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Show RET Clouds And Rain Clouds and rain for the Intermountain area. See details, weather map on Page B-- VOL. NO. 3 7 2 News, News Tip3 A PAGES 10c WEST'S MOUNTAIN THE 524-284- SATURDAY, Como AUGUST ' -- vju "k- 'X MIAMI (UPI) warning went up along a Civilians watch armeid British soldiers take positions behind barbed wire barricades in effort to quell North Irish fighting. FAST, NORTHERN IRELAND (UPI) snipers, machinegun-ner- s and firebnmbers spread more bloodshed through Belfast's flaming streets today in new fighting between Catho- - lics and Protestants outside barbed wire zones manned by 400 British troops. Military sources said up to 600 more soldiers might be moved into Belfast by sundown to reinforce the peacekeeping troops during Saturday night and the weekend. At least eight persons had been shot to death since the' religious rioting erupted in this capital city of Northern Ireland Thursday night. Two died early today. Another 336 persons have been injured, including 66 by gunfire. A ninth person was killed in the city of Armagh. Across the border, the overwhelmingly Roman Catholic Irish Republic mobilized 2,000 reserve troops to support 1,600 men already massing along Northern Ireland frontiers. adjacent Protestant and olic neighborhoods along the Shankhill and Falls roads Friday night. Police were helpless to separate mobs fighting with guns, firebombs, stones, bricks and fists. Gas Train Continues m - - No demonstrators were present as a trainload of lethal phosgene gas, en route from the Mountain Rocky Arsenal in Denver to a chemical firm at Lockport, N.Y., passed through this western Pennsylvania town. The train traveled at an extremely slow speed as it headed toward the mountainous Allegheny National Forest on its way to the New York border. The train was reported running far behind schedule, due In part to a speed limit imposed by the Interstate Commerce Commission on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad which was transporting the gas here. The gas was shipped in 196 ni e t a canisters divided among 14 flatcars as part of a freight train. 1 ' A Central SAIGON (UPI) Intelligence Agency official advised military authorities to kill the Communist double agent in the Green Beret' murder case, sources close to the case said Saturday. The sources said the killing was suggested by a senior CIA agent known by the code name of Col. Enking when lie detector tests confirmed the mans allegiance was to North Vietnam. Although the victim's body has not been found, eight former U.S. Special Forces members are being held in the Long Binh stockade near Saigon in connection with the deepening mystery. the accused is Col. . Among Robert Rheault, 43, Vineyard Haven, Mass., former com flags 200-mil- e expensive motels with vacationers. They joined the local residents in a run on food and sundry store stocks of foul w'eathcr supplies. The New Orleans Weather Bureau ordered hurricane warnings posted from Fort Walton to St. Marks, which lies at the head of the Apalachee Bay south of Tallahassee. Gale warnings went up from Pensacola to Fort Walton and from St. Marks to Cedar Key. POSITION PLOTTED At noon Camille was centered about 380 miles south of Panama City, near latitude 24.5 north, longitude 86 0 west. It was moving on a course at 10 m.p.h. Camille spread its hurricane force winds of 75 m.p.h. jammed . The British troops surrounde area with ed a barbed concertina wire and violence scaled down to sporadic sniper fire and rock throwing. But the fighting erupted anew in areas outside those where the troops stood guard. Catholic gunmen Roman roared past the home of milimile-squar- tant Protestant leadef the Rev. Ian Paisley, firihg Into his house. Others blazed away at the with submachineguns Tenant Street pqlice station. mP Wirt Photo Apollo 11 v north-northwe- st - A gang of shouting Protes-- tant youths hurled firebombs into the Roman Catholic St. Gall's School. Flames quickly destroyed if. ' Police In armored cars rolled u and down Crumlin Road between entire blocks of burning buildings firing bursts of machinegun fire at gangs racing along in the glow of fires. Gangs hijacked buses and overturned them for barricades from which they fired guns. mander of all 3,000 Green Berets in Vietnam. Seven of the men in confinement are officers, the eighth is a sergeant. The sources said the victim, identified by military officials only as a Vietnamese was drugged with national, morphine June 20, shot in the head and dumped in the South China Sea near Nha Trang in a canvas bag weighted with tire rims and chains. According to the sources, the man's double identity was learned after Special Forces members saw a photograph of g him posing with a North Vietnamese intelligence officer. When lie detector tests performed in Nha Trang confirmed his dual role, sources See VIET oa Page 2 high-rankin- A-- 524 or higher for 40 miles around its center and galea lashed the core. gulf 150 miles Jrom-th- e The Weather Bureau urged residents of Florida's Miracle Strip to rush all preparations for high winds and 5 to 10 foot tides. very storm, dangerous Simpson said. The important thing right now is to start getting people off the beaches and exposed areas that might be cut off from the storm. GETTING READY FlorMany hurricane-waridans didn't wait for the hurricane watch. They began to batten down after Camille crossed into the Gulf of Mexico after lashing Cuba. There were no immediate reports of damage from Cuba, but it was believed Camille took a heavy toll on the islands tobacco and coffee crops. y More-Leav- e ters. Todays Thought Nothing is so firmly believed as what we least know. Michel E. dc Montaigne LA JOLLA, CALIF. (UPI) cause of the rare, fatal - The childhood disorder known as s disease has been discovered by two researchers at the University of California at San Diego school of medicine. Tay-Sach- Dr. John S. O'Brien, principal investigator, and Shintaro Okada, both of the Departanment of Neurosciences, nounced their discovery Friday. The researchers found the disease is caused by the absence of a specific enzyme, Hexosaminidase A, in the brain. (TSD) is a genetic disease transmitted to children whose parents carry the gene for the disease, Dr. O'Brien said. If an infant gets the gene from only one of his parents, he will be healthy, but if he received the gene from both parents, he will be a TSD baby and live only a few years, Tay-Sac- OBrien said. He said TSD babies appear normal until they are about six months old. Until that time they look healthy and have pale and pink trenslu-cen- t skin. The researchers have found they can determine carriers of the disease by examining blood samples. People who think about getting married now can know if their children will have the dreaded gene, OBrien said. TSD can be detected in unborn infants by taking amniotic fluid from the mother and performing an enzyme assay. If the cells in the fluid the are lacking required then the parents enzyme, have the option of a therapeutic abortion, the doctor added. A slight glimmer of hope was offered by the research T, BIG BASH TONIGHT Viet Pullout - n A SAIGON (AP) U.S. unit left Vietnam today as part of President Nixon's withdrawal of 25,000 American troops, the U.S. Com-- . mand said. Sunday. SISTER STORM h , In Forecaster ' predicted ,a slight turn to a more northerly course tonight and a slight increase in the hurricane's forward speed tonight and Meanwhile, a sister tropical storm, Debbie, grew to a full blown hurricane today with top winds of 80 m.p.h. It was well away from land, however, 1,200 miles cast of Puerto Rico at noon, near latitude 15.4 north, longitude 48.2 west Debbie was moving toward the west at about 15 m.p.h. Dr. Robert Simpson, chief of the National Hurricane Center at Miami, said Camille lost little punch Friday night in a slash across the tobacco western tip of and coffee-ricCuba. Camille is potentially a astronauts ride down. Main Street of Houston, Tex., today os their edopted hometown turned t V'i , v ;! out to-- honor the exploreri.7; . The departure of the 9th Infantry Division's 1st Battalion, 84th Artillery, raised to 18.500 the number of U.S. troops withdrawn from Vietnam since Nixons announce- ment June 8. The unit commanded by Lt. Col. Robert L. Schroeder, of D.C., left for Washington, Hawaii, where it will be deac- ' Astro 524-ma- tivated. Critics of the war, including Sens.,J. W. Fulbright, and Albert Gore, have said that U.S. troop strength is increasing despite the continuing withdrawals. said new The Pentagon troops sent to the war zone are part of a replacement cycle and that total strength would begin dropping by the end of the month. . Missing Sought Divers (UPI) today searched the Nile River 10 miles north of Cairo for more victims of Fridays collision between a pleasure boat and a barge. Seven bodies have been recovered so far and about 20 other persons and feared are missing CAIRO drowned. Medics Pinpoint Pare Disease -- " Hur-.ican- e 31-c- Two chemical companies in Lockport were to receive the shipment which was purchased from the U.S. Army One firm planned to use ttr gas to make dyes and the other was to utilize the canis- i lined with Viet Spy Did CIA Order It? Long Trip - BUTLER, PA, (UPI). Cath- 161969 At the center of the warning area lay Panama City, Fla., and its sugary white beaches Fires The illegal Irish Republican Army (IRA) said it was ready to send help to Northern Irelands Roman Catholics. The 10 months of intermittent strife in Northern Ireland erupted into near civil war this week and is the result of the Roman Catholic minority's contention that the predominantly Protestant government of Northern Ireland sys-- t e m a tically discriminates against Catholics, particularly in jobs, housing and voting. The Irish Republic which includes all but the six northern make up counties'Tvhich Northern Ireland has never recognized the 1S20 partition which established the predominantly Protestant area which is still loyal to the British Crown. British troops rolled into the 5 approach of Camille, a small and dangerous hurricane with winds of 115 miles an hour. In Belfast Fighting BEL 8 521-353- stretch of Florida's most beautiful beaches today the unswerving signaling LP Telephoto Wore Riots, 524-444- Are In Its Path Km j- 0 IFnniry Resorts '1 0 524-444- NEWSPAF FIRST 524-440- Home Delivery 5 Information Scores Sports Classified Ads Only Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 4 6 6 2 Our Phone Numbers ers that in the future the disease can be eliminated. We have now begun to do the obvious, that is to try to produce the missing gene that s causes disease and supply it to the brain of the Ty-Sach- it unborn infant. However, will be two or three years before its known if this method will be effective, OBrien said. The disease is rare, but between 90 and 150 babies a year are born in the United States with TSD. In California alone it costs some $15.00 a year to care for these infants, O'Brien said. A quarHOUSTON (UPI) ter of a million cheering per- sons showered Apollo 11 astroNeil A. Armstrong, nauts Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Mike Collins with ticker tape and moon certificates today in a tumultuous tribute in the spacemens adopted home- feature Frank Sinatra as ter of ceremonies and formances by comedians masper- Bill Dana and Flip Wilson and singers Marguerite Piazza, Dionne WarJose Jimenez wick and Nancy Ames. Buddy Brocks orchestra will provide the music for the extravagan za which Is being produced by David Merrick, There will be a photographic slide of the three Apollo 11 astronauts plus a National Anthem sequence rewritten to fit the feats of Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins. , town. Apollo 11 Commander Armstrong, wearing a green suit and his usual smile, was almost covered with confetti as the parade turnwl into Houston's Main Street. Everett Shafer, a Secret Service man, had to get out of the three the convertible astronauts were in to keep the crowds back. The three astronauts, grinning and waving in the sunny weather, had come home in triumph after official appearances in New and Los York, Chicago Angeles. A king-siz- e party for the astronauts will be held in the Houston Astrodome tonight. moon The certificates were fake $100 and $1,000 bills. One elderly man dashed up to Armstrong In the midst of the parade and jammed a Texas flag into his hand. A total of 31 astronauts and their families, the largest number ever gathered at one occasion, rode in the parade. The astronauts were preceded by a huge float containing the charred Apollo 9 space capsule and models of the Lunar Module and Gemini spacecraft. The Astrodome bash will Trains Collide, 2 Persons Die GERMADUESSELDORF, An express train NY (UPI) from Amsterdam crashed into commuter train near Friday night. A third train piled into the wreck, police said. Railroad officials said at least two persons were killed, seven seriously injured, and at least 20 others were taken a to the hospital. Dues-seldo- Copier Shot Down, 10 Americans Killed - North ViSAIGON (UPI) etnamese troops shot down a as it was U.S. helicopter delivering soldiers to a battlefield near Da Nang, military spokesmen said today. All 10 Americans aboard were U.S. and South Vietkilled more than 100 Communist soldiers in fighting near the Cambodian border. U.S. B52s dropped more than two million pounds of bombs over jungles near Saigon in the heaviest raids in six weeks. Reliable allied sources said the United States had diverted all B52 bombers used over Laos to bombing missions in South Vietnam, they said the move was taken in hopes that intensified bombing raids will force Communist troops to withdraw from positions near key Allied bases. Until Monday, the Stratofor-tresse- s had divided their daily strikes about equally between Laos and South Vietnam, the sources said. But high-levintelligence about imminent Communist attacks necessitated a temporary suspension of the Laotian missions, they said. Most of the raids were in Binh Long and Tay Ninh provinces where Communist forces have concentrated their killed. namese troops was shot down 26 miles northwest of Saigon on Thursday, killing seven Americans. shot The latest chopper down crashed 12 miles south of Due Pho and 60 miles south of Da Nang on South Vietnam's northern coast. Overnight the Communists 50 shelled Allied targets including 20 American bases and camps. Twenty-thre- e Americans were wounded. U.S. military communiques reported three Americans were killed and 72 bounded in ground actions late Friday and early today. INSIDE THE NEWS SECTION A au- tumn campaign. The helicopter downed Friday near Da Nang was the sixth shot down in as many days. Another large helicopter 5 if I, jim.iiffiiiin linn, ifli iWhiiiiTi inT' rPtii'lF r- - i1 iTiufT ii1 11 r 5. |