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Show Our Phene Numbers Remains Fair News, News Tips Home Di livery Fair tonight and Saturday. in the mid 60s. Daytime highs 40. Lows near Details, weather map on Page 8 7 -5- 24-2840 Information Sports Scoies Classified Ads Only 5 Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South -5-24-4445 -5- 24.-4445 521-353- C-- 6. VOl. 371 NO. -5-24-4400 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 10c PAGES 5 8 THE WEST'S MOUNTAIN NEWSPAPER FIRST APRIL FRIDAY, 11, 1969 All In The Way You Look At It tH ' f, ' , i A , i t ; A ' M Js 4J & Moie than By Associated Pi ess w. Swift ruirent and tons of Wa,pr continued pressure on dikes at Moux City, Iowa, ,he t0,1y Sioux Rivers mightiest flood slid past the northwest Iowa city intu the Missouri River. 4 j ' - V nest The officially measured at 11.7 feet over well flood stage Thursday, below the retold 15 feet over flood level which at one time had been piedicted by the Weather Bureau. o J was The river had fallen back to 10.5 feet by midmoming. AP W!r and transformers This collection of roil ties, clinkers is urban North Sioux City, S.D., evacuated as Ihe water roe remained under Tuesday, water. Ftoie labeled art by tydskegon, Mich., woman. responded Irately Thursday to the City Commission order that the city attorney take Mrs. Kaufman to court over the refusal to remove the old transformers, clinkers, oxidized metal urinals and Art-lov- earth garden." Earth garden is the name shavings, whal-no- used by Mrs. Kaufman, wife of a Muskegon industrialist,' to describe the assemblage of what she terms art and what Muskegon officials call junk on a vacant lot near her home. A city inspector has ordered her to clean It out but she refuses. , f . asserted. "I have the best lawyers and where in this city are they going to find an art expert? I didnt expect Muskegon to like It. Theyre so -- far j forward-thinkin- -- NATO Ministers; Nixon In Huddle - Commu- gunners destroyed part of the city of Tay Nlnh early today with a barrage of rocket and mortar fire tons of am.that exploded munition with heavy casualties. It was one of 45 shellings during the night heaviest In three weeks. 200 Officials in Tay Ninh, GO miles northwest of Saigon and only a few miles from the Cambodian border, said nine civilians were killed and more than 90 soldiers wounded, five ot them Americans. Another 90 Sooth Vietnamese soldiers were reported missing. Officials said the mortar fire blew up two ammunition dumps holding more than 200 tons of ammunition and that the explosion destroyed 50 houses and damaged 45 in the ' city of 150,000 persons. WASHINGTON,. (UPI) -President Nixon met with NATO foreign ministers for an hour and 20 minutes today, and discussed with them his Administrations plans for arms limitation talks with the Russians. ' ' State U.S.-Russi- - A White House official said To Tell 'What'sj Right' ' Protesters are complaining about whats wrong with America." Theyre dragging our couand often ntys good name its flag through the muck. Theyre violating the prin- ciples of American democracy, then they take refuge behind the very principles they work to overthrow. As A newspaper were tired of having Americas motives its questioned, constantly honor doubted, its honesty disbelieved. And we believe the majority of our young adults diose in junior and senior high school, feel the same way. Joday's Thought m For (tftev all, thf bent thing one cm do to hen it fj raining ii to let it rain. Henry W. Longfellow The Deseret News, In cooperation with the Utah State Board of Education, is providing an opportunity for these students and this years high school graduates to tell about "Whats Right With America in an essay contest. T. H. Bell, state superintendent of public Instruction Because we are consaid. cerned and because we share, with many others, a responsibility to emphasize the great many aspects of our American system that are worthy of commendation, it is a pleasure for the State Board of Education to cooperate with the Deseret News in encouraging our youth to do some serious thinking and writing on the topic: What Right With AuiericaV Watch for complete information of this context oil Page of Saturdays Deseret News. A-- 3 ' . 1 SECTION A the meeting to explaining to the ministers his decision to build the Safeguard antiballs-ti- c missile system. , I . 1 Pnmtpc tv Highiigh'.rzz:::::::5 Financial It was believed mere also was a discussion by the East : 6,7 SECTION C St e nr5anS rational 1 Describing the session, Ziegler said the President spoke Informally to the ministers for quite a long time," then responded to questions. Nixon met with the group just a few hours before the conclusion of NATO ministeri- al talks. Muskic Hurls The NATO ministers, folmeeting lowing their this morning with NLxon, were scheduled to resume their annual spring council session at which they are seeking to reconcile differences over how to deal with a proposal fiom the Warsaw Pact countries for a conference on the military and polit- -' ' ical future of Europe. Soviet-dominate- d EXTREME ' Attack At ABM PROVIDENCE, R.I (AP) Saying that hunger and poverty are more dangerous Sen. communism, Edmund S. Muskie, blasted the antiballistic missile sys- tem and called for tighter controls on military spending in a speech at Brown Univer- t sity Thursday. Defense spending will not decrease automatically with tlie ei'd of tlie Vietnam war and free federal funds for the solution of chronic urban at home, die Maine senator said. than : , cei,ter al Rampton. y Rowley also announced that National Lead has acquired the minority interest in the Inc., project of H-in a stock agree- ), ment ,an.d The plant is to be located on aroand' the western shore of the lake ' about 25 miles northwest of It was largely accidental Grantsviile. It is due for comthat the end of the American pletion in late 1971. desire and ability to be the It will be a single site, elec-- t universal and dominant power roly tic reduction plant, itiLthe end including evaporating ponds s;,ou!d of.ei,f" ears of .emocrat and auxiliary facilities with a ntle toe survey sa.d rated annual capacity of The Institute said the Unit- States international role in the 1970s could become the malITerst since before World . I e ..1 TALKS INFORMALLY metal-chemic- Cross gives approximate site of National Lead plant, about 40 miles northwest of Tooele. . . ' European Communist nations confor a general East-Weference on European' security." Action Ads :.7-i- 8 The NATO ministers are con SECTION D sidering how to feply to the countries . Warsaw recurrent calls or such talks. -.5 Pact Deseret News Staff Writers ence ... . ritv By DON WOODWARD and CLARENCE BARKER (Hogle-Kearns- ftegl dfne"se 1 one-ho- Its Time . V ' 8-- the President devoted part of , Ziegler declined to give specifics on the topics. But he confirmed that talks were part of the agenda. Nixon has pledged to keep the Atlantic allies fully posted on tlie subjecL RESEARCH CENTER The Institute made Us assessment of tlie relative strengths of the two powers in , .l-National, Foreign City, Regional 12, 14, 16, 24 Womens Pages 11.17-2Editorial Pages .22,23 .23 Theyre Your Schools 23 Our Man Jones Music 23 j. SECTION B st Ronald Ziegler, White House press secretary, said the private session at the also . Department touched on 'strategic and political questions of common concern to the Allies. NEWS , p At Gierokee, Iowa, whete some 350 persons had been Plans for construction of a nearly $70 million complex by National Lead Co. for the first commercial production of magnesium metal and chlorine from States In ballistics missiles (ICBMs) by brines of Great Salt Lake mid-19- . were announced today. But it said the United States would keep its . E. R..Bqwle;, chairman of overall lead in nuclear weap-INblthe board of National Lead ons because of its greater Co., made the announcement submarine and air forces. in the office of Gov, Calvin L. TUC ' - LONDON The (UPI) United States lost its edge in military strength over Russia in the past year along with the desire and ability to be the worlds dominant power, a British insltute said today. The Institute for Strategic Studies predicted the Soviets would overtake the United hostility, when we and hail should openly applaud all and any form of progress, said John Parker, a faculty member of the Art Institute of Chicago. Muskegon officials say residents of the earth garden area have complained that children climbed on the metal scrap and cut themselves. flood-fightin- g Million Plant To Refine Brine Strength? with greeted entrenched The youngsters pitched In to repair the damaged bairler and no injuries resulted from the broken gas line. High srhools in the flood threatened communities fieed students from classes to join the foicc, and colleges in the area were in the midst of Faster vacation. 'Ive just divided I'm not going to say anything against those little rascals anymore," said R. G. Clatk, the city clerk at Akron, Iowa, 28 miles upstream from Sioux City. Without them we would have had It." INCREASING SENSE sald there was in the United Slatft ',n increasing sense that the rewards of American global responsibili- ty were by no means cm mensurate with the costs. It hausted the Americans fldent ,sense ot PP086 con- - nd ability. Because of her upsurge in nuclear strength, the survey said. the Soviet Union must now be treated as a full equal in terms both of strategic power and of her ability to control conflict in the devel- oping woild. The physical strength of both however, had superpowers, not enabled either of them to impose their authority pletely on international events in 19G8, the Institute said. 45.000 tons. The average employment level during construction will be about 550 and during peak peuods may approach 1,000. . Total payroll, including subcontractors, will approximate $12 million during construction, and about $10 million will be spent locally for materials, equipment and services. On completion of the plant, it is expected that approxi- - Speeches by foreign Communist motives and weighing possible consequences i before agreeing to ' an all European security conference of the type proposed by the Warsaw Pact nations at their Budapest meeting last month. Missile Launched vandenberg air FORCE BASE, CALIF. (AP) The fust Minuteman III missile launch in he Air Force Western test rang was made at 12:55 a.m. today. The missile was programmed to fly about 5,000 miles to a target zone near the Marshall Islands in the Pacific Ocean. - ' - well-to-d- o tion, lias spent the last two days as a w itness at the Food anil Drug Administrations hearings on nearly year-lonadveitising and labeling of vitamins and minerals. Irrespective of income levWe are els. Schaefer said. finding obesity in 50 per cent of our adult w omen. Schaefer also testified in January before the Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and related Human Needs. Schaefer is directing a national nutrition survey of families whose incomes range from $180 a year to more than $42,000 a year. Of the latter group he said: "We do have problems in them." g f Air-Se- $78 MILLION Page A4 T rade Commission Charges Litton With Antitrust Violation WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Fedetal Trade Commission today formally charged Litton Industries Inc., one of the nations largest conglomerate corporations, with violating antitrust laws in its acquisition of a German type- rt settlement of tlie gov- ernment suit. Litton has pledged a long legal defense of its full rights to keep the German firm, Triumph-AdleThe FTC denied Littons request for reconsideration of the complaint and said in a public notice: The commission advised that its offer of settlement has been rejected and that no useful purpose would be served by r. writer manufacturer. The commission voted 4 to 1 to reject the companys proposal at a public hearing Thursday for extended negotiations leading to an out- - Litton has Many Too Fat Or Can't Chev A WASHINGTON (UPI) malnutrition expert said today that, rich and poor alike, 50 per cent of adult women are too fat, and ail segments of the population suffer from bad teeih. Dr. Arnold E. Schaefer, a Whos Who biochemist who is chief of the U.S. Public Health Services nutrition program, said that persons as well as tlie poor suffer from malnutrition, The affluent have such problems as anemia, obesity and dental difficulties, Schaefer said in a testimony and an interview Schaefer, secretary of the American Institute ot Nutri full-tim- , CAUTION all. 15 e employes mately 250 will operate the plant. In addition, the office and research center to be located near the e Salt Lake International I V f ministers at the Thursday sessions of the council disclosed that all but Italy believed the alliance should exercise extreme caution in assessing forced to flee their homes when the Little Sioux River flooded 27 bloiks, evacuation chairman Carvell Burkhart praised the young people. We hear mote about the youngsters who do wrong, said Burkhart. "These boys are the kind anyone would be proud to have as a son." Some of the Cherokee residents began returning to their homes today. All 800 residents of North Sioux City, SD., remained away from their homes, abandoned to the swilling wateis which crested between 12 and , 12.5 feet early today. The flood level was not expected to recede before Saturday. $70 In Arms Your work is eternal, wrote William Wegman, an art instructor at the University of Wisconsin. "New directions are usually adding, Im modest. Mrs. Kaufman, whose husband is board chairman of American Store Equipment Co. of Muskegon, says, My earth garden is something tourists will want to come to Muskegon to see. They would flip, absolutely flip, about it in New York. On Thursday, Mrs. Kaufman won support for her fight from a number of art experts who sent her telegrams. Most of the telegrams were , line. Otlierwi.se, flooding conditions today were no worse than Thursday when water spilled through a dike at Sioux Falls, S.D., forcing the evacuation of 50 families and sent collect, she said. been she said not going to be j , - Ive always BEHIND CLOSED DOORS p 'SAIGON behind, and t Reds Score Biggest Hit In 3 Weeks it ' (UPI) nist . t. "They picked the wrong she person to do this to, ... s ' Kaufman Mrs. lupturmg a natuial gas pipe- adult volun- 1 ,0O0 youngstere who had done yeoman service in sandbagging operations. The biggest fear among restheir idents forced from homes whcie the Big Sioux flows into tie Missouri River along ihe South Dakota and Iowa border was that constant pressute on the levees would cause a breaktlnough and innundate the area. u s Lags It's Junk To City , Art To Her MUSKEGON, MICH. (AP) Mrs. J. Kelly , Kaufman has warned Muskegon officials theyre in for a legal donnybrook if they try to clear piles of old railroad ties and foundry clinkers from her Sub- 2U0 teers kept a vigilant eve on the dikes, relieving moie than Schaefer said that 18 per cent of persons over 10 years of age in the Texas nutrition survey reported they were to chew some foods because of tlie condition of their teeth. "Severe dental decay ocurs in 'all segments of the population, Schaefer said. Schaefer testified there has been little change in the incidence of anemia tlie last 3d years, with its results of fatigue, listiessness and inability to achieve sharp physical and mental performance. In his appearance before the Senate committee Jan. 22, Schaefer, a native of Tripp, I SD., defined malnutrition as: An impairment of health and physiological functions resultto ing from the failure obtain the proper food that will supply all the essential nutrients in proper amount and balance. An interviewer asked Schaefer if people, are well-feshould there be signs ot undernourishment, except in persons with a disease? Schaefer replied: By signs of or under malnutrition nutrition you are talking about growth retardation of children, low tissue levels as measured by blood and urine. "Our answer to that is, no, there should not be. ... d . 1 further consent order negotiations. Accordingly, the commission issuance has directed of a complaint the .. . Commissioner E v e r e 1 1 e MacIntyre dissented to the extent that he thought Litton should be allowed to continue consent order negotiations until April 25. Litton told the commission Thursday (hat the mere filing of the antitrust suit would hamper efforts to build European confidence in tiie new Nixon Administration. Tlie FTC order, if upheld, would require Litton, a $1.9 billion corporation and 14th largest military contractor, to divest itself of Triumph-Adle- r within one year of the final order. Litton acquired tlie typewriter firm last October for $51 million to bolster its floundering Royal Typewriter Division. The commission charged the marger would reduce competition in tlie U.S. industry and tend to create a monopoly. Litton contends that International Business Machines (IBM) holds an "unassailable monopoly in the industry and that if its merger with Ti luniph-Adle- r is denied it would be forced to sell off Royal. Litton said this wooW leave IBM virtually alone the f inlet. type-writ- I. |