapes before deciding whether to order them turned over to a federal grand jury Efforts suggested by the court to reach a compromise in that dispute ended last week with both sides reporting "sincere but truitless negotiations The case appeared destinted to go to the Supreme Court for resolution, possibly next month In responding to the Senate suit, Nixon's lawyers argued as they did that the President could against Cox not be forced to take any action by the legislative or judicial brandies of government and that it was up to Congress to abused his powers impeach him if Nixon's attorneys maintained that the Watergate committee was not authorized to try to force disclosure ol the White House tapes it the President thought it was in the public mterest to keep them secret Beyond that, the President's lawyers contended, the judge had no jurisdiction in the case because the committee had tailed to establish "that the matter is . not essentially a political question Court Edicts Cited They cited numerous preuous court rulings to claim that judges have d longstanding tradition of staying out ot political issues The attorneys claimed that Nixon was not questioning the nght and duty ot Congress to cunduct investigations and that he lias cooperated voluntarily with the Senate investigators " All of this cooperation been v oluntarv Inside The Tribune Tribune Telephone Numbers, Page 2 ral disasters Aside from these concrete pioposals the Kissinger speech provided much that devotees of the United Ndtions would That President Nixon like to hear should ask me as my first oltiual act to speak time for the United States." said reailirms the a.ipoitance Kissinger, that my country attaches to the values See Page 1 2, Column I Tuesday's Forecast Sait Lake City and vicinity Fair cloudy with a chance of some! showers. Continued cool Weather map is m Page B V |