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Show A Few Clouds TN Mostly fair tonight and Thursday. Daytime highs near 70. Lows tonight near 45. Probability of rain 10 per cent or less. Details, weather map on Page E-3 72 NO. News, News Tips Home Delivery 104 PAGES 5 lOe THE MOUNTAIN WEST'S FIRST -5-24-4400 -5- 24-2840 Information Sports Scores Classified Ads Only 5 Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South -5-24-4445 24-4445 521-353- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 2. VOL. Our Phone Numbers NEWSPAPER WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1969 U.S. Waits Hanoi's Viet Move Nixon Asks Reds To Match Pullout WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. eff,cials are watching for a Hanoi response, either through diplomatic channels or on the battlefield, to President Nixons bid for a North Vietnamese pullback to match die American troop withdrawal from South Vietnam. So far the enemys answer seems negative both in propaganda blasts at Nixons 25,000-ma- a withdrawal announcement and in a flareup in combat offensives after a brief lull. But U.S. sources suggested It would take time for Hanoi leaders to make a full evaluation of Sundays Midway Island meeting between Nixon and South Vietnams President Nguyen Van Thieu, at was which the U.S. pull-ou- t announced. TIME TO CONFIRM And it would also probably take weeks for U.S. intelligence to confirm an unannounced North Vietnamese troop withdrawal if such were to take place, informants said. North Vietnamese' troop strength in the South has been estimated at about 100,000 in recent months. Nixon made his appeal Tuesday in a report to the nation on the Midway summit as he returned to a White House lawn greeting from bipartisan congressional leaders, Cabinet members and diplomats. We have opened wide the door to peace with the troop wit hdrawal announcement and his earlier eight-poipeace offer, Nixon said in his brief televised remarks. WALK WITH US .And now we invite foe leaders of North Vietnam to walk with us through that door either by withdrawing forces, their forces, from South Vietnam as we have withdrawn ours, or by negotiating in Paris, or through both avenues, he said. We believe this is the time for- them to act We have acted and acted in good faith. And if they fail to act in onei direction or foe other, they must bear foe responsibility for blocking, the way to not and walking peace through that door which we have opened. The next Paris negotiating session is due Thursday. A State Department spokesman indicated that in the peace talks so far, the North Viet- namese have not signaled they would match U.S. with- drawals. He said Washington wants agreement for stinulta- neous pullbacks. Nixon said the Midway meeting brought home the message that the troops of South Vietnam have now been and equipped to the See U.S. WAITS on Page A--4 WASHINGTON (UPI)' - The White House ruled out today, possible imposition of wage and price controls if Congress fails tov extend the 10 per cent income tax surcharge. One day after Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy said such controls were among alternatives that might be necessary to curb runaway inflation in absence of continuation of the surtax, President Nixon was pictured by his press secretary, , T UPI Teteohoto Prank Turns Into Costly Caper An Denver boy started the engine on this n bulldozer and jumped off. The dozer traveled 385 feet in reverse, tore through the Peter Metros garage and climbed part way up Metros new car. Damage was estimated at $15,000. 45-to- Midsection Bombarded By Storms Let's Not Get Mad ANGELES (AP) or other anxiety, stressful emotions may increase tiie risk of catching virus infections of the nervous system such as polio, a medical researcher said today. Dr. Margaret I. Sellers of the University of California at Los Angeles Medical School said c pertinents with mice show brain infections are enhanced by doses of adrenalin and serotonin, hormones produced by the body under stress. In a report on her work released by the school, Dr. Sellers said these hormones, which dilate blood vessels, increase blood flow through foe brain and thus bring more viruses to that area. In a way not yet understood, the release said, the hormones may also weaken the anatomical barrier be tween blood supply and brain, and permit viruses to enter brain and other nerve cells. Dr. Sellers earlier reported that inhalation of carbon diox ide concentrations enhanced entry of polio virus into the brain of mice. Since heavy exercise generates excess car-bo- n dioxide, the release said, this seemed to explain how unusually strenuous exercise, long associated with occurrence of paralysis in polio-infecte- d victims, might contribute to paralysis. . A spokesman said It now appears that both emotional and physical stress may facilitate virus infections of the nervous system." Yellowstone Bear Killed After Mauling Girl At Park - - A NEB. (AP) St Paul, Minn., girl has been injured by a grizzly bear in Yellowstone National Park, the National Park Service reported today. OMAHA, WASHINGTON ' (UPI)' History tells us the first tiling Columbus did on wading ashore in the New World was to raise the flag of Spain, Aeronautics Rational NAA AP Tesd?y U astronauts wall plant wen moon next month land on Whats more, they will hoist a second Stars and Stripes for a moment, then bring it back for presentation to foe organi-traine- d zation whose largess made the trip possible the U.S. Supt Jack Anderson Identified the girl as Daphne Jax, daughter of Eugene J. Jax, St. Paul. Yellowstone her condition was described as serious in the He said Park Service Hospital at Lake Junction in the Park. He said she had suffered a puncture wound and lacerations in the chest said foe incident occurred about 8 p.m. MDT Tuesday at Trailer Village in Fishing Bridge Campground in Yellowstone. The girl was from a restroom walking when the bear grabbed he the superintendent said. Anderson A park killed the ranger shot and bear about half an hour later, Anderson said. The animal was described as an old bear. Fishing Bridge Campground is at the north end of Yellowstone Lake in the center of the park. The area is in northwest Wyoming. ' Ronald Ziegler, as giving no consideration to such a move. told reporters emphatically that the administration does not plan to impose wage and price controls even if the Congress rejects Nixon's request to continue the surtax at the 10 per cent rate for ail of 1969, phasing it out with a 5 per cent rate for the first half of 1970. FACE PROBLEMS 4 6th MURDER VICTIM Mother Sees Ziegler Ziegler said that Kennedy was referring to some of the problems we will face if the surtax is not passed- - in remarks at a news conference Tuesday. conmentioned Kennedy trols, along with additional budget cuts and tighter re. By Associated Press strictions on money supplies, alternatives he said Storms tornadic among packing the administration would have winds, hail and rain persisted to consider if the surtax were allowed to expire as schedtoday in the nations interior. And freezing weather uled on June 30. While ruling out wage and chilled some areas Just 10 controls, the White price days short of summer. House insisted the surtax Wind gusts up to 45 to 50 extension was vital not only to provide a strong budget but m.p.h. slapped North Platte to assist in stopping the inflaand Lincoln, Neb., and Russell and Salina, Kan., during tionary spiral in existence for the last four years. thunderstorms early today. QCFRY RESPONSE A temperature of 36 set a made his remarks BisZiegler 11 in record for June when asked for the White marck, N.D. House position in response to Readings ranged down to 27 on Capitol Hill that in Lewistown, Mont., and 32' reports the surtax is in trouble. in the freezing level Is The Nixon proposal Grand Forks, N.D., and Flagexpected to win approval in staff, Ariz. the House Ways and Means Rain or drizzle were reCommittee possibly this ported in 26 states. week but faces trouble on the House floor. Police reported 100 homes were damaged in the West It alsi has some strong Texas city of Plainview by a opposition in the Senate. Sen. tornado Tuesday night The Eugene J. McCarthy, same storm smashed all the today called the windows in a country club and Nixon plan a gimmick. in a shopping center. McCarthy said Nixon is in trouble on his proposaL No injuries were reported in The White House shot down Plainview or in at twister foe one at Johnsons Lake, Neb., speculation about wage and 85 miles west of Grand Island, price controls as initial reaction in Congress was strongly where two cabins were destroyed. Other twisters were against the Kennedy suggessighted near Bertrand, Neb., tion that they might be considered. and Stratford, Tex. . 1 TV Sketch: Her Daughter ANN ARBOR, MICH. (AP) Mrs. Joseph Kalom was watching television in Kalamazoo, Mich., when she saw an artists sketch of a young woman whose mutilated body was found near this college town. She recognized the likeness of her daughter Alice. Tuesday night, the Kaloms drove a hundred miles to Ann Arbor and after viewing the body, confirmed that their daughter was the ' V T. school of r V, - .so'-d- , yj Sw 2 latest victim in a string of six murders of young women in the Ann Arbor area. Miss Kalom, a recent graduate of the University of Michigan V : V. 7Vi V 7 4 i':: archi- tecture and design who stayed on to take a few courses this summer, was last seen alive by her boy friend early Saturday morning. Police believe she was killed some time Sunday night Her body was found Monday on an abandoned farm. She had been shot in the head and repeatedly stabbed, once in foe heart I was afraid. I called her every time there was one of the murders. She said, Im careful; I dont associate with the girls father strangers, said. Tha murder chain began Aug. 7, 1967. The victims ranged in age from 13 to 23 years. All foe bodies have been found on the fringes of Ann Arbor and nearby YpsilantL Alice Kalom . . . body identified - V Ail had been shot, strangled or stabbed. All but one were partially nude and had been sexually molested. Authorities investigating the murders believe all six deaths were the work of a single as- sailant ;; There are similarities linksaid ing all the murders, Douglas Harvey, sheriff of Washtenaw County. It has got to be a real psy- cho who would shoot a girl, stab her several times and then stab her In the heart the sheriff continued. Its got to be a real sick man. Its somebody who knows the area. It has to be. I Congress. IKJCmir lINJIlsC THF . . N tW5 SECTION A 8 National, Foreign 9 City, Regional Womens Pages Editorial Pages 16, 17 Our Man In Washington ..17 17 Our Man Jones 17 Music SECTION B 1-- 12-1- 5 City Regional 1, 2, 4, 6, T, 10, 11, 13, 18 8, 9 Theater 12 TV Highlights 14 Comics 16, 17 Financial SECTION C 1-- 8 SECTION D 14, 6, 7 8 e" City, Regional ...1 Obituaries. .1, 2 Weather Map Action Ads SECTION Grand Central State Department suggested the U.N. flag as a possibility. Rep. Burt L. Talcott, told Paine bluntly that if the U.N. flag went up, the agency might as well for-get about the extra billions it said it needed to keep ahead of the Soviet Union in space. The flag proviso was first suggested last week by Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, Bennett said he was happy to see the idea succeed in the House and promised to insist h. Scot Sports City, Regional SECTION The gift to the legislators on added significance in the wake of a debate over whether the spacemen should take along the United Nations flag as a gesture of international goodwill. NASA Administrator Thomas O. Paine testified in April no decision had been made what flag to fly. He said the 2 on adoption in the Senate if the measure is taken up there before the July 16 moon iauncj, (por details on Apollo schedule see st on 6 u. .. . 0 G 1-- 8 Todays Thought section k 0 rt SECTION F 1--8 Penneys SECTION 8 , t Alphonse Ailals 14 Skaggi "i We talk of killing time , as if, alas, it werent time that kills us. i 'Secret': Posh New Capitol CALIF, SACRAMENTO, A group of legislators (AP) has been meeting weekly in secret to plan what could be one of the most lavish state capitols: a soaring, struc- twin-tow- ture. A drawing shows it to be an edifice to be proud of. So why the secrecy? Its supporters, who are shy about discussing it publicly, say privately they fear that disclosure before plans are completed will stir taxpayer resentment over cost. The double building would the office space for each state senator and assemblyman, with a private bathroom extra cost 33,000 for each. To find out how other states and nations are building their new capitols, five legislators have traveled at state expense to such cities as Brasilia, Brazil; Honolulu; lima, Peru; Lansing, Mich.; Albany, N.Y.; and Santa Fe, N.M. On one trip, the travelers spent New Years Eve In Hawaii, . No ont has indicated when foe taxpayers will be officially appraised of the com- mittees plans, but the lawmakers are expected to offer a bill next year to authorize a replacement for the columned and domed Capitol that has housed the California Legislature since 1869. Proponents of the plan say Capitol is cramped and antiquated and modern new quarters are needed. Assemblyman Joe A. Gonsalves of La Mirada says the 80 assemblymen and 40 senators need foe space for staff members who he says have made the California Legislature the nations best. the present Under preliminary plans by state architect Fred Hummel, every one of foe 42 committee chairmen would occupy offices of 2,707 square feet twice as big as an average three bedroom home. Thoi who are not committee chairmen would have 1,693 square feet This is twice foe size of offices in foe present office building anrex to foe Capitol, A Tt -- AP Wirt Photo Model shows design of California's proposed $65 milllion, ? $ ) 24-sto- ry capitol. Shhh. It's a secret. |