OCR Text |
Show Our Phone Numbers Cooler Tonight r; Mews, News Tips Home Delivery Cloudy with afternoon and evening thundershowers. Gusty southerly winds. Daytime highs in the mid 90s. Lows tonight in the mid COs. Details, weather map on Page ; YOU 10c WEST'S MOUNTAIN THE FIRST NEWSPAPER TUESDAY, Urged By Burger - Dallas, tex. (ap Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, agreed today with Americans who complain that justice takes too long. He also proposed a possible solution: the immediate training of skilled managers" to take over problems of administration, leaving judges free to judge. In almost every large court house in the country, Burner told the Amreican Bar Association's House of Delegates, frustrated and angry citizens called for jury service Spnd about 80 per cent of their time just waiting. ASTRONAUTS TELL WORLD MUCH WAITING Witnesses called for a precise day and hour, having left their jobs, also find themselves spending most of their time waiting, the chief justice Moon s Gravity Results In New Sense Of said. Many lawyers have come to accept this philosophically and many have simply surrendered to The System, Burger went on. The public ' JR. . SPACE CENTER- - HOUS TON (UPI) Apollo 11 Cfndr. Neil A. Armstrong told thei world today man feels the strange, weak gravity lot the moon than in free bet-ter- in spce or on earth. number of experts prior goal deal of difiicnlty would encountered . by people trying to work on the moon,, reported the first man. This, fopi on the mopn. wasnt the case, ,7 'After landing, we felt very comfortable in lunar gravity. Itwas, in fact, preferable both to weightlessness and to earth gravity. The moons gravity is only h as strong as earths and Armstrong and Edwin E. b$ to-s- et - oiie-sixt- Jr.; surface of Tram July 29 Without n The astronauts news ends in the auditorium of the manned ' spacecraft center was the first scheduled item on an agenda that included an swing unprecedented across toe United States to receive the acclaim of a grateful nation. As the news conference progressed, Armstrong displayed a dry humor. A film showing him setting up a television camera on the lunar surface was speeded up, like a Key-sto- confer-sctfbe- d - football-field-wid- -- hr Ihe flight predicted that a Aldrin1 tie- - under hot television lights, ' qutlfty Ba&e the historic landing de- -' operation in matter-of-fadifficulty. tail. Armstrong, Aldrin and MiHe pointed out in a motion chael Collins, who remained, e - a in lunar orbit in the command picture which he had to dodge, crater in ship Columbia; described described how the four- their first public report what then landing craft Eagle legged, like to was it explore ,th r skimmed over a - smaller demoon. In th? process they set down in a narrated some of the - most pression, and ' " cloud of dust; spectacular lunar "photograIts quite important not to phy ever taken. toe during the final stub your " g Armstrong, he of touchdown, phases appearing nervous before an said. auditorium of several hundred Armstrong reported he had newsmen and an international no descendingdifficulty television audience, said his ladder to Eagles biggest prohlem on the moon for first time the surface the ( was the lack of time. and said the last step was We had the problem of a , about three and a half feet. ' Once on the surface, he boy in a. candy he said. . store, said, he sighted a - The civilian, deep crater near the ship.' I concerned wearing a dark gray suit and was somewhat on balance his about and losing my unclasping clasping hands during the first minutes the steep slopes, he said. rock-strew- . walked, skipped aijd even hopped! about the Boyish-lookin- Cops film, and . - I quickly Armstrong said erected the TV camera. He and Aldrin also raised the American fag on the stark, gray surface and set up a geophysical station to look for moonquakes. To me, it was one of the prouder moments of my life to stand there and quickly salute toe flag, said Aldrin, a Air Force colonel. , nine-rung ld . six-fo- ot : r Quake Jolts North Japan Reds Open New Offensive; Hit Navy Hospital SAIGON (UPI). ' North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops poured out of jungles today to attack U.S. bases near border in a new offensive that erupted into the heaviest fighting in Vietnam since last February. Communist 137 allied forces shelled targets including a hospital where mortar rounds blew up in a ward crowded with 50 wound U.S. Navy ed men and In an operating ; room. t killed American troops more than 360 Communist soldiers in repulsing 13 ground attacks mostly in the strategic area between Saigon and the Cambodian border. At least. 29 Americans were killed and more than 200 wounded. Military sources said the new wave of attacks of shell- -' Ing and on the ground were the start of a new late sum- - ' : the Cambodian . Army Plans To Promote Rank Women To are at least (AP) the 1-S- The WASHINGTON process Army may be in of selecting Us first woman general. Officers on the Armys distaff side report happily that for the first time the records of Womens Army Corps colonels are being included in the annual review of candidates general. 1 1 doesnt necessarily mean were going to have one of our own make it this time Cor. Elizabeth P.. Hoisington, director of the WACs, told a reporter, ' But the nicest Y 524-444- 8 tar they thing Is that a now giving everybody chance, A selection board which will draw up the yearly list of recon , one-stommendations appointments began meeting Monday. The selection process takes several days. There are about 11,800 WACs in uniform today, many carrying out secretarial, and other administrative . chores for the male side of the Army. WACs serve around the world, with some 160 currently assigned in South Vietnam. . . , ar . - An underTOKYO (UPI) sea earthquake as powerful as those that hit San Francisco mer Communist offensive. in 1906 and Alaska in 1964 said that rocked northern Japan and Communiques . since North Vietnamese infan-toe Kurile Islands early t r y m e n attacked Marine foot today. It generated 4 ramps near the Demilitarized tidal waves but no major Zone (DMZ) Sunday nearly. damage or Injuries were re100 Americans had been killed ported. .and more than 550 wounded. The first tidal wave hit Communist dead approached Hokkaidos eastern coast near 1,000. Nemuro, Japans. ea$termost U.S. military sources saw city, at 658 a.m. The the new attacks as designed waves came at low tide and U.S. to run up casualties and caused no damage or injuries, increase antiwar feeling in the United States. Two of the most spectacular attacks were near the huge American base at Da Nang on South Vietnams northern coast. i will not As hospitals concluded long ago that they needed a corps of trained administrators, he said, judges need trained people to do for them what they cannot do for themselves. And yet, hr said, except in details, a civil or a criminal trial today is essentially the same as in Daniel Webster's time, a century ago. WEARING THIN Frankly, I do not know the Burger added, but that toe patience of the American people with the processes of litigation is wearing thin. As an Immediate start toward a solution, he said a dozen or so court managers and business administrators should be brought together within the next two months to plan a program to train court administrators. The planning need not include lawyers and judges. Burger said, but should ultimately draw in universities. Along the same lines, be supported legislation pending in Congress to provide administrators for the federal court. And he appealed to the prito vate sector" support planned pilot programs to train administrators. The need is now, not at some distant future date, ' he emphasized. answer, I do know Nation's Priority WASHINGTON (UPI) -B. John Anderson, Rep. in the GOP House leadership, said MonR-Il- third-ranke- d Americas first priority should be helping men - on earth rather than putting men day on Mars. AUGUST 12, 1969 Cloims System Will Deter Poverty, Unemployment 'Speed-U- p' By AL ROSSITER 0 524-444-5 5 Classified Ads Only Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 36. PAGES NO. 57 3 7 2 00 521-353- - . 3-1- 1. Information Sports Scores 524-44524-284- - SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. (UPI) President Nixon today asked Congress for a comprehensive manpower training system as a buffer against possible rising unemployment and as an improved weapon against poverty. It was the second installment in Nixons current proint gram dealing with under advantaged members of the American labor force. On Monday he asked Congress to provide an LACK OF EVIDENCE as- LA. ce Free Suspect In Case sured income for families too poor to care for themselves adequately. On Wednesday, he planned to submit the third in a series of messages to Congress, dealing with an evolving system for sharing federal revenue with states on a complicated population and tax rate basis. Nixons message on manpower training was outlined broadly in his address to the nation last Friday. Today, however, he added details to what was a basic seven-poi- LOS ANGELES (AP) olice well-know- n . STABILIZER He asked Congress to authorize the use of toe camprehen- -. sive manpower training sys tem as ah economic stabiliz- er. The President explained: If rising unemployment - P- released toe caretaker they held for questioning in the killing of actress Sharon Tate and four other persons. There is no reason to sussaid Inspector pect him, Harold Yamell as William E. Garretson was released Monday after two days of custody. The baby-face- d youth wouldnt talk with newsmen. But his lawyer, Barry Tarlow, said Garretson was in his room in a guest house of Miss Tates estate Friday night and Saturday when the five were shot and stabbed to death. program. The details were relatively but the manner in which an he. envisioned expanded and coordinated manpower training program might be an effective hedge against unemployment. ECONOMIC have ' : vS$ r :w v. y : . ' K; ft i knew nothing Garretson didnt know, anywere ever to suggest the posthing had happened uatil po- -. .) sibility of a serious economic . lice kicked in his door at 9 a counter-cylic'"i 'i' '1 downturn, a.m. Saturday, Tarlow said. automatic trigger would Investigators said they want be provided. Appropriations to question friends of Miss ; for manpower services would ; Tate , ... and, Garretson., be increased by 10 per cent if Officers continued investithe national unemployment gating the deaths of a superrate equals or exceeds 4.5 per market UM Tetephol owner and his wife cent for three consecutive whose bodies were found Sun-- . Tate months. Persons without the . Sharon night, their heads hooded of immediate day . . . death still mystery prospect could like one of the victims in the use this peemployment Saturday killings a few miles riod to enhance their skills In both cases bodies and productive capacity of the away. Those killed with Miss Tate were slashed and words were nation., scrawled nearby in what ap- were Abigail Folger, 26, a San JOB BANK peared to be the victims Francisco socialite; Voityck blood. The President also proposed Frykowski, 37, a movie asso establishment of a "national NOT CONNECTED date ot Miss Tates husband, computerized job bank to Despite the similarities, a director Roman Polanski; Jay match job seekers with job police spokesman said, the Sebring, 26, an internationally Liberals have cases vacancies. known hairdresser; and Stevapparently are unconobjections to such a system, nected. The couple, Leno A en Earl Parent,' 18, a student based on fears that such a LaBianca, 44, and his wife from suburban El Monte who computerized job bank Rosemary, 44, may have been police and Garretsons lawyer would end up as federal Interthe victims of a copycat said was a friend of Garretvention upon toe individual son. killer, officers said. privacy. The President, In his message, indicated no such fears. The computers of the job bank would be programmed with constantly changing data on available jobs, he said. SECTION A SECTION B A job seeker would tell an his National, Foreign 3, 10, 20 City, Regional employment counselor Comics ..2 fi 7 IK training or employment backPi tv Rpoinnal ' ground, his skills and career pi ans, which could be Womens Pages 8. 9 Financial matched with . . . available Editorial Pages Obituaries 14, 15 10, 11 t job options.' This would help 15 11 Our Man Jones Weather Map expand the potential workers 15 Music Action Ads See JOB on Page 4 al . . INSIDE THE NEWS 1-- 5 .1, d . 10-1- 3 A-- 11-1- 9 . (FTC Viet Cong Curbs Sale (Promotion Games commandos dressed in loin cloths and carrying satchels filled with dynamite attacked the U.S., 1st Marine Division headquarters near Da Nang early today. Marine defenders killed 11 of them after several broke through the barbed wire surrounding the base. The Viet Cong killed two Marines and wounded five, some of whom fell in the barrage of 122mm rockets the Communists fired before the ground assault. The worst of the Communist attacks was a mortar assault on the U.S. Navy hospital five miles south of the- northern coastal city of Da Nang. It is the largest U.S. medical evacuation hospital in Vietnam, - - WASHINGTON (AP) The Trade Commission (FTC) announced today new regulations designed to ban deceptive practices in games of chance used as sales promotion by the food retailing and gasoline industries. The regulations, published in the Federal Register, become efiective in 60 days. The trade rule was adopted over the objection of Commissioner Philip Elman, who argued that promotional gimmicks should be outlawed entirely. The action came four months after hearings ended on a proposed rule that would have been even tougher on the promotion business. Federal As finally approved, the that provides regulation deception in conducting giveaway games constitutes an unfair and deceptive practice and outlines a list of actions that might be considered misleading to consumers. Among other things, toe rulfe bans any promotions that misrepresent, either directly or indirectly, a customers chances of winning a prize. It also requires that sponsors disclose clearly and conspicuously the exact number of prizes to be awarded and the odds on winning one. Companies also will have to dis- - close the total number of participating retail outlets and the scheduled termination date of the contest. The FTC said it will consider as deceptive tile failure to mix and distribute gamewinning pieces at random throughout the program and throughout the geographic area covered by toe contest. Other requirements stipulate that the FTC will consider . unlawful to: moves by sponsors Promote any game ble of being identified. capa- or pre- broken Fail to provide the FTC at the conclusion of eaf h program and to post in each retail outlet a complete list of winners, the total number of game pieces distributed, the total prizes in each category and the total prizes awarded. Promote any new contest a time providing interval of at least 60 days after conclusion of toe previous game. Terminate any contest, regardless of toe scheduled conclusion date prior to toe time when all game pieces are distributed. Add additional winning the game pieces during course of the contest. The FTC omitted a section without 4 that wss included in Its proposed regulation dealing with possible coercion of retail dealers in the gasoline industry. In so doing, however, toe commission said it would respond to dealer complaints, whether in connection with giveaway games or other as-- ; pects of retailer relationships; with suppliers. Todays Thought . Educate men without religion , and you make, them but clever devils. Duke of Wellington If ! i |