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Show Clouds On Way T Fair tonight and warmer. Daytime highs in the upper 70s. Lows tonight near 50. Partly cloudy Wednesday with increasing winds. Details, weather map on Page 372 NO. 38 PAGES 94 News Tips 0 0 Home Delivery Information 8 Sports Scores 5 Classified Ads Only Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South 524-440- 524-284- -- 524-4445 524-444- 521-353- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH B-1- 3. VOL. Our Phone Numbers 10c WEST'S MOUNTAIN THE FIRST NEWSPAPER TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1969 M 'COy Seraptani Says By GORDON ELIOT WHITE Deseret News Washington Bureau - WASHINGTON Utah Gov. Calvin L. Raxnpton emerged from a White House meameeting on sures Monday afternoon believing that wage and price controls may tie necessary to stop the present inflationary spiral in the U.S. The governor, a member of the Executive Committee of the National Governors Conference, met with President Nixon, Vice President Spiro eco Agn e w, presidential n nomics assistant Dr. Arthur Bums, and other top federal officials to discuss proposed construction cuts designed to reduce inflation pressures on the economy. Ramptor-- . said afterwards that all of the governors agreed that inflation should be checked but that most felt that construction cuts were not the way to do it. In Utah, he said, there was little state construction work that could be stopped. He said the proceeds of a $65 million bond issue were just being put under contract for college buildings and that the proj . ects were already under way or so far along in planning that they could not be cut. Other state projects offered no room for cuts, he said. Federal spending projects in Utah are more vulnerable. The governor said that post mentioned in our meetings. He added that some of the governors brought the subject of controls up at the White House and that Vice President Agnew and presidential adviser Dr. Arthur Bums had rather seriously discussed it I dont thing that construcin at least a general way. tion cuts appear adequate to I just dont think the cut in stop this inflationary spiral, construction will even affect the governor said and wage the inflation at Gov. all, and price controls may well be Hampton said. necessary if it keeps up. Colorado Gov. John Love told a White House press conHe said the Nixon administration obviously does not ference after the Monday want to impose controls, but meeting with the President the subject was seriously See GOVERNORS on Page Starvation Dam project at the WTiite House and believed that the Bureau of Reclamation would be able to award new contracts necessay for completion of contracts there already under way. office construction, including the planned new $12 million office in Salt Lake City would be subject to the 75 per cent fedeid cut. Also affected would be public lands roads, reclamation work, and some projects in the Four Corners area. the He said he discussed A-- 4 Red Attack Batters Viets, G!s SAIGON (AP) A company of 130 South Vietnamese civilian irregulars led by American Green Berets suffered more than 50 per cent casualties in heavy fighting six miles south of the Cambodian border, military spokesmen Here is model of reported today. Within hours after the fighting ended, five waves of U.S. B52 bombers pounded North Vietnamese bases and staging supersonic airliner Pres. Nixon is pushing. 1,800-m.p.- h. areas along the border north SST Will Be Built; - v: INSIDE : Pres. Nixon Declares SECTION A ; -Pair transport, he declared at (AP) resident Nixon said today he a White House briefing. The will ask for $662 million in the SST is going to be built. next five years tc develop ' a , Nixon noted his decision on i1 a 1,800-supersonic transport aircraft. our, airliner came must States United go The called after a spirited debate withahead with the plane in the administration. to maintain its the SST leadership in the world air- . Opponents of the project craft industry, Nixon said. have argued it is impractical, I want the Uqited States to too expensive and too noisy. Nixon askeu $96 million this continue to lead the world in National, Foreign year in new funds from Congress in addition to $99 million in unused carryover for the SST WASHINGTON the . program. This would rise to $314 million In fiscal 1871, then progressively fall to $189 million in fiscal 1972, $48 million in fiscal 1973 and $15 million in fis- n-- h e-- cal h . Her Secretary's Story . . : i Jackie Plans Weil Ahead Foltwi.u It flic third crticlc on whtl JacQUClint Kennedy Onastit Is rttlly Ukt by htr termer pirtonel tecratery. By MARY BARELLI GALLAGHER For Caroline Kennedy, there was but one person whose every handclap and call caused her to bound forth in the most excited, exhilarather daddy. His ed way loud, sharp claps, accompanied by his usual call of Buttons, wheres Buttons? would have Caroline scampering in the direction cf his voice with Incredible, almost uncontrollable, speed. With her mother, Caroline was more subdued. But then, I seldom saw her around her mother when Jackie was working. She would be off somewhere with her nanny, . 1 Comics TV Highlights Sports , i Financial said government investment in the SST would total $994 million of the In addition to the need for continued U.S. leadership in world aviation, Nixon said a further reason for going the ahead with the SST plane would bring the world closer together in a physical sense and in time. , A-- They say sonic booms would make it impossible to fly the plane over inhabited areas and that the federal funds are needed to solve other domestic problems. I Dam Is Holding -- He's Siftin' On It - r 1.10, 11 . 13 13 13-2- 1 Month After Still Missing 1978. The QUINCY, FLA. (AP) water was 28 feet high and rising in Lake Talquin Monday night, the result of three days of rain in northwest Florida. When M. L. Purvis, the dam keeper at the lake south of Quincy, was asked If the dam was holding. Purvis replied: I guess so. Im sittin on it. 4 Camille... 55 billion $1.4 approximately needed to build two prototype aircraft by 1972. The first test flights are scheduled for late 1972, with commercial use expected by Backers of the SST had called for $200 million to keep the project going full blast through next June 30. i , Opponents of the project contend much of the $500 million the government already has put out for research and design study has been wasted. 14, 15 15 15 ' ' ' camp. Four Green were wounded. Berets American fighter-bombeand artillery came to the rescue of the embattled company and South Vietnamese headquarters said 35 North Vietnamese bodies were found afterward. 6-- 9 Obituaries ... Weather Map Action Ads 1 3 1, 3, 5. 12, 13, 22 2 City, Regional Volpe , 8-11-1- Our Man Jones Music SECTION B J Maud Shaw, or playing up- stairs in her bedroom. Usually, when Jackie was having breakfast, Miss Shaw would bring her in for a little visit with Mommy. Jackie would Where are you going say, or today with Mis? Shaw? What are you and Miss Shaw up to today? Jackie always prepared a season ahead for her wardrobe. Now, though pregnant, she was getting ready for her move to the White House in January. Despite the work of closing the house and taking inventory, she was looking ahead to her spring wardrobe. Soon after election, she dictated a long letter to Oleg Cassini in New York, outlining her specific needs with her usual precision types of See HANDCLAP on Page 4 n. City, Regional To meet a major objection from some opponents, Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe said the SST would not be allowed to fly over population areas until the noise factor comes within acceptable limits. Concorde To Try Sound Barrier The Franco-Britissupersonic transport PARIS (UPI) sound barrier beplane Concorde will attempt to break the fore the end of the month, Sud Aviation sources said today. The French compary, which built the plane with the British Aircraft Corporation, would not disclose officially when the first attempt will take place. But aviation sources said althey expected the test in the next several days. The plane sound. of the 40 under test speed flights has undergone ready Concorde is not expected to reach its top speed of mach 2 before next year. But the fact twice the speed of sound It is ready to break the sound barrier only eight months after its first flight in Toulouse March 2 is considered excellent, company officials said. 1974. 1-- 6 6, 7 Womens Pages Editorial Pages appro-priatio- Seven of the South Vietnamese civilian' irregulars were killed and 62 were wounded in the fight Monday three miles northwest of the Thien Ngon Special Forces six-ho- Theater . GULFPORT, MISS. (UPI) Anxious relatives and friends have not been able to account for at least 55 persons more than a month after Hurricane Camille slammed into the Mississippi and Louisiana coasts. Jeanne Durr, Red Cross disaster nursing director, said the Red Cross was trying to help find 55 persons whose whereabouts is unknown, although she said a number might be missing due to the difficulty of communications in the disaster area. The possibility that some of those on the list might be victims was increased Sunday with the recovery of another body from the wreckage at Pass Christian. The victim, as yet unidentified, was a man in his 60s. Three of the last unidentified victims were buried a couple of weeks ago. Mrs. A. J. Stallings of Biloxi, widow of a prominent New Orleans banker, died Sunday night from injuries suffered at her beachfront home during Camille. She was the 138th victim of the hurricane. Round Up Reds - Rampton attended the session devoted to JAKARTA (AP) Security forces have rounded up more than 35 Communists believed to be behind a wave of economic sabotage in East Java, the official Antara News Agency reported today. The U.S. Command sent its biggest bombers against the bases along the border in an attempt to break up preparations for a new enemy campaign expected in November. BIG TARGET AREA said the spokesman Stratofortresses hit. North ViU.S. etnamese Utah's-!-Govern- anti-inflati- or steps.;!! Bailey Joins Defense Of Beret Officer MAO MAY SHOW UP AT FETE IN PEKING ' ' THE NEWS - - . of Saigon with some 750 tC.iC of explosives. BATTLE at meeting with governors. President. Nixon savors lighter moment LONG BINH, VIETNAM Boston criminal law(AP) yer F. Lee Bailey is going to defend one of the six Green Beret officers charged with murdering a Vietnamese double agent, the military attorney for the officer announced today. Bailey will take charge of the defense of Capt. Robert F. Marasco of Bloomfield, N.J., who is scheduled to go on trial before a general on Oct 20 along with Capt. Leland J. Brumley of Duncan, Okla., and Capt. Budge E, Williams of Athens, Ga. However, the defense is expected to seek a postponement of the court-marti- trial. Fdward Bennett Williams, n another of Americas criminal attorneys, is expected to direct the defense of Col. Robert B. Rheault of - KONG (UPI) Shanghai Radio hinted;. ! tonight that Communist Party Chairman Mao ; was well enough to attend Red Chinas National Day cel- -' ' ebrations in Peking on Oct 1. . HONG Tse-tun- g The broadcast appeared to be an indirect attempt to refute reports from Moscow that the leader wac incapacitated by a stroke allegedly suffered early I this month. Mao has not make a public appearance since last-- . , " . . May 19. Shanghai Radio said Mao had given personal ap; -- ; proval for workers in Shanghai tb send a delegation to;-- ! Peking for the Oct. 1 anniversary of the founding of the !- - Chinese Peoples Republic. The approval was granted today by the great chair! ! man and his close comrade-in-armLin Piao, the Chi- - j ' nese radio broadcast said. , 7' It was the first word from China about the!' leader since reports from Moscow indicated ! - !- that he was critically ill. : well-know- Vineyard Haven, Mass., the former commander of Special Forces troops in Vietnam and the highest ranking of the de- base activity, Rheault arid two camps, supply and staging fendants. areas between a mile and a others are to be tried after mile and a half from the borthe other three officers, but der. The target area stretched there are indications the from 65 miles charges will be quashed if the of Saigon to 83 miles north of first trial ends in an acquittal. the capital. Both Bailey and Williams Earlier, four American ob- are expected to arrive in Vietservation helicopters were nam next Monday or Tuesshot at in the same general day. A third prominent trial lawarea, 60 miles of Saigon. The helicopters reyer, Henry B. Rothblatt of turned the fire with machine New York, arrived in Saigon to defend ' Capt. guns and directed artillery Monday onto the enemy positions. U.S. Brumley and Maj. David E. headquarters said 16 enemy Crew of Ceda. Rapids, Iowa, soldiers were killed. No U.S. who is scheduled to be tried casualties were reported, and with Rheault and Maj. Thomthe helicopters returned to as C. Middleton Jr. of Jeffertheir base. son, S.C. north-northwe- st north-northwe- st Russ Say They'll Reply 'Soon' To A-Ta- UNITED NATIONS. NY. The Kremlin has sent (AP) word that it will reply soon to President Nixons bid to begin curbing talks nuclear U.S.-oovi- the race. This message fom Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko to Secretary of State William P. Rogers Monday night fell short of U.S. hopes. It meant indefinite further deay on the disaralready mament parley the two superpowers agreed long ago to much-delaye- Invitation lk d hold. Crcmyko did not speeijy what he meant by soon'. State Department press offi- cer Robert J. MCloskey commented: We were satisfied that what was said was meant, and we accepted it. Rogers and Gromyko held a three-hou- r dine-and-ta- lk ses-'- "' sion at Rogers hotel suite. The Middle East, the United and Nations, Germany-Berlithe treaty to outlaw the spread of nuclear weapons but not Vietnam or Red China also were discussed. ; n A Safety Device Por Planes BALTIMORE (AP) The aviation industry put on display today three sets of equipment designed to prevent catcollisions astrophic between airplanes. The Air Transportation Association, which sponsored the exhibit, said airlines hope to invest up to $70 million to m ike one of the systems standard equipment on planes before 1974. The equipment consists of a digital computer to be carried in an airplane, transmitting and receiving equipment and an extremely accurate timecalled device an keeping atomic clock. According to manufacturers, the equipment s designed to keep tabs on all aircraft within a specific area, enabling each pilot to know the altitude, distance and rate of approach of all other planes near him. Testing of the equipment is scheduled to end Dec. 31. The airlines then will decide which of the three systems should be put into general use. The Air transport Association sponsoted aft inspection of the equipment at Martin Airport neai Baltimore where the Martin Marietta Corp. is conducting tests for the airlines under a $1.8 million con. tract. An acthe airline industry search for a suitable CAS (Collision Avoidance System) has been years. under way for 14 a statment prepared by tlie association said. Ten of those years were marked by disappointment and a few false hopes. Then, three years ago, pessimism gave way to optimism. The break came when Collins Radio of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, developed a workable the association technique, said. Concurrently, it said, solid state electronic technology developed to the point where a practical CAS could be built. Systems being tested were developed by McDonnell Douglas Corp. of St. Louis, Bendix Avionics Division of Fort Lau- - b derdale, Fla., and a joint project by the Sierra Research Corp. of Buffalo, N.Y., and Wilcox Aviation Electronics of Kansas City, Mo. The Federal Aviation Agency sponsored initial research into collision avoidance sys terns and plans to let contracts for studies of ground operations relating to such systems. . Today's Thought Money is like an airji use it or lose.it or a leg Henry Ford 9 'J - |